The ongoing administration of the upscale Glee Hotel by Equity Bank over a disputed Sh9.1 billion debt is not an isolated case but a stark symptom of a broader crisis gripping Kenya’s real estate sector, where many developers and property owners are struggling to service loans amid high borrowing costs, market oversupply and cash flow challenges.
Businesswoman Mary Wambui Mungai lost her latest bid in the High Court to halt the takeover of the five-star Nairobi hotel. Justice Freda Mugambi ruled that Glee Hotel had failed to provide sufficient grounds to suspend the administration, noting the substantial debt and lack of evidence that the administrator had disrupted operations. The case stems from a collapsed February consent agreement under which the hotel was to repay Sh7.75 billion, a figure Equity Bank says has since ballooned.
This high-profile default highlights several structural problems plaguing the sector. Elevated interest rates, even as the Central Bank of Kenya has eased its base rate, continue to burden developers with expensive loans. Many projects financed during lower-rate periods now face refinancing difficulties at higher costs, squeezing margins and repayment capacity.
Rising construction costs — driven by expensive building materials, inflation and recent tax measures in the Finance Act 2026 — have inflated project budgets far beyond initial projections. Many developers underestimated these escalations or diverted funds from one project to another, leading to delays, stalled sites and eventual defaults.
Weak sales absorption, especially in the off-plan market, has compounded the problem. Buyers have grown wary after numerous cases of abandoned or delayed projects, further drying up revenue streams for developers. Diaspora remittances provide some support, but many investors prefer completed properties or more stable segments.
Broader economic pressures, including tight liquidity in previous years, cautious lending by banks, and political uncertainty, have also played a role. Banks are increasingly classifying real estate loans as non-performing, contributing to elevated impaired loan ratios across the sector.
The Glee Hotel saga and similar cases serve as a wake-up call. Real estate remains a critical pillar of Kenya’s economy and urbanization drive, but without better financial planning, realistic market assessments, stricter project oversight and more innovative financing models such as REITs and stablecoin-enabled payments, more properties risk falling into distress.
As the sector resets in 2026, sustainable success will depend on developers shifting toward demand-driven, phased projects and prudent leverage rather than aggressive borrowing based on optimistic assumptions. For many, the era of easy money in real estate appears to be ending.














