Every few years Kampala’s skyline provokes the same uneasy question.
Are we building too much?
A recently released Kampala Property Market Performance Review for the second half of 2025 by Knight Frank Uganda provides a useful starting point for thinking about that question. The report reads less like a warning of a looming collapse and more like a snapshot of a market that is beginning to diverge.
"Look closely and three very different stories are unfolding beneath Kampala’s real estate boom.
The first is a cooling residential market.
The second is a roaring industrial sector.
And the third is a quiet migration of business activity away from the traditional city centre...
Each raises deeper questions about where Kampala’s property market is heading.
Start with the hills.
For two decades Kampala’s prime residential market ran on a very simple engine: expatriate rents.
Developers built apartments in Kololo, Nakasero, Naguru and Mbuya because NGOs, diplomatic missions and international consultants were willing to pay dollar-denominated rents that justified the investment.
That model is now wobbling.
Knight Frank’s latest market review shows rental rates for two- and three-bedroom apartments in these prime areas falling by roughly 9 to 10 percent over the past year. It is not a crash. But it is the first meaningful correction the market has seen in years.
More telling is what lies beneath the numbers.
Supply is rising. Demand is shifting. And marketing periods for properties are getting longer. Some developers are quietly discounting prices. Others are simply waiting for better days.
At the same time, distressed property listings are beginning to appear—never a good sign in any asset market.
Yet the buyers that remain are not the ones developers originally built for.
Increasingly, it is Ugandan investors snapping up smaller apartments priced between about $80,000 and $170,000. The logic is simple: buy, furnish and list the property on the short-let market for diaspora visitors and business travellers.
That shift—from expatriate tenants to investor buyers—is the kind of transition that has preceded property bubbles in other cities.
But Kampala may not be there yet.
What we may be seeing instead is something more mundane: a market adjusting to the slow replacement of expatriate demand with domestic wealth.
Uganda’s middle and upper classes are growing. Many are now able to buy into neighbourhoods that once belonged almost exclusively to diplomats.
Prices may soften. But the long-term demand story is still intact.
Now leave the hills and head for the warehouses.
If residential real estate is cooling, industrial property is having a moment.
"Knight Frank’s report shows occupancy rates across Kampala’s industrial corridors remaining above 80 percent and warehouse rents holding firm between about $3 and $7 per square metre...
Three forces are powering this demand.
The first is coffee.
Uganda exported about 8.4 million bags last year earning roughly $2.4 billion and overtaking Ethiopia as Africa’s largest coffee exporter. Coffee exporters now require modern storage facilities—large warehouses with ventilation, security and climate control.
The second is logistics.
As Uganda’s consumer economy grows, distribution companies and FMCG manufacturers increasingly require storage space close to Kampala’s transport corridors.
The third force—still largely anticipatory—is oil.
With commercial production expected to begin around 2026 and the East African Crude Oil Pipeline nearing completion, contractors and support companies are already securing space for logistics yards and equipment storage.
Industrial real estate is therefore benefiting from a rare alignment of economic forces: exports, consumption and energy.
The question, of course, is whether the boom will last.
Oil timelines have slipped before. Infrastructure delays are common. And once the initial construction frenzy ends, demand for some logistics facilities may ease.
But unlike residential property, industrial real estate is anchored in productive activity rather than speculation.
Warehouses are built because goods need to move.
That is usually a healthier foundation for a property market.
The third transformation is perhaps the most subtle but also the most permanent.
Kampala’s centre of gravity is shifting.
For decades the city revolved around the CBD—Kampala Road, Nakasero and the immediate surroundings. Offices clustered there. Retail followed. And traffic, predictably, followed both.
But businesses are quietly voting with their feet.
Knight Frank notes that office tenants increasingly prefer suburban locations such as Ntinda, Bukoto, Naguru and Nakawa where parking is easier and congestion is less punishing.
Retail is following the same path.
Neighbourhood malls are replacing roadside shops across emerging suburbs. International brands—from KFC to Java House—are expanding along major commuter corridors rather than squeezing into the already crowded city centre.
Even fuel stations are becoming mini retail hubs with supermarkets, pharmacies and restaurants built into their forecourts.
"This is not the decline of the CBD.
It is simply the decentralisation of Kampala...
As cities grow, economic activity spreads outward into multiple nodes rather than concentrating in a single downtown district. Nairobi went through this transition years ago when Westlands, Upper Hill and Kilimani emerged as alternative business centres.
Kampala appears to be following the same trajectory.
And so the real story of Kampala’s property market today is not one of uniform boom or impending bust.
It is one of divergence.
Residential property is adjusting to new patterns of demand. Industrial property is riding the wave of exports and the oil economy. And commercial activity is gradually redistributing itself across a wider metropolitan footprint.
Markets, like cities, rarely move in straight lines.
But if Kampala’s cranes seem unusually busy today, it may be because the city is not simply growing.
It is rearranging itself.