India’s housing finance landscape is undergoing a quiet but significant shift—and it is not being led by the country’s biggest metros. According to the Urban Money Homebuyers Credit Pulse Report (2025), Palwal in Haryana has emerged as one of the fastest-growing cities in terms of new home loan volumes, outpacing traditional heavyweights like Mumbai and Delhi in the number of loans originated during the year.
This trend underscores a broader structural change in India’s housing market, where Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities are no longer peripheral players but central drivers of housing finance growth.
Palwal’s Rise: Small City, Big Numbers
Palwal, located in Haryana’s National Capital Region (NCR) belt near Faridabad and Gurugram, recorded a sharp surge in new home loan creation in 2025, placing it ahead of Mumbai and Delhi in terms of volume growth, not ticket size or absolute loan value.
While Mumbai and Delhi continue to dominate in high-value home loans, Palwal’s performance reflects strong end-user participation, driven by:
- Affordable property prices
- Increasing availability of plotted developments and mid-income housing
- Improved road and rail connectivity with Delhi-NCR
- Growing local employment and spillover demand from Gurugram and Faridabad
For lenders and policymakers alike, Palwal’s data point is a clear signal that housing demand is deepening beyond premium urban centres.
Mumbai and Delhi: Big Ticket, Slower Volume Growth
In contrast, Mumbai and Delhi posted slower growth in the number of new home loans, despite remaining among the largest markets by loan value. The report indicates that:
- Mumbai’s housing finance growth is largely value-led, driven by higher ticket sizes and affluent upgraders
- Delhi’s growth reflects stable affordability, but not the rapid borrower expansion seen in emerging cities
In both cities, rising property prices and higher entry barriers have meant that incremental demand is narrower, even as average loan sizes continue to increase.
Why Tier-2 and Tier-3 Cities Are Winning
The Urban Money report highlights that Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities together accounted for 64% of total home loan volumes in 2025, up from 60% in 2024. These cities recorded 81% year-on-year growth, far exceeding the 52% growth in Tier-1 cities.
Cities such as Palwal, Jaipur, Surat, Chandigarh, and Madurai are benefiting from:
- Infrastructure expansion and highway connectivity
- Growth of local and regional employment hubs
- Sustained supply of mid-priced and affordable housing
- Entry of first-time homebuyers into the formal credit system
This shift marks a move away from a metro-centric housing finance cycle toward a more distributed and resilient demand base.
Affordability Is the Key Differentiator
One of the strongest drivers behind Palwal’s rise is affordability. Lower land costs and manageable home prices have enabled:
- Smaller loan ticket sizes
- Higher approval rates
- Faster loan disbursements
This has made Palwal attractive to first-time buyers, salaried households, and self-employed borrowers, who are increasingly priced out of central Mumbai and Delhi.
What This Means for Developers and Lenders
For developers, the data reinforces the case for scaling projects in emerging NCR corridors rather than relying solely on saturated metro markets. For banks and housing finance companies, it highlights the growing importance of volume-led growth markets that offer diversification and lower concentration risk.
As India’s housing finance market expands, cities like Palwal are shaping the next phase of growth—not through luxury demand, but through mass homeownership.
The Bigger Picture
India’s home loan story is no longer defined by Mumbai, Delhi, or Bengaluru alone. While metros remain crucial for value and premium demand, the momentum has clearly shifted toward smaller cities where aspirations, affordability, and access to credit are aligning.
Palwal’s emergence ahead of Mumbai and Delhi in new home loan growth is not an anomaly—it is a preview of where India’s housing finance market is headed next.