Delhi's Rs 1000 Crore Real Estate Deal: A Milestone in Luxury Housing
The ultra-luxury property market in Delhi is abuzz as a Rs 1,000-crore bungalow on Bhagwan Das Road enters advanced talks with a prominent food and beverage entrepreneur. Spanning 3.2 acres, the estate is owned by Maharaja Manujendra Shah of Tehri Garhwal. Reports indicate the same buyer was also negotiating Jawaharlal Nehru’s first official residence for nearly Rs 1,111 crore.
Should either transaction finalise, it would mark one of the largest residential deals in the city’s history, surpassing previous marquee bungalow sales that rarely exceeded Rs 500–600 crore, according to a Hindustan Times report.
Land, Legacy, And Lutyens’ Rules Shape Pricing
Delhi’s luxury real estate operates under stricter constraints than Mumbai’s skyline. In the Lutyens’ Bungalow Zone (LBZ), redevelopment rules, height restrictions, and FAR (Floor Area Ratio) limitations preserve the area’s heritage. These marquee estates, while commanding record-breaking prices, are valued more for their location, legacy, and expansive land parcels than potential redevelopment gains, states the report.
As Shveta Jain, Managing Director and Head of Residential Services at Savills India, explained in the report, “The full Floor Space Index cannot be commercially exploited, change of land use (CLU) is not permitted, and strict height caps apply. These estates are largely for end use, trophy assets sought by a select group of ultra-high-net-worth individuals.”
Deal Details And Market Implications
Both properties, Bhagwan Das Road and Motilal Nehru Road, are currently leasehold. The Bhagwan Das Road estate measures approximately 3.2 acres, with a public notice issued as part of standard due diligence. Sources confirm in the report that a term sheet has been signed for this property, while an agreement to buy has been executed for the Motilal Nehru Road bungalow.
Real estate experts suggest that finalising even one of these transactions could set new benchmarks for Delhi’s luxury housing market. With recent sales of smaller plots in the LBZ achieving Rs 17–18 lakh per sq yard, valuations for large estates have shifted, making Rs 1,000-crore deals plausible, the report added.
A Glimpse Of Ultra-Luxury India
Delhi’s trophy homes are increasingly attracting elite buyers who prioritise legacy and exclusivity over redevelopment potential. Unlike Mumbai, where high-rise redevelopment allows for larger FAR exploitation, LBZ regulations preserve the low-density, heritage-focused character of central Delhi, making such estates rare and coveted.