Sanlam Investments has introduced a Property Impact Fund, an equity vehicle designed to channel capital into affordable housing, student accommodation, rural and township retail outlets, as well as education and healthcare facilities, according to the group’s launch announcement. Seeded with R1.4 billion, the fund aspires to amass R4 billion in assets under management, pursuing annual returns of consumer price index plus nine per cent through an open-ended structure that demands a minimum commitment of R50 million for participation in the investment-linked policy.
Portfolio manager Kamogelo Leeuw highlighted the fund’s focus on an investable landscape surpassing R2.9 trillion in property and infrastructure, noting that despite South Africa’s pressing infrastructure deficits, under two point seven per cent of the nation’s R5.8 trillion pension savings is allocated to such ventures. He pointed out the acute lack of access to vital social infrastructure for lower and middle-income earners, where governmental initiatives prioritise the most destitute, and private capital often bypasses this demographic.
This shortfall is evident in areas like student housing, where safe options near universities remain scarce, hindering educational advancement and economic progression. Similarly, healthcare access for this group affects productivity and well-being, with the fund aiming to foster community development through targeted investments.
The initiative specifically addresses the needs of the working lower-middle class—encompassing professionals such as teachers, nurses, police officers, and entry-level workers—who constitute twenty-three to thirty per cent of the population. South Africa’s housing backlog stands at 2.5 million units, exacerbating affordability issues amid urbanisation rates exceeding three per cent annually, as reported by Statistics South Africa.
The fund will concentrate on five burgeoning sectors ripe for investment: education, with 1.2 million learners and a projected two point five per cent annual growth tied to gross domestic product, offering R129 billion in opportunities; affordable housing, encompassing 3.7 million units with two point five per cent price escalation, valued at R1.5 trillion; rural and township retail, supporting 248 small and micro enterprises in fast-moving consumer goods with ten per cent yearly trading density growth, totalling R900 billion; student accommodation, requiring over 600,000 beds amid four point nine per cent compounded annual expansion, worth R150 billion; and healthcare, serving 9.8 million medical scheme beneficiaries with two point two per cent growth, representing R200 billion.
This demographic provides a substantial, reliable market with pent-up demand for quality services, affording early entrants advantages in tenant retention and stability. Sanlam anticipates that real estate in social infrastructure will surpass conventional commercial segments like offices and city-centre retail, as escalating middle-income needs spur fresh developments.
Investors will secure prompt access to a portfolio exceeding R800 million in impact-oriented properties, yielding competitive yields. The strategy encompasses collaborations with seasoned joint-venture allies sharing commercial and societal objectives, alongside data-informed allocations utilising geospatial tools and infrastructure metrics to identify neglected regions.
This analytical approach ensures capital deployment maximises socioeconomic benefits. The property investment team has consistently outperformed listed property and equity benchmarks over the past five years, delivering elevated returns with reduced volatility.
Sanlam, managing over R1 trillion in assets and ranking among Africa’s largest insurers, views the fund as an extension of its sustainable investing ethos, aligning with United Nations Sustainable Development Goals on poverty reduction and infrastructure, as emphasised in its 2025 sustainability report. Each initiative will undergo scrutiny for its role in promoting inclusive expansion, employment generation—potentially adding thousands of jobs in construction and operations—and ecological viability, amid South Africa’s push for green building standards.

