Domestic Investors Dominate India’s $1.6B Real Estate Inflows in Q1

Domestic investors led India's institutional real estate inflows to $1.6 billion in Q1 2026, a 26% year-on-year increase. Domestic capital accounted for 76% of inflows, surpassing foreign investment for the third consecutive quarter. The office segment attracted the largest share at $1 billion, followed by hospitality at 13% and residential at 9%. Delhi-NCR drew 28% of investment, with Chennai and Bengaluru following at 17% and 14% respectively.

Key Points: India Real Estate: Domestic Investors Drive $1.6B Q1 Inflows

  • Domestic investors accounted for 76% of $1.6B Q1 inflows
  • Office segment attracted 64% of capital at $1 billion
  • Q1 2026 marks the highest first-quarter deployment since 2021
  • Delhi-NCR led cities with 28% of investment
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Domestic investors drive India's $1.6 billion institutional real estate inflows in Q1

Domestic investors led India’s institutional real estate inflows at $1.6B in Q1 2026, a 26% YoY rise, with offices attracting 64% of capital. Report by Cushman & Wakefield.

"The sustained dominance of domestic capital is driven by growing confidence in the underlying fundamentals of the market - Somy Thomas"

New Delhi, April 28

India's institutional real estate investment activity totalled $1.6 billion in Q1 2026, marking a 26 per cent year-on-year increase and led by domestic investors who accounted for 76 per cent of inflows, a report said on Tuesday.

Domestic institutional capital increased, surpassing foreign inflows for the third consecutive quarter and signalling a sustained shift, the report from Cushman & Wakefield said, also noting that institutional activity moderated 52 per cent quarterly.

Over the past three quarters, domestic investors have consistently accounted for the majority of institutional investment activity, with their share rising from roughly 63 per cent in Q3 2025 to around 81 per cent in Q4 2025, and remaining elevated at about 76 per cent in Q1 2026.

Overall institutional investment activity in the Indian real estate sector during Q1 2026 also marked the highest first‑quarter deployment recorded since 2021.

Private equity remained the main channel, accounting for 74 per cent of institutional inflows, while Real Estate Investment Trusts made up the remaining 26 per cent.

The office segment attracted the largest share of capital with $1 billion inflows, or 64 per cent of the quarter's investments. Hospitality sector followed at 13 per cent and residential at 9 per cent, underscoring the continued prominence of commercial real estate within institutional portfolios.

Delhi-NCR drew 28 per cent of Q1 investment, with Chennai and Bengaluru attracting 17 per cent and 14 per cent respectively.

The sustained dominance of domestic capital is driven by growing confidence in the underlying fundamentals of the market and a more disciplined, institutional approach to deployment, said Somy Thomas, Executive Managing Director-Capital Markets, Cushman & Wakefield.

Domestic capital has been particularly active in the office segment, and this momentum is likely to increase, due to higher leasing, occupancy and income visibility, the report forecasted.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Great to see domestic capital leading the charge! But I hope some of this flows into residential too, especially affordable housing. Not just offices and hotels—people need homes.
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Vikram M
Delhi-NCR getting 28% is interesting—so much construction and redevelopment happening there. But the quarterly drop of 52% is a bit worrying. Might be seasonal, but let's see next quarter.
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Sarah B
It's promising that domestic investors are leading for three quarters straight—shows Indian institutions have matured. However, would have liked to see more diversity across sectors; hospitality and residential are still small compared to office.
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Kavya N
This is a clear vote of confidence in India's economic fundamentals. With office leasing picking up and REITs growing, the market is maturing. Hope smaller cities like Pune and Hyderabad get more attention too.
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Rajesh Q
Good numbers overall, but I'm concerned about the 52% quarterly drop. That's a big swing. Volatility like this can worry smaller investors. Need more stability in inflows.
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Nisha Z
Domestic capital dominance is a positive sign for 'Atmanirbhar Bharat' in real estate. But I wish the report also highlighted how this impacts jobs and rental yields for common people.

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