Cape Town CBD Commercial Property Market Insights

Data-driven analysis and expert insights on Cape Town CBD's commercial real estate market

Updated: February 2026Next Update: May 2026

Cape Town CBD: Falling Vacancies, Rising Rents

Cape Town CBD remains South Africa’s most investable inner-city commercial node when asset quality and precinct performance are right, with late-2024 data showing a lower office vacancy rate and rental growth across all grades. The area’s strongest tailwinds come from mixed-use intensification, improved retail stability, and a growing resident base that supports a more resilient, 24-hour economy.

Q1 2026 Snapshot

office Market

9.4%
Total Vacancy
As of Q4 2024
P-Grade Vacancy:4.2% (2,998 m² available)
A-Grade Vacancy:2.0% (7,328 m² available)
B-Grade Vacancy:15.2% (79,348 m² available)
P-Grade Asking Rental (Median Gross):R247/m²

industrial Market

0 listings
Industrial Space Listed
As of February 2026
CBD Industrial Listings (Property24):0 in Cape Town City Centre; nearby Foreshore/Woodstock alternatives shown
Indicative CBD-Fringe Light-Industrial Asking:~R120/m² (example: R242,280 for 2,019 m²)
Typical Tenant Profiles:Last-mile storage, workshops, specialist fit-out users
Supply Constraint:Highly limited in CBD grid; most stock sits in fringe nodes

retail Market

6%
Retail Vacancy
As of Q4 2024
Vacant Retail GLA:16,445 m²
Total Retail Space:274,320 m²
Occupied Retail Space:257,875 m² (+4.4% YoY)
New Retail Supply:The Mutual +7,500 m² (opened late-2024)

Economic Context

6.75%
Repo Rate
At 6.75% as at 20 Feb 2026
As of February 2026
10.25%
Prime Lending Rate
At 10.25% as at 20 Feb 2026 (repo + 3.50pp convention)
As of February 2026
3.50%
CPI Inflation (headline, y/y)
Down from 3.60% in Dec 2025
As of January 2026
R9.031bn
CBD Development Pipeline (value)
Up from R7.285bn in FY2023
As of FY2024/25

Key Market Trends

Vacancy Healing, Rent Growth Returns

Cape Town CBD’s office market showed clear late-cycle recovery signals, with total vacancy tightening while asking rentals rose across every grade. The market’s bifurcation is visible: A-grade space is tight, while B-grade remains the main source of vacancy and incentive pressure.

  • Total office vacancy fell to 9.4% in Q4 2024 (99,166 m² available) from 13.3% in 2023 (107,045 m²).
  • Total CBD office stock (occupied + vacant) ended 2024 at 1,053,255 m², with B-grade comprising ~523,700 m² (about half of stock).
  • Median gross asking rentals increased across all grades in 2024: P-grade +15% YoY to R247/m²; A-grade +13% to R186/m²; B-grade +5% to R137/m²; C-grade +9% to R107/m².
  • A-grade vacancy tightened materially to 2.0% (7,328 m²), while B-grade vacancy remained elevated at 15.2% (79,348 m²).
  • By end-2024 the CBD was the only Cape Town node with any P-grade space available, limited to 2,998 m².

Retail Mix Shifts, Vacancy Stable

CBD retail remained comparatively resilient on CCID-measured metrics, with vacancy holding steady as new space was absorbed. The trend is less about overall vacancy and more about tenant rotation, convenience-led anchors, and precinct-level performance differences.

  • Retail vacancy across the Central City remained stable at 6.0% in 2024 (16,445 m² vacant out of 274,320 m² total).
  • Occupied retail space increased to 257,875 m² in 2024 from 247,023 m² in 2023 (+4.4%).
  • The Mutual shopping centre opened towards the end of 2024, adding 7,500 m² of retail space in Precinct 2 with national tenants (e.g., Checkers, Mr Price).
  • Precinct 4 maintained the strongest occupancy at ~97% in 2024 (94,567 m² occupied of 97,464 m²).
  • The Felix maintained its retail GLA at 12,610 m² (2023 and 2024), reinforcing the Strand/Adderley core as a managed retail destination.

Residentialisation Drives a More 24-Hour CBD

The CBD’s investment narrative is increasingly mixed-use and residential-led, supported by price growth and strong formal rental demand for small units. This underpins footfall, supports convenience retail, and creates a deeper after-hours economy that benefits well-managed precincts.

  • Median sectional title price in the Central City rose to R1.85 million in 2024 (from R1.59 million in 2023, +16.3% YoY) and reached R1.95 million by end-January 2025 (+5.4%).
  • Total residential units in the Central City were recorded at 6,819 by mid-2025, with the Foreshore the largest node (~34.5% of apartments).
  • Formal long-stay apartment rentals (Property24 listings sample) showed higher rents versus early-2023: Studio average R15,017 vs R11,586; 1-bed average R15,850 vs R14,233; 2-bed average R28,630 vs R24,750.
  • 23 Lower Long (Foreshore) is set to deliver 442 partly furnished apartments aimed at more affordable long-stay rentals (not short-term lets).
  • Golden Acre’s redevelopment plan targets 414 affordable rental units by early 2027, reinforcing the station/Adderley axis as a residential-led regeneration corridor.

Capital Recycling and Flagship Asset Trades

A small number of very large CBD assets are catalysing market attention—through outright sales and potential municipal divestment. These moves signal both investor appetite for prime, well-located buildings and a policy push to redirect capital into core municipal services and precinct performance.

  • The Cavaleros Group announced its acquisition of Portside Towers (total GLA 25,154 m²). Deal value was not publicly disclosed, but the trade is a high-profile CBD benchmark transaction.
  • The City of Cape Town initiated a public participation process for the proposed sale of its 72.7% stake in the CTICC, with reported valuation around R885 million.
  • Golden Acre Shopping Centre was sold for R781 million and is earmarked for conversion into 414 affordable rental apartments (completion targeted for early 2027).
  • CCID reported CBD property development value exceeding R9.031 billion in 2024/25, supporting an active development and refurbishment pipeline that affects supply and tenant options.

Notable Transactions

Golden Acre Complex – Sale & Redevelopment Plan

2025-08-18Sale
R781 million

A rare CBD-scale trade of a landmark retail and commuter-linked asset, paired with a major repositioning into affordable rental housing (414 units planned). The project highlights the CBD’s pivot toward mixed-use intensification around transit corridors.

Portside Towers – Acquisition by The Cavaleros Group

2025-12-04Sale
Undisclosed

High-profile ownership change of Cape Town’s most recognisable premium office tower, signaling continued investor appetite for prime, Green Star-rated CBD assets with blue-chip tenancy profiles.

City of Cape Town – Proposed Sale of 72.7% CTICC Stake

2025-08-21Sale
~R885 million (reported valuation)

A potential municipal divestment of a strategic Foreshore convention asset intended to redirect capital into core service delivery, with implications for Foreshore regeneration and event-economy-driven demand supports.

The Mutual Shopping Centre – New Retail Supply and Anchors

2024-12Development
+7,500 m² retail GLA

A major CBD retail intervention that expanded precinct-level supply while keeping overall vacancy stable, pointing to absorbable demand for convenience-led formats in managed nodes.

23 Lower Long (Foreshore) – Affordable Rental Delivery

2025-08Development
442 apartments (partly furnished)

Adds long-stay rental stock targeted at affordability gaps, supporting CBD residentialisation and reinforcing the Foreshore as the dominant residential node in the Central City.

The Rubik – Additional P-Grade Office Supply (Mixed-Use)

2024-12Development
~5,000 m² P-grade offices

A premium mixed-use add that expanded the P-grade office pool and strengthened Grade-A+ options in the CBD’s deeper East/Loop Street corridor.

Ninety One (Growthpoint) – New Office Build in the Pipeline

2024-12Development
R600 million (reported project value)

One of the few purely commercial pipeline projects noted in 2024/25, indicating selective development appetite concentrated in quality-led, finance/legal-adjacent locations.

Cautious Optimism with Clear Grade Divergence

Cape Town CBD enters 2026 with improved office fundamentals (lower vacancy and higher asking rentals versus 2023) and stable retail performance, alongside a strong mixed-use and residential pipeline. The near-term market is likely to reward asset quality and active management: premium and resilient buildings in well-run precincts should outperform, while older B/C stock remains exposed to structural vacancy and higher leasing incentives.

Office

Office fundamentals improved by end-2024, supporting a cautiously positive 2026 outlook. P- and A-grade buildings are expected to continue leasing best, while B-grade must clear through sharper net-effective pricing, incentives and repositioning. Select new projects add premium choice, but older stock will likely keep incentives elevated where large blocks of space must be absorbed.

Industrial

The CBD has effectively no traditional industrial inventory, so occupier demand is mainly served by Foreshore and inner-city fringe nodes. Where workshop or storage space does come up close to the CBD grid, scarcity and accessibility can support firm rentals, but market evidence is thin and deals are bespoke. Industrial investment opportunities are niche and generally focused on small-format last-mile usable space.

Retail

Retail vacancy has been stable in the Central City and is expected to remain relatively steady into 2026. Anchored, managed retail and street retail linked to residential and tourism footfall should outperform. Secondary streets and older arcades may see higher churn, while nodes near Adderley/Golden Acre benefit from ongoing regeneration and commuter flows.

Investment Considerations

Opportunities

  • Acquire well-located P- and A-grade CBD assets (Foreshore and Loop/Strand corridors) where tight A-grade vacancy supports leasing momentum and ESG/efficiency features justify premium rents.
  • Target B-grade towers with large vacancy pools for repositioning: phased refurbishment, serviced-office insertion, or office-to-residential / mixed-use conversion strategies where zoning and structure allow.
  • Retail value-add around the station/Adderley spine: convenience and food-led tenanting tied to commuter and resident demand, particularly where regeneration projects (e.g., Golden Acre) increase footfall.
  • Participate in mixed-use development partnerships in the Central City pipeline where office components are paired with residential and hospitality to diversify income streams.
  • Small-format last-mile/storage plays in the CBD fringe (Foreshore) where true industrial supply is scarce, focusing on secure-access, flexible, multi-tenant layouts.
  • Acquire heritage buildings in walkable precincts for boutique office, creative studios or destination retail, using sensitive upgrades and strong building management to capture niche demand.

Risks

  • Structural oversupply in B-grade office stock can keep incentives elevated and soften net-effective rentals even when headline asking rentals rise.
  • Execution risk on conversions and mixed-use repositioning (capex, approvals, heritage constraints, contractor capacity, and letting risk).
  • Perceptions of CBD safety and public-realm quality vary block-by-block; weak precinct management can undermine tenant attraction even where macro metrics improve.
  • Interest rate volatility and funding costs impact feasibility of refurbishments and conversions despite currently subdued inflation.
  • Municipal service reliability (electricity, water, waste, roadworks) remains a key tenant decision factor; buildings without resilient infrastructure can be structurally disadvantaged.

Building Directory

14 commercial buildings surveyed in Cape Town CBD

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.

Grade P

Portside (Portside Towers)

5 Buitengracht Street, Cape Town CBD, 8001

Portside is a flagship P-grade office tower in Cape Town CBD offering blue-chip appeal and strong ESG positioning. The building is Green Star-rated and benefits from excellent visibility on the Buitengracht/Bree edge, supporting corporate branding. Large, efficient floorplates and concierge-style arrival make it suitable for HQ tenants, finance and professional services. On-site security, basement parking and modern services underpin operational reliability. Portside typically competes at the top end of CBD rentals, but delivers a premium address and long-term tenant retention advantages.

GLA25,154
Floors32
Parking613 bays (2.4:100)
RentalR310/m²
5-Star Green Star24/7 securityEV charging baysHigh-speed fibre connectivityBasement parking

"A top-tier CBD address with strong tenant appeal and ESG credentials; best suited to corporates prioritising brand and resilience. Parking ratios are competitive for the CBD but costs and access management should be budgeted carefully."

Grade P

The Box

9 Lower Burg Street, Cape Town CBD, 8001

The Box at 9 Lower Burg Street is a landmark P-grade office tower in Cape Town CBD with a curated ground-floor retail offering and strong commuter accessibility. With a gross lettable area of roughly 26,257 m² and large, efficient floorplates, it suits scaling tech, financial and professional services occupiers. The building’s modern lobby experience, fibre connectivity and strong parking provision support premium tenant expectations. Its position near the Foreshore and public transport interchange makes it attractive for staff commuting. In the CBD context, The Box tends to trade as a ‘flight-to-quality’ option and can command above-market rents for fitted space.

GLA26,257
Floors31
Parking570 bays (2.2:100)
RentalR195 - R210/m²
No load shedding (backup power)Column-free floorplatesFibre-readyConcierge / modern lobby experienceOn-site retail (Salt Market)

"One of the CBD’s most marketable premium towers, especially for tech and professional tenants wanting a modern lobby and strong commuting access. Effective rentals can be very competitive for premium space when compared with decentralised nodes, but availability is typically limited."

Grade P

35 Lower Long

35 Lower Long Street, Foreshore, Cape Town CBD, 8001

35 Lower Long is a modern P-grade office tower in the Foreshore precinct of Cape Town CBD, designed around efficient floorplates and strong street activation. With approximately 14,400 m² of lettable space and a Green Star design focus, it appeals to occupiers seeking a premium address with measurable building efficiencies. The tower’s location provides quick access to the N1/N2 and the CTICC/V&A Waterfront.co.za/) corridor, supporting client-facing businesses. A mix of conventional office floors and flexible suite options broadens demand beyond traditional corporates. Asking rentals are typically premium for the CBD, reflecting quality and views.

GLA14,400
Floors14
Parking284 bays (2:100)
RentalR225 - R285/m²
4-Star Green-rated designFlexi Suites (semi-serviced option)24/7 security and access controlFibre-readyHigh parking provision for CBD

"A true ‘statement’ Foreshore building that competes directly with the CBD’s best product. Works well for professional services and corporates that value views, parking and highway access; effective cost depends heavily on fit-out requirements and tenant allowances."

Grade P

The Rubik

19 Loop Street (Loop/Strand precinct), Cape Town CBD, 8001

The Rubik is a premium mixed-use development in Cape Town CBD that introduced new P-grade office product alongside hospitality and urban amenities. The office component (about 5,000 m² noted as added to the CBD pool) targets occupiers seeking a modern, design-led environment with strong lifestyle positioning. Its Loop/Strand area location supports a walkable, amenity-rich workday and short connections to the Foreshore and inner-city core. The Rubik competes for ‘flight-to-quality’ demand, typically outperforming older stock on tenant perception. For investors, it is best viewed as a core-plus premium office play within an increasingly mixed-use CBD.

GLA5,000
Floors15
Parking160 bays (3:100)
RentalR265 - R289/m²
P-grade office componentMixed-use amenities on-siteModern façade and lobbyFibre-readyLifestyle-led location

"High-quality mixed-use product that appeals to premium tenants and supports a modern ‘live-work-play’ CBD narrative."

More Commercial Buildings

Grade A

11 Adderley Street (Eleven Adderley)

11 Adderley Street, Cape Town CBD, 8001

11 Adderley Street (often marketed as Eleven Adderley) is an A-grade refurbished tower in Cape Town CBD with strong public transport access and a land...

GLA20,000
Floors10
Parking800 bays (4:100)
RentalR150 - R185/m²
Refurbished A-grade interiorsBackup generatorFibre-ready24/7 security and access control

"Strong option for larger tenants wanting the Adderley Street transit spine at a by-the-square-metre cost below P-grade towers."

Grade A

2 Long Street

2 Long Street, Cape Town CBD, 8001

2 Long Street is a modernised A/AAA-grade office address in Cape Town CBD with direct access to the Foreshore and key arterial routes. It is typically...

GLA15,000
Floors12
Parking450 bays (3:100)
RentalR185 - R220/m²
AAA/A-grade positioning24/7 securityFibre-readyClose to N1/N2 access

"A strong ‘corporate value’ CBD option: modern enough to satisfy most occupiers while pricing below the very top tier."

Grade A

Newspaper House

112 St Georges Mall, Cape Town CBD, 8001

Newspaper House is a character-rich A-grade office option on St Georges Mall in Cape Town CBD, combining a heritage façade with flexible modern worksp...

GLA15,000
Floors6
Parking90 bays (0.6:100)
RentalR170 - R180/m²
Heritage characterCBD pedestrian spine locationFibre-readyFlexible floor layouts

"Well-positioned for tenants that want St Georges Mall visibility and a central address without premium-tower pricing. Parking is limited by design (typical for the CBD core), so it works best for public-transport-heavy workforces."

Grade A

The Felix

58 Strand Street, Cape Town CBD, 8001

The Felix at 58 Strand Street is a landmark mixed-use complex in Cape Town CBD, combining substantial managed retail with upper-level commercial accom...

GLA35,000
Floors12
Parking350 bays (1:100)
RentalR168 - R300/m²
Managed retail centre on-siteHigh footfall Strand Street locationFibre-readyMixed-use amenities

"A strong amenity play: tenants benefit from managed retail and food options on-site, supporting staff experience and client convenience. Best for firms that value location and amenities"

Grade A

14 Long

14 Long Street, Cape Town CBD, 8001

14 Long is a boutique A-grade commercial building in Cape Town CBD, representing the smaller end of new or upgraded supply in the Central City pipelin...

GLA2,500
Floors5
Parking25 bays (1:100)
RentalR185 - R200/m²
Boutique CBD footprintFibre-readyGood natural light (typical for low-rise CBD refurb)Walkable amenities

"A niche option for smaller tenants wanting a credible CBD address without the complexity of large multi-tenant towers. Availability can be lumpy due to the small size, so it’s best for tenants with flexible timing."

Grade B

1 Thibault Square

1 Thibault Square, Cape Town CBD (Foreshore), 8001

1 Thibault Square is a large-format B-grade office landmark on the Foreshore edge of Cape Town CBD, historically positioned near the city’s financial ...

GLA31,000
Floors25
Parking500 bays (1.6:100)
RentalR170 /m²
Large contiguous floor opportunitiesForeshore arterial accessMulti-tenant flexibilityFibre typically available (building dependent)

"Best suited to large tenants prioritising scale, access and cost control. Competes on net-effective rent and fit-out allowances versus newer towers; due diligence should focus on building services, backup power readiness and upgrade history."

Grade C

Constitution House

99 St Georges Mall (Adderley/Church area), Cape Town CBD, 8001

Constitution House is a value-focused C-grade office option in Cape Town CBD, positioned near civic and legal amenities and within walking distance of...

GLA8,000
Floors8
Parking60 bays (0.8:100)
RentalR90 - R110/m²
Central civic locationCost-competitive rentalsBasic securityClose to rail/bus/taxi connections

"A classic C-grade CBD play: it works for price-driven occupiers and can be improved through targeted upgrades. Leasing success depends on refurb quality and the ability to offer flexible deals; investors should consider repositioning, mixed-use conversion or sectional strategies."

Rental Rates by Building Grade

Office rental rates in Cape Town CBD (R//month)• As of Q4 2024 (SAPOA medians) with Q1 2026 listing checks

GradeAsking (R/)Achieved (R/)TrendNotes
PremiumR185/m² - R285/m²R165/m² - R260/m²+15.4%Asking levels are anchored by SAPOA-reported median gross asking rental of R247/m² in Q4 2024 for Cape Town Central City, with current premium listings spanning roughly the high-R100s to high-R200s depending on fit-out, views and backup power. Achieved rentals are not published at node level; achievedMin/Max are estimates assuming incentives and negotiation reduce effective rentals by ~5–15% for larger deals.
A GradeR150/m² - R220/m²R140/m² - R205/m²+12.7%SAPOA-reported median gross asking rental for A-grade in Cape Town Central City was R186/m² in Q4 2024 (up 13% YoY). Current A-grade asking evidence clusters around the mid-R100s to low-R200s depending on location and fit-out. Achieved rentals are not published at node level; achievedMin/Max are estimated as a modest discount to asking to reflect incentives and negotiations.
B GradeR100/m² - R160/m²R90/m² - R145/m²+5.4%B-grade remains the CBD’s largest vacancy pool, so asking rentals can be wide by building and lease size. SAPOA-reported median gross asking rental was R137/m² in Q4 2024 (+5% YoY), but net-effective deals may be materially lower where incentives are required to absorb larger blocks.
C GradeR80/m² - R120/m²R70/m² - R110/m²+9.2%C-grade asking rentals are supported by affordability and centrality rather than building specification. SAPOA-reported median gross asking rental was R107/m² in Q4 2024 (+9% YoY), but leasing outcomes are dominated by unit condition and the extent of landlord-funded upgrades.

Residential Property Market

Residential property prices and trends in Cape Town CBD• As of Q1 2026

🏢

Apartments

Median Sale Price
R1 850 000
16.3% YoY
Median Rental
R15 850/pm
4.3% YoY
Medium Stock

Central City apartment pricing has shown strong momentum, with median sectional-title prices rising in 2024 and continuing into early-2025. Rental indicators from formal long-stay listings suggest upward movement, but the rentalTrendPercent is an annualised estimate derived from early-2023 to August-2025 listing averages, not a same-month YoY figure.

🏘️

Townhouses

Median Sale Price
R3 500 000
0
Median Rental
R20 000/pm
3% YoY
Low Stock

True townhouse stock within the CBD core is limited and listing samples are thin, so these medians are indicative estimates based on sparse CBD/City Bowl fringe listings and should be treated as directional. Townhouse demand is typically niche and driven by lifestyle and security considerations rather than mainstream CBD supply.

🏠

Houses

Median Sale Price
R8 000 000
0
Median Rental
R35 000/pm
0
Low Stock

Freehold houses are rare in the Cape Town CBD footprint; 'house' market indicators are therefore low-confidence and essentially proxy measures from a very small listing base in adjacent City Bowl pockets. For most residential investment decisions in the CBD, apartments dominate the relevant market.

Transport & Accessibility

Public transport and commute times from Cape Town CBD

Public Transport Routes

🚌MyCiTi T01 (Dunoon – Table View – Civic Centre – Waterfront)
High-frequency trunk service; timetable indicates closely spaced weekday departures on the Civic Centre corridor
To: Civic Centre, Table View, Dunoon, V&A Waterfront
🚌MyCiTi A01 (Airport – Civic Centre)
Every 20 minutes when operating (MyCiTi notes the airport service is temporarily suspended; confirm current status)
To: Cape Town International Airport, Civic Centre (CBD connection)
🚆Metrorail: Cape Town Station commuter rail services
Schedule-based; peak-focused commuter services (frequency varies by line and operational reliability)
To: Southern Suburbs (via Southern Line), Cape Flats corridor (via Cape Flats Line), Bellville corridor (via Northern Line connections)
🚐CBD minibus-taxi ranks (Cape Town Station / Grand Parade area)
Turn-up-and-go in peak periods; high frequency on main commuter routes
To: Khayelitsha, Mitchells Plain, Bellville, Southern Suburbs interchange points

Estimated Commute Times

Drive times are indicative averages and vary with traffic, route, and time of day.

DestinationDistancePeak TrafficOff-Peak
V&A Waterfront (est.)2.5 km15 min10 min
Century City (est.)12 km35 min20 min
Claremont (est.)11 km45 min25 min
Bellville (est.)28 km60 min35 min
Cape Town International Airport (est.)20 km50 min30 min

🚶Walkability: High

The CBD’s compact grid, high amenity density (retail, civic, hospitality) and growing residential base support strong walkability for most day-to-day needs. Walkability is best in well-managed precincts and main pedestrian corridors (e.g., St Georges Mall), while perceived safety and street activation can vary by block and time of day.

🚍Transit Access: High

Cape Town CBD benefits from the city’s primary public transport hubs, including Civic Centre MyCiTi interchanges, multiple MyCiTi routes, and Cape Town Station rail and bus connections. Transit quality is strong in network coverage and accessibility, but reliability can vary by mode, especially for rail, so resilient tenants often value proximity to multiple transport options.

Explore Properties in Cape Town CBD

Last Updated: February 2026Next Update: May 2026