Rs 1 Crore: The New Benchmark for Mumbai's Affordable Housing
In Mumbai’s property market, Rs 1 crore no longer signals arrival. It is just an entry point, if that. Across India, homes priced above that mark now account for nearly half of all residential sales, according to Knight Frank India’s India Real Estate: Office and Residential Market H2 2025 report released in February 2026. At the same time, supply at the lower end is evaporating. New launches of homes priced under Rs 50 lakh dropped 28 per cent in 2025, underscoring how sharply developers have shifted away from affordable housing.
In Mumbai, that transition has redrawn the middle-class dream in brutally compact terms. Listings across the city show that a Rs 1-crore budget often buys a space that would register as modest in most other metros. In Prabhadevi, for instance, one apartment listed around that price measures just 228 sq ft of carpet area. That is smaller than the standard rehabilitation unit guaranteed under Mumbai’s Slum Rehabilitation Authority policy, where eligible households redeveloped under the scheme receive flats of roughly 300 sq ft carpet area at no cost.
Placed side by side, the comparison is striking. A middle-class family assembling years of savings to enter the property market may end up purchasing a home smaller than the baseline rehabilitation unit provided under the city’s slum redevelopment programme. Elsewhere in the city, the compromises change a bit but rarely disappear. In Andheri (E), around Rs 1 crore typically buys a compact 1-BHK of about 450 sq ft, often in older buildings or redevelopment projects. In Santacruz (E), apartments of roughly 425 sq ft in redeveloped MHADA colonies are now priced in the same range. Brokers say buyers at that budget frequently have to choose between space, amenities and location, rarely securing all three.
“Today Rs 1 crore it is the starting point for home ownership in the city,” says Pushpamitra Das, chairman and managing director of Justo RealFintech. Most buyers in this segment are first-time homeowners relying on bank loans, typically earning Rs 15–25 lakh annually and prioritising connectivity to rail and metro corridors. Affordability calculations reveal how narrow the margin has become. Sagar Visawadia, real-estate influencer and owner of Dream Properties suggests that the cost of a home is often about four to five times a household’s annual income. “A family earning Rs 50 lakh a year can therefore comfortably afford a property worth about Rs 2–2.5 crore. That would require a down payment of roughly Rs 40–50 lakh and monthly loan instalments of around Rs 1.6–1.8 lakh over 25 years,” he says.
Anything above Rs 3 crore begins to seem like an impossible dream for middle class families. Yet, much of Mumbai already sits far beyond that range. “In Bandra, a typical 2-BHK costs Rs 3–5 crore. In Lower Parel, prices run between Rs 3 and Rs 7 crore. In Colaba, the starting point is often well above Rs 4.5 crore,” says Visawadia. For most residents, that leaves only one strategy: start small, often painfully small, and, typically, in the extended suburbs. One’s first home might be in Virar, Vasai or Mira Road. The next upgrade may happen in Andheri or Goregaon. Only much later can buyers aspire to reach neighbourhoods like Bandra, Lower Parel or south Mumbai.
Until governments step in with stronger affordability measures — from shared-equity programmes and first-time buyer support to the large public housing systems seen in parts of Europe and Singapore – Rs 1 crore will only buy you a foothold in the dream of home ownership in Mumbai. The figure still sounds enormous to many. The space it affords never is.