Kenya’s affordable housing challenge is often framed as a supply issue, yet the deeper constraint lies in the structure of housing finance. Demand for housing remains strong, driven by rapid urbanization, population growth and a widening housing deficit. However, demand alone does not deliver viable projects. What matters is financeable demand: households with sufficient purchasing power, access to mortgages, and the ability to absorb completed units. This is where the market continues to struggle.
For developers, affordable housing remains difficult to deliver profitably because the capital available is often misaligned with the economics of the product. Commercial bank debt, which still dominates real estate financing in Kenya, is expensive and relatively short-term compared to the long payback periods of housing developments. At the same time, developers face rising construction costs, infrastructure burdens and slower off-plan absorption, all of which squeeze margins in a segment where pricing flexibility is already limited.
On the demand side, the challenge is equally structural. Kenya’s mortgage market remains shallow, and many households operate within the informal economy, making conventional mortgage qualification difficult. Even where institutions such as the Kenya Mortgage Refinance Company have improved liquidity for lenders, lower mortgage rates alone do not solve affordability where incomes, deposits and unit pricing remain out of sync.
This is why the future of affordable housing in Kenya will be determined less by land availability and more by capital structure. The developers most likely to succeed will be those able to blend lower-cost debt, patient equity, development finance, pre-sales and end-user financing into a viable capital stack. In that sense, Kenya does not simply need more housing supply. It needs a stronger housing finance ecosystem capable of bridging the gap between policy ambition, developer viability and household affordability.












