New builds in Nairobi: what the market looks like in 2026
Nairobi hosts 0 active new-build listings across Nairobi. The typical price band sits at —, with a median of — — a reflection of the apartment-heavy mix that now defines the county's residential pipeline.
Nairobi's new-build inventory is concentrated in four corridors: Westlands (16 listings), Lavington (11), Kileleshwa (11) and Kilimani (10). Together they account for roughly two-thirds of the county's off-plan supply, with the rest spread across Karen, Runda, Nairobi Central, Dagoretti and pockets near the JKIA/Eastlands corridor.
Westlands: the high-rise headquarters
Westlands is the densest sub-market on Jumuika today, with 16 active listings ranging from KES 6M studios near Sarit Centre to KES 60M penthouses along Waiyaki Way. The Nairobi Expressway exit at Westlands has pulled in commercial-grade developers who now treat the area as a mixed-use hub rather than a pure suburb. Off-plan towers typically deliver 18–36 months from groundbreaking, and finishes track international rental standards because of the diplomatic and corporate-tenant demand.
Lavington and Kileleshwa: the upgraders' corridor
Lavington (11 listings, median KES 13.5M) and Kileleshwa (11 listings, median KES 15.2M) attract buyers stepping up from rentals in Kilimani or trading in older bungalows. Stock here skews to 2–4 bedroom apartments in 4–8 storey blocks, often with rooftop pools and dedicated DSQs. The Gitanga Road and James Gichuru Road backbones keep these areas within 15–25 minutes of the CBD outside peak.
Kilimani: the entry-point
Kilimani's 10 listings include some of the most accessible new-build prices in the inner city — studios and 1-bedrooms occasionally surface in the KES 4–8M band, with 2-beds dominating the 9–15M range. Density has compressed plot economics, so most new projects here are 8+ storeys with retail at ground floor.
Off-plan vs ready: what to weigh in Nairobi
Roughly two-thirds of Nairobi's new-build inventory on Jumuika is sold off-plan — i.e. before completion. Buyers typically pay a 10–20% deposit, then milestone instalments tied to construction stages, with handover 18–36 months later. The trade-off is well known: off-plan units carry a 10–20% discount versus completed equivalents, but expose buyers to construction delay and developer-execution risk.
The single most important guard against that risk is the developer's NCA (National Construction Authority) class. NCA Class 1–4 is the minimum threshold most independent agents will recommend for residential towers above 6 storeys. Ask for the NCA number on every shortlisted project; cross-check it on the NCA register. Jumuika listings flag developer credentials where the data is supplied.
What sets Nairobi apart from neighbouring counties
Compared with new builds in Kiambu (22 listings, predominantly townhouses and gated low-rise) or Machakos (8 listings, mostly along the Mombasa Road / Konza corridor), Nairobi's new-build market is dominated by mid- and high-rise apartments rather than ground-up houses. That shape reflects price per square metre of land — central Nairobi land prices push developers vertical, while Kiambu and Machakos still support cost-effective horizontal builds.
The other defining feature is infrastructure absorption. The Nairobi Expressway (completed 2022), the operational Nairobi Commuter Rail Syokimau line, and the ongoing BRT corridor work along Mombasa Road and Thika Highway have all shifted demand patterns inside the county. Buyers increasingly underwrite "distance to a fast-moving artery" rather than raw distance to the CBD.
Practical buyer checklist for a Nairobi new build
Whether you're buying off-plan or a completed unit, the same checks apply:
- Verify the title and the developer's land hold. The Ardhisasa portal lets you confirm parcel registration; pair that with a manual search at the Ministry of Lands.
- Confirm the NCA class. Class 1 is the highest; for a tower above 6 storeys, expect Class 1–4. Lower-class developers may not be cleared for the project type.
- Read the sale agreement carefully on penalties. Most legitimate Nairobi developers offer 1–2% per month penalty on delayed handover; vague "force majeure" clauses are a red flag.
- Inspect the show unit and a like-finished completed block by the same developer. Past delivery quality is the best predictor of future quality.
- Confirm service-charge expectations in writing. Apartment service charge in central Nairobi typically runs KES 15–35 per square foot per month.
Financing a new build in Nairobi
Mortgage uptake in Nairobi remains modest by global standards — around 30,000 active home loans nationally — but bank appetite for new-build apartments has improved as banks accept developer-issued sectional titles. Typical 2026 terms: 80–90% LTV for salaried borrowers, 14–16% p.a. interest on KES loans, and 15–25 year terms. The mortgage calculator below uses 14% as a working assumption; your actual quote will vary by bank and risk profile.
Several new-build developers also operate in-house instalment plans (12, 24 or 36 months) at zero or low interest, sometimes as an alternative to bank financing. Compare both — the in-house route can be cheaper on small balances but rarely matches the long-tail terms a bank offers on a final-stage drawdown.
Where to start
If you're early in the search, the Westlands, Lavington and Kileleshwa sub-pages will give you the deepest current inventory. For value-driven first-time buyers, Kilimani consistently offers the lowest entry-point. Buyers comparing across categories may also want to scan houses for sale in Nairobi (1,399 listings, broader stock including older homes) or new builds in Kiambu (22 listings, lower-density alternative just north).
Inventory and pricing refresh continuously; figures shown above reflect live data as of June 2026.