India's Housing Market Normalises in 2025: Sales Dip, Prices Hold Firm

India's residential real estate market entered a phase of normalisation in 2025, with annual sales declining 12% year-on-year. New residential supply also fell by 6%, marking the lowest annual addition since 2021. The market saw significant city-level divergence, with Hyderabad and Chennai outperforming while Mumbai and Pune saw sharp declines. Despite softer sales volumes, residential prices remained firm as developers maintained pricing discipline.

Key Points: India Housing Market 2025: Sales Fall, Prices Stay Firm

  • Sales fell 12% to 386,365 units
  • New supply dropped 6%
  • Hyderabad & Chennai were top performers
  • Prices remained resilient nationwide
2 min read

India's housing market normalised in 2025; sales fell, prices stayed firm: PropTiger report

PropTiger report shows India's 2025 housing sales fell 12%, but prices remained resilient due to disciplined supply management.

"2025 was not a year of demand destruction, but one of recalibration. - Onkar Shetye"

New Delhi, January 24

India's residential real estate market entered a phase of normalisation in 2025, with housing demand softening gradually but remaining structurally resilient, according to a report released by PropTiger.

Across the top eight Indian cities, all-India residential sales declined 12 per cent year-on-year to 386,365 units in 2025, compared with 436,992 units in 2024, marking the lowest annual sales since 2022, as per the report by digital real estate transaction and advisory platform.

New residential supply during the year fell 6 per cent to 361,096 units from 385,221 units in 2024, the lowest annual supply addition since 2021, the report said.

In the October-December quarter (Q4 2025), housing sales declined 10 per cent year-on-year and 0.5 per cent quarter-on-quarter to 95,049 units, the lowest quarterly sales volume since Q2 2023.

Onkar Shetye, Executive Director of Aurum PropTech, said, "2025 was not a year of demand destruction, but one of recalibration. Buyers remained active but more deliberate, while developers responded with disciplined supply management. This prevented inventory stress and helped prices remain resilient despite softer volumes."

City-level divergence widened through the year, with Hyderabad and Chennai emerging as consistent outperformers, recording sustained quarterly and year-on-year growth.

Chennai saw annual sales rise 55 per cent to 24,892 units, while Hyderabad recorded a 6 per cent increase to 54,271 units. In contrast, Mumbai and Pune posted sharp annual sales declines of 26 per cent and 27 per cent, respectively

Delhi-NCR remained the only major market to record year-on-year sales declines across all four quarters of 2025, reflecting a prolonged phase of consolidation, the report noted

On the supply side, total new residential supply across the eight cities rose 4 per cent year-on-year and 0.2 per cent quarter-on-quarter in Q4 2025 to 92,007 units. However, for the full year, new launches declined 6 per cent compared with 2024.

Despite the moderation in sales volumes, residential prices continued to rise across key markets. Developers largely avoided aggressive discounting, reinforcing pricing discipline, the report said

"The housing market is transitioning into a more mature, execution-led phase," added Onkar Shetye. "Growth in 2026 is likely to be driven by affordability, infrastructure-led micro-markets, and city-specific fundamentals rather than broad-based acceleration."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The divergence between cities is fascinating. Hyderabad and Chennai booming while Mumbai and Pune see sharp declines. Shows how local job markets and infrastructure are becoming the real drivers, not just national sentiment.
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Aman W
As someone looking in Delhi-NCR, this "prolonged consolidation" is just a fancy term for a stagnant market. Prices are still too high for what you get. Builders need to offer better value, not just hold prices firm.
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Sarah B
Interesting data. The disciplined supply management by developers is a smart move to prevent a crash. It shows the market is maturing. Hopefully, this leads to better quality projects focused on execution, as mentioned.
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Vikram M
Chennai with 55% growth! 🚀 Southern cities are clearly winning. Better urban planning, lower pollution, and growing IT corridors are making them more attractive than the traditional metros for settling down.
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Karthik V
"Recalibration" is the right word. After the post-pandemic frenzy, a cooling-off period is healthy. Buyers are now more deliberate, looking for ready-to-move-in or near-completion projects to avoid builder delays. Trust is key.

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