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Institutional investments in Indian real estate increased 17 per cent to a record USD 10.4 billion in the current calendar year, according to JLL India. Domestic investors contributed 52 per cent of the total inflows, while foreign funds accounted for 48 per cent. Office assets emerged as the leading investment segment with a 58 per cent share, followed by residential at 20 per cent. Data centres and logistics parks each attracted 8 per cent, while retail and hotels saw limited inflows. The growth reflects sustained investor confidence across asset classes.
Institutional investments in Indian real estate rose sharply during the past week's assessment period, increasing 17 per cent to an all-time high of USD 10.4 billion in the current calendar year, driven by sustained interest from both domestic and overseas investors, according to data released by JLL India. Investors continued to channel capital into commercial and residential assets, seeking stable returns amid improving market conditions.
The data shows that domestic investors accounted for a larger share of total institutional investments, contributing 52 per cent of the overall inflows during 2025. Foreign-domiciled funds made up the remaining 48 per cent, reflecting steady global interest in Indian property markets despite wider economic uncertainties.
In value terms, institutional investments stood at about USD 10,406 million, compared with USD 8,878 million recorded in the previous calendar year, underlining a clear year-on-year expansion in capital deployment across real estate assets.
Office properties regained their position as the most preferred asset class, commanding a 58 per cent share of total institutional investments. The segment benefited from improved leasing activity and stronger occupier demand across key business districts.
The residential segment accounted for 20 per cent of total investments, supported by steady housing demand and project-level funding. Data centres and logistics and industrial parks each attracted 8 per cent of the total inflows, reflecting growing interest in digital infrastructure and supply chain assets. Retail assets accounted for 4 per cent, while hotels drew 2 per cent of overall institutional investments.
Institutional investments, as defined in the report, include capital inflows from family offices, Indian and foreign corporate groups, pension funds, private equity players, real estate fund-cum-developers, non-banking financial companies and sovereign wealth funds. The data also factors in investments through Real Estate Investment Trusts and capital raised via Qualified Institutional Placements.
Source PTI
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