India's Residential Real Estate Reaches Structural Maturity in Q1 2026

India's residential real estate market has entered a structurally mature, demand-anchored growth phase in Q1 2026. New launches reached 93,065 units and sales hit 95,973 units across top eight cities, with the weighted average price crossing Rs 10,050 per sq ft for the first time. Bengaluru emerged as a standout performer with a 33% year-on-year sales surge, driven by durable GCC and startup employment. The outlook for Q2 2026 remains constructive with predicted steady growth of 2-4% and price appreciation of 4-8%.

Key Points: India’s Housing Market Matures: Sales & Supply Rise in Q1 2026

  • Record high price of Rs 10,050 per sq ft achieved
  • Bengaluru sales jump 33% YoY, a standout performer
  • Market shifts from speculation to demand-driven growth
  • Premium segment drives price appreciation across metros
2 min read

India's residential market structurally mature in Q1 2026 as sales, supply improve

India's residential market enters a mature growth phase in Q1 2026 with 95,973 sales and record prices, led by Bengaluru's 33% sales surge.

"The Indian residential market has transitioned into a structurally more disciplined phase. - Prakash Tejwani, CEO, PropTiger"

New Delhi, May 16

India's residential real estate market has transitioned into a "structurally mature, demand‑anchored growth phase", with Q1 2026 recording 93,065 new unit launches and 95,973 unit sales across the top eight cities, a report said on Saturday.

The report from PropTiger said the supply rose 1.1 per cent sequentially and sales improved 1 per cent quarter‑on‑quarter.

The weighted average price reached a record high of Rs 10,050 per sq ft -- crossing the five‑digit benchmark for the first time -- "signalling that value creation now drives market health rather than transaction volume."

"The Indian residential market has transitioned into a structurally more disciplined phase. Growth today is increasingly being driven by demand quality, inventory discipline, and buyer confidence rather than speculative expansion," said Prakash Tejwani, CEO, PropTiger.

The supply remained flat at -0.1 per cent on a YoY basis, while sales moderated to -2.2 per cent, reflecting healthy normalisation rather than structural weakness, the report noted.

Bengaluru emerged as the standout performer, recording sales of 15,603 units, up 33 per cent year‑on‑year and 12 per cent sequentially. The city also maintained near-parity between new supply and sales absorption, indicating a well-balanced market.

The GCC and startup employment engine continues to prove more durable than conventional IT hiring cycles, providing Bengaluru with a structurally differentiated demand base.

Mumbai Metropolitan Region remained the largest market by volume and value with 26,116 sales units in Q1 2026. Though the performance moderated on YoY basis, it reflected base-effect normalisation against an exceptional 2025, rather than a loss of demand momentum, the report noted.

Chennai, Hyderabad and Delhi‑NCR also posted robust gains in sales from 11 per cent to 43 per cent, while Pune, Kolkata and Ahmedabad showed mixed trends.

A disproportionate share of new launches in Q1 2026 -- particularly in Mumbai MMR, Bengaluru, and Delhi NCR -- remained concentrated in the premium and upper mid-income segments, driving the average property prices higher.

The outlook for Q2 2026 is constructive, the firm said, predicting a steady sequential growth of 2-4 per cent and sustained year‑on‑year price appreciation of 4-8 per cent across major metros driven by limited mid-segment supply.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Bengaluru's 33% sales jump is insane! The GCC job market is truly a game-changer. My cousin works in a Global Capability Centre and she says the demand for premium apartments near KR Puram is through the roof. But affordability for middle-class families remains a concern. Hope developers don't ignore budget segments. Jai Bengaluru! 🏡
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Vikram M
As someone who bought a flat in Noida Extension in 2023, I can tell you the reality is different. Yes, sales are up, but the inventory overhang in many projects is still high. The report says disciplined buyers but I see many people still buying on EMI loans that stretch 30 years. Maturity? More like FOMO-driven purchases from Instagram influencers. Just my two paise.
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Sarah B
Interesting data, but I wonder about the impact on rental yields. As an NRI looking to invest, the price appreciation is good but if rents don't keep pace, it's just speculative froth. The 4-8% annual price growth sounds healthy though. Need to check if it's really a seller's market or just polished data from PropTiger.
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Ananya R
The premium segment concentration is worrying for first-time buyers like me in Pune. We're priced out of Wakad and Hinjewadi now. The report says "supply discipline" but it's really builders chasing high margins on luxury homes while ignoring ₹40-50 lakh budget buyers. Also, Ahmedabad mixed trends? That's surprising given the GIFT City boom. 🏢
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Michael C
I work in a multinational and we recently expanded our Bengaluru

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