India’s property sector is entering 2026 with renewed confidence after a year of steady sales, expanding capital inflows and visible premiumisation across major cities. Market data from leading consultancies show that housing absorption across the top eight urban centres remained resilient through 2025, underpinned by stable interest rates, moderating inflation and sustained end-user demand.Â
The momentum in India real estate growth has been most pronounced in the premium and luxury brackets. Homes priced above ₹1 crore have recorded consistent traction, while ultra-luxury properties in select metro markets have seen sharper demand from high-net-worth individuals and non-resident buyers. Analysts attribute this to rising household incomes, dual-income urban families and a shift in perception of housing as both a lifestyle anchor and a long-term asset. Mumbai continues to command a disproportionate share of high-value transactions due to limited land supply and concentrated wealth. In the National Capital Region, micro-markets with established transport connectivity and social infrastructure have drawn stronger buyer response than speculative corridors. Industry experts suggest that buyers are increasingly prioritising completed or near-completion projects, reflecting a preference for delivery certainty in a regulated post-RERA environment.
Beyond the metros, India real estate growth is increasingly visible in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities. Land acquisition volumes in smaller urban centres have outpaced those in Tier-1 cities during parts of 2025, signalling a structural reallocation of capital. Developers are targeting these markets for plotted developments, mid-rise housing and gated townships, supported by lower land costs and infrastructure upgrades. Urban planners argue that this geographic diversification reduces systemic risk in the housing cycle. As employment hubs expand beyond traditional metros and remote work remains embedded in corporate culture, secondary cities are evolving into credible residential alternatives. Improved highways, regional airports and digital connectivity are reinforcing this transition.
Investor appetite has also remained strong. Institutional investments in Indian real estate, spanning residential, office, logistics and data centres, continued through 2025, reflecting growing confidence in regulatory transparency and compliance frameworks. Real estate investment trusts and private equity funds are increasingly assessing climate resilience, energy efficiency and ESG alignment as part of due diligence. Sustainability considerations are moving from peripheral to central in project design. Developers targeting premium buyers are integrating green building certifications, water recycling systems and energy-efficient materials. Market observers note that environmentally responsible design is gradually becoming a value differentiator rather than a niche offering.
Looking ahead, economists anticipate that potential monetary easing in 2026 could widen affordability, sustaining India real estate growth across segments. The challenge will lie in balancing expansion with infrastructure capacity, ensuring that housing supply aligns with transport, utilities and climate resilience planning.
If current trends persist, 2026 may mark a phase where India real estate growth becomes broader-based, geographically distributed and increasingly aligned with long-term urban sustainability goals.
India Real Estate Growth Outlook 2026Â