
Safaricom Phase 2 resale plot
Safaricom Scheme · 50x100
KSh 1,400,000
Scheme resales
Some of the best-value land in Kitengela sits inside old cooperative and sacco subdivision schemes: Safaricom Phase 1 and 2, KCA, Police Sacco and Stima Sacco. Original allottees who never built are selling, and informed buyers can acquire established-area plots at a discount to the open market. The discount exists for a reason, since scheme resales demand more careful verification, and that verification is exactly what we do.

Safaricom Scheme · 50x100
KSh 1,400,000

KCA Scheme · 50x100
KSh 1,250,000

Police Sacco Scheme · 50x100
KSh 1,100,000
Looking for a specific scheme or phase?
Free site visits, Mon–Sat, 8am–7pm. Tell us your budget and we will shortlist for you.
The Safaricom Investment Cooperative subdivisions are among the best-known schemes in Kitengela, with Phase 2 seeing the most active resale market. Original members who never built are now selling, and buyers get established-scheme locations at prices below equivalent open-market plots. Verify which phase the plot sits in, whether the individual title has been processed or the parcel remains on the scheme title, and that the seller is the registered member or holds a properly executed transfer from one.
KCA plots in Kitengela trade steadily on resale, typically at mid-corridor prices. The paperwork chain matters here: many parcels transacted informally years ago, so insist on tracing from the original allotment to the current seller before any payment. Where the chain is clean, KCA plots represent solid value in maturing neighbourhoods.
Kenya Police Sacco subdivisions around Kitengela offer some of the most affordable scheme entries, with a meaningful share still held on allotment letters rather than processed titles. That lowers the price and raises the diligence bar: confirm the scheme's mother title status and the seller's standing in the scheme register before committing.
Stima Sacco parcels appear on the Kitengela resale market less frequently, which keeps them under-priced relative to their locations when they do surface. Buyers should move quickly but never skip verification: the same allotment-to-title chain check applies.
First, establish what the seller actually holds: a processed individual title, a share certificate, or an allotment letter. Each is purchasable, but the process and the fair price differ. Second, verify against the scheme itself, meaning the mother title, the subdivision approval, and the scheme register showing the seller as the recognised member. Third, complete the transfer through the scheme's official process alongside a standard sale agreement, so the scheme records and the land registry end up telling the same story. We walk buyers through all three stages on every scheme plot we list.
The schemes themselves are genuine and well established. Individual resales require verification: confirm the phase, the title or allotment status, and that the seller is the registered member. We check all three before listing any Safaricom scheme plot.
Many remain on shared titles or allotment letters while individual deeds are processed, and the extra paperwork discourages casual buyers. The discount compensates for diligence effort, not for hidden defects, when verification is done properly.
Yes, once the scheme completes subdivision and individual deed processing, or immediately if the plot's deed has already been issued. We confirm the exact deed status of every scheme listing.
Prefer we call you? Leave your number.
New to scheme buying? Start with how to verify a title deed in Kajiado and the step-by-step land buying process.