Knight Frank's Q2 2025 Prime Global Cities Index places Bengaluru 4th globally with 10.2% annual prime property growth, surpassing Mumbai and Delhi. Tech wealth creation and constrained luxury inventory drive this outperformance against a global average of 2.3% growth.
Chennai's housing market surged 24% QoQ with 5,660 units sold in Q2 2025, defying a 20% national sales decline. Strong infrastructure growth, mid-segment dominance, and RERA compliance drive resilience as other metros face correction pressures amid geopolitical tensions.
North Goa villa prices stabilized in H1 2025 after a 30% surge since 2022, with oversupply and cautious buyer sentiment creating market correction opportunities.
Kolkata's office space demand surged 100% to 6 lakh sq ft in Q2 2025, contrasting sharply with a 10% dip in residential sales. Despite a 23% rise in new housing supply, affordability challenges and geopolitical uncertainty impact buyer sentiment, while commercial real estate thrives on corporate expansion and GCC demand.
Ahmedabad's residential supply saw a Q2 2025 surge with West Peripheral and North sub-markets launching 5,166 new units, aligning developer strategies with buyer demand near emerging business hubs.
Amid India's 20% YoY housing sales drop, Chennai stood out with 11% annual growth and 40% QoQ surge. New launches jumped 65% YoY, driven by GCCs and premium demand. Developers are strategically boosting supply to meet rising demand in this outlier market.
Navi Mumbai's housing market saw a 17% YoY sales decline and 56% drop in new launches during Q2 2025, reflecting broader real estate corrections despite infrastructure upgrades like MTHL. PropEquity data highlights cautious developer strategies amid economic pressures.