As developers add more high-end amenities to meet rising lifestyle demands, the average apartment loading factor across India’s top 7 cities has reached a record 40% in Q1 2025, up from 31% in 2019, according to new research by ANAROCK Group.

The loading factor — the difference between the super built-up area and the actual carpet area of a flat — has been steadily rising due to growing common spaces such as lobbies, clubhouses, gardens, and utility areas.

🔍 What is the Loading Factor?

The loading percentage represents how much extra space homebuyers pay for beyond their actual usable (carpet) area.

Formula:
Loading % = (Super Built-up Area – Carpet Area) ÷ Carpet Area × 100
Example: If super built-up area is 1300 sq. ft. and carpet area is 1000 sq. ft., loading = (1300–1000)/1000 × 100 = 30%.


📊 Loading in Top 7 Cities: 2019 vs 2025

City20192022Q1 2025
NCR31%37%41%
MMR (Mumbai)33%39%43%
Bengaluru30%35%41%
Pune32%36%40%
Hyderabad30%33%38%
Chennai30%32%36%
Kolkata30%35%39%
All-India Avg.31%35%40%

Source: ANAROCK Research & Advisory


🔼 MMR Has the Highest Loading at 43%

Mumbai Metropolitan Region (MMR) continues to have the highest loading among India’s major cities — 43% in Q1 2025, up from 33% in 2019.

Bengaluru has witnessed the sharpest increase, from 30% in 2019 to 41% in Q1 2025, reflecting the rapid inclusion of upscale amenities in the IT hub’s housing projects.

Chennai, by contrast, remains the most conservative, with an average loading of 36%, indicating a buyer preference for paying more towards private space than common areas.


💬 Expert View

“Today, homebuyers in the top 7 cities effectively get just 60% of the total space as livable carpet area,” said Dr. Prashant Thakur, Regional Director & Head – Research & Advisory, ANAROCK Group.
“While RERA mandates carpet area disclosure, there is no law limiting the loading percentage, leaving buyers exposed to high extra costs.”

He added that increased demand for amenities — such as fitness centres, clubhouses, landscaped gardens, and fire-compliant infrastructure — is driving the rise in loading percentages.


⚖️ Call for Regulation

While Maharashtra RERA (MahaRERA) enforces carpet area disclosure more strictly than other states, Dr. Thakur highlighted that homebuyers across most Indian states remain unaware of how much they actually pay for usable space versus common areas.

“State RERAs should enforce mandatory clarity on how much of the super built-up area is actually usable,” he said.


🏗️ The New Normal in Urban Housing

With urban housing trends evolving, higher loading is becoming the norm, not the exception. For homebuyers, this means evaluating not just the price per square foot — but what percentage of that square footage is actually usable.

Also Read: New Flats in MMR Shrunk 20%

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