Inertia Egypt has unveiled an ambitious growth roadmap for 2026, setting its sights on a substantial expansion in sales, investment outlays, and regional footprint. The strategy is underpinned by accelerated construction schedules and a strengthened capital structure designed to support long-term scalability.
The company is targeting EGP 16bn in contracted sales in 2026, compared to EGP 6bn achieved in 2025, marking projected growth of nearly 167%.
In parallel, Inertia plans to increase total investments to EGP 6bn, up from EGP 3.5bn last year, reflecting a 71.5% rise. The additional capital will be deployed to fast-track construction progress, enhance operational efficiency, and ensure timely project deliveries across its portfolio.
The 2026 strategy focuses on launching new phases within existing developments, expanding infrastructure works, and upgrading services and community facilities. At the same time, the company is maintaining disciplined cost controls and high execution standards. Accelerated deliveries remain central to the plan, aimed at reinforcing cash flows and supporting future expansion through internally generated financing.

Chief Executive Officer Ahmed El Adawy stated that Inertia is pursuing a disciplined growth model centered on maximizing asset value, strengthening operational performance, and selectively expanding its land bank in strategic, high-demand locations.
As part of its financing strategy, Inertia recently secured a long-term syndicated loan valued at EGP 5.2bn to partially finance the investment cost of its flagship Jefaira project in Ras El Hekma.
The facility was arranged through a consortium of leading Egyptian banks, including Banque Misr, Banque du Caire, National Bank of Egypt, Housing and Development Bank, and Suez Canal Bank.
El Adawy noted that the syndicated financing underscores strong confidence from the banking sector and contributes to enhancing the company’s capital structure by extending debt maturities and alleviating short-term cash flow pressures. He added that the facility further strengthens the competitiveness and investment appeal of Jefaira, while reinforcing the company’s broader reliance on institutional financing instruments to sustain medium- and long-term growth.
Land acquisition remains a core pillar of Inertia’s 2026 expansion agenda. The company is targeting the acquisition of approximately 100 feddans in Cairo for the development of a mixed-use project designed to address rising demand for integrated urban communities.
On the regional front, Inertia is advancing plans to enter the Saudi market. Feasibility studies are in their final stages ahead of the anticipated launch of a residential development in Riyadh, marking a strategic step toward geographic diversification.
El Adawy added that throughout 2025, the company prioritized accelerating on-ground execution across its portfolio, spanning West Cairo to Ras El Hekma along Egypt’s North Coast. This operational focus, he said, has already yielded measurable progress and positions Inertia to sustain growth momentum in the coming years.