Leonita Mhishi
ZIMBABWE’S property market is no longer being shaped primarily by those who live within the country’s borders. Increasingly, it is being defined by those who left — often out of necessity — but never severed their economic and emotional ties. Diaspora investors have quietly become one of the most influential forces in real estate, and their growing dominance says as much about Zimbabwe’s structural weaknesses as it does about its enduring appeal.
The scale of diaspora influence is not speculative. According to the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, remittances have consistently exceeded US$2 billion annually in recent years, making them one of the country’s largest and most reliable sources of foreign currency. That flow of money has increasingly found its way into property. It is not difficult to see why. In a country where currency instability has repeatedly eroded savings, real estate offers something rare: a store of value that is both tangible and relatively insulated from policy shocks.
This is not merely a story of investment preference; it is a story of rational adaptation. Zimbabwe’s financial history — marked by hyperinflation, currency reforms and shifting monetary regimes — has fundamentally altered how people think about wealth preservation. Diaspora investors, earning in stable currencies, are uniquely positioned to exploit this reality. They convert external earnings into local assets, effectively arbitraging between global stability and domestic uncertainty. Property, in this equation, becomes less of a lifestyle choice and more of a financial strategy.
But this strategy is reshaping the market in ways that demand scrutiny. Property prices in key urban areas increasingly reflect diaspora purchasing power rather than local earning capacity. Suburbs such as Borrowdale, Mount Pleasant and emerging peri-urban zones are seeing sustained demand driven by buyers who are not constrained by Zimbabwean salaries. The result is a market that is, in effect, partially dollarised — not just in currency terms, but in its pricing logic. This raises a critical question: who is the Zimbabwean property market actually being built for?
There is an argument, often made by developers and policymakers, that diaspora capital is a lifeline. It finances construction, creates jobs and injects foreign currency into an economy that desperately needs it. That argument is valid, but incomplete. What it overlooks is the structural distortion that can occur when external capital becomes the dominant driver of domestic markets. When pricing is anchored to foreign incomes, local buyers are inevitably pushed to the margins. The risk is not just inequality, but a deeper disconnect between development and accessibility.
Technology has amplified this shift. The rise of remote property buying has effectively collapsed geographic barriers, allowing Zimbabweans abroad to participate in the market with unprecedented ease. Online platforms, virtual tours and digital transactions have made it possible to purchase land or property without ever boarding a plane. This is often celebrated as innovation, but it also introduces new layers of risk. Distance does not eliminate uncertainty; it often magnifies it.
The issue of safeguarding investments has therefore moved from the periphery to the centre of the diaspora property conversation. Reports of fraud, disputed ownership and incomplete developments are not isolated incidents — they are symptoms of systemic gaps in governance and regulation. For diaspora investors, the challenge is not just identifying opportunities, but verifying their legitimacy. Trust, in this context, becomes the most valuable commodity, yet it is also the most fragile.
Efforts to address these concerns have been uneven. Initiatives such as diaspora desks and targeted investment platforms signal recognition of the issue, but they do not fully resolve it. The underlying problem is institutional. Without consistent enforcement of property rights, transparent processes and reliable dispute resolution mechanisms, the market remains vulnerable. For a sector so heavily reliant on external confidence, this is a significant weakness.
Yet, despite these risks, diaspora investors continue to commit capital. This persistence reveals something deeper than financial calculation. Property ownership, for many Zimbabweans abroad, is tied to identity and belonging. It is a way of maintaining a stake in a country that economic realities forced them to leave. In this sense, the property market is not just an economic space; it is an emotional one.
This dual nature — where investment is intertwined with sentiment — makes the diaspora’s role both powerful and complex. On one hand, it sustains growth in a sector that might otherwise stagnate. On the other, it introduces dynamics that can be difficult to manage, particularly in terms of affordability and market balance. The challenge is not to limit diaspora participation, but to integrate it in a way that aligns with broader economic objectives.
One of the most pressing concerns is the potential for over-reliance. If the property market becomes too dependent on diaspora capital, it becomes vulnerable to external shocks. Changes in global economic conditions, immigration policies or employment trends in host countries could quickly translate into reduced investment flows. A market that is heavily anchored to external income streams is, by definition, exposed to factors beyond domestic control.
There is also the question of what kind of development diaspora investment is driving. Much of the focus has been on residential properties, particularly in middle- to high-income segments. While this has contributed to urban expansion, it does not necessarily address Zimbabwe’s broader housing needs. The country continues to face a significant housing backlog, particularly in low-income and affordable segments. If diaspora capital is concentrated in areas that do not align with this demand, its developmental impact may be limited.
This is where policy direction becomes critical. The state has an opportunity to channel diaspora investment toward areas of strategic importance, including affordable housing and infrastructure development. This would require more than incentives; it would require a coherent framework that aligns private investment with public priorities. Without such alignment, the market risks evolving in ways that are efficient for investors but misaligned with national needs.
At its core, the rise of diaspora investors in Zimbabwe’s property market is a reflection of both resilience and fragility. It highlights the ability of Zimbabweans to mobilise resources across borders, but also underscores the limitations of the domestic financial system. Property has become the default investment not because it is inherently superior, but because alternatives are constrained.
This reality demands a more nuanced conversation. Diaspora investment should not be viewed as a substitute for domestic economic reform, but as a complement to it. Strengthening financial markets, restoring confidence in monetary policy and improving institutional governance would create a more balanced investment landscape. In such an environment, property would remain important, but not overwhelmingly dominant.
For now, however, the trajectory is clear. Diaspora investors will continue to shape Zimbabwe’s property market, not just through the capital they bring, but through the expectations they carry. They demand transparency, efficiency and security — standards that, if met, could elevate the entire sector.
The question is whether the market, and the institutions that underpin it, can rise to meet those expectations.
Mhishi is the principal registered estate agent at House of Stone Properties and can be reached at +263 772 329 569 or via email at leonita@hsp. co.zw or www.hsp.co.zw