Kuwait Real Estate Outlook 2025 H2 - The Top Results—What’s Winning and Why
1. Hawalli · Retail — 67.4 (Leader)
If you’re a core/core-plus buyer, this is your first stop. Operator data point to high-90s occupancy at Kuwait’s flagship assets, and the Salmiya corridor’s ground-floor base rents (c. 25–40 KWD/sqm/mo) have held. Two practical drivers matter for you:
- Footfall & tenancy resilience anchored by best-in-class operators (think Avenues-level discipline).
- Mobility upside from the India–Kuwait seat increase feeding Q4/Q1 trade and VFR demand—a meaningful tailwind for retail spend.
Underwrite: Base-rent growth +1–3% (prime) in 6 months, with limited incentive creep. Yield compression of 10–25 bps is plausible on trophy assets if funding remains benign and turnover remains tight.
2. Kuwait City · Retail — 67.3 (Co-leader, slightly different mix)
CBD-adjacent retail benefits from institutional leasing and destination traffic. The leadership story is similar—approximately 98% operator occupancy—but with a tenant mix that skews more towards corporate and experiential. The risk case is less about demand than unit economics for smaller retailers; watch how landlords share fit-out and how turnover rent clauses evolve.
Underwrite: Same headline band as Hawalli, +1–3%, but spend time on tenant-level durability and co-tenancy clauses; your IRR sensitivity sits in downtime and TI, not in rent per se.
3. Hawalli · Residential (Istithmari) — 64.0 (Quiet compounding)
Investment apartments (3BR, 60–110 sqm) in Hawalli, priced at a depth suitable for small-to-mid landlords and steady tenant churn. Rents have been stable to modestly positive; inflation in the housing/rents sub-index is muted. What unlocks upside is not inflation, but rather credit throughput and handover cadence (permits are still the point of opacity).
Underwrite: Rents +1.0–3.0% in 6 months, with cap rates flat to -10 bps on prime blocks where operating costs are managed tightly. If you finance with floating-rate debt, assume ±50 bps KIBOR → ±0.5 pp to rent growth as a sensitivity.
4. Kuwait City · Industrial & Logistics — 63.0 (Tight on storage, spec matters)
Prime Shuwaikh/Al-Rai space continues to command a premium (e.g., Shuwaikh ground-floor around the mid-20s KWD/sqm/mo). The nowcasting gap is in monthly port TEUs (annual baselines are public, but monthly granularity is not); however, operator commentary and rent prints support a tight storage narrative. Spec wins—clear heights, docks, power redundancy.
Underwrite: Rents 0–2% (prime) near-term; 1–+1% on legacy stock depending on spec creep. Your IRR lift comes from asset upgrades (sprinklers, mezz capability) and vacancy shrink, not rate beta.
5. Kuwait City · Alt-Assets (Data centers/Healthcare) — 62.6 (Power-gated upside)
Multiple Tier III facilities and corporate DC footprints exist, but power allocations and fiber routes determine timing. The Ministry’s capacity plan (+14.05 GW by 2031) is constructive; near-term execution and seasonal peak loads remain the swing factor.
Underwrite: Flat to +3% for wholesale/cage pricing if you secure MW and cross-connects. Treat power lead times as a schedule risk, not a footnote. For healthcare real estate, growth is steady, not explosive; focus on operator covenants over headline rent.