Repossessed & repo houses for sale in South Africa
When a home loan goes into default, the bank or sheriff puts the property up for sale below market. These are the repo houses and repossessed homes buyers search for — we aggregate listings from the major SA banks and Government Gazette sale-in-execution notices, each tagged with a freshness signal so you don't waste time on stale auctions.
2-bed sectional title in Erf 754 Muckleneuk Township
2-bed sectional title in Pretoria, Gauteng
3-bed house in 50 Blue Bush Road, Naturena Extension 26
2-bed house in 155 Luthando Street, Phumola, Roodekop
3-bed sectional title in Ekurhuleni, Gauteng
3-bed sectional title in Ekurhuleni, Gauteng
3-bed house in 12 Page Street, Yeoville
2-bed house in Ekurhuleni, Gauteng
2-bed house in Ekurhuleni, Gauteng
3-bed house in 22a Danie Theron Street, Fochville
27-bed house in Gauteng
27-bed sectional title in 5 Prairie Place, 58 Prairie Street, Rosettenville Extension
27-bed house in 32250 VUKA STREET, TSAKANE EXTENSION 12 with
3-bed sectional title in Erf 793 & 794 Witkoppen Ext 28 Township
2-bed house in Stand 1507, 48 Bafana Bafana Road, Payneville, Springs
2-bed house in Gauteng
house in 29 AG Visser Street, Rensburg, Heidelberg
Browse by bank
Browse repossessed houses by suburb
Every suburb with live sale-in-execution inventory has its own page — the repo houses, reserve prices and auction dates for that area, re-verified weekly.
How South African repossessions work
“Repo houses”, “repo homes” and repossessed property all mean the same thing: a home a bank or the sheriff is selling after a home-loan default. Here is how a house ends up on this page.
A property gets “declared executable” when a home-loan account is in arrears long enough for the bank to apply for judgment in the High Court. Once the court grants the writ, the sheriff schedules a sale in execution and publishes the notice in the Government Gazette at least 30 days before the auction.
Most banks (FNB, Absa, Standard Bank, Nedbank) also try to sell distressed homes before the sheriff auction — these are “quick sale” or “mandated sale” listings, usually priced 10–20% below market.
On RepoLens, the reserve price on each listing sits next to the suburb median, the municipal valuation and (where unlocked) the last-sold price — so you can tell a deal from a trap before calling the attorney.