Mumbai recorded 12,268 property registrations in November 2025, up from 11,649 in October 2025 (+619 units, ≈5.3% MoM). Yet the government collected just ₹1,043 crore — only ₹3 crore more than October’s ₹1,040 crore (effectively 0% MoM as reported). That tiny revenue uptick despite a clear improvement in transactions is the clearest sign yet that volume is rising without richer ticket-size growth. In short: buyers are transacting, but they’re not paying materially higher sums.


Monthly snapshot (Nov-24 → Nov-25)

PeriodRegistrations (units)YoYMoMRevenue (INR cr)YoYMoM
Nov-2410,2165%-21%92530%-23%
Dec-2412,4181%22%1,13421%23%
Jan-2512,24912%-1%99431%-12%
Feb-2512,0660.1%-1%9356%-6%
Mar-2515,50110%28%1,58942%70%
Apr-2513,08012%-16%1,1155%-30%
May-2511,565-4%-12%1,0623%-5%
Jun-2511,599-1%0%1,0352%-3%
Jul-2512,5791.7%8%1,1236%8%
Aug-2511,230-3%-11%1,000-6%-11%
Sep-2512,07032%7%1,29247%29%
Oct-2511,649-10%-3%1,040-14%-20%
Nov-2512,26820%5%1,04312%0%

Key immediate takeaway: November recorded a healthy recovery in transactions relative to October (+5.3% units) but revenue increased only by ₹3 crore, i.e., effectively flat.


YTD (Jan–November) annual comparatives (2013–2025)

Year (Jan–Nov)Registrations (units)YoYRevenue (INR cr)YoY
201357,460NA3,268NA
201455,798-3%3,2570%
201559,8627%3,68713%
201658,434-2%3,658-1%
201761,7026%4,89134%
201872,41917%5,0343%
201961,430-15%4,904-3%
202046,052-25%2,442-50%
2021102,232122%5,352119%
2022112,66810%8,06651%
2023114,6522%9,93723%
2024128,78412%11,00711%
2025135,8075%12,22411%

Context: Jan–Nov 2025 totals — 135,807 registrations (+5% YoY) and ₹12,224 crore revenue (+11% YoY). Respectable annual gains, but the late-2025 monthly pattern (flat revenue in Nov despite higher units) shows momentum softening.


Ticket-size and area splits (Nov-24 vs Nov-25)

Ticket size share

CategoryNov-24Nov-25
< ₹1 crore46%42%
₹1–2 crore31%33%
₹2–5 crore18%18%
≥ ₹5 crore5%7%

Area (unit size) share

Unit size (sq ft)Nov-24Nov-25
Up to 50039%38%
500–1,00045%46%
1,000–2,00012%13%
Over 2,0003%4%

Micro-market share (by region)

AreaNov-24Nov-25
Western Suburbs52%56%
Central Suburbs32%29%
South Mumbai9%9%
Central Mumbai7%6%

What the full dataset adds to the interpretation

  1. Shift within the mid-market, not an across-the-board upcycle.
    • The share of ₹1–2 crore deals increased (31% → 33%). This means growth is concentrated in mid-tier transactions rather than high-ticket buys. That supports why registrations rose but revenue didn’t proportionally.
  2. Luxury is rising but too small to move totals.
    • The ≥₹5 crore segment rose from 5% to 7%, but that slice is still tiny. Even strong luxury sales won’t lift city-wide revenue much unless their absolute numbers grow rapidly.
  3. Smaller-to-mid unit sizes still dominate.
    • Units ≤1,000 sq ft account for 84% of registrations (38% up to 500 sq ft + 46% 500–1,000). That composition favors lower ticket sizes per unit, capping revenue growth.
  4. Geographic concentration increases market fragility.
    • Western + Central Suburbs = 85% of registrations (Western 56%, Central 29%). Overdependence on a few corridors is risky — any microeconomic shock or supply glut there could dent overall figures.
  5. Month-to-month volatility during 2025.
    • Several months show swings: Mar-25 had a spike (15,501 units, ₹1,589 cr) and Sep-25 also lifted revenue; however, late-year months (Oct → Nov) show a pause in revenue improvement despite higher volumes. That inconsistency signals uneven demand and possible churn from developers (discounts, incentives).

So what does flat revenue with higher registrations indicate — the critical read

  • Price sensitivity and discounting: Developers may be reducing effective prices, giving concessions or incentives to keep sales moving. That raises unit counts but not the stamp-duty-able transaction value sufficiently to boost revenue.
  • Shift to smaller / lower-value inventory: Increased share of 500–1,000 sq ft units and more transactions in the ₹1–2 crore band mean individual ticket sizes are not rising fast enough.
  • Selective luxury demand: While luxury appetite exists (≥₹5 cr up to 7%), it’s a small base; hence, it cannot offset the larger mid/affordability segment.
  • Stretched affordability at the bottom: The share of sub-₹1 crore transactions has dropped (46% → 42%), which can be read two ways: (a) affordability worsening and buyers inching up to slightly pricier/less affordable options, or (b) displacement of the lowest-end buyers due to price pressure. Both are concerning.
  • Market not uniformly healthy: Volume alone is a poor metric of market health; real price discovery and revenue traction are. The revenue flatline amid rising registrations suggests demand is transactional, not value-led — buyers are acting, but not at higher price points. That’s a leading warning sign of price plateauing or an upcoming correction in nominal price growth.

Policy & developer implications (brief)

  • For policymakers: If revenue growth stalls even with rising volumes, stamp-duty revenues will not keep pace with expectations. Targeted measures to broaden demand geographically, or to incentivize affordable supply in growth corridors, may be needed.
  • For developers: Reliance on incentives to drive bookings hurts long-term pricing. Firms should manage inventory quality and avoid discounting that compresses future margins and market perception.

Conclusion — the blunt, critical line

November 2025’s data is a cautionary tale. Registrations are up relative to October — good on the surface — but revenue barely budged. That divergence is a classic early indicator that the market’s momentum is volume-driven rather than price-driven. Unless November’s pattern reverses into stronger ticket-size growth (sustained luxury volume or genuine price appreciation across mid-tier inventory), Mumbai could see price stagnation and margin pressure for developers next year. In plain terms: the city is selling more homes, but not selling them for more. That’s not a healthy upcycle — it’s a fragile one.

Also Read: Mumbai property registrations in October 2023 surge 26% YoY

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