ECONOMY — April 12, 2026

Kabul Faces Housing Shortage and Sharp Rent Increases

Kabul residents report a severe housing shortage and sharp rent increases since the new year, accusing landlords of colluding with the Taliban to underreport rents for taxes. Prices for two- and three-room houses have doubled in some cases, with no effective oversight despite Taliban announcements.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Hasht-e Subh2 min read

Kabul residents report a severe shortage of rental housing and significant rent hikes since the start of the new year.

Tenants interviewed say landlords have raised prices without regard for laws or principles. They accuse homeowners of colluding with the Taliban to generate more tax revenue by underreporting actual rents at official rental transaction offices while charging higher amounts through separate illegal contracts.

Specific increases include two-room houses rising from 7,000-8,000 afghanis to 13,000-15,000 afghanis. Rents for three-room houses, which were 10,000-12,000 afghanis two years ago, have jumped to 20,000-21,000 afghanis.

Tenants note there is no oversight body to control these price increases in Kabul. Although the Taliban's Ministry of Justice has announced measures to monitor rental transaction offices, residents say these have had no effect on curbing the rises.

The situation has left many tenants impoverished, with some unable to afford housing amid the scarcity.

Read the original reporting at Hasht-e Subh

Reliability assessment

Single source (Hasht-e Subh) reports direct interviews with at least five tenants, providing concrete, checkable details on locations (Kabul), specific price changes, and Taliban involvement, corroborating the core event of housing shortage and rental price hikes.

The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Hasht-e Subh: "in collusion with the Taliban" implies criminal conspiracy without evidence; "impoverished tenants" and "skyrocketing prices" use emotional, hyperbolic framing to evoke sympathy and outrage.

Independent web corroboration

An independent web search turned up no separate corroborating reports. Treat the account as single-sourced until more outlets pick it up.

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EconomyKabul, housing shortage, rental prices, Taliban, Ministry of Justice

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