Northern Cape – expensive to rent, but cheap to buy a home | Everything Property
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Northern Cape – expensive to rent, but cheap to buy a home

Northern Cape

Seeff Country and Karoo’s Ian Badenhorst shares that Northern Cape property prices are still well below most other provinces.

While the rental range in the Northern Cape is from R2,500 to R15,000, the average rent per month is R9.274 (per the PayProp Rental Index), making it the second most expensive province to rent.

WORDS & PHOTO: SUPPLIED

For property purchasers, however, it is still the most affordable, says Ian Badenhorst, licensee for Seeff Country and Karoo. Lightstone data for example shows that only 2.5% of all transactions in the province fall above R1.5 million.

 

Province

% Value above R1.5M Ave

Price

 

Province

% Value above R1.5M Ave

Price

N.Cape 2.5% R875k North West 8.5% R912k
Free State 5% R908k Gauteng 17.5% R1.17M
Limpopo 6% R997k KZN 18.5% R1.33M
E.Cape 7% R969k W.Cape 25% R1/95M
Mpumalanga 8.25% R1M  

Source: Seeff/Lightstone

The average transaction price rose from R676,000 in 2019 to R875,000 currently. This represents total growth of 29.4% over the last five years, averaging at around 5% annually, but is still well below most other provinces.

The sparsely populated province only has about 1.4 million residents with Kimberley as the main city and mostly smaller towns serving mining or farm areas along with some coastal villages, says Badenhorst.

Numerous landmarks

Northern Cape Ian Badenhorst MD for Seeff Country and Karoo

Ian Badenhorst, licensee for Seeff Country and Karoo

Several landmarks characterise the province, from the mighty Orange River to the Kalahari Desert, Great Karoo, and Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park (shared with Botswana). It is also home to the MeerKAT radio telescope (80kms north of Carnavon), and the Astronomical Observatory, (SAAO) in Sutherland.

Mining (manganese, iron ore, diamonds, and copper set for revival), is a big driver of demand for housing. The highest volume of sales are recorded in Kimberley and Upington, and in smaller towns such as Kathu, Kuruman, Springbok and Port Nolloth.

Agriculture comprises mostly livestock such as beef, sheep and goats, and game farming. Only 2% of land is used for crop farming due to the arid nature of the province.

During the 2021/2 boom period, a fair amount of first time buyers used the low-interest rate to invest in homes, especially in Kimberley,  Upington, Kathu and Kuruman.

Good value in Kimberley

While the market has slowed, there is good value to be had in Kimberley with the average house price at around R1.45 million, and R845,000 for sectional titles. Property owners enjoyed good capital value growth during the 2021/2 market boom, especially freehold houses, making these a good investment.

Kuruman, Danielskuil

Kuruman in the heart of the Kalahari is surrounded by mines and thus somewhat of a buyer hotspot, but offers excellent value in the R1.3 million to R1.9 million range, says Lochna Swartz, an agent with Seeff.

Danielskuil offers more affordability compared to Kuruman, Postmasburg and Kathu with the average house price of R1.1 million to R1.4 million, and is popular with younger buyers and retirees from the mines, says Sandy-Ann Alberts, an agent with Seeff. There are also smallholdings in the area.

Seeff Orania

Bennie Hoffman and Gustav Bronkhorst, agents for Seeff Orania, a town on the Orange River, say it is popular for its good services including solar which is under construction. Buyer enquiries have picked up since the election, and as a growing town, people can invest in vacant plots, along with a choice of houses and smallholdings.

Springbok region

People who come to work in the mine in Aggeneys will often prefer to settle in the Springbok area, says Esther Roscoe, an agent with Seeff who also services a number of smaller towns around, as well as Port Nolloth on the coast. Housing in the small towns starts from R645,000, from R1.5 million Port Nolloth and R19.5 million in Springbok. Game farms are also popular in the area.

Top picture: Wikimedia

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