Is now a good time to buy property in South Africa? This question lands in our inbox weekly. The honest answer depends almost entirely on your personal financial situation, your time horizon, and the specific market you are buying in. But the macro picture matters too — and in 2026, that picture is more encouraging for buyers than it has been at any point since 2020. Here is the analysis.
WORDS: NEWSROOM :: PHOTOS: PEXELS
The Interest Rate Picture
After the aggressive rate-hiking cycle of 2022–2023, the South African Reserve Bank has begun its cutting cycle. The prime lending rate, which peaked above 11.75%, has moderated into 2025 and early 2026. For property buyers, every 25 basis point cut reduces the monthly repayment on a R2M bond by approximately R290 — a meaningful shift in affordability.
Buyers who entered the market at peak rates in 2022–2023 have already seen their repayments ease. For buyers who delayed because of rate uncertainty, 2026 represents a clearer window — rates are moving in the right direction, and the most acute affordability pressure is behind us.
Price Trends: What the Data Shows
South African house prices have been broadly flat to slightly positive in nominal terms over the past 18 months — and negative in real (inflation-adjusted) terms. This is not a crash. It is a healthy correction after the pandemic-era price surge, which overheated markets in Cape Town, Umhlanga, and the KZN coast.
What this means practically: buyers in 2026 have more negotiating power than at any point since 2018. Properties are sitting on the market 15–20% longer than in 2021. Sellers who need to sell are realistic. This is a buyer’s market in the genuine sense of the term.
The best time to buy property in South Africa has historically been when sentiment is cautious and prices are flat. That describes 2026 precisely.
Supply and Demand: The Structural Story
South Africa faces a structural housing shortage estimated at over 2.3 million units. At the lower and middle ends of the market, demand consistently exceeds supply. New developments are coming through in key nodes, but construction costs, materials inflation, and municipal approval delays mean supply will not outpace demand in desirable suburbs in any foreseeable near-term horizon.
This structural demand supports values at the bottom. The risk of a sustained, broad-based price decline — the kind that would make a 2026 purchase regrettable — is low given this supply backdrop.
The Verdict: Four Scenarios
| Buyer Profile | 2026 Recommendation | Reasoning |
| First-time buyer, stable income, 5+ year horizon | Strong buy | Rates declining, prices flat, more choice, strong negotiating position |
| Upgrader selling and buying simultaneously | Buy — transact now | Symmetry in the market means you sell lower but buy lower too |
| Buy-to-let investor | Selective buy | Target high-yield nodes (Muizenberg, Woodstock, Umhlanga) at current prices before rate recovery drives values |
| Speculative short-term buyer (<3 years) | Caution | Flat prices + transaction costs = negative real returns in short hold periods |

