Young First-Time Homebuyers on the Rise: 64% Under 35, Bengaluru Leads

Published: March 24, 2026 | Category: real estate news
Young First-Time Homebuyers on the Rise: 64% Under 35, Bengaluru Leads

The profile of the first-time homebuyer is undergoing a marked shift. In 2019, only 38% of buyers were under 35; by 2026, that share rose to 64%, with Bengaluru accounting for nearly 68% of first-time buyers in this age group. This generational change is being driven by the tech economy and startup culture, as younger buyers increasingly view homeownership not as a retirement milestone but as a foundation for building long-term wealth, a report by NoBroker said on March 24.

Interestingly, the share of unmarried first-time homebuyers is also seeing a gradual decline, the report said. In Bengaluru, buyers under the age of 35 contribute 68% of the first-time buyers, fueled by high early-career incomes and a cultural normalization of taking on significant debt in one's late 20s and early 30s, it said.

The influx of younger buyers has brought with it a subtle but important demographic shift: a steady decline in the share of first-time homebuyers who are married. As recently as 2019, about 73% of first-time buyers were married at the time of purchase; that figure has since fallen to around 65%. This reflects two broader trends: urban millennials are marrying later, and there is a growing willingness to take on significant financial commitments independently. Single buyers, particularly women, are increasingly entering the housing market on their own terms, the report showed.

Yet, paradoxically, the co-applicant model has gained traction. Even as fewer buyers are married, those who are married or in partnerships are more likely than before to opt for joint loan applications. The logic is twofold: co-applicants enhance overall loan eligibility and, in many cases, help unlock meaningful stamp duty benefits. Today's first-time homebuyer is younger, more leveraged, and increasingly part of a dual-income household where both partners are not just contributors but co-applicants. The home loan has evolved from a cautious financial instrument to the primary vehicle of aspiration, the report said.

In Mumbai, a flat 1% discount on stamp duty applies across all property values when a woman is listed as a co-applicant. In Bengaluru, the benefit is more targeted, as it applies to properties under ₹35 lakh, but uptake remains strong in that segment, it said. In the NCR region, the savings are among the most attractive: Delhi offers a 2% concession, bringing stamp duty down to 4% for women compared to 6% for men, while Haryana cities like Gurugram and Faridabad provide a 1-2% reduction, and Noida in Uttar Pradesh charges around 6% for women versus 7% for men, the report showed.

Women now account for approximately 30% of property registrations, but women-only loans account for just less than 5% of disbursals. The gap tells its own story: women are overwhelmingly present in these transactions as co-applicants, not as standalone borrowers, it said.

The most consequential shift in the first-time buyer landscape is the dramatic increase in the share of income devoted to loan repayments. The industry standard and a longstanding internal guideline for most banks have been to cap EMI obligations at 50% of net monthly income. As of 2026, the average EMI-to-income ratio among first-time buyers has climbed to 60-65%, up from 45% in 2019. This is not simply a market trend; it represents a structural shift in how financial risk is calibrated and, in some cases, accommodated. Lenders are adapting. Several banks have quietly stretched their effective underwriting limits beyond the 50% threshold to accommodate borrowers. This particularly applies to dual-income couples whose combined income profile makes the loan serviceable, even if they are individually below par, the report said. The affordability pressure is further evidenced by the sheer scale of loan dependency in the market today. More than 80% of residential property purchases are now financed through home loans. This figure underscores how fundamentally the 'save first, buy later' model has been displaced by 'borrow now, build equity later,' the report added.

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Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is the age demographic of first-time homebuyers in 2026?
In 2026, 64% of first-time homebuyers are under the age of 35, a significant increase from 38% in 2019.
2. How has the marriage status of first-time homebuyers changed?
The share of married first-time homebuyers has declined from 73% in 2019 to around 65% in 2026.
3. What benefits do women get in home loan applications in different cities?
In Mumbai, women listed as co-applicants get a 1% discount on stamp duty. In Bengaluru, the benefit applies to properties under ₹35 lakh. In Delhi, women get a 2% concession, bringing stamp duty down to 4%. In Haryana and Noida, women get a 1-2% reduction in stamp duty.
4. What is the current EMI-to-income ratio for first-time homebuyers?
The average EMI-to-income ratio for first-time homebuyers has climbed to 60-65% in 2026, up from 45% in 2019.
5. How has the home loan market changed in terms of loan dependency?
More than 80% of residential property purchases are now financed through home loans, reflecting a shift from the 'save first, buy later' model to 'borrow now, build equity later.'