How Exchange Rates Can Affect Hurghada Property ROI for Foreign Buyers (2026)
How Exchange Rates Can Affect Hurghada Property ROI for Foreign Buyers (2026),
When you invest in Hurghada real estate as a foreign buyer, your ROI is not only about rental income and resale price. Itโs also about exchange rates.
In simple terms: you may buy and earn in EGP, but you โfeelโ the result in USD, EUR, or GBP. Because of that, currency movement can raise or reduce your actual returnโeven if your apartment performs well locally.
The good news is that you can manage this risk with the right strategy, the proper paperwork, and clear proof of payment.

Quick answer: What exchange rates do to Hurghada property ROI
Exchange rates can change your ROI in three main ways:
- At purchase, your apartment price in EGP converts to approximately the same amount in your home currency.
- During rentals, rent paid in EGP fluctuates when converted to USD/EUR/GBP.
- At resale: your resale amount in EGP can increase or shrink in your home currencyโsometimes more than the propertyโs local price change.
To model this correctly, many buyers use official exchange-rate sources (daily rates and historical data) as a reference point.
Exchange rates and Hurghada property ROI: the 3 โcurrency momentsโ that matter
Think of your investment like a timeline. You have outflows (money you pay) and inflows (money you receive). Exchange rates affect both.
1) Purchase conversion (your initial cost)
Most Hurghada apartments are priced in EGP. So, your real cost in your currency depends on the rate when you send funds.
- If the EGP weakens after you buy, you may feel like you โoverpaidโ in USD/EUR/GBP terms.
- If the EGP strengthens after you buy, your apartment may look โcheaperโ in hindsight.
2) Rental conversion (your ongoing income)
Rent is usually collected in EGP. Therefore:
- If the EGP weakens, the same rent converts into fewer USD/EUR/GBP.
- If the EGP strengthens, the same rent converts into more USD/EUR/GBP.
3) Resale conversion (your exit value)
This is where ROI can shift dramatically.
Even if your property rises in EGP, the resale value in your currency can still drop if the EGP weakens enough.
The easiest ROI formula for foreign buyers (in your home currency)
Pick one โbase currencyโ for all planning (USD, EUR, GBP). Then convert all cash flows into that currency.
A simple ROI structure:
ROI (%) = (Total income + Resale proceeds โ Total costs) รท Total costs
Where โTotal costsโ includes:
- purchase price
- furnishing and setup
- legal and transaction costs
- bank transfer fees and FX spreads
And โTotal incomeโ includes:
- net rent (after fees, utilities, maintenance, management)
- any additional income (if applicable)
Example: the same Hurghada apartment can produce very different ROI
This is a hypothetical example to show sensitivity (not a market prediction).
Assumptions (illustrative)
- Apartment purchase price + setup: 3,250,000 EGP
- Net rental income: 25,000 EGP/month
- Holding period: 3 years (36 months)
- Total net rent: 900,000 EGP
- Resale price: 3,300,000 EGP
Now compare two exchange-rate scenarios:
Scenario A: EGP weakens after you buy (ROI looks lower in USD)
- FX at purchase: 40 EGP = 1 USD
- FX at resale: 50 EGP = 1 USD
What happens:
- Your purchase cost in USD is higher at the start.
- Your resale value in USD is lower at the end.
Even if your local EGP resale price goes up, your USD result may feel flat.
Scenario B: EGP strengthens after you buy (ROI looks higher in USD)
- FX at purchase: 50 EGP = 1 USD
- FX at resale: 40 EGP = 1 USD
What happens:
- You paid fewer dollars at purchase.
- You receive more dollars at resale.
That alone can create a much stronger USD-based return.
Takeaway: Your Hurghada apartment can be โa great local deal,โ yet your foreign-currency ROI can still swing widely because of FX.
Installment plans: exchange rates can change your monthly cost
If you buy a Hurghada apartment with installments, exchange rates matter even moreโbecause you pay over time.
If your contract is in EGP (common)
Your installments are fixed in EGP. However, your cost in USD/EUR/GBP changes every time you transfer:
- When the EGP weakens, your installment becomes cheaper in your currency.
- When the EGP strengthens, your installment becomes more expensive in your currency.
This is why foreign buyers should plan with an FX buffer (for example, 5โ10% extra) so payments never become stressful.
If your contract is in a foreign currency
This can reduce your FX uncertainty on payments, but you still face FX exposure on rental income and local expenses.
Proof of payment is part of ROI protection (not just paperwork)
Foreign buyers should treat proof of payment like an asset. It protects your ownership path and your future resale.
1) Registration and ownership steps may require proof of payment
The Official Egyptian Real Estate Platform blog lists documents that typically include evidence of full payment or a payment plan during registration.
It also describes that proof of payment (receipts or bank transfers) is typically needed when transferring property ownership.
2) Foreign-buyer payments may need to come through official banking channels
A Lexis Middle East summary reports that Circular No. 41 (Real Estate Registration and Notarisation Authority) requires the purchase price of real estate sold to a foreigner to be transferred from abroad in foreign currency to a bank in Egypt, with evidence for qualifying contracts.
Why this matters for ROI:
If you canโt document payments correctly, you may face delays or extra costs later. That can reduce your net ROI and increase risk.
Practical ways to reduce exchange-rate risk (without overcomplicating it)
Here are realistic steps foreign buyers use in 2026:
1) Track FX using official references
Use daily exchange-rate tables and (when possible) historical data to understand volatility and plan scenarios.
2) Add an FX buffer to your budget
Instead of planning at โtodayโs rate,โ plan for:
- a worse exchange rate during payment months, and
- transfer fees + conversion spread
This reduces stress and prevents missed installments.
3) Split large transfers into planned tranches
For example:
- down payment now
- installments, monthly or quarterly
- Final payment at handover
This can reduce the risk of โbad timing,โ especially when the market is volatile.
4) Keep a clean โPayment File.โ
Save:
- sales contract + annexes
- bank transfer confirmations
- receipts
- schedule (if installments)
This also aligns with what registration and transfer checklists typically require.
5) Align your rental strategy with currency reality
If your goal is ROI in USD/EUR/GBP, focus on:
- strong occupancy
- durable furnishings
- cost control (utilities, maintenance, repairs)
Because even if FX moves against you, operational excellence can protect your net return.
FAQs: exchange rates and Hurghada property ROI
Should I calculate ROI in EGP or in my home currency?
If youโre a foreign buyer, calculate ROI in your home currency (USD/EUR/GBP). Thatโs the return that matters to you.
Can exchange rates alone make a โgood propertyโ look like a bad investment?
Yes. Your apartment can perform well in EGP, but your foreign-currency ROI can drop if the EGP weakens enough.
Do I need proof of payment for registration in Egypt?
Registration guidance commonly includes proof of payment or payment plans as required documentation.
How Hurghadians Property Company helps foreign buyers plan ROI realistically
If youโre buying a Hurghada property from abroad, we help you compare apartments using an accurate ROI view, including:
- price + setup cost planning
- rental strategy fit (short-term vs long-term)
- realistic monthly cost planning
- safer payment documentation habits from day one
That way, youโre not only buying a beautiful homeโyouโre buying a plan that works in real life.