Domestic Capital Drives 76% of India's Real Estate Investment in Q1 2026

Domestic institutional investors dominated India's real estate sector for the third consecutive quarter, accounting for 76% of total inflows at USD 1.2 billion. Total institutional investment reached USD 1.6 billion in Q1 2026, marking a 26% year-on-year increase despite global uncertainties. The office sector led with USD 1.0 billion in investments, followed by hospitality at 13% and residential at 9%. Delhi NCR attracted the highest city-level share at 28%, with Chennai and Bengaluru following at 17% and 14% respectively.

Key Points: India Real Estate: Domestic Capital Dominates at 76%

  • Domestic investors accounted for 76% of total institutional inflows
  • Total investment stood at USD 1.6 billion, up 26% YoY
  • Office sector led with 64% share at USD 1.0 billion
  • Delhi NCR attracted highest city-level share at 28%
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Domestic capital drives 76% of India's real estate investment, foreign inflows stay muted: Report

Domestic institutional investors drove 76% of India's real estate investments in Q1 2026, totaling USD 1.2 billion, with foreign inflows muted amid global uncertainties.

"The sustained dominance of domestic capital marks an important inflection point for India's real estate investment landscape. - Somy Thomas, Cushman & Wakefield"

New Delhi, April 28

Domestic institutional investors continued to dominate India's real estate sector for the third consecutive quarter, driven by global macroeconomic uncertainties impacting foreign inflows and rising confidence in domestic market fundamentals, according to a report by Cushman & Wakefield.As per the firm's Q1 2026 Capital MarketBeat report, domestic investors accounted for 76 per cent of total institutional inflows at USD 1.2 billion during the quarter, compared to foreign investments of USD 0.4 billion, which made up 24 per cent. Total institutional investment stood at USD 1.6 billion, marking a 26 per cent year-on-year increase, though declining 52 per cent sequentially.

The report noted that foreign capital remains sensitive to global macroeconomic and geopolitical developments, while domestic capital is increasingly providing stability and continuity to investment activity. This has led to a sustained rebalancing of capital flows, with domestic investors accounting for a larger share in four of the last five quarters.Over the past three quarters, domestic participation has steadily increased, rising from around 63 per cent (USD 1.1 billion) in Q3 2025 to 81 per cent (USD 2.7 billion) in Q4 2025, before moderating slightly to 76 per cent in Q1 2026, reflecting consistent local conviction in real estate as an asset class.The report highlighted that overall investment activity in Q1 2026 marked the highest first-quarter deployment since 2021, underscoring the scale and resilience of capital flows despite global uncertainties.Private Equity remained the dominant investment route, accounting for 74 per cent of inflows, while Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) contributed 26 per cent.Segment-wise, the office sector led institutional investments with USD 1.0 billion, representing 64 per cent of total inflows. The hospitality sector followed with a 13 per cent share, while the residential segment accounted for 9 per cent, indicating continued preference for commercial real estate assets.At the city level, Delhi NCR attracted the highest share at 28 per cent, followed by Chennai at 17 per cent and Bengaluru at 14 per cent, reflecting broad-based investor interest across major metropolitan markets.Commenting on the trend, Somy Thomas, Executive Managing Director, Cushman & Wakefield said, "The sustained dominance of domestic capital marks an important inflection point for India's real estate investment landscape. What we are seeing is a more structural shift in capital allocation, driven by growing confidence in the underlying fundamentals of the market and a more disciplined, institutional approach to deployment."He added that strong leasing activity, occupancy levels and income visibility in office assets, along with consistent REIT performance, are reinforcing real estate's position as a core, yield-driven investment within domestic portfolios.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

V
Vikram M
The report says Delhi NCR got 28% share - it shows our national capital region is still the hub of business activity. But I wish they focused more on affordable housing instead of just commercial spaces. Residential only 9%? That's concerning for common people.
K
Kavya N
Honestly, I'm a bit skeptical. Domestic capital is good, but we need to ask - is this really confidence in the market or just because foreign investors are scared of global uncertainty? The 52% drop from previous quarter is worrying. We shouldn't get too comfortable. 🤔
S
Siddharth J
As someone working in commercial real estate in Bengaluru (14% share), I can tell you the leasing activity is absolutely buzzing. REITs performing well is a game-changer for retail investors too. Finally, real estate is becoming a proper institutional asset class in India. No more 'just buy land and sit on it' mentality. 👏
R
Rajesh Q
Good to see Chennai at 17% - shows the southern markets are holding strong. But I worry about the hospitality sector getting 13% - after COVID, tourism is still recovering. Are we over-investing in hotels? Need more balanced allocation towards residential and industrial spaces.
P
Priya S
This is actually very encouraging for the economy. When local players have confidence in our own market, it means the fundamentals are strong. The report mentions 'structural shift in capital allocation' - that's exactly what India needs. Let's hope this trend continues! 🙏

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