Home sales in Hyderabad dropped 6 per cent year-on-year in Q2 2025, with 11,513 units sold. Though quarterly sales and new launches saw minor growth, high prices and affordability concerns are slowing demand, especially in the budget and mid-income housing segments
Published Date – 16 July 2025, 05:16 PM

Hyderabad: Home sales in Hyderabad continued to remain sluggish, with year-on-year comparison showing the unit sales to be 6 per cent less this year second quarter compared to last year. The year Q2 2025 (April-June) recorded sales of 11,513 housing units as against 12,296 units sold in the year 2024 Q2, according to the latest report.
In its report titled ‘Real Insight Residential- April – June 2025’, the digital real estate transaction and advisory platform, PropTiger.com, pointed out that though the sale of units quarter-on-quarter this year improved between Q1 and Q2 by 8 per cent in Hyderabad, the Y-o-Y sales remained lower by 6 per cent.
The report, which assessed eight prime residential markets in the country, documented a decline of 14 per cent annually in the April-June quarter amid pricing concerns forcing buyers to opt for a wait-and-watch mode. The sales fell across cities, barring Bengaluru, Chennai and Kolkata, while the sharpest dip in sales during the quarter was seen in the MMR (-32%) and Pune (-27%).
In terms of new launches, Hyderabad did show a small Q-o-Q rise of 6 per cent with 10,748 units in Q2-2025 as against 10,156 in Q1-2025. In the eight prime markets assessed, covering Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Pune, NCR (Gurugram, Noida, Greater Noida, Ghaziabad and Faridabad) and MMR (Mumbai, Navi Mumbai and Thane), PropTiger.com revealed a drop in new launches with 84,138 units in Q2-2025 as against 93,114 units in Q1-2025.
Sridhar Srinivasan, Head of Sales, PropTiger.com, said, “The short-term dip in home sales and new launches is more of a recalibration than a sign of waning demand. Affordability pressures, particularly in the budget and mid-income segments, have led to some cautious buyer sentiment.”
However, underlying demand remains intact, as evidenced by strong sequential growth in several cities and the continued dominance of key markets like MMR, Pune, and Bengaluru, he said.
PropTiger.com in its assessment noted, “The dip in both sales and launches has to do with the fact that housing affordability has worsened after a prolonged period of dramatic growth in average costs, severely affecting the affordable housing segment.”