About Maitland
Maitland Property Market Guide
In-depth market analysis, rental rates, and investment insights
Industrial stock in Maitland spans a practical range of building types that reflect the suburb's long history as a working trade-and-services hub. Small to medium warehouses between 300 and 2,000 square metres dominate the market, alongside workshop and showroom units, mini-factory spaces and a mix of older character industrial buildings that have been partially converted or refurbished for modern occupiers. Clear-to-eaves heights on older stock typically run between 4 and 8 metres, while newer and upgraded facilities reach 6 to 9 metres, adequate for racking systems and light manufacturing. Most buildings offer roller-shutter vehicle access, three-phase power supply, gated yard space for delivery vehicles and basic CCTV and guard-house security, making the stock broadly functional for a wide range of light industrial and trade users.
Industrial rentals in Maitland generally range from R40 to R75 per square metre per month, placing the suburb among the most affordable centrally located industrial options in the Cape Town metro. Older and more basic stock tends to sit at the lower end of this range, while newer buildings or those with recent upgrades, improved yard ratios or enhanced security command rates closer to R75 per square metre. By comparison, Montague Gardens, the premium modern industrial node, attracts rentals well above this range, while Epping operates at a broadly similar central-metro tier but with a larger proportion of purpose-built and upgraded facilities. Ndabeni competes closely with Maitland on both price and format for small-format users, and Paarden Eiland commands a premium driven by its proximity to the port and the V&A Waterfront. For occupiers who need a central Cape Town address at a cost-effective rate, Maitland offers a compelling combination.
The local environment along and around Voortrekker Road is characterised by a dense, mature trade ecosystem that has developed over several decades. Automotive aftermarket businesses, panel beaters, spray painters, parts wholesalers and tyre dealers, occupy a significant concentration of units throughout the suburb, giving Maitland a well-established reputation in the motor trade. Retail and trade outlets serving the building, electrical, plumbing and signage sectors line the main arterials, providing daily convenience for operators and their staff. Maitland Cemetery borders part of the residential fringe, and adjacent suburbs bring a steady pedestrian population that supports the food, convenience and service businesses catering to the area's workforce. The broader precinct's strong public transport infrastructure means that businesses here can draw on labour catchments spanning the Northern Suburbs, the Southern Suburbs and the Cape Flats without requiring staff to own private vehicles.
The tenant mix in Maitland reflects the suburb's affordability, central position and transport accessibility. SMEs in motor trade and panel beating, plumbing and electrical wholesalers, light manufacturers, food production businesses, automotive parts distributors, signage and printing companies, fabric and textile wholesalers, and a broad range of service and logistics operators are consistently represented in the occupier base. When comparing Maitland against competing nodes, Ndabeni offers a similar small-format, centrally located tier and overlaps significantly on tenant profile; Salt River attracts a more creative and mixed-use occupier base at generally higher rentals; Epping suits businesses requiring larger formats and more modern industrial specifications; and Montague Gardens serves occupiers who prioritise contemporary premises over cost. Maitland's clearest competitive advantage remains its combination of genuine metro centrality, strong public transport for workforce access and rental rates that remain accessible to growing SMEs and established trade businesses alike.