Luxury Housing Redefines India’s Real Estate Market as Pricing Power Shifts Upward
India’s real estate market witnesses a major shift as luxury housing dominates residential sales in 2025, driven by rising HNIs, IPO liquidity, and changing buyer preferences, with Gurugram overtaking Mumbai in ultra-premium home sales.
It is not that the mid-market has disappeared; it is that it has stopped setting the tone. Pricing power has quietly migrated upward, as luxury housing drives the bulk of residential sales across India’s top cities and redefines the market's center of gravity toward premium living.
According to JLL India, homes priced above Rs. 1 crore accounted for nearly 63% of total residential sales in 2025, a significant rise from about 53% the previous year. The total residential sales value has edged past Rs. 6 lakh crore, reflecting the scale of this transformation. This trend is further amplified by what Knight Frank India attributes to the steady expansion of India’s high-net-worth population. IPO activity alone, with over $19 billion raised across more than 100 companies in 2025, has injected a fresh layer of liquidity that is not particularly price-sensitive in residential decisions.
Arjun Gehlot, Director, Ambience Group, states that luxury housing is increasingly driving residential sales across India’s top cities, led by a clear shift in buyer priorities. He notes that at the top end, brand credibility has become non-negotiable, with buyers aligning with developers who can deliver consistently while evaluating financial strength, execution track record, and long-term design quality. This segment is witnessing a more informed, investment-led approach, influencing how developers plan, partner, and position their offerings.
Mohit Gawri, VP, Rise Infraventures Limited, emphasizes that from an investment standpoint, luxury housing is offering more predictable value retention, attracting a different class of investor that is less speculative and more strategic. He adds that infrastructure development has supported this trend, where early movers, mostly investors, have been followed by end-users. However, despite the ongoing premiumisation, the market still depends on the mid-income buyer, even as capital, both financial and managerial, continues to flow disproportionately into the upper tiers where margins are cleaner, inventory cycles shorter, and brand positioning sharper.
Ashok Singh Jaunapuria, MD & CEO, SS Group, highlights a subtle shift within the luxury segment itself. He explains that the earlier luxury buyer, who was status-conscious and location-fixated, has been replaced by someone far more evaluative. The conversation has moved from pin codes to product, reflecting a deeper change in buyer priorities, where the focus is less on owning a home and more on owning a certain quality of living. This shift is now defining competition among developers.
In Mumbai, the gravitational pull of established luxury micro-markets remains intact, but pricing has reached a point where demand is incremental and selective. In contrast, Gurugram has been growing steadily. JLL’s estimates indicate that Rs. 10 crore-plus home sales in the city crossed Rs. 24,000 crore in 2025, placing it ahead of Mumbai in that segment. Bangalore and Hyderabad are also witnessing significant growth, reinforcing the nationwide nature of this premiumisation trend.
The shift is no longer confined to metropolitan cities. Udit Jain, Director, One Group, points out that in markets like Mohali, there is a growing segment of buyers willing to invest in better-designed, higher-value homes, provided the ecosystem, including schools, healthcare, and connectivity, keeps pace. He observes that buyers are no longer benchmarking locally but are comparing product quality, amenities, and planning standards with developments in larger cities, gradually raising expectations for developers in Tier 2 markets.
Karan Malik, Regional Director, Realistic Realtors, adds that a behavioural shift is also shaping demand. He notes that the definition of “adequate space” has permanently changed in recent years. A 3BHK is no longer a default upgrade but is often seen as a compromise. Projects across the country are reporting stronger traction for larger configurations, as expectation levels rise and buyers compare offerings across cities rather than within them.
Amid this transformation, the market has grown larger but quieter. Demand is concentrating at the top, even as the broader base remains less decisive. For now, the market appears comfortable allowing this imbalance to persist. Whether this marks a temporary phase or a long-term structural reordering remains uncertain. However, the current trajectory clearly indicates that the center of gravity has shifted upward, and it does not appear in a hurry to move back.

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