Hyderabad
Feb 21, 2026
MyHome looks like it’s going all in for 2026.
Kollur - Udyan is massive, 24+ acres, 3,766 units, 2/3/4 BHK, 8 towers till G+48. On paper it sounds like one full township only. But 3,700+ flats is a lot of people in one place. Even if they give big clubhouse and parks, density will be high no. Kollur roads are still not that wide everywhere, so I’m just thinking about future traffic once all projects there get occupied.
Financial District project is 25.2 acres, 2,422 units, only 3 & 4 BHK, going up to G+50. 50 floors is proper skyscraper level for Hyderabad. Location wise it’s strong, offices all around, but FD is already feeling crowded these days. Luxury tag means pricing will be premium. Wondering how many genuine end-users vs investors will go for it at those rates.
Budvel one is 10.5 acres, 1,654 units, G+34. Compared to the other two it’s smaller, but still dense for 10 acres. Budvel side has airport connectivity and ORR, but infra around is still developing. It might take a few years to feel fully “settled”.
Overall specs look big and impressive. At the same time, so much supply is coming in one year not just MyHome, other builders are also launching. The market has been strong but at these ticket sizes and heights, execution and pricing will matter a lot. Let’s see how it actually plays out.
I guess they changed Udyan's name to The Park Life
When a developer goes big like this, especially in corridors like Kollur, Financial District, and Budvel, it signals long-term confidence in Hyderabad’s growth story. Large-format developments aren’t just about volume — they’re about creating integrated ecosystems with scale-driven amenities, open spaces, and better planning than fragmented smaller layouts.
That said, density is a real discussion. 3,000–4,000 units in one campus means infrastructure planning inside the project has to be world-class — traffic flow, entry/exit design, parking ratios, lift planning, sewage treatment, power backup — everything needs to be engineered properly. Execution quality becomes the real differentiator at this scale.
From a market perspective, Hyderabad is maturing. High-rise living (G+40, G+50) is no longer experimental — it’s becoming aspirational. But pricing strategy will be crucial. End-users today are far more aware. They’re not just buying a brand; they’re buying long-term livability — road width, future metro connectivity, social infra, school access, and resale liquidity.
In areas like Financial District, demand is fundamentally driven by employment hubs. That gives confidence. Kollur and Budvel are more growth bets — and those typically reward patient buyers.
The key question isn’t “Is supply high?”
The real question is “Will execution match the ambition?”
In large launches like these, the market always filters out who can deliver at scale and who can’t. 2026 will definitely be interesting for Hyderabad real estate.