
A property is only as strong as the people who want to live in it. A qualitative look at the tenant demand around Aricia — without inventing the numbers.
The natural tenant base
The strongest rental locations are the ones with an obvious answer to “who would live here?”. Around Aricia, several groups answer it: young professionals working in the TRX–KLCC corridor who want a one-stop commute; remote and hybrid workers who value in-building co-working; and small families drawn to the facilities and schools nearby.
Add the smaller 1+1 and 2+1 layouts — the sizes that rent most readily — and the building covers the most active slice of the rental market.
What tenants actually pay for
Tenants prioritise commute, security, facilities and a move-in-ready home. Aricia's case is built on exactly those: the interchange on the doorstep, 24-hour security and a smart-home system, a resort-grade sky club, and Signature-fitted kitchens.
Pet-friendly policies and a pet play zone also widen the pool — a surprising number of renters rule out buildings that don't allow pets.
Reading supply sensibly
Healthy rental demand still has to be weighed against new supply in the corridor. The honest approach is to look at absorption, the specific layout, and your holding horizon — not a headline yield. Smaller, well-located units in amenity-rich buildings tend to let faster than large ones.
- Most-lettable sizes: 1+1 (550 sf) and 2+1 (757 sf)
- Demand drivers: TRX access, facilities, security, pets
- Weigh against corridor supply and your horizon
No invented yields
We deliberately don't publish rental-yield or ROI figures — they vary by unit, furnishing, timing and management, and a number on a marketing page is rarely the number you achieve. This is a qualitative picture of demand; do your own sums and seek independent advice before committing.
Talk through the rental case
Message us for the layouts that rent best and the current price list, or explore Aricia's floor plans and location.
This article is general information from an independent resource, not financial or investment advice. Figures are indicative; binding terms are set out in the Sale and Purchase Agreement. Artist's impressions; E&OE.