Affordability, land pricing, and the weight of foreign capital dominated the conversation around Egypt’s real estate market as an investment asset, with developers warning that current dynamics risk locking inflation and delivery risk into the sector for years to come. Those issues were front and center at AmCham’s flagship real estate conference yesterday. The session brought together Sherif El Kilany, vice minister of finance for tax policies; Hazem Badran, co-CEO and managing director of Palm Hills Development; Ibrahim El Messiri, CEO of Abu Soma Touristic Development Company, and Tamer Nasser, CEO of City Edge Developments. Patrick, our editor-in-chief, moderated the panel.

Developers agreed that affordability pressures have intensified across both primary and secondary housing, with prices rising far faster than incomes. Egypt’s GDP per capita sits at roughly USD 3k, a mismatch that has become more visible as residential prices climb into tens on mns of EGP. Rising foreign demand — now extending beyond Egyptian expats to include Gulf and European buyers — has broadened the investor base, but also tightened access for middle-class Egyptians seeking homes for end use.

Land pricing emerged as the central structural driver. Badran argued that the way land is priced and allocated now shapes inflation across the entire sector. “The government and the regulatory body should not look at land as a profit center alone,” he said. “Whatever the land is going to be priced at, we’re going to build over that — and the entire market will follow.”

Developer receivables may now exceed deposits held in the retail banking sector, Badran argued. Over the past 3-4 years, real estate has increasingly become Egypt’s primary store of value, particularly after the post-2021 inflation shock, he said.

Recent land auctions have amplified the distortion. One New Cairo plot measuring roughly two mn sqm drew bids from all major developers, but ultimately sold at around double what the largest players were willing to pay to a company with no track record. “Nothing much has happened there since,” Badran noted, warning that land is increasingly being warehoused rather than developed.

Correcting that distortion requires tighter alignment between land offerings and developer capability. “There needs to be regulation on the correlation between the size of lands offered and the developer’s track record,” Badran said, alongside financial screening to ensure developers can service land obligations typically spread over eight to ten years. Land allocation should align with city master plans and national development goals, he added.

Revenue-share models have intensified the strain. El Messiri drew a clear line around project viability. “On the residential side, land cost cannot exceed 15% of the sticker price,” he said. That threshold has been repeatedly breached. Revenue-share ratios that once hovered between 22% and 27% climbed to around 30%, then 35% last year, and have now reached as high as 50% in recent transactions.

At those levels project economics collapse, El Messiri warned. “If you’re selling at EGP 100k per sqm and the state is taking 50%, you cannot finance ten-year payment plans, build, or even make a penny,” he said. Developers accepting such terms, he added, are locking in losses. “It’s a train crash waiting to happen.”

Affordability limits are already reshaping demand. Upper middle-class buyers begin dropping out once prices approach EGP 15 mn, El Messiri noted. “If you hit EGP 7 mn, we call it the sweet spot,” he said — adding that such a product effectively no longer exists unless values are being artificially understated. With construction and logistics costs still rising — transportation alone now accounting for up to 60% of material costs in some cases.

A new re-gentrification trend is emerging, particularly on the North Coast, where buyers are adjusting by trading newness for price, El Messiri noted. Newer developments now command EGP 15–20 mn for comparable units, while nearby projects in “old Sahel” are trading closer to EGP 6 mn. “People will go back, refinish, and make it affordable,” he said, describing the market’s internal pressure release.

Geography is shifting as well. Nasser highlighted growing interest in non-core areas, including Delta communities and newer extensions such as the sixth, and seventh settlements of New Cairo. These locations offer lower land costs and remain within reach of local purchasing power. “There is a lot of potential out there,” he said, noting that relatively few high-end developers have moved into these markets despite demand.

At the upper end of the market, demand has increasingly decoupled from domestic income levels. Badran attributed this to foreign buyers enabled by heavy investment in roads, transport networks, and airports. “Being predominantly a high-end real estate player, we are selling more to foreigners than ever before … This is due to the fact that we have a very compelling story if we continue to focus on the North Coast,” he said

External dynamics are also playing in Egypt’s favor, Badran added. “Europe is not doing very well for a lot of obvious reasons — the weather specifically for the Gulf clients is better at our end,” he said, citing climate and lifestyle considerations. “There is cultural proximity between Egypt and the Gulf — language, lifestyle, all of that.”

That demand shift is reshaping the product mix. “To cater to these clients you need certain products that were previously unavailable,” Badran said. Those include “products where you get certain services, where you get access — whether through a road network or through airports within proximity.” Increasingly foreign buyers are seeking assets “that would earn money when and if they’re not in use,” he added.

Those buyers are driving demand for branded and serviced residences linked to hospitality. Red Sea developments are attracting European buyers seeking long winter stays. “It’s more affordable for a German to spend winters in the Red Sea than in his house in Germany,” Badran said.

Foreign ownership, however, runs into friction once taxation begins. El Messiri described European homeowners asked to back-pay real estate taxes dating as far back as 2013 — only to discover they cannot pay electronically, cannot use foreign credit cards, and often cannot open local bank accounts. The result has been lawsuits for default, despite attempted compliance.

“If it’s difficult for Egyptians to pay real estate tax, what about foreigners?” El Kilany said, acknowledging the friction and pointing to efforts to simplify property tax payments through an electronic platform set to launch soon. El Kilany also confirmed that the ministry will coordinate with the central bank to resolve the issue of accepting foreign cards.

“We are going to waive the penalties for some time,” El Kilany announced during the panel, adding that penalties will be capped at 100% of the original tax liability — meaning a tax bill of EGP 20, for example, cannot accrue more than EGP 20 in penalties.

Tourism-linked real estate exposed a deeper policy gap. El Messiri contrasted roughly 300k hotel keys built before 2011 with fewer than 10k added since, arguing that the difference was driven by policy rather than investor appetite. “The government had a policy from 1990 until 2010 for incentives for tourism projects … This is directly related to the development of something in the range of 300k keys,” he said.

Developing a hotel typically costs USD 60–100 mn, with projects requiring seven to ten years before reaching a second cycle that demands reinvestment of up to 50% of the original cost, El Messiri explained. This pushes the total capital closer to USD 150 mn before meaningful returns emerge.

Taxing projects heavily before that point makes them unbankable, El Messiri argued. Earlier incentive frameworks — including low-cost land, tax holidays, customs exemptions, and SPVs — were instrumental in scaling capacity. Without them, investment stalls, even as Egypt targets 30–40 mn tourists annually.

The Airbnb model cannot substitute for structured hotel investment, El Messiri warned. “If doubling hotel keys is a national project, let’s go back to the playbook,” he said, arguing that capital is available, but policy alignment remains the bottleneck.