India Real Estate Sentiment Cautious Amid Global Volatility, Office Strong

Stakeholder sentiment in India's real estate sector turned cautious in Q1 2026 due to global macroeconomic volatility. The Knight Frank-NAREDCO report shows the Current Sentiment Score fell to 49 and the Future Sentiment Score eased to 50. Residential activity is recalibrating with 52% of respondents expecting sales to drop, while 73% foresee prices rising due to structural costs. In contrast, the office segment outlook remains strong with 41% expecting improved leasing demand.

Key Points: India Real Estate Sentiment Cautious in Q1 2026

  • Current Sentiment Score falls to 49 from 60
  • Future Sentiment Score eases to neutral 50
  • 52% respondents expect housing sales drop
  • 73% foresee prices rising due to structural costs
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India's real estate sentiment enters cautious phase over global volatility, office market strong

India's real estate sentiment turns cautious in Q1 2026 due to global volatility. Residential demand softens but office market remains strong, says Knight Frank-NAREDCO report.

"Real estate sentiment has moderated amid global macroeconomic headwinds and inflationary pressures; however, this reflects short-term caution among stakeholders rather than any weakening in the residential market's underlying strength. - Praveen Jain"

New Delhi, May 6

Stakeholder sentiment in India's real estate sector entered into a cautious phase in Q1 2026 over global macroeconomic volatility, a report said on Wednesday.

The report from Knight Frank and NAREDCO said its quarterly index Current Sentiment Score fell to 49 from 60 and the Future Sentiment Score eased to a neutral 50 from 61.

The index captures supply‑side and financial institution views on economic conditions and funding availability.

"The moderation in sentiment is largely driven by global macroeconomic volatility. Elevated crude oil prices have intensified inflationary trends, impacting construction and logistics costs, affecting project viability," the report said.

Even as India's economic fundamentals remain largely stable, geopolitical conditions are beginning to influence real estate demand and supply dynamics.

Residential activity showed signs of recalibration after a prolonged growth cycle as sales and new launches moderated in Q1 2026.

"Demand is expected to further soften in the near term, even as property prices remain firm or continue rising. This divergence between demand moderation and price resilience highlights the structural cost challenges currently shaping the market," the report noted.

Around 52 per cent of respondents expect housing sales to drop, even as 73 per cent foresee prices rising or remaining stable due to rising materials costs, labour costs and loan costs.

The divergence between weakening demand sentiment and firm pricing expectations highlights that rising structural costs are driving the residential market, it added.

"Real estate sentiment has moderated amid global macroeconomic headwinds and inflationary pressures; however, this reflects short-term caution among stakeholders rather than any weakening in the residential market's underlying strength," said Praveen Jain, National President, NAREDCO.

He called the recent softening in residential sentiment a natural recalibration following a sustained growth phase, with end-user demand and steady price appreciation continuing to support resilience.

The report noted that nearly half of stakeholders expect fewer new project launches in the near term.

By contrast, the outlook on office segment remained strong, with 41 per cent of respondents expecting improvement in leasing demand.

A similar trend is observed in the office supply outlook with nearly half of the stakeholders expecting more completions, and others expecting stable or lower supply.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
I've been saving for a home for years, and now they say prices will stay high while demand drops. This is so frustrating for middle-class families like mine. The government needs to step in to check rising costs or we'll never afford a house in a city like Mumbai or Delhi. 😔
S
Sarah B
Interesting to see the divergence between residential caution and office optimism. In the West, commercial real estate is struggling with work-from-home trends. India's office market seems to be going the other way. Maybe it's the outsourcing boom and GCC growth? Will keep an eye on leasing data.
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Vivek B
The report says prices rising due to structural costs—that's key. Developers aren't just being greedy; steel and cement costs have shot up, labour wages are up, and loan rates are higher. But it's a tough time for buyers. I hope the real estate sector doesn't become a rich-only game in India.
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Ravi K
Hmm, the future sentiment score at 50 is exactly neutral. It's like everyone's waiting and watching. But the office sector resilience is promising—maybe more WFO policies from IT companies are driving this. For residential, I think if interest rates soften, demand could bounce back quickly.
K
Kavitha C
As someone working in project management in real estate, I can confirm construction costs are biting. Margins are squeezed, and many developers are delaying new launches. But for genuine buyers, maybe a softening in demand will eventually bring some price correction? Let's see.

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