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South Africans eye Mauritius for property and political stability

Category Living in Mauritius

Mauritius will fully open its borders by October 1, granting vaccinated South Africans the opportunity to travel to another destination.

But, most of them are not only looking to travel the gorgeous Indian Ocean island but they also want to purchase homes there.

South Africans make up the second-largest number of foreign investors in Mauritius, next to the French.

South Africans were drawn to the destination because of it political stability, strong economy, productive business environment, great tax incentives, excellent schools, low crime rate, world-class healthcare and excellent quality of life.

With borders reopening and interest rates at record lows, a lot more South Africans are expected to push play on plans to relocate their families and businesses onto Mauritian soil.

Buying property in Mauritius was the "easiest way to get Mauritian residency".

Travellers would need to invest in one of the designated real estate schemes, including Property Development Scheme (PDS), Integrated Resort Scheme (IRS), Real Estate Scheme (RES), Smart City Scheme (SCS) or G+2.

Each scheme has its own benefits and price points, with buy-ins ranging from MUR 6 million (around R2-million)

Top locations for South Africans included Black River and Tamarin on the West Coast. North Coast properties in Grand Baie, Pointe aux Cannonier, Calodyne and Grand Gaube were also popular with foreign nationals.

Luxury rentals do particularly well thanks to the strong tourism market, and could experience a significant boom as borders reopen and travel resumes.

Mauritius had grown in popularity.

There has been a significant upsurge of interest in Mauritius. This is quite an interesting shift, given many people had been opting for European destinations such as Portugal or Greece in preference to somewhere virtually on the doorstep.

Author: IOL - Travel Reporter

Submitted 04 Sep 21 / Views 1510