North Bengaluru has emerged as one of the most closely watched property corridors in 2026, with select micro-markets reporting double-digit price growth amid sustained infrastructure expansion and employment-led demand. Market data reviewed by Urban Acres indicates that areas such as Devanahalli, Hebbal and Yelahanka are driving a significant share of the city’s new housing supply and investor interest.
According to recent industry assessments, Bengaluru recorded over 49,000 new residential unit launches in 2025, marking strong year-on-year expansion. Nearly a third of this supply was concentrated in the northern belt, underscoring the region’s strategic importance to the city’s growth story. The most dramatic appreciation has been visible in Devanahalli, where residential values in certain plotted developments have risen between 15 and 20 per cent annually. Prices that hovered around Rs 3,000 per sq ft two years ago are now approaching Rs 4,000 per sq ft in key pockets, while premium villa and township formats command significantly higher rates. Proximity to the Kempegowda International Airport and the state-designated Special Investment Region has positioned Devanahalli as a long-horizon investment zone anchored by aerospace, logistics and technology employment clusters. Urban economists note that this is infrastructure-led growth rather than speculative momentum. Airport expansion, industrial corridors and integrated townships are gradually building social infrastructure, transforming what was once peripheral land into a self-sustaining micro-market.
Closer to the city core, Hebbal remains a comparatively mature segment within the North Bengaluru property hotspots narrative. Average apartment prices have moved into the Rs 9,500–Rs 12,500 per sq ft range, supported by established connectivity along the Bellary Road corridor and access to major employment hubs such as Manyata Tech Park. Rental yields remain steady, with two-bedroom homes often leasing between Rs 35,000 and Rs 55,000 per month. Analysts describe Hebbal as a lower-risk market driven largely by end-users and salaried professionals rather than purely land-bank investors. Yelahanka presents a middle path. Property values have appreciated in the 8–12 per cent range, with average prices now between Rs 7,500 and Rs 9,500 per sq ft depending on location. Its appeal lies in balanced connectivity including planned metro access under Phase 2B combined with educational institutions, defence establishments and relatively lower congestion compared to core city zones. While capital growth has drawn investors northward, planners caution that rapid expansion must align with water security, public transport capacity and ecological safeguards. Much of the corridor sits within sensitive catchment areas feeding Bengaluru’s lake network.
As the North Bengaluru property hotspots continue to attract developers and institutional capital, the long-term success of the corridor will depend not only on price appreciation but on how effectively infrastructure, sustainability and liveability evolve in tandem with real estate growth.
Also Read: Devanahalli leads North Bengaluru property surge
Devanahalli leads North Bengaluru property surge


