Sales of affordable homes down 23% in Jan-Mar to 16,273 units in top 8 cities: Knight Frank
Sales of affordable homes, costing less than ₹50 lakh each, fell 23 per cent on-year in January-March to 16,273 units across the top eight cities, mainly due to lower fresh supply in this price bracket, according to Knight Frank.
Post-Covid pandemic, the demand for luxury homes has surged. Builders are attributing the lower launches in the affordable housing segment to the high cost of inputs, especially land.
In its latest report, real estate consultant Knight Frank India pointed out that affordable housing segment saw the steepest decline of 23 per cent during the January-March period of this year, with all eight cities reporting a fall in sales.
As per the data, even the ₹50 lakhs-1 crore category witnessed a decline of 12 per cent year-on-year during the first quarter of the 2026 calendar year to 23,567 units across eight major cities.
These cities are Mumbai, Delhi-NCR, Pune, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, Ahmedabad and Kolkata.
However, the housing sales in the ₹1-2 crore segment rose 10 per cent to 24,657 units during January-March. In the ₹2-5 crore category, the housing sales rose 17 per cent to 16,075 units. Sales in the ₹5-10 crore price category dipped 3 per cent to 3,338 units.
Housing sales in ₹10-20 crore category increased 12 per cent to 738 units, while sales in ₹20-50 crore category jumped 80 per cent to 165 units.
In homes costing more than ₹50 crore, the sales declined 93 per cent to 12 units during the January-March period.
Overall, across all price categories, Knight Frank data showed that the housing sales fell 4 per cent annually in January-March to 84,827 units across the eight cities due to soft demand because of high prices and uncertainties caused by the West Asia conflict.
"Market activity remained skewed toward the higher end even as growth moderated, while volumes continue to slide in ticket sizes below ₹10 million (1 crore)," Knight Frank said in its report.
The share of these lower segments (below ₹1 crore) has declined to 47 per cent of the total sales, compared to 54 per cent in January-March 2025.
Shishir Baijal, International Partner, Chairman & Managing Director, Knight Frank India, said the moderation in residential demand follows a sustained multi-year upcycle.
"While this phase can be partly attributed to a natural consolidation after strong growth, the continued rise in prices alongside softening volumes indicates growing pressure on affordability and absorption," he said.
At the same time, Baijal said the volatile geopolitical situation has also resulted in subdued interest in residential demand. The total new supply fell 2 per cent annually to 94,855 units in January-March across the eight cities.
Comments
Published on April 26, 2026
READ MORE
Key Insights
- This topic is currently trending
- Experts are closely monitoring developments
- It may impact future decisions


