Quarterly year-on-year residential rental growth continues to accelerate, reaching its higher level since the first quarter of 2017, according to PayProp’s most recent Rental Index which shows that rental growth reached 4.4% in both April and May 2023, followed by 4.2% in June 2023. The average national rent figure now stands at R8 375.
Head of Data Analytics at PayProp, Johette Smuts, says that for the first time since before Covid-19, residential rental growth is approaching the rate of consumer price inflation. Interest rates may now have reached their peak following SARB’s decision to hold them steady in July 2023, and this places the rental industry on the brink of its first real-term gains in some time.
All of South Africa’s provinces posted positive growth during Q2 2023 with the majority falling within a percentage point of the 4.4% national average. The wealthiest province, Gauteng, showed year-on-year rental growth of 4.5% taking the average rent in the province to R8 691 during that quarter – a particularly strong performance after a sluggish first quarter when Gauteng posted the second slowest rental growth at just 3.1%.
The Western Cape remains the most expensive province to rent in despite a weaker performance in terms of growth during the quarter. Average rents reached R9 730 in Q2 from R9 462 a year earlier, but year-on-year growth was just 2.8% – the second lowest in the country and well below the 5% set the previous quarter.
KwaZulu-Natal recorded 4.4% growth in the quarter, putting it right on the national average. However, this is a slowdown compared to Q1’s 5.%. KZN remains South Africa’s third most expensive province in which to rent with an average monthly rent of R8 817.
In terms of rental pricing, Mpumalanga is South Africa’s most average province with tenants paying R8 281 during the quarter. Rents in the province are less than R100 from the national average of R8 375 after a solid rental growth rate of 5.2%.
Rental growth in the Northern Cape slowed slightly from the blistering 10.2% in Q1 to 6.8% in Q2. The province experienced the biggest average rental increase in cash terms at R590 year-on-year, from R8 626 to R9 216.
While rents have gone up, data taken from credit checks on rental applicants shows that tenants’ incomes have comfortably outpaced rents across most income brackets – and even beaten inflation. Previously, analysts have warned that affordability pressures on tenants could stifle rental growth, but according to PayProp that hasn’t been the case so far despite a slight increase in arrears.
“With rents and incomes rising and inflation falling, Q2 brought good news for landlords, tenants and rental agents,” says Smuts.
“The residential rental sector has endured challenging conditions over the last few years and it’s encouraging to be able to report on sustained, positive rental growth.”