India’s retail real estate sector is sitting on a hidden goldmine. Knight Frank India’s latest flagship retail study, Think India, Think Retail 2025 – Value Capture: Unlocking Potential, reveals that reinvigorating the country’s dormant shopping centres—popularly known as ‘ghost malls’—can unlock ₹357 crore in annual rental revenues.
According to the report, 74 out of 365 operational shopping centres across 32 cities have been classified as ghost malls, representing a massive 15.5 million sq ft of underperforming retail space. Of this, 15 malls—totalling 4.8 million sq ft—hold immediate reinvigoration potential, capable of generating ₹357 crore annually.
Tier 1 Cities Hold Two-Thirds of the Opportunity
Knight Frank notes that Tier 1 cities account for 11.9 million sq ft of ghost mall stock, reflecting that even India’s most mature retail hubs are struggling with ageing infrastructure and declining relevance.
These cities alone present a ₹236 crore opportunity, while Tier 2 markets add another ₹121 crore.
Ghost Malls: Not Just a Smaller-City Problem
The study highlights that ghost malls are present across urban India and not just isolated to emerging cities. Key issues include:
- High vacancies
- Poor tenant curation
- Ageing designs and layouts
- Lack of strong anchor tenants
- Weak mall management
- Oversupply in some markets
Older Grade C malls are most vulnerable unless repositioned as mixed-use centres, co-working hubs, community spaces, or redeveloped Grade A assets.
‘A Defining Phase of Retail Growth’: Knight Frank CMD
Shishir Baijal, CMD, Knight Frank India, said:
“India’s retail sector is entering a defining phase of growth. Reinvigorating 4.8 million sq ft of dormant mall stock could unlock ₹357 crore in annual rentals. With Grade A malls at only 5.7% vacancy and several Tier 2 cities showing strong absorption, the sector is exceptionally well placed for future expansion.”
Geographical Trends: West & South Lead the Opportunity
- 44% of ghost malls lie in the West
- West + South regions together contribute 77% of the reinvigoration potential
- Top 8 cities account for 66% of the ₹357 crore rental upside
- A rental yield of 5.86% makes reinvigoration a viable investment alternative to new-build malls
High-Performing Shopping Centre Markets
Cities with some of the lowest mall vacancy levels:
- Mysuru – 2% vacancy
- Vijayawada – 4%
- Vadodara – 5%
- Thiruvananthapuram – 6%
- Visakhapatnam – 6%
These cities benefit from calibrated supply, strong demand, and proactive mall management—keeping occupancy near full levels.
Underperforming Markets
Several cities show distressed retail infrastructure due to oversupply or weak planning:
- Nagpur – ~49% vacancy
- Amritsar – ~41%
- Jalandhar – ~34%
Oversupply without sufficient brand depth has left multiple centres chronically empty.
A Polarised Retail Landscape
Despite overall vacancy of 15.4% across 32 cities, the divide between quality malls and obsolete centres is widening:
- Grade A malls: Single-digit vacancy, strong footfalls
- Grade C malls: Vacancies up to 36%
- High streets: Dominated by Indian brands (86%)
- Airports: Balanced international presence (30%)
Brand Mix: How India Shops
- Shopping centres: 67% Indian brands, 33% international
- High streets: 86% Indian, 14% international
- Airports: 70% Indian, 30% international
Malls continue to be the gateway for global brands entering India.
Retail Density Variations
Top 5 cities with lowest occupied mall density (high opportunity for expansion):
- Surat – 118 sq ft/1,000 population
- Jalandhar – 149
- Ludhiana – 218
- Ahmedabad – 226
- Visakhapatnam – 231
Highest density markets (well-penetrated):
- Mangaluru – 1,521
- Lucknow – 1,230
- Chandigarh – 1,140
- Pune – 1,103
- Bengaluru – 1,031
Conclusion
Knight Frank’s 2025 retail report underscores a clear message: India doesn’t just need new malls—it needs better malls.
Revitalising dormant retail assets, especially in Tier 1 and Tier 2 cities, presents a massive opportunity for developers, investors, and city planners as India moves toward more experience-led, mixed-use, and design-forward retail formats.
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