South African Civil Aviation Authority
Randburg's position as a major Gauteng economic hub shapes how people move through and out of the city. The N1 corridor, proximity to OR Tambo, and Johannesburg's role as a financial centre mean many relocations are corporate moves or interstate transfers — people uprooting for jobs in Cape Town or KZN, or arriving for positions in Randburg's business parks. This creates a particular kind of moving demand: coordinated timing with employment contracts, sometimes cross-border logistics, temporary accommodation while houses are finalised. The city's mix of established suburbs and newer developments means moves range from Victorian-era houses with narrow doorways to modern apartments in secure complexes. Understanding Randburg's specific geography — the hills, the traffic patterns, the distance from storage facilities to residential areas — is part of what makes moving here different from other South African cities.