Mumbai’s property market may be climbing the value ladder, but affordability still drives its foundation. In February 2026, 40% of all homes sold in Mumbai were priced below ₹1 crore, making this the single largest price segment by transaction share, according to registration data released by the state government and analyzed by Knight Frank India.

While this segment remains dominant, its share has fallen from 46% a year ago, signaling a gradual but important shift: buyers are increasingly stretching budgets and upgrading to higher-priced homes.


Affordable Still Leads — But Its Grip Is Loosening

The price-wise distribution of property registrations in February 2026 shows a market in transition:

  • Below ₹1 crore: 40% share (down from 46%)
  • ₹1–2 crore: 33% (up from 31%)
  • ₹2–5 crore: 20% (up from 17%)
  • ₹5 crore+: 8% (up from 6%)

This pattern highlights a classic growth-phase housing market: entry-level homes still dominate volumes, but mid and premium segments are expanding faster.

What this means

The decline in sub-₹1 crore share does not mean fewer affordable homes are selling. Instead, it shows:

  • more buyers upgrading budgets,
  • improved loan eligibility,
  • and rising aspirations post-pandemic.

Registrations Hit 14-Year February High

February 2026 recorded 12,885 property registrations and ₹1,124 crore in stamp duty collections, making it the strongest February performance in 14 years.

  • Registrations rose 6% year-on-year
  • Revenue jumped 20% year-on-year

The gap between transaction growth and revenue growth confirms a crucial trend: higher-value homes are forming a larger portion of sales.


Compact Homes Continue to Dominate Preferences

Despite rising budgets, Mumbai’s spatial reality still shapes buying decisions.

  • 81% of homes sold were under 1,000 sq ft
  • The 500–1,000 sq ft category alone accounted for 45%
  • Homes between 1,000–2,000 sq ft rose to 15% from 12%
  • Units above 2,000 sq ft increased to 4%

This suggests buyers are not abandoning compact housing — they’re upgrading within practical limits. In other words, the market is seeing aspirational upgrading, not luxury migration.


Suburbs Remain Mumbai’s Real Estate Engine

Location trends show where real demand lies:

  • Western suburbs: 57% of transactions
  • Central suburbs: 30%
  • South Mumbai: 8%
  • Central Mumbai: 6%

Suburban dominance reflects a combination of factors:

  • better infrastructure,
  • wider supply,
  • and relatively attainable pricing.

Large infrastructure investments led by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation, including transport corridors and connectivity upgrades, continue to expand residential catchments and push demand outward.


Why This Data Matters More Than Headlines

Registration data is widely considered the most reliable indicator of housing demand because it reflects completed transactions, not bookings or announcements.

The February numbers reveal three key structural signals:

1. End-users are driving demand
Sales distribution and ticket-size spread suggest genuine buyers rather than speculative investors.

2. Market depth is increasing
Growth across price categories indicates a broad-based recovery.

3. Mumbai’s market is stabilizing
Strong registrations without policy incentives or stamp duty cuts point to organic demand.


Expert View: Not a Spike — A Structural Trend

Shishir Baijal, Chairman and Managing Director of Knight Frank India, noted that February’s performance is not a temporary spike but evidence of a resilient market backed by end-user demand, infrastructure expansion, and strong buyer sentiment. He emphasized that mid-to-premium housing is gaining traction while suburban corridors remain the primary growth engines.


The Real Story Behind the 40% Figure

At first glance, the headline number suggests affordable housing dominates Mumbai. But the deeper insight is more nuanced:

  • Affordable homes still form the backbone of transactions.
  • Mid-segment housing is gaining ground quickly.
  • Premium housing is expanding its share steadily.

Taken together, these trends show a market that is broadening upward without losing its base — one of the healthiest signs for long-term real estate growth.

Also Read: Mumbai Property Market Sees April Uptick with 12,986 Registrations, Akshaya Tritiya Boosts Month-End Surge

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