An NGO set up to encourage people to resettle in South Africa says it has seen an 80 percent increase in enquiries about moving back compared with two years ago -- and the majority of those queries are from the United Kingdom.
"I think always in the back of my mind I wanted to go back. It's home at the end of the day," Durrant told CNN as he prepared to leave London and start a life back in Cape Town.
"There's been this migration of my friends leaving the UK over the last two years," he said. "I think the recession triggered that off, and a lot of them have gone back and have good things to say and are enjoying themselves back there."
In 2009 it was estimated that about 20 percent of the country's professionals had left since 1995. Around 800,000 white people, of a total white population of four million, are thought to have left the country.
One of the most common reasons given was crime. South Africa has some of the world's highest rates of murder, rape and other violent crime. Other professionals feared their career options might be limited by the government's affirmative-action policy.
All these issues made London an attractive option for the thousands of South Africans entitled to British passports.
But that tide may be turning, with a combination of economic and social factors creating a push from countries like the United Kingdom, and a pull back to South Africa.
A recent employment survey found more than 100,000 South African job seekers were expected to move back home this year.
Gordon Glyn-Jones, who runs a South African newspaper in London, has also noticed he is bidding farewell to an increasing number of friends.
"I think certain economics have played a part, with the recession. Making a living here is perhaps not quite as lucrative as it was before. Potentially after the World Cup there are more opportunities in South Africa," he said.
But the decision to move back is not necessarily an easy one.