Indian Proptech Sector Surges in 2025: $550 Million Raised Amid Full-Stack Shift and IPO Wave
The vast Indian proptech sector, encompassing real estate, hospitality, co-working, co-living, interior design, construction technology, and other allied areas, has witnessed a remarkable revival in funding activity in 2025. This resurgence follows the downturn in 2023 and is closely linked to rapid technological advancements, particularly the adoption of artificial intelligence, data analytics, and automation. These technologies are improving property discovery, asset management, construction efficiency, and customer experience.
In 2025, the proptech sector collectively secured over $550 million in funding, led by major players including Infra.Market, OYO, WeWork, Square Yards, and several others. Importantly, investor interest in 2025 was increasingly driven by full-stack and transaction-led proptech models, marking a clear shift away from classifieds-only platforms. Startups are now pursuing deeper monetization and end-to-end control of real estate transactions.
According to data compiled by Entrackr, Indian proptech startups raised over $550 million across 32 deals in 2025. The construction technology and building materials platform Infra.Market led the pack, securing around $175 million, accounting for over 30% of the total proptech funding during the year. This was followed by hospitality major OYO. Meanwhile, three co-working space providers—WeWork India, IndiQube, and Smartworks—went public in 2025 and also raised their respective pre-IPO funding rounds. Real estate and brokerage firm Square Yards secured a $35 million funding round.
The proptech sector has witnessed significant shifts in funding trends over the past few years, mirroring broader market conditions and evolving investor sentiment. In 2021, the sector attracted a robust $1.56 billion in investments, riding the wave of the Indian startup funding boom. This momentum weakened in 2022, with funding declining sharply to $680 million, and further in 2023 to a low of $126.7 million. However, the trend reversed in 2024, as improving market confidence led venture funding inflows to rebound beyond the $500 million mark. This recovery continued into 2025, with the sector sustaining its growth trajectory and raising $552 million.
Among all proptech segments, the hospitality sector emerged as the leading segment in terms of total funding, attracting $956 million, largely driven by OYO alone raising over $900 million during the period. Other hospitality companies that raised capital included Treebo, FabHotels, and several early-stage firms. Construction tech also witnessed strong investor interest, garnering approximately $670 million in funding, with a significant portion raised by Infra.Market.
Real estate firms also received investors' interest, securing around $535 million. The funding was led by major players such as NoBroker, Square Yards, PropShare, and others. The co-working sector has seen significant activity since 2020, marked by a wave of public listings. Four co-working startups went public during this period, including Awfis in 2024, followed by Smartworks, IndiQube, and WeWork India in 2025. Collectively, the co-working segment raised around $300 million across 26 deals, reflecting sustained investor interest in the sector.
Other major proptech segments that secured funding during the 2020–2025 period included mortgage & finance, co-living, interior design, SaaS, and furniture rental startups, which collectively raised over $1 billion in funding.
In FY25, interior design firm Livspace led the proptech sector with operating revenues of Rs 1,460 crore. It was followed by full-stack proptech platform Square Yards, which generated Rs 1,410 crore in operating revenue during the same period. Other proptech companies featuring among the top 10 included Smartworks, Awfis, IndiQube, HomeLane, and Simpliwork. Notably, five of the top 10 revenue-generating proptech firms were from the co-working segment, highlighting the sector’s growing scale and maturity.
The proptech sector witnessed only two merger and acquisition deals in 2025. Home interior and renovation platform Livspace acquired Mumbai-based LED lighting solutions provider Abby Lighting in a cash-and-stock deal. Meanwhile, workspace solutions provider Incuspaze acquired VSKOUT, a B2B SaaS company that offers curated data analytics for commercial real estate (CRE).
The proptech sector has seen a notable surge in IPO activity in recent years, reflecting rising investor interest and growing confidence in real estate technology-driven businesses. Co-working space solutions provider Awfis became the first co-working startup to go public in May 2024, raising Rs 599 crore through its IPO. This momentum continued in 2025 as four more co-working startups—Smartworks, IndiQube, WeWork India, and DevX—listed on Indian stock exchanges, highlighting the increasing acceptance of proptech companies in public markets.
Co-working has emerged as a leading segment in the Indian startup IPO landscape, with several players tapping public markets in recent years. Building on this momentum, many other co-working space brands, including Table Space, which is eyeing a $2.5 billion valuation in its planned IPO, along with Bhive, Stylework, and Incuspaze, are also expected to enter the IPO fray soon, further strengthening co-working dominance in the proptech public listing space.
Other proptech startups are also eyeing public listings in the near term. PRISM, the parent company of OYO, has recently filed confidential draft IPO papers with SEBI and is targeting a valuation of $7 to $8 billion. Square Yards, an integrated real estate platform and mortgage platform offering property search, transactions, home loans, rentals, interiors, and property management, is also preparing for an initial public offering. In addition, co-working is not the only segment driving this trend, as other proptech segments, including construction tech major Infra.Market and furniture rental companies Furlenco and Rentomojo, are also expected to join the IPO wave.
Full-stack proptech platforms have a clear advantage over classifieds-led models as they participate directly in transactions and capture a larger share of real estate value. The report notes that in a Rs 1 crore property transaction, brokerage earns around 5% (Rs 5 lakh), compared to Rs 25,000–30,000 in listing fees for classifieds, highlighting the stronger scalability of commission-led models. Even large classifieds players such as Zillow, despite over 70% traffic share in the US, have captured only about 1.4% of the overall real estate services market, which points to monetization limits. In this context, the report positions Square Yards as a full-stack real estate platform that combines a classifieds layer with an in-house and partner agent network, showing unit economics that compare favorably with traditional portals such as 99acres, Housing.com, and Magicbricks.
Square Yards' full-stack model goes beyond simple discovery to control the entire transaction value chain, unlocking the majority of the market's revenue pool through high-ticket commissions rather than low-value listing fees. This integrated ecosystem, encompassing in-house brokerage, mortgage (Urban Money), and interior services, creates a virtuous cycle that significantly lowers customer acquisition costs through cross-selling warm leads, driving higher operating leverage and scalability. Consequently, while competitors struggle with fragmented customer journeys and persistent losses due to high recurring marketing spend, Square Yards has achieved 50%+ compounded annual growth over the last four years with superior unit economics and EBITDA profitability.
It might see its ebbs and flows, but there is little doubt that the real estate and property market will offer a compelling opportunity for startups and investors for a long time to come. Massive categories like affordable housing have become like the agriculture of the sector, unable to attract private sector participation and counting on government backing, even as commercial segments continue to thrive and innovate.