Hyderabad
Apr 15, 2026
Hyderabad housing prices have shot up 81% since 2019, while the average home size has actually shrunk by 4%. We’re officially in the era of "shrinkflation" real estate. Developers are slapping a "luxury" label on 1,200 sq. ft. apartments in Kokapet and Neopolis, but when you strip away the Italian marble and the infinity pool, you’re essentially paying double for a smaller box than what you could have bought five years ago.
Is this the "Mumbai-fication" of Hyderabad, where we sacrifice livability for a prestigious pin code? I’m looking at the massive inventory of 40+ floor towers coming up and wondering: who is actually going to live in these? With rental yields stagnating around 2.5–3%, the math only works if prices keep skyrocketing forever. Are we building a world-class city, or are we just fueling a speculative fire that’s pricing out the very people who keep the IT corridors running?
81% price hike vs. my 5% annual appraisal. The "Financial District" is becoming a place where the people who work there can’t afford to live there. We’re building a gated community for NRIs, not a city for locals.
People forget that Hyderabad was undervalued for decades. This 81% isn't a bubble; it's a "correction" to bring us on par with Bangalore and Gurgaon. The infrastructure in the West justifies the premium.
The HT article mentions the shift to the resale market. That’s where the smart money is moving. Why pay ₹9,000/sq. ft. for a pre-launch "promise" when you can get a 5-year-old ready-to-move flat with more space for ₹7,000?
I checked a flat in Narsingi. Price: ₹1.6 Cr. Expected rent: ₹40k. After maintenance, the yield is 2.6%. My Fixed Deposit gives me 7%. Why would I buy this?