Experts advise buyers to focus on long-term value, transaction costs and building an affordability buffer. Take note: 2026 won’t be the year of a property boom, but there’s reason to be cautiously optimistic. After years of a two-speed market, early signs of recovery are appearing, but it’s not a one-size-fits-all.
Coastal andlifestyle hotspotslike Cape Town are showing robust growth, while inland areas and regions with poor service delivery are still struggling to keep up. “While we most likely won’t have a property boom this year, we’re seeing very encouraging early signs of recovery,” says Renier Kriek, managing director of home loan provider Sentinel Homes. He adds that better home loan terms, higher approval rates, and increased first-time buyer participation are all indicators that things are slowly moving in the right direction.
“It’s initially going to be better conversion and affordability, and higher transaction volumes, followed by gradual price firming,” Kriek adds. Interest rates are giving buyers somebreathing room. Since September 2024, the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) has reduced rates by 1.5%, and at least two more cuts are expected in 2026.
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But it’s not all sunshine. New Basel 4 banking regulations – the so-called “output floor” – may increase banks’ funding costs, which could limit how low home loan rates can go. Bottom line: rates are easing, but buyers still need a plan and a buffer.
South Africa’s property market is moving at two different speeds. Coastal and lifestyle areas, especially Cape Town and parts of the Western Cape, are seeing much stronger demand and faster price growth, with values increasing by up to 9% a year. Ongoing development in high-demand areas signals early signs of market recovery for 2026. In contrast, inland markets such as Gauteng are growing far more slowly.
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