Bellville Commercial Property Market Insights
Data-driven analysis and expert insights on Bellville's commercial real estate market
Bellville’s value node with tight vacancies
Bellville sits at the hinge-point between Cape Town’s northern suburbs corporate spine (Tyger Valley/Tyger Waterfront) and the logistics-heavy industrial belt (Bellville South/Stikland) anchored by the R300 and N1/N2 network. For investors and occupiers, the market is defined by a clear bifurcation: premium, green-rated office product and new logistics parks attract higher rentals, while older Bellville CBD stock competes primarily on price and repositioning potential.
Q1 2026 Snapshot
office Market
industrial Market
retail Market
Economic Context
Key Market Trends
Tight A-grade office vacancy in Bellville
Bellville’s decentralised office node has been one of Cape Town’s more resilient markets, with particularly tight A-grade availability in SAPOA-reported node tables. Demand is reinforced by Tyger Valley/Tyger Waterfront’s amenity depth and the node’s motorway accessibility, while older CBD stock competes aggressively on rental to maintain occupancy.
- A-grade vacancy for Bellville shown as 1.1% in SAPOA-referenced node table (Q2 2025).
- A-grade median gross asking rental for Bellville shown at R172/m² in the same SAPOA-referenced node table (Q2 2025).
- P-grade vacancy for Bellville shown as 0.0% in the SAPOA-referenced node table (Q2 2025), indicating no prime space available at that survey date.
- Bellville Central marketed vacancy schedules show gross rentals as low as R75/m² for multi-floor availability in older CBD stock (lease-up pricing).
- Tyger Valley portal profiles show office asking ranges spanning roughly R130–R250/m² depending on building quality and location within the node.
Flight-to-quality and green-rated premiums
Bellville’s premium segment is concentrated in Tyger Waterfront/Tyger Falls/Tyger Valley office parks, where sustainability credentials, backup systems, and corporate-spec finishes drive a rental premium versus the Bellville CBD. The market shows clear segmentation: green-rated premium assets lease at materially higher R/m², even as broader CBD inventories price to move.
- The Edge is described as a 5-Star Green rated building with 11,132m² lettable area and 529 parking bays, positioning it as a flagship premium asset in the node.
- Premium The Edge listings show rate points around R178/m² for large floor plates (example listing).
- Glacier Place listings show premium asking/quotations in the R210–R230/m² range for corporate-grade space (example listings).
- New prime developments in Tyger Valley are marketed at materially higher rentals (example: Quarry Hill marketing indicates ~R272/m²).
- Bellville Central vintage stock continues to clear at lower gross rentals (example: R75/m² at Van Der Stel Building).
R300-led industrial new-build cycle
Bellville South and Stikland continue to attract new industrial development and refurbishment, driven by highway exposure (R300), proximity to the N1/N2, and demand for modern distribution/light-manufacturing product. New parks set a higher rental bar for premium specification, while older parks and large-scale estates offer a wider pricing spread depending on yard, loading, and power availability.
- TAC Business Park promoted base rental of R95/m² (developer letting guide), reflecting new-build pricing for a visible, access-controlled industrial site.
- Galetti Bellville South listing evidence shows an established-stock reference point at ~R60/m² for a 1,240m² warehouse.
- Galetti Bellville South listing evidence shows ~R75/m² for a 1,600m² warehouse with dock-level doors and yard access (logistics-leaning spec).
- A Mega Park listing shows ~R44/m² for a yarded warehouse component, highlighting the low-to-mid rental band for older large-estate supply.
- Newer business parks emphasise security, 3-phase power, and (in some parks) solar/energy options, aligning with occupier resilience requirements.
Retail polarisation between Tyger Valley and CBD
Bellville’s retail market is split between dominant regional retail (Tyger Valley Shopping Centre and surrounding convenience/strip clusters) and more price-sensitive CBD and secondary formats. Prime clusters sustain higher rentals, while CBD formats often lease at lower implied R/m² and carry higher vacancy risk, frequently requiring active management and tenant curation.
- Tyger Valley Shopping Centre’s disclosed scale: 90,382m² GLA and ~6,000 parking bays, reinforcing its drawing power and tenant demand potential.
- Tyger Valley retail offerings imply asking rentals around R200–R275/m² based on monthly advertised rentals and areas (selected listings).
- Bellville Central retail in multi-use buildings shows lower benchmarks (example vacancy schedule: retail at R125/m²).
- Bellville CBD mall-format listings can show very low R/m² points (example listing: R57/m² at Middestad Mall), but these should be interpreted against tenancy type, fit-out, and operating-cost structure.
- Recent advertised Bellville retail investment opportunities cite ~9% net yield for a fully tenanted Oakdale retail centre listing, indicating investor pricing that still demands yield compensation for node/asset risk.
Notable Transactions
142 Edward Road, Bellville (Tygervalley corridor)
Reported sale of 142 Edward Road in Bellville as an investment-property transaction, signaling continued institutional interest in well-located Tyger Valley office assets even amid broader office market bifurcation.
TAC Business Park, Bellville South
New-build logistics and light-industrial park positioned on the R300 corridor with base rentals marketed at R95/m², reflecting the premium being attached to modern spec, access control, and logistics connectivity in Bellville South.
Mega Park, Bellville South (warehouse + yard component)
A Bellville South yarded-warehouse listing in Mega Park illustrating the lower rental band still available in older/large-estate stock, even as new parks push materially higher benchmarks.
Bellville South industrial warehouse
Warehouse listing evidence in Bellville South showing an established-stock rental point around R60/m² with strong access to R300/N1/N2 and airport routes (logistics-focused positioning).
Bellville South warehouse (dock-level doors)
Warehouse listing evidence at ~R75/m² highlighting the mid-range rent band for better-specified logistics facilities in Bellville South (dock-level doors and yard access).
Oakdale retail centre, Durban Road (Bellville)
A fully tenanted ~2,093m² retail-centre listing in Oakdale marketed at ~9% net yield, providing a signal of current yield expectations for Bellville corridor retail investments.
The Edge, Tyger Waterfront (premium office listing)
Premium green-rated Tyger Waterfront office listing indicating pricing for large plate premium space in the Bellville node’s flagship assets, supporting the flight-to-quality narrative.
Constructive, bifurcated, and opportunity-rich
Bellville’s outlook remains constructive where specification and location align: premium offices and modern logistics parks are best positioned to defend rentals and attract credit tenants. The key risk and opportunity is the CBD and older stock layer, where pricing is sharp and returns are driven by active management, conversion logic, and placemaking execution.
Office
Tyger Valley/Tyger Waterfront premium space should remain comparatively resilient, supported by low reported A-grade vacancy in SAPOA-referenced node tables and a sustained preference for modern, secure, amenity-rich precincts. Rental tension is likely to persist between prime green-rated assets (often marketed well above CBD levels) and Bellville Central’s value stock priced to maintain occupancy. Investors should expect continued capex and tenant-incentive requirements for older B/C inventory, with the best outcomes achieved through refurbishments, service upgrades, and targeted sector leasing (medical, education, back-office/BPO). The absence of publicly released Bellville-only vacancy updates after mid-2025 means near-term monitoring should lean heavily on portal availability, vacancy schedules, and broker intelligence.
Industrial
Bellville South and Stikland should remain among Cape Town’s more competitive industrial submarkets because they combine highway adjacency (R300/N1/N2) with a deep ecosystem of estates, yards, and warehouse typologies. New-build parks are explicitly setting higher rental benchmarks (e.g., ~R95/m² base in a new business park), and this should support rent growth and redevelopment feasibility for well-located older parks. Occupiers focused on resilience (power, solar options, secure yards) are likely to continue paying a premium for modern product, while older estates will compete on price and flexibility. The biggest constraint is the lack of a publicly available, Bellville-only, audited industrial vacancy series; underwriting should therefore include conservative vacancy sensitivity and leasing velocity assumptions.
Retail
Bellville retail will likely remain polarised: dominant regional retail and Tyger Valley convenience/strip clusters should keep attracting tenants and support higher rentals, while Bellville Central and secondary formats remain more volatile and price-led. Investment appetite is still present, but marketed yields indicate investors require compensation for node and asset risk, especially where tenant mix skews to value retail. Retail strategy should prioritise footfall drivers, parking convenience, and tenant curation rather than purely chasing nominal rental. Where CBD retail is combined with office or transport-adjacent assets, repositioning options (service retail, affordable food, last-mile collection points) can improve resilience if executed alongside public realm improvements and security management.
Investment Considerations
Opportunities
- Acquire and refurbish B/C-grade Bellville CBD offices into medical suites, training/campus space, or government-adjacent admin offices where transport access is a key tenant driver (pricing support visible in low gross rentals).
- Target Tyger Valley/Tyger Waterfront premium office assets with green ratings/backup systems where tenant demand concentrates and asking rentals reset higher than CBD equivalents.
- Pursue small-to-mid box industrial in Bellville South/Stikland with R300 visibility and good yard/loading, where modern parks are pushing higher benchmark rents and older parks can be re-tenanted with selective capex.
- Seek diversified multi-tenant industrial estates (yard + warehouse mix) that can balance logistics, light manufacturing, and service trades across economic cycles in the Bellville node.
- Consider yield-based retail acquisitions on proven corridors (e.g., Durban Road) where fully let assets can trade at higher yields while remaining supported by commuter and residential catchments.
- Value-add land/estate strategies aligned with the Stikland long-distance bus terminus and mixed-use planning trajectory, positioning for future transit-oriented development upside (high entitlement/value-creation risk, but meaningful optionality).
Risks
- Limited public release of Bellville-only vacancy/rental series (especially industrial and retail) increases underwriting uncertainty and requires conservative assumptions and stronger on-the-ground leasing intelligence.
- Bellville CBD office oversupply risk in older stock and the potential for prolonged lease-up without capex-led repositioning, especially where buildings cannot match modern tenant expectations.
- Transport-node externalities (congestion, informal trading pressure, crime perception) can impair CBD retail and office performance without active precinct management and security coordination.
- R300/N1 congestion and logistics disruptions can impact industrial occupier efficiency, particularly for operations reliant on consistent peak-hour travel windows.
- Interest-rate volatility affects investor yields and tenant affordability; while rates are currently lower, future shifts could tighten liquidity and cap-rate expectations.
Building Directory
15 commercial buildings surveyed in Bellville
Building specifications are based on available market data. GLA, parking, and rental figures should be confirmed with the landlord or leasing agent during due diligence.
More Commercial Buildings
Rental Rates by Building Grade
Office rental rates in Bellville (R/m²/month)• As of Q1 2026
| Grade | Asking (R/m²) | Achieved (R/m²) | Trend | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Premium | R175/m² - R280/m² | R165/m² - R260/m² | ↑+4% | P-grade ranges reflect premium Tyger Waterfront/Tyger Valley stock (e.g., The Edge/Glacier Place and new prime developments). Achieved ranges are estimates based on typical negotiation discounts versus asking and the observed spread across premium listings; Bellville-specific achieved (signed) deals are not disclosed publicly in a consolidated dataset. |
| A Grade | R150/m² - R230/m² | R140/m² - R215/m² | →+2% | A-grade asks incorporate SAPOA-referenced Bellville A-grade median asking rental (R172/m²) and current Tyger Valley listings that range into the low 200s depending on building quality and fit-out. Achieved ranges are estimated at ~5%–10% below asking for standard leases; verify building-specific operating costs and incentives. |
| B Grade | R120/m² - R180/m² | R110/m² - R165/m² | →+1% | B-grade pricing reflects mid-tier Tyger Valley stock and older but functional offices that still benefit from decentralised access. Achieved ranges are estimated; incentives and parking costs can materially affect effective rentals. |
| C Grade | R75/m² - R140/m² | R65/m² - R125/m² | ↓-3% | C-grade reflects Bellville Central and secondary CBD stock where landlords compete primarily on price. Low advertised gross rentals (e.g., R75/m² in Bellville Central vacancy schedules) indicate persistent leasing pressure. Achieved bands are estimated and may include further concessions depending on lease term and fit-out. |
Residential Property Market
Residential property prices and trends in Bellville• As of Q1 2026
Apartments
Bellville’s apartment market is supported by proximity to employment nodes (Tyger Valley), higher education and medical facilities, and transport connectivity. Sale and rental medians are estimates derived from a directional reading of active listing ranges and published commentary on Bellville demand; Bellville-only achieved-medial statistics by property type are not published openly in a single authoritative dataset.
Townhouses
Townhouse demand is generally driven by security and lock-up-and-go preferences around Tyger Valley and adjacent suburbs. Medians are estimates based on current listing observations and typical rent-to-price positioning in the northern suburbs; verify by micro-area (e.g., Loevenstein vs Tyger Falls vs Boston).
Houses
Freehold pricing varies materially by micro-suburb (Boston, Oakdale, Oakglen, Welgemoed edge) and proximity to schools and transport. The figures shown are estimates consistent with Bellville’s broader affordability advantage relative to many southern and coastal suburbs, informed by listing patterns and Bellville-focused market commentary; confirm with deed-level analytics where available.
Transport & Accessibility
Public transport and commute times from Bellville
Public Transport Routes
Estimated Commute Times
Drive times are indicative averages and vary with traffic, route, and time of day.
| Destination | Distance | Peak Traffic | Off-Peak |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cape Town CBD | 20 km | 50 min | 30 min |
| Century City | 15 km | 35 min | 20 min |
| Cape Town International Airport | 13 km | 35 min | 20 min |
| Stellenbosch | 30 km | 55 min | 35 min |
| Durbanville (central) | 10 km | 25 min | 15 min |
🚶Walkability: Medium
Tyger Valley and Tyger Waterfront offer pockets of walkable amenities around office parks and retail clusters, but the node remains largely car-oriented with wide arterials and discontinuous pedestrian links. Bellville CBD is walkable in parts, but comfort and safety perceptions vary strongly by micro-location and time of day.
🚍Transit Access: High
Bellville is one of Cape Town’s major public transport hubs with rail links and a high-volume taxi interchange. While Tyger Valley itself lacks direct MyCiTi coverage, the broader Bellville node benefits from multi-modal options that support labour access for commercial and industrial occupiers.