Delhi-NCR Leads in Housing Price Growth with 24% Surge in July–September: Anarock
Based on data from Anarock, the
average residential property price in Delhi-NCR soars to ₹8,900 per sq ft
during the July–September quarter, up from ₹7,200 per sq ft a year ago. In
Bengaluru, prices increased by 10%, reaching ₹8,870 per sq ft, compared to
₹8,100 per sq ft last year. Across the seven major cities tracked, average
housing prices increased by 9%, moving up to ₹9,105 per sq ft from ₹8,390 per
sq ft.
After witnessing sharp
year-on-year price increases over the past three years, the top seven cities
experienced some moderation, with average housing prices rising by a more
modest 9% annually—from ₹8,390 per sq ft in Q3 2024 to ₹9,105 per sq ft in Q3
2025.
Among these cities, Delhi-NCR
recorded the highest annual surge at 24%. On a quarterly basis, average prices
across the top seven cities inched up by just 1%, according to Anarock data.
The Mumbai Metropolitan Region
(MMR) remained the priciest housing market, with prices increasing 6% to
₹17,230 per sq ft from ₹16,300 per sq ft. In Pune, residential property prices
increased by 4%, reaching ₹7,935 per sq ft compared to ₹7,600 per sq ft, according
to a report by PTI.
Hyderabad experienced an 8%
increase in housing prices, rising to ₹7,750 per sq ft from ₹7,150 per sq ft.
Meanwhile, average prices in Chennai grew 5%, moving up to ₹7,010 per sq ft
from ₹6,680 per sq ft, the report added.
Housing prices in Kolkata
increased by 6%, reaching ₹6,060 per sq ft during July–September, up from
₹5,700 per sq ft in the same period last year, the report revealed.
Regarding new housing launches,
the NCR experienced an 11% year-on-year decline, with around 12,645 units added
in Q3 2025. On a quarterly basis, this represented a significant 33% drop
compared to Q2 2025. Notably, 70% of the new supply during the quarter came
from the luxury segment (priced above ₹1.5 crore).
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Among the top seven cities, the
Mumbai Metropolitan Region (MMR) led in sales with approximately 30,260 units,
followed by Pune with about 16,620 units. While most major cities saw a
year-on-year decline in housing sales, Chennai and Kolkata bucked the trend,
recording annual increases of 33% and 4%, respectively.
The leading seven cities
comprised Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Kolkata, Pune, and Hyderabad.

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