Indian
Retail REITs Potentially a INR 60,000-80,000 Cr Market by 2030 - ANAROCK
- Potentially ~30-40% of
India’s overall REIT market, which is projected to touch USD 25 Bn (INR 2
lakh crore) by 2030
- Retail REITs form approx.
15-25% of total REIT market capitalization in mature economies
- 2-3 retail REITs expected to
launch over the next 3-5 years with Grade A malls maturing into stable,
income-generating assets
- Of five currently listed
REITs, only Nexus Select Trust is retail-focused; other 4 are
office-focused
- Beyond the metros - tier-II
cities such as Indore, Coimbatore, Surat, Bhubaneswar, and Chandigarh now
seeing institutional entry, raising REIT opportunities, devs like Phoenix
Mills, Prestige Estates, & Nexus Malls expanding aggressively there
- New projects averaging 1-1.2
Mn sq. ft. being planned - entertainment, F&B, & lifestyle retail
now account for nearly half of new mall spaces
Mumbai,
16th October 2025: India’s
retail real estate sector is on the brink of a major transformation. While the
country’s Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) ecosystem is still dominated by
commercial office assets, the next wave of growth can come from retail malls,
shopping centres, and mixed-use developments. Consolidation of quality retail
assets, steady consumer spending, and rising urban incomes are driving this
shift.
Data from
ANAROCK Research estimates that the Indian retail REIT market can become a
between INR 60,000 - INR 80,000 Crore market by 2030 - roughly 30-40% of
India’s overall REIT market, which is projected to touch USD 25 billion (INR 2
lakh crore) by 2030.
Anuj
Kejriwal, CEO & MD - ANAROCK Retail, says, "Currently, out of the five listed
REITs in India, four are office-focused and only one - Nexus Select Trust - is
retail-centric. However, with Grade A malls now maturing into stable,
income-generating assets, 2-3 retail REITs are expected to launch over the next
3-5 years. Our estimate of the Indian retail REITs' potential to become a INR
60,000 – INR 80,000 crore market in the next five years assumes only partial
listings of various institutional portfolios."
This
vital new entry into India's REIT universe will mirror the path of mature
economies, where retail REITs form 15% to 25% of total REIT market
capitalization.
|
Company |
Malls Owned |
Leasable Area (Mn sf) |
Key Cities |
|
Nexus Malls (Blackstone) |
19 |
~ 10 |
Mumbai, Pune, Bengaluru |
|
(Total 14 Cities) |
|||
|
Phoenix Mills |
12 |
~ 11 |
Mumbai, Pune, Bengaluru, Kolkata |
|
(Total 8 Cities) |
|||
|
DLF (Including DCCDL) |
8 |
~ 4 |
Delhi-NCR |
|
K Raheja |
5 |
~ 3 |
MMR (3 Cities) |
|
Pacific |
9 |
~ 3 |
NCR (2 Cities) |
|
Lakeshore |
5 |
~ 3 |
MMR, NCR (5 Cities) |
Source: ANAROCK Research & Advisory
Hotspots
Emerging Beyond the Metros
Tier-II
cities such as Indore, Coimbatore, Surat, Bhubaneswar, and Chandigarh are
witnessing the entry of institutional players for the first time, with mall
developers like Phoenix Mills, Prestige Estates, and Nexus Malls expanding
aggressively in these high-income, consumption-driven clusters.
New
projects averaging 1-1.2 million sq. ft. are being planned, with entertainment,
F&B, and lifestyle retail accounting for nearly half of new mall space.
Market
Demand-Supply Dynamics
According
to ANAROCK Retail’s RELEAP H1 2025 report, the first half of the current year
saw 2.8 million sq. ft. of mall space deployed across the top 7 cities - 155%
more than in 2024, when 1.1 million sq. ft. of supply was recorded. Net absorption
in malls was approx. 2.0 Mn sq. ft. - almost 31% more than that in the previous
year. The absorption was predominantly driven by the Apparel and F&B
segments, which accounted for nearly 55% share of the total absorption.
These
absorption trends in institutional assets reflect an evolution in Indian
consumer preferences," says Anuj Kejriwal. "High-value consumption
categories are being seen as gaining increasing traction - an important signal
to mall developers and their tenant mix strategy going forward."
High
Streets Vs. Malls - A Changing Rental Landscape
"Across
major cities, high streets are showing consistent rental appreciation,
reflecting sustained demand for prime retail locations with high footfall and
visibility characteristics," says Kejriwal. "In contrast, mall
rentals have largely remained stagnant in most cities, indicating a more
cautious approach from retailers towards enclosed retail formats amid evolving
market dynamics."
Outlook
The
Indian organized mall sector is no longer chasing square footage and focusing
on creating vibrant urban destinations instead.
Predictions
for the Next 5 Years:
- Top 5 mall owners will
control 60% of the overall organized stock
- New retail REITs will
institutionalize the market further
- We will see wave of
mixed-use redevelopment, with older malls repurposed into integrated
lifestyle districts
"Retail
is no longer just an afterthought in Indian real estate portfolios," summarises
Kejriwal. "It is now edging closer to centre-stage, under the spotlight as
a resilient, high-yield asset class which is finally ready for institutional
scale and public markets."
