In a significant monetary policy move, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has reduced the repo rate by 25 basis points, bringing it down to 5.25%. For India’s housing market—which has been battling affordability pressures amid rising prices—this decision comes as a direct relief for homebuyers and a sentiment booster for developers.

A repo rate cut is one of the quickest ways to soften the cost of borrowing. For homebuyers, this translates into lower EMIs, especially because most home loans today are linked to external benchmark rates that transmit policy changes faster than earlier systems. If banks pass on the full 25 bps cut, borrowers can expect a meaningful drop in monthly EMIs, improving affordability across segments.


Lower EMIs Can Revive Demand — Especially in Affordable & Mid-Income Housing

Real estate experts view this decision as well-timed and transformational.

Shishir Baijal – Knight Frank India

“We welcome the RBI’s positive move to cut rates by 25 bps, as it signals growing confidence that inflation will remain low on a durable basis. The reduction in borrowing costs should offer timely relief to the real estate sector… We hope this will be instrumental in boosting affordable and mid-income housing sales, which have been witnessing a sequential decline over the past few quarters.”

Baijal’s point about sequential declines is critical—end-user demand in these segments had begun softening as property prices rose across major markets.


Price-Rise Pressure Meets a Rate-Cut Cushion

According to ANAROCK Research, average housing prices across India’s top 7 cities jumped nearly 10% in 2025. For many buyers, this created a affordability mismatch—even if incomes were rising.

Anuj Puri – ANAROCK Group

“The RBI’s decision to cut the repo rate by 25 bps is a distinct positive… this move further sweetens the value proposition for homebuyers, particularly in the affordable and mid-income segments which are highly sensitive to interest rate fluctuations.”

“This rate cut provides a critical cushion to affordability… encouraging aspiring homebuyers who had paused their decisions due to price hikes to finally take the plunge.”

Puri also highlights a crucial factor: swift transmission.

“If banks swiftly pass on this rate cut to borrowers, we anticipate a renewed surge in sales velocity carrying firmly into Q1 2026.”

Luxury housing is expected to stay strong irrespective of the rate cut, but the biggest boost will likely come from fence-sitters in the mid and affordable categories.


Developers See This as a Sentiment Lifter for Both Buyers & Builders

Manju Yagnik – Nahar Group / NAREDCO Maharashtra

“A 25 basis point rate cut at this stage will meaningfully support homebuyer sentiment and improve affordability across categories. Demand has remained resilient despite elevated prices, and a reduction in borrowing costs will give fence sitters the confidence to move ahead with their purchase decisions.”

Yagnik adds that developers too gain from a softer rate environment, especially with persistent inflationary pressures in construction materials.

“The real estate sector has been navigating higher input costs… so a softer rate environment will ease financial pressure for both buyers and developers.”


Rupee Depreciation Adds Another Layer to the Demand Story

Dharmendra Raichura – Ashar Group

“The rate cut to 5.25% gives an immediate boost to affordability for home-buyers… At the same time, the depreciation of the rupee makes imported building materials costlier — a challenge for developers’ margins.”

Interestingly, this same rupee weakness creates a positive effect too:

“For NRIs… the weaker rupee makes Indian real estate more attractive and affordable, balancing demand dynamics.”

Developers who manage cost inflation well stand to gain from increased NRI participation and a broader buyer base.


A Macroeconomic Signal of Confidence — With Direct EMI Relief

Dr. Samantak Das – JLL India

“The RBI’s decision to cut the repo rate by 25 bps is a powerful, proactive signal that strategically leverages India’s macroeconomic strength — a robust 8.2% Q2 GDP expansion alongside record-low inflation.”

Das stresses that this is not a reactive move but a strategic push to make growth more inclusive.

“For the residential sector, this is a direct boost to affordability… Given the high penetration of external benchmark-linked loans, the transmission to homebuyers is expected to be quick, providing tangible EMI relief.”

He also notes that India saw price resistance in the affordable and mid-segment categories this year, with projected residential sales 8–9% lower than last year in the top cities.

The repo cut, therefore, is seen as a catalyst:

“This move… will activate the crucial segment of first-time affordable and mid-market homebuyers who have been waiting on the sidelines.”

Das expects demand revival not just in metros but across India’s Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities as well.


What This Means for You: Lower EMIs, Higher Eligibility

If banks pass on the full 25 bps cut:

  • Your home loan EMI will reduce across floating-rate loans.
  • Loan eligibility increases because your EMI-to-income ratio improves.
  • First-time buyers in mid-income segments will find it easier to enter the market.
  • Developers get relief through better sales momentum and sentiment stability.

This rate cut has arrived at a moment when the market needed a confidence push—and it may very well carry the housing sector with stronger momentum into 2026.

Also Read: RBI Repo Rate Hike May impact Home buyer sentiments

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