India’s Housing Market Shifts Gears: 2025 Marks the Rise of Value-Driven Real Estate ICC-ANAROCK Report

India’s Housing Market Shifts Gears: 2025 Marks the Rise of Value-Driven Real Estate ICC-ANAROCK Report

New Delhi, Jan 22: India’s residential real estate market entered a new phase of maturity in 2025, transitioning from volume-led expansion to value-driven growth, according to the latest report by the Indian Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and ANAROCK.

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While housing sales across the top seven cities declined 14% year-on-year to 3.96 lakh units, the total transaction value rose 6%, crossing INR 6 lakh crore, indicating that premium and higher-ticket homes are increasingly driving the market.

This divergence between volume and value reflects a structural shift in Indian housing. After a muted price phase between 2015 and 2019, residential prices surged nearly 54% during 2019–24, supported by post-pandemic recovery, infrastructure spending, and consolidation among large developers. In 2025, price growth moderated to a healthier ~8%, pointing to a more sustainable, end-user-focused market.

Premium and Luxury Housing Leads Growth

One of the most striking changes is in demand composition,” said Anuj Puri, Chairman – ANAROCK Group. “Homes priced below INR 75 lakh, which accounted for nearly 60% of sales in 2021, now make up just ~32% of the market. In contrast, luxury and ultra-luxury housing has expanded rapidly, supported by rising incomes, lifestyle upgrades, and improving affordability.”

  • Luxury homes priced above ₹4 crore now contribute 18–20% of total sales, compared to just 1–2% pre-pandemic.

  • The ultra-luxury segment (INR 40 crore and above) recorded a 66% jump in sales in 2025, with the Mumbai Metropolitan Region (MMR) accounting for over 70% of transactions.

Structural Shifts in Residential Demand

  • Tier-I cities continue to lead, while Tier-II cities gain traction.

  • Larger, wellness-focused, amenity-rich homes are increasingly preferred.

  • Demand for 3BHK and larger units has risen to 45–50%, up from 30% in 2018, with average unit sizes across major cities increasing by ~40% since 2021, led by the NCR region.

Supply Trends and Market Institutionalisation

  • Listed and Grade-A developers now account for ~45% of residential supply, up from 28% five years ago, reflecting stronger balance sheets, execution capabilities, and growing buyer trust.

  • The market continues to benefit from macro fundamentals, including robust private consumption (~60% of GDP), tripling of government capital expenditure since FY19, and a healthy banking system with net NPAs at multi-decade lows.

Outlook
India’s residential real estate is increasingly being recognized as a structural pillar of economic growth, capital formation, and urban transformation. Key tailwinds include:

  • Lower interest rates

  • Rising per capita incomes

  • Infrastructure-led urbanisation

  • Growth in Global Capability Centres (GCCs)

  • Increased FDI inflows

  • Under-penetration of housing finance (mortgage-to-GDP ratio at ~11%)

“Residential real estate in India is no longer just a cyclical investment play—it is now a strategic driver of economic development and urban transformation as the country moves toward a USD 7.3 trillion economy,” the report concluded.

Neel Achary

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