Bengaluru’s home market sees a big surge, driven by real buyers and a strong economy. Sales in India’s nine main cities may drop overall, but Bengaluru keeps climbing fast, says PropEquity data.
PropEquity reports a 4% drop in home sales for India’s top nine cities in the quarter ending September. This comes mostly from weak demand in Mumbai and Pune.
Housing sales in India’s Silicon Valley should jump 21% in July to September, hitting 16,840 units. That’s up from 13,966 units in the same time last year, per PTI.
From January to September 2025, home sales could reach 49,559 units. This beats the 46,392 units from the same months in 2024.
Developers expect the holiday season to push Bengaluru sales higher in the last quarter of 2025. This will end the year well, after a fall in 2024 to 61,116 units from 66,600 in 2023.
The market bounced back after 2020’s low of 34,480 units during COVID. Demand grew later due to built-up needs, with 43,181 units in 2021 and 60,391 in 2022, PTI adds.
Sales across the nine cities may dip 4% to 100,370 units in July-September 2025. That’s down from 105,081 units a year earlier.
Experts point to Bengaluru’s key spots for its strong demand. These include its location, true buyers, and economic, social, and living factors.
Karishmah Siingh, president of sales, marketing, and CRM at Sattva Group in Bengaluru, says real homebuyers fuel the boom. She calls the growth very steady.
The city draws big companies and global centers, plus a lively IT and startup scene. This sparks big needs for good homes.
Umesh Gowda H.A., chair and founder of Sanjeevini Group, says end-users drive most demand. Many work in IT or startups.