Average rent in South Africa crosses R9,000 mark for the first time

For the first time, South Africa's average rent has exceeded R9,000, reaching R9,051 in Q4 2024, signalling a significant shift in the rental market.

For the first time, South Africa's average rent has exceeded R9,000, reaching R9,051 in Q4 2024, signalling a significant shift in the rental market.

Published 22h ago

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The average rent for property in South Africa for Q4 2024 was R9,051, according to the PayProp Rental Index. 

This is the first time that average price of rent in the country was over R9,000. Year-on-year, rental growth increased by 5.2% for Q4.

Rent for Q4 was R453 higher than the year prior and R195 more than the previous quarter. 

The report showed rental growth recovery, signalling confidence in the SA rental market. 

The report said: "Landlords and agents had been holding off on large rental increases in the wake of the pandemic, prioritising reliable payments instead. But with tenant demand high and the economy recovering, the industry is well set for real-terms growth."

A closer look at provinces

For a third quarter in a row, all provinces recorded positive rental growth with one teetering on the edge and the postive streak breaking by next quarter. 

Rental prices in provinces such as the Western Cape and Limpopo have been significantly impacted by local supply and demand. Other factors that can affect the price of rent include: new building projects starting or workplaces opening or closing. 

The average rent in the nine provinces:

ProvinceAverage rent for Q4 2023Average rent for Q4 2024
Eastern CapeR7,018R7,297
Free StateR6,969R7,216
GautengR8,864R9,169
KwaZulu-NatalR8,755R9.147
Northern CapeR9,409R9,657
North WestR6,344R6,798
LimpopoR7,919R8,797
Western CapeR10,118R11,141
MpumalangaR8,423R8,439

 

Looking at the data, there are three top three provinces with the highest average rent including: the Western Cape, Northern Cape and Gauteng.

Different age groups

According to the report, the age distrubtion amongst tenants is broadly the same as it was a year ago. Those who are in the age group of 30 to 39, make up the biggest group of renters. 

Younger people tend to live with their parents while older people tend to leave the rental sector as soon as they buy a house but a rising group of older people are renting into older age. 

In Q4 2024, 6.8% of the tenants were over the age of 60, a hike from the 5.8% two years earlier. The youngest age group account for 20.8% of tenants, down from 21.6%.

The 20 to 29 age bracket (Gen-Z) tend to spend more on rent proportionally in comparison to any other age group at 32.3% of their income. 

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