Kolkata's residential market surged to 46,742 apartment registrations from January to September 2025, a 32% year-on-year rise and the highest since 2020. September recorded 5,302 units amid stable prices and infrastructure boosts. Knight Frank data reveals 53% demand for 500-1,000 sq ft homes, signaling a shift to spacious living in key zones like South and North Kolkata.
Kolkata's housing sector thrived with an 8% year-on-year price rise in Q3 2025, per Knight Frank, selling 4,374 units amid India's slowdown. It outperformed Mumbai's 7% and Pune's 5%, driven by end-user demand and steady sales, positioning the city as a resilient market hub for buyers and investors.
Knight Frank's Q3 2025 report reveals Bangalore's residential prices rose 15% year-on-year, second to NCR's 19%. Anarock data back 15-20% growth in 2024. Premium areas like Sarjapur Road, Whitefield, and North Bangalore see huge demand from IT pros, startups, and NRIs, making 2BHKs under ₹1 crore scarce.
Mumbai's office sector shines with 11% year-on-year rent increase, the thirteenth straight quarter of growth per Knight Frank's Q3 2025 report. Premium Grade A spaces in Nariman Point, Lower Parel, and Bandra-Kurla Complex draw strong demand as developers prioritize project completions over new launches in a supply-constrained market.
Hyderabad's real estate market showed robust growth in September 2025, with residential registrations rising 35% year-on-year to 6,612 homes valued at ₹4,804 crore. The premium segment, properties over ₹1 crore, surged 151%, comprising 22% of registrations and 53% of total value, indicating a strong shift to luxury living.
India's ultra-rich are investing more in residential real estate, with 32% of their portfolio allocated to this sector, showing a shift in preferences and a growing appetite for luxury homes.