Nairobi’s suburbs have outpaced satellite towns in quarterly land price growth for the first time since 2020, according to the latest HassConsult Land Price Index for the second quarter of 2025.
Land prices in the city’s 18 key suburbs rose by 1.6 percent in Q2, slightly lower than the 1.7 percent growth recorded in Q1. However, the increase was enough to surpass the 1.25 percent rise in land prices across Nairobi’s 14 satellite towns, which marked their slowest quarterly growth in two years. In comparison, the towns had registered a 2.4 percent growth in the previous quarter.
“All 18 suburbs recorded positive price movements this quarter, a sign of steady demand despite economic pressure,” said Ms. Sakina Hassanali, Co-CEO and Creative Director at HassConsult. “The consistency in growth, especially in low-density areas preferred for standalone houses, has allowed Nairobi’s suburbs to reclaim their dominance.”
Among the suburbs, Spring Valley led with a 2.3 percent price increase, followed closely by Parklands at 2.2 percent. These were the only two suburbs with growth above 2 percent this quarter. In contrast, Q1 had seen eight suburbs post growth above 2 percent, with Spring Valley topping at 3.7 percent.
Meanwhile, satellite towns, which had been the centre of booming land value in recent years, are showing signs of cooling. Key towns like Kiserian, Juja, and Thika posted significantly lower or even negative growth. For example, Kiserian’s growth dropped to 2.8 percent from 5 percent in Q1, while Thika registered a -0.2 percent decline, down from a 4.6 percent gain.
This slowdown in satellite towns is attributed to a combination of economic strain on the middle class and fears of apartment oversupply. “Private developers are pulling back due to softer demand and stagnating rental prices. The previous rush to acquire plots in satellite areas is now tempered by market realities,” noted Ms. Hassanali.
Despite the quarter’s slowdown, satellite towns still maintain strong annual performance, with Juja recording a 15.5 percent year-on-year increase, followed by Kiambu (14.4 percent) and Syokimau (13.1 percent). In the suburbs, Spring Valley (11.5 percent) and Kileleshwa (11.0 percent) led annual gains.
Since 2007, land in Nairobi’s satellite towns has grown by 13.12 times, outperforming the 7.31-fold growth in the suburbs over the same period. However, the current trend suggests investors may now be rebalancing interest toward city-based plots, especially in low-density, high-value neighbourhoods.
The report also highlights Nairobi’s long-term investment appeal. An investment of KES 1 million in land in the satellite towns in 2007 would have grown to KES 13.12 million by mid-2025, compared to KES 7.31 million in suburbs, KES 4.65 million in bonds, and only KES 0.48 million in equities.












