📉 A Festive Season Without the Spark

The usually vibrant festival season — known for record property sales — failed to cheer Mumbai’s real estate market in 2025. Between October 20 and October 26 (Monday to Saturday), Mumbai recorded only 915 property registrations, an unusually low figure for a period that typically drives festive housing demand.

In total, between October 1 and October 26, Mumbai saw 9,161 properties registered, reflecting a clear dip in buyer sentiment.

For context, the average daily property registrations in October stood at 352, but the festival week saw daily numbers dropping well below this benchmark.


📊 Key Data Points

  • Period: October 20–26, 2025 (Monday–Saturday)
    Registrations: 915
  • Dhanteras (Oct 18, 2025): 284 registrations
  • Diwali (Oct 20, 2025): 249 registrations
  • Total registrations (Oct 1–26, 2025): 9,161
  • Average daily registration: 352

Even during key auspicious days like Dhanteras and Diwali, when homebuying typically peaks, the numbers remained disappointing — underscoring a market slowdown that’s hard to ignore.


💸 What the Dip Suggests

Real estate professionals view the festival season as a crucial sentiment booster. Developers launch new projects, banks roll out festive loan offers, and buyers line up to register homes on “shubh muhurats.”
But this year, the enthusiasm was missing.

Analysts attribute the subdued registrations to multiple factors:

  • High property prices despite slower absorption.
  • Buyers holding back, expecting post-festival corrections.
  • Limited festive incentives from developers compared to previous years.
  • A shift in buyer focus from luxury to affordable segments where new launches are limited.

⚠️ A Warning Sign for Mumbai’s Real Estate Market

The festival slump has raised a red flag for the city’s real estate ecosystem.
Traditionally, October–November contribute a significant share of annual registrations, but 2025 has broken that trend.

Industry observers now fear this could be the start of a larger market correction if developers don’t adjust pricing expectations.

A senior industry insider remarked,

“The home loan rates are at one of their lowest levels in recent years. If buyers still aren’t closing deals, it clearly signals a trust or pricing issue. The festive dip is not just seasonal — it’s structural.”


🏘️ The Bigger Picture: Price vs. Sentiment

While developers have resisted price reductions, homebuyers appear unwilling to commit at current valuations.
The outcome: festive stalls, delayed deals, and growing market nervousness.

If this sentiment persists, the fourth quarter of 2025 could see muted performance, undoing much of the momentum built earlier in the year.

Market experts now believe “price correction, not interest rates,” will determine the next phase of growth in Mumbai’s housing market.


📌 Takeaway

The numbers don’t lie.

  • 915 registrations in the week of Diwali,
  • Only 249 on Diwali day,
  • 9,161 till October 26,
  • All well below the daily average of 352.

For a city where homes are often registered on auspicious occasions, this Diwali told a different story — one of buyer hesitation and market fatigue.

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