guide · Egypt

New Build vs Resale Property in Egypt: A Guide for Overseas Investors

Updated 5 min readBy Global Investments

Egypt's international property market is almost entirely new build. The combination of large, established developers offering flexible payment plans, a steady pipeline of resort and leisure developments on the Red Sea coast and North Coast, and limited institutional resale infrastructure means that the vast majority of overseas buyers enter the market through new developments rather than the secondary market. This does not mean the resale market does not exist — but it plays a very different role than in European or Gulf markets. This guide explains both channels and what to expect from each.

Property values can fall as well as rise. Egyptian property regulations and currency conditions are subject to change. Seek professional legal advice before proceeding. The information below reflects conditions as of mid-2026.

Market Overview

Egypt's internationally oriented property market clusters in a small number of specific locations:

  • Red Sea coast: Hurghada, Ain Sokhna, El Gouna, Marsa Alam, and emerging areas further south
  • North Coast (Sahel): Alexandria to Marsa Matrouh, including New Alamein City — primarily Egyptians and Egyptian diaspora
  • New Administrative Capital (NAC): Cairo's planned new capital, with significant apartment development aimed at middle-class Egyptians and some international interest
  • Cairo: limited international buyer interest in the traditional residential market; most activity is domestic

For overseas investors, the Red Sea coast and (to a lesser extent) the North Coast represent the primary opportunities.

The New Build Market

How It Works

Egypt's new build market is characterised by large-scale developers — Orascom Development (El Gouna), SODIC, Emaar Egypt, Palm Hills, Mountain View, Rixos (in partnership with developers) — who operate integrated resort or community developments with full amenities. The business model is:

  1. Developer acquires a large land parcel from the government
  2. Development is planned and phased over many years
  3. Units are sold off-plan with extended payment plans to fund construction
  4. Each phase is typically launched at a higher price per square metre than the previous one, creating apparent capital growth for early buyers

Payment plans (discussed in detail in the Egypt property finance guide) are the norm: buyers pay 10–20% upfront and the remainder in annual or quarterly instalments over 4–10 years.

Advantages of New Build in Egypt

  • Flexible payment plans: the most significant advantage. Buyers can acquire a property with limited upfront capital and pay the balance over many years — effectively developer-financed leverage.
  • Zero-to-low interest financing: in many cases, the instalment plan is nominally interest-free (the financing cost is embedded in the developer's margin).
  • Phase pricing dynamics: early buyers in a multi-phase development typically pay lower per-metre prices than later buyers — assuming the development sells out and prices advance per plan.
  • Quality resort infrastructure: the major developers build complete resort communities with beaches, pools, restaurants, golf courses, marinas, and hotel operators. El Gouna is a well-established example with 30+ years of operation.
  • Modern specifications: new units come with contemporary fittings, energy-efficient systems (increasingly important given Egypt's climate and utility cost dynamics), and developer warranties.

Risks of New Build in Egypt

  • Developer delivery risk: while the major developers have strong track records, smaller or newer developers may not deliver on time or to specification. Research the developer's previous projects thoroughly.
  • Title deed delay: in Egypt, receiving the final title deed (Tasgeel) can be delayed significantly — sometimes years — after physical handover. You may be in occupation and paying service charges without holding legal title.
  • Currency risk: units may be priced in EGP or USD. If priced in EGP, significant currency movements affect the hard-currency cost. If priced in USD, you pay in a harder currency but avoid EGP volatility.
  • Repatriation risk: ensure you document all inward remittances carefully. Repatriating sale proceeds in hard currency requires proof that the original purchase was funded from abroad.
  • Phase-specific risks: later phases in a development may be priced at a premium that exceeds underlying market value if the earlier phases were sold below market. Do not assume phase price increases represent genuine market appreciation.

The Resale Market

How the Resale Market Operates

A resale market does exist in Egypt's tourist resort areas, particularly in established developments like El Gouna (which has been operating since the early 1990s), Hurghada's older complexes, and Ain Sokhna's established resort villages.

The sellers are typically:

  • Egyptians selling a holiday apartment they no longer use
  • Foreign buyers from an earlier cycle (Hurghada attracted significant British and German buyers in the 2000s) who are exiting
  • Investors who bought off-plan in an earlier phase and are now re-selling

Advantages of Resale in Egypt

  • No payment plan required: for buyers with cash, a resale purchase is straightforward — agree a price, instruct a lawyer, complete the transfer.
  • Established community: buying into a functioning resort with a proven holiday let market, established management, and a community of owners is lower risk than buying into a new, unproven development.
  • Rental track record: a resale property in an established letting resort (El Gouna, for example) comes with comparable rental data from the local holiday let market — more reliable than developer projections.
  • Price negotiation: individual sellers in the resale market may be more motivated than developers pricing off new-plan inventory.
  • What you see is what you buy: no construction risk; you inspect the finished property.

Risks of Resale in Egypt

  • Title deed irregularities: the history of Egyptian property title is complex. Some properties sold in the early resort development phase (1990s–2000s) have incomplete or delayed title documentation. Verify the legal status thoroughly before purchasing.
  • Condition: older resort properties may have outdated fittings, worn infrastructure, and deferred maintenance. Budget for renovation if necessary.
  • Limited liquidity: Egypt's resale market is thin compared to the new-build market. Finding a buyer when you want to exit may take time and require a significant price discount versus developer prices.
  • Currency and repatriation: the same issues apply as to new build — document your purchase funding carefully for future repatriation purposes.

Practical Framework: Which Route Makes Sense?

New build suits investors who:

  • Want flexible capital deployment via payment plans
  • Are comfortable with a 2–5 year horizon before the property is complete and income-generating
  • Have confidence in a specific established developer
  • Are targeting a specific new resort area with long-term growth potential

Resale suits investors who:

  • Want immediate income from an established rental market
  • Can buy in cash and complete quickly
  • Want to inspect before committing
  • Are entering a well-established resort area where the track record is already visible

How Global Investments Can Help

Global Investments works with buyers looking at Egypt's Red Sea and resort markets. We can help you assess developer track records, introduce you to independent Egyptian legal advisers for due diligence, and assist with the currency planning needed to protect both your purchase cost and future repatriation. Contact our team to discuss your requirements.

This guide is for general information only and does not constitute financial, legal or tax advice. Programme rules, prices and tax rates change; verify current requirements with a qualified adviser before acting.