The Northern Cape experienced another quarter of rapid rental growth and could challenge the Western Cape as South Africa’s most expensive province for renters before long. The PayProp Rental Index for Q1 2023 shows that for four consecutive quarters, the Northern Cape has had the nation’s fastest growth. In Q1 the province reached an average rent of R9 248, up from R8 962 in the last quarter of 2022. Year on year, rents increased by an impressive 10.2%.
For now, at least, the Western Cape still boasts the highest average rent in South Africa at R9 872, up from R9 737 last quarter. Year on year, rentals in the province grew by an above average 5.0%.
Johette Smuts, Head of Data and Analytics at PayProp says, “If above-average growth continues in the Western Cape, rent could well reach five figures during the course of the year. Despite that, if the Northern Cape continues to grow at the pace it has for the last four quarters, the Western Cape might soon be challenged for the top spot.”
National outlook
In the first quarter of 2023, PayProp reported national rental growth of 3.9%, 4.6% and 4% in January, February and March respectively. However, inflation remained high at 6.9%, 7% and 7.1% in the same months. Smuts says to date, interest rate increases have done little to tame inflation, which is now below last year’s peak but still stubbornly high.
“Rising prices and more expensive debt repayments are putting continued pressure on tenants’ ability to afford rent,” says Smuts. “On the other hand, tenants who have managed to control their expenses are continuing to rent as rising interest rates price them out of buying homes, increasing demand for rental properties.”
Onwards and upwards
Despite persistently high inflation, the rental market appears to be recovering well and rental growth is now comfortably into the range seen before the pandemic. The average national rent rose by 4.2% from Q1 2022 to Q1 2023, the strongest year on year figure since Q4 2017. In monetary terms, this was an increase of R336 to R8 924 since Q1 2022. National rental growth has now accelerated for six successive quarters. To date, rentals have also resisted downward pressure from high inflation and diminished affordability to set a clear upward trend.
Writer: Tammy Tinline