Indian real estate draws $3.2 billion in PE investments in H1 2026, up 33%

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Indian real estate draws $3.2 billion in PE investments in H1 2026, up 33%

Synopsis

India's real estate sector pulled in $3.2 billion in private equity in just six months — and for the first time, data centres, not offices, topped Q2 inflows. With domestic capital crossing 51% and North American money flowing into digital infrastructure, this is no longer your grandfather's property market.

Key Takeaways

Indian real estate attracted $3.2 billion in private equity inflows in H1 2026 , up 33 per cent year-on-year.
Q2 2026 alone saw $2 billion in PE inflows, a 25 per cent rise over Q2 2025.
Data centres led Q2 with a 38 per cent share , overtaking the traditionally dominant office segment.
Domestic capital accounted for 51 per cent of H1 inflows; 69 per cent of foreign capital came from the USA and Canada .
Office remained the top segment for the full H1 2026 period with a 34 per cent share of equity inflows.
Emerging asset classes — hospitality (8%), student housing/co-living (3%) — are gaining traction among institutional investors.

Private equity investment inflows into the Indian real estate sector reached $3.2 billion in the first half of 2026, marking a 33 per cent year-on-year increase, according to a report released on Monday, 13 July by global real estate consulting firm Savills India. The surge signals deepening institutional confidence in India's property market across both traditional and emerging asset classes.

Q2 2026 Performance

Investment inflows in Q2 2026 alone stood at $2 billion, a 25 per cent increase over the corresponding period last year. The figures cover equity deals executed through private routes, structured debt deals by Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs), and Non-Convertible Debenture (NCD) issuances — excluding plain debt deals, QIPs, public market transactions, and platform formations.

Data Centres Overtake Office in Q2

Data centres led Q2 2026 inflows with a 38 per cent share of total investments, bucking the sector's longstanding trend of office-led capital allocation. The office segment followed at 30 per cent, while residential held third place at 16 per cent. Investors also diversified into hospitality, which garnered an 8 per cent share, and student housing and co-living, which captured 3 per cent.

For the full H1 2026 period, however, office retained its position as the leading segment with a 34 per cent share of equity inflows — underscoring that the data centre surge is a Q2-specific inflection rather than a structural displacement, at least for now.

Domestic vs Foreign Capital

Domestic capital accounted for 51 per cent of total PE inflows in H1 2026, with 68 per cent of that domestic money concentrated in office assets across India's Tier I cities. Foreign investors contributed the remaining 49 per cent, with 69 per cent of foreign capital originating from the USA and Canada, directed primarily into data centres and the hospitality segment. This geographic split reflects divergent risk appetites: domestic institutions favour income-generating office stock, while North American capital chases digital infrastructure and experiential assets.

What the Industry Is Saying

Sumeet Bhatia, Managing Director, Capital Market Services, Savills India, said: 'PE inflows in the first half of 2026 reaffirm the growing confidence investors have in India's real estate market… Continued diversification into hospitality, healthcare, and student housing/co-living reflects a maturing investor base that is increasingly betting on India's digital and alternative real estate growth story.'

Savills India forecast that this momentum would sustain through coming quarters as investors deepen conviction in India's long-term real estate opportunity.

What to Watch

The data centre segment's emergence as a Q2 frontrunner aligns with a broader global push toward AI infrastructure and cloud capacity — trends that are increasingly finding expression in Indian real estate. With domestic capital now crossing the 50 per cent threshold for the first time in recent cycles, the market's resilience is less dependent on foreign flow volatility. Whether office can reclaim the top spot in H2 2026 — or whether data centres consolidate their lead — will be the defining question for the sector's year-end performance.

Point of View

But the more telling signal is the composition shift: data centres claiming 38% of Q2 inflows is not a blip — it is a structural realignment driven by AI infrastructure demand and hyperscaler expansion in India. Domestic capital crossing 51% is equally significant; it means the sector's growth story is no longer hostage to global risk-off cycles. The risk is concentration — 68% of domestic money is still parked in Tier I office, leaving Tier II cities and affordable housing starved of institutional capital. If policymakers want the PE boom to translate into broad-based urban development, that geographic skew needs addressing.
NationPress
13 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

How much did private equity invest in Indian real estate in H1 2026?
Private equity inflows into Indian real estate reached $3.2 billion in the first half of 2026, a 33 per cent increase compared to the same period in 2025, according to a Savills India report released on 13 July 2026.
Which segment led real estate PE investments in Q2 2026?
Data centres led Q2 2026 with a 38 per cent share of total PE inflows, overtaking the office segment, which came second at 30 per cent. This marked a notable shift from the sector's traditional office-led investment pattern.
What was the share of domestic versus foreign capital in H1 2026?
Domestic capital accounted for 51 per cent of total PE inflows in H1 2026, while foreign investors contributed 49 per cent. Of the foreign capital, 69 per cent originated from the USA and Canada, directed mainly into data centres and hospitality.
Why are data centres attracting so much real estate investment in India?
Data centres are drawing institutional capital as demand for cloud computing, AI infrastructure, and digital services accelerates in India. North American investors in particular are channelling funds into this segment, viewing it as a high-growth, long-term asset class.
What is the outlook for Indian real estate PE investment in H2 2026?
Savills India has forecast that investment momentum will sustain through the coming quarters, citing deepening investor conviction in India's long-term real estate landscape. Emerging segments such as hospitality and student housing are expected to attract increasing allocations.
Nation Press
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