Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Property prices in Cape Town are reaching record highs as affordability reaches its limit

Date:

Western Cape Property Trends: What Teens Need to Know

Why Buyers Are Leaving Cape Town

Cape Town has long been a dream spot for many South Africans. Lately, however, prices in the city have climbed so high that even middle‑class families are looking elsewhere. Real‑estate expert Frans Stander notes that buyers are now moving to smaller towns in the Western Cape for more space, nature, and a slower pace of life.

Main Reasons Behind the Move

  • People want bigger homes and easy access to beaches, mountains, or farms.
  • Remote and hybrid work means the daily commute to an office matters less.
  • Outside the metro, you get more house for your money.

Does Cape Town Still Make Financial Sense?

Frans points out that many buyers are now asking whether buying in Cape Town is still a smart money move. With prices rising, some are turning to Gauteng where homes are cheaper and rentals are easier to find. This creates two parallel trends:

  • Western Cape residents moving inland to towns like Tulbagh, Barrydale, Paternoster, Bonnievale, and Kleinmond.
  • Gauteng regaining interest as a value‑focused alternative.

Questions Raised by the Shift

  1. Is Cape Town turning into a premium‑only market rather than a place for everyday families?
  2. Can small towns handle the extra demand without overloading roads, schools, and water supplies?
  3. Will Gauteng become attractive again for a new generation of buyers?

History Repeating Itself

Commercial‑real‑estate specialist Regan van As reminds us that today’s hotspots were once quiet villages. Camps Bay, for example, started as a small coastal town before becoming a luxury destination. The Garden Route is already booming, with George set to grow fast and the West Coast following suit.

Cape Town No Longer Fits the Middle‑Class Budget

Regan adds that while good municipalities, safety, and quality of life still draw people west, the old “geographical arbitrage” – getting a better deal by moving a bit outside the city – has disappeared. Cape Town is now priced out of reach for many families seeking a fair deal.

Atlantic Coast: A Selective Market

Finella Botes, a high‑end advisor at Seeff Atlantic Seaboard, says agents do not set prices; buyers do. The Atlantic coast has always been premium, but today it is far more selective. Only those who truly value the location and are willing to pay the asking price are active in the market.

She also notes that working in this market does not mean she lives there. Like many professionals, she makes practical choices about where she resides, showing that even experts feel the pressure of high prices.

Conclusion

The Western Cape property scene is shifting. Buyers are chasing space, nature, and affordability, pushing them toward smaller towns or even back to Gauteng. While Cape Town remains a beautiful place, its price tag now puts it out of reach for many middle‑class families. Whether these trends will continue depends on how well infrastructure keeps up with demand and how buyers reassess what “value for money” really means.

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