The Indian residential real estate market has hit a historic milestone, with inventory overhang (the estimated time required to sell off unsold stock based on sales velocity) dropping to 22 months in the June quarter, down from 34 months in the corresponding quarter last year. This decline underscores robust demand across the sector. Notably, the inventory overhang varies significantly across regions, with Delhi-NCR recording the highest at 31 months and Kolkata the lowest at 16 months.
In its quarterly report titled ‘Real Insight Residential – April-June 2024’, the Gurugram-headquartered firm highlighted significant improvements in key regions, with NCR's Gurugram witnessing a substantial decline in inventory overhang from 72 months in Q2 2023 to 31 months in Q2 2024. Ahmedabad also showed strong performance, reducing its inventory overhang from 33 months to 18 months during the same period, reflecting the healthy demand dynamics in these markets.
Regarding unsold inventory, the report noted that despite a moderation in supply and absorption rates, India’s residential real estate market displayed resilience, achieving a 2% year-on-year decline, bringing the total to over 9.26 lakh units as of June 30. This reduction underscores the market’s capacity to adapt to evolving conditions, maintaining overall stability and indicating sustained buyer interest across various regions.
Inventory overhang across key Indian cities has shown notable improvement compared to the same period last year. Ahmedabad and Bangalore saw significant reductions, with Ahmedabad's inventory overhang decreasing from 33 months to 18 months and Bangalore’s from 36 months to 18 months. Delhi-NCR experienced a substantial drop from 72 months to 31 months, while Kolkata achieved a remarkable reduction from 34 months to just 16 months.
On a pan-India level, the overall inventory overhang decreased to 22 months from 34 months, reflecting a healthier balance between supply and demand in the residential real estate market.
Ahmedabad led the way in reduction in unsold inventory with the highest reduction, cutting over 12,500 units, followed by the NCR region, which saw a decrease of over 9,400 units. These reductions reflect healthy demand and a positive market outlook in these key cities, indicating that the market is effectively absorbing the available stock.
The Mumbai Metropolitan Region (MMR) and Pune -- the two most important real estate markets in Maharashtra -- accounted for 54 per cent of the total unsold inventory across top 8 cities at the end of the latest June quarter. The MMR and Pune markets have comparatively high unsold stock because of an increase in the number of new launches by developers as a response to strong consumer demand. In MMR, the unsold housing stock rose 1 per cent to 3,39,362 units in April-June 2024 from 3,35,476 units in the corresponding period of the previous year.