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Gross vs. Net Yield in Kenya: Why the Gap Is Wider Than You Think

· 8 min read· James Mwangi
Gross vs. Net Yield in Kenya: Why the Gap Is Wider Than You Think

Gross vs. Net Yield in Kenya: Why the Gap Is Wider Than You Think

Gross yield is a marketing metric. It is calculated before vacancy, management fees, maintenance reserves, county rates, insurance, and KRA rental income tax. Kenyan investors routinely quote it as if it were the actual return. It is not. Across Nairobi's prime residential submarkets — Kilimani, Lavington, Westlands, and Kileleshwa — the average delta between gross and net yield runs between 280 and 420 basis points. That gap is the difference between a defensible investment thesis and a compounding capital erosion event.

The Gross Yield Calculation and Its Limitations

Gross rental yield is arithmetically simple: annual rent income divided by acquisition cost, expressed as a percentage. A two-bedroom apartment in Kilimani acquired at KES 12 million generating KES 1.08 million in annual rent yields 9% gross. The number is clean. The number is also incomplete.

It excludes every cost of property ownership except the purchase price. In a market where property management is routinely necessary, maintenance reserves are non-trivial, vacancy cycles are measurable, and KRA enforces a 10% monthly rental income (MRI) tax on gross receipts, the gross yield figure is a starting point for analysis, not a conclusion.

What the Net Yield Calculation Actually Requires

To derive a defensible net yield, apply the following deduction framework to gross income:

Cost CategoryTypical Range (% of Gross Rent)Notes
Property management fee8%–12%Higher for furnished or serviced units
Vacancy allowance8%–15%Use 12% for Nairobi prime residential; higher for secondary
Maintenance & repairs reserve5%–10%Escalates in older buildings; budget 8% for assets 10+ years
KRA Monthly Rental Income Tax10% of grossFlat rate; no expense deductions under MRI regime
County rates & land rent1%–2%Varies by county and property classification
Insurance0.5%–1%Structural and landlord liability cover

Sources: KRA MRI Guidelines 2025, Nairobi City County Rates Schedule, Murivest internal benchmarks

Summing the midpoints of these ranges produces a total cost load of approximately 38%–42% of gross rental income. Applied to that 9% gross yield apartment: net yield falls to approximately 5.2%–5.6%. That is the real return before financing costs.

Why Investors Consistently Overprice Net Yield Assumptions

Three structural biases distort Kenyan investor yield expectations.

The first is vacancy underestimation. Developers presenting investment projections routinely use 5% vacancy assumptions for Nairobi residential. The actual long-run vacancy in prime Kilimani and Westlands residential stock, per Cytonn Research FY2025 data, tracks closer to 10%–14%. For secondary locations the figure reaches 18%–22%.

The second is MRI tax invisibility. Many investors, particularly those operating informally, exclude rental income tax from their return calculations entirely. KRA's enforcement of the Monthly Rental Income regime has intensified since 2023, and the 10% gross levy — levied on receipts without expense deductions — is a significant cost that materially reduces net yield.

The third is maintenance reserve denial. Kenyan investors consistently underbudget maintenance, particularly in the first three years of ownership when assets appear to require minimal intervention. By years five through eight, the deferred maintenance bill arrives simultaneously with a refinancing event. The combination is avoidable through disciplined reserve funding from day one.

Net Yield by Submarket: The Current Evidence Base

Cytonn Research FY2025 provides the most granular public benchmarking of Nairobi residential returns. Prime residential nodes — Kilimani, Lavington, Loresho, and Runda — produce average net yields of 4.5%–5.8% on stabilised assets. Westlands and Spring Valley, where dollar-denominated lease structures are more common, can achieve 5.5%–6.5% net where tenants include multinational employees and diplomatic staff.

Secondary nodes including Ruaka, Athi River, and Kitengela produce higher gross yields — frequently quoted at 11%–14% — but net yield compression is severe once vacancy, management intensity, and infrastructure-related maintenance costs are properly modelled.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate gross rental yield in Kenya?

Gross yield equals annual rent divided by purchase price, expressed as a percentage. A KES 8M property earning KES 720,000 per annum produces a 9% gross yield. This figure excludes all operating costs and is therefore misleading as a standalone investment metric.

What costs reduce gross yield to net yield in Kenya?

Key deductions include: property management fees (8%–12% of gross rent), maintenance and service charge reserves (5%–10%), annual vacancy allowance (10%–15%), KRA Monthly Rental Income Tax (10% of gross rent), property rates, and insurance premiums.

What is a realistic net yield target for residential property in Nairobi?

For prime residential in Kilimani, Westlands, and Lavington, realistic net yields in 2025 range from 4.5%–6.0%. Secondary locations may offer higher gross yields but rarely exceed 6.5% net after accounting for higher vacancy and management intensity.

Net yield is the only metric that matters for income-producing property. Model it honestly before acquisition. The gross yield number on the term sheet is a starting point for negotiation, not a basis for capital allocation.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Investors should undertake independent financial and legal due diligence before making any property acquisition decision.

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James Mwangi

Murivest Editorial

Written by the Murivest team — analysts, advisors, and deal-doers based in Nairobi. We write from the field, not from a template.

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