Q1 home sales, launches drop amid price hikes and geopolitical concerns: PropTiger report

Against the backdrop of worsening geopolitical concerns that can deeply impact the domestic job market, sales fell in all key residential markets except Bangalore and Chennai.

April 16th, 2025: Home sales across India’s eight prime residential markets in the January-March period fell 19% over last year, as rising property prices and slowing growth forced buyers to exercise caution, says the latest report by digital real estate transaction & advisory platform PropTiger.com.

According to the Real Insight Residential: Q1 2025 report (January–March 2025) by PropTiger.com—part of REA India, which also owns Housing.com— new home supply also dropped 10% in the first quarter of the calendar year, as developers adjusted expectations amid a dramatic price appreciation of the past couple of years, which made housing unaffordable for a large section of buyers in the world’s most populous country.

“The huge spike in prices had already started to show its adverse impact on sales. With a global trade war now bringing new uncertainty, it is only natural for buyers to adopt a cautious approach to investment, particularly in something so big as real estate,” said Mr. Dhruv Agarwala, group chief executive officer, Housing.com and PropTiger.com.

The sales decline could have been a lot sharper if not for the 25-basis-point rate cut announced by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in February, Mr. Agarwala added.

Most urban Indians rely on housing loans to make a house purchase. Repo rate is the benchmark that determines the interest they would pay on this credit. A downward change in this rate is a certain measure to boost buyer confidence.

 

Sales fall across cities barring Bengaluru, Chennai

According to the report, less than 100,000 residential units were sold in the January-March quarter, with most cities covered in the analysis showing a fall in numbers. While Bengaluru and Chennai bucked this trend, Hyderabad, MMR and Pune witnessed the sharpest sales drop.

Signs of a market correction were also visible through a dip in new supply, with five of the eight cities showing an annual decline in launches. Pune, Hyderabad and Ahmedabad registered the sharpest fall in numbers, the report showed.

Sales (Units)
City Q1 25 Q4 24 Q1 24 QoQ YoY
Ahmedabad 10,730 10,170 12,915 6% -17%
Bengaluru 11,731 13,236 10,381 -11% 13%
Chennai 4,774 4,073 4,427 17% 8%
Delhi NCR 8,477 9,808 10,058 -14% -16%
Hyderabad 10,647 13,179 14,298 -19% -26%
Kolkata 3,803 3,715 3,857 2% -1%
Mumbai 30,705 33,617 41,594 -9% -26%
Pune 17,228 18,240 23,112 -6% -25%
Grand Total 98,095 1,06,038 1,20,642 -7% -19%
           
           
New Launches (Units)
City Q1 25 Q4 24 Q1 24 QoQ YoY
Ahmedabad 2,384 3,515 3,116 -32% -23%
Bengaluru 18,183 15,157 10,000 20% 82%
Chennai 4,070 4,005 4,723 2% -14%
Delhi NCR 7,952 10,048 6,872 -21% 16%
Hyderabad 10,156 9,066 15,095 12% -33%
Kolkata 3,534 3,091 1,485 14% 138%
Mumbai 31,322 30,127 36,784 4% -15%
Pune 15,543 13,652 24,945 14% -38%
Grand Total 93,144 88,661 1,03,020 5% -10%

NOTE: Housing markets covered in the report are Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata, NCR (Gurugram, Noida, Greater Noida, Ghaziabad and Faridabad), MMR (Mumbai, Navi Mumbai and Thane) and Pune.

 

Got any questions or point of view on our article? We would love to hear from you. Write to our Editor-in-Chief Jhumur Ghosh at jhumur.ghosh1@housing.com
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