In Africa’s rapidly growing real estate market, glossy architectural plans and high-gloss brochures are cheap at a dime a dozen. Sky-scraping towers, ocean-view villas, intelligent city-living, and luxury to “feel” are all being promised by developers. But for seasoned investors and astute homeowners, true luxury is found in certainty—and it begins with one key discipline: scrutinizing the developer.
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Too many have lost money not because of poor location or market forces, but because they had put their trust in the wrong builder. In a regulatory context where the supervision is typically patchy and projects are constantly delayed, the difference between a profitable deal and a legal nightmare is typically in the credibility, reputation, and governance of the developer.
Vetting isn’t about asking for a company profile—it’s a science and an art form. It begins with scrutinizing the developer’s record. What did they develop before? Are they finished? Ahead of schedule? Leased? Working? Visit ongoing developments. Interview residents or commercial tenants. Look behind the facade—are the lifts working? Is plumbing efficient? Are service charges being well spent? Is property appreciating over time?
Track record matters. In every African city, there are new developers daily who offer luxury at prices that cannot be beat. But they are mere shell companies created specifically to raise funds—only to vanish when things turn against them. Serious investors should never gamble on a dream before first proving the capacity to deliver.
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Just as important is the funding structure of the development. Is the project self-financed? Off-plan sales-based? Third-party financiers employed? Project financing transparency is a giveaway to legitimacy. When a developer is evasive about where the money is being supplied—or sent—there’s a red flag.
Due diligence is valuable legally, too. Can the titles to property be confirmed? Have the environmental and building permits been acquired? Has the development been approved by the relevant municipal or state authorities? The top developers send you these documents upfront before you even request them. The lower ones delay with “we’re working on it.”
And then, naturally, there is the governance. Who are the people behind the project? Who sits on the board? Who takes care of the legal and financials? Developers with strong corporate governance tend to be less likely to default or cut corners. They understand that in high-end real estate, reputation is capital.
Investors would also prefer to look at developers who believe in post-sale responsibility and support. The interaction should not end with key handover. Often, good developers extend good facility management partnerships, service guarantees, and customer-friendly services. These are the projects that attract good tenants, command improved resale value, and can withstand the test of time.
Finally, pay attention to how the developer speaks. Do they over-promise? Do they avoid difficult questions? Or do they speak clearly with timelines and contingency plans? The tone of the developer will reveal as much as their proposal.
In an industry where money is hard-earned and errors cost dollars, to depend on a developer without verification is not ambition—it’s folly. For Africa’s best property investors and purchasers, caution is the luxury. And indeed, as the market continues to mature, the best deals will not go to the highest bidder—but the most attentive questioners.
Because in African real estate today, the most prized thing that you can buy is not land. It’s certainty.