India's Real Estate PE Investment Soars to $637M in Q1 2026, Offices Lead

Private equity investment in India's real estate sector more than doubled year-on-year to USD 637 million in the first quarter of 2026, according to Knight Frank India. The office segment dominated, attracting 83% of total investments, with a clear preference for stabilised, income-generating assets. Geographically, the National Capital Region and Pune accounted for 97% of the total inflows, while domestic capital constituted 80% of the investments. The report notes the investment momentum remains selective, constrained by global uncertainties and a risk-calibrated approach focusing on steady yields.

Key Points: PE Investment in Indian Real Estate Jumps to $637M in Q1 2026

  • PE investment more than doubled YoY
  • Office assets captured 83% of total inflows
  • Domestic investors drove 80% of capital
  • NCR and Pune dominated geographically
3 min read

PE investments in real estate jump to USD 637 mn in Q1 2026, office assets dominate: Report

Private equity investment in India's real estate surged to USD 637 million in Q1 2026, with office assets dominating 83% of inflows, says Knight Frank report.

"Investment momentum remains selective, with domestic capital continuing to drive the majority of deals - Knight Frank India Report"

Mumbai, April 16

Private equity investment in India's real estate sector rose sharply in the first quarter of 2026, reaching USD 637 million across nine deals, according to a report by real estate consultancy firm Knight Frank India.

This marks more than a twofold increase compared to USD 300 million recorded across three deals in the same period last year, indicating a pickup in transaction activity.

However, the report noted that investment momentum remains selective, with domestic capital continuing to drive the majority of deals amid persistent global uncertainties.

The office segment emerged as the dominant asset class, attracting USD 529 million, or 83 per cent of total investments, across four transactions. All deals involved stabilised, income-generating assets, reflecting a clear investor preference for steady yields and lower risk exposure.

Notably, three of these transactions were structured as equity investments, signalling improved confidence in pricing for leased office properties.

In contrast, the residential segment accounted for USD 108 million across five deals, contributing 17 per cent of total investment activity.

The majority of these investments were debt-led, with four out of five deals structured as structured credit. Capital was primarily directed towards mid-income and luxury housing projects, as investors continued to prioritise downside protection in a segment characterised by relatively uncertain exit timelines.

The warehousing and retail sectors did not record any transactions during the quarter, a sharp departure from their combined USD 885 million contribution in 2025.

The report attributed this slowdown to cautious underwriting due to high financing costs and limited availability of stabilised assets at attractive yields. Retail investments, meanwhile, remained episodic, with no large, high-quality opportunities closing during the period.

Geographically, investment activity was heavily concentrated in select markets. The National Capital Region (NCR) accounted for USD 411 million, representing 65 per cent of total inflows, followed by Pune with USD 203 million, or 32 per cent.

Mumbai saw limited activity at USD 23 million, while a transaction in Bengaluru was completed at an undisclosed value.

Domestic investors played a pivotal role, contributing USD 510 million, or 80 per cent of total investments. Foreign capital accounted for the remaining 20 per cent, with USD 128 million deployed selectively in stabilised assets.

The report highlighted that factors such as currency hedging costs, valuation gaps and continued caution towards development risk have constrained cross-border investment.

According to the consultancy, the current investment landscape reflects a risk-calibrated approach, with capital flowing into markets offering strong leasing demand, institutional-grade assets and clearer exit visibility.

It added that the pace of recovery in 2026 will depend on improved valuation alignment and a supportive macroeconomic environment.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Interesting data, but I have a concern. Why is Mumbai, our financial capital, seeing such limited activity at only $23 million? NCR and Pune are getting the lion's share. Are investors finding better value or infrastructure there? This concentration could lead to imbalanced regional development.
R
Rohit P
The report clearly shows everyone is playing it safe. 83% in stabilised office assets, residential deals mostly as debt... no warehousing or retail deals at all. It's all about steady yields with minimal risk. Can't blame them with global uncertainties, but hope we see some bold bets on new developments soon.
S
Sarah B
As someone working in commercial real estate in Gurgaon, this data matches what we're seeing on the ground. The demand for Grade-A office space with good amenities is very strong from both Indian and MNC companies. The equity investments in leased properties are a key confidence indicator.
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Vikram M
Good news overall, but the complete absence of warehousing deals is surprising. With the e-commerce and manufacturing push, I thought logistics parks would be a hot sector. The report says high financing costs are a blocker. RBI needs to look at this if we want to boost the supply chain infrastructure.
K
Kavya N
The focus on mid-income and luxury housing for the residential debt is telling. It seems affordable housing is still not attractive enough for big institutional money. The government's push for 'Housing for All' needs more innovative financing models to attract this kind of capital. 🏠

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