India's Top Cities See 8% Rise in Warehousing Absorption in Q1 2026

India's top seven cities recorded 11.4 million square feet of warehousing absorption in Q1 2026, an 8% quarter-on-quarter increase. Mumbai and Pune dominated with 81% of total leasing activity. The sector is expected to exceed 45 million square feet in annual absorption by end of 2026. Occupiers are prioritizing supply chain resilience and technology-enabled warehousing solutions.

Key Points: India Warehousing Absorption Up 8% in Q1 2026

  • 11.4 msf absorbed in Q1 2026, up 8% QoQ
  • Mumbai and Pune contributed 81% of leasing
  • Annual absorption expected to exceed 45 msf by end of 2026
  • Grade-A facilities and supply chain resilience driving growth
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India's top cities record 8 pc growth in warehousing absorption in Q1

India's top 7 cities recorded 11.4 msf warehousing absorption in Q1 2026, up 8% QoQ. Mumbai and Pune led with 81% of leasing activity.

"Sequential growth in absorption reflects strong underlying market fundamentals - Shrinivas Rao, CEO, Vestian"

New Delhi, April 29

India's top seven cities recorded warehousing and logistics absorption of 11.4 million square feet in Q1 2026, posting a 8 per cent quarter‑on‑quarter increase and the fourth consecutive quarter of sequential growth, a report said on Wednesday.

The report from workplace solutions firm Vestian said the warehousing and logistics sector entered 2026 on a stronger footing, supported by improved occupier sentiment, resilient domestic demand and ongoing infrastructure upgrades.

"Sequential growth in absorption reflects strong underlying market fundamentals, supported by rising manufacturing activity, infrastructure development, and resilient domestic consumption," said Shrinivas Rao, FRICS, CEO, Vestian.

While absorption was down 14 per cent year‑on‑year, leasing activity remained robust, led by third‑party logistics, engineering and manufacturing, and consumer goods occupiers.

The warehousing and logistics sector is expected to post annual absorption exceeding 45 million sq ft by the end of 2026, reflecting sustained demand in the sector.

Mumbai and Pune together contributed 81 per cent of the total leasing activity, underscoring the continued dominance of established western industrial and logistics hubs in driving demand. The sustained quarterly recovery indicated that the moderation witnessed in 2025 was a phase of strategic recalibration rather than a structural slowdown in demand.

Mumbai recorded the highest absorption at 4.76 million square feet or 42 per cent of the pan-India absorption and Pune stood at 4.46 million square feet, up 162 per cent quarter‑on‑quarter and 42 per cent year‑on‑year.

Hyderabad recorded an absorption of 0.69 million square feet, up 50 per cent year‑on‑year.

The National Capital Region witnessed an absorption of 0.73 million square feet, which has moderated 57 per cent year‑on‑year.

Chennai, Bengaluru and Kolkata recorded 0.59 million, 0.17 million and 0.01 million square feet of absorption, respectively.

A growing emphasis on supply chain resilience, rising demand for modern Grade-A facilities, and continued expansion into emerging Tier-I and Tier-II logistics hubs are expected to drive the next phase of growth in 2026, the report forecasted.

Occupiers are likely to prioritise network efficiency, faster delivery capabilities, and technology-enabled warehousing solutions, creating fresh demand across strategic corridors, it noted.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Great for Pune and Mumbai! But what about Bengaluru? Only 0.17 msf is disappointing given all the e-commerce and manufacturing there. Hope Tier-II cities like Nagpur also get more attention.
J
James A
Interesting data. The 162% QoQ jump in Pune is impressive—probably driven by the new highway connectivity and industrial parks. Warehousing is definitely the backbone of modern supply chains. 🏗️
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Vikram M
NCR's 57% YoY drop is worrying. Traffic issues and land costs are hurting. Meanwhile, Hyderabad's 50% growth shows how Telangana's logistics policy is working. Need similar focus across states. 👏
S
Sarah B
The demand for Grade-A facilities is the real story here. Old-style godowns won't cut it anymore—tech-enabled warehousing with automation is the future. Indian developers need to step up quality. 🤔
R
Rohit P
Only 0.01 msf in Kolkata? That's pathetic for a city with such a huge port. East India is being ignored again. The government must fast-track the proposed logistics hubs in Bihar and West Bengal. 🙄
K
Kavya N
Positive signs overall. The report says annual absorption should cross 45 msf by

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