Ahmedabad, Pune Lead India's Most Affordable Housing Markets as Interest Rates Decline
Knight Frank India's Affordability Index shows improved housing affordability in major Indian cities due to lower home loan interest rates. Ahmedabad leads with an 18% EMI-to-income ratio, while Mumbai's ratio falls below 50% for the first time. The improvement is attributed to recent monetary policy changes and stable economic conditions. Most cities saw better affordability, with only NCR experiencing a slight decline. The supportive rate environment is expected to sustain residential demand, backed by economic growth and easing inflation.

*this image is generated using AI for illustrative purposes only.
Lower home loan interest rates have significantly improved housing affordability across India's major cities, offering relief to homebuyers and supporting sustained residential demand, according to Knight Frank India's latest Affordability Index. The comprehensive analysis reveals that affordability conditions have strengthened substantially following recent monetary policy changes and stable economic conditions.
Ahmedabad Leads Affordability Rankings
The report highlights that affordability improved in seven of the top eight cities, with Ahmedabad emerging as the clear leader in housing affordability. The city recorded the lowest EMI-to-income ratio of 18% among major markets, making it the most accessible destination for homebuyers.
| City | EMI-to-Income Ratio | Affordability Status |
|---|---|---|
| Ahmedabad | 18% | Most Affordable |
| Pune | 22% | Highly Affordable |
| Kolkata | 22% | Highly Affordable |
| Chennai | 23% | Affordable |
| Mumbai | 47% | Below Critical Threshold |
A lower EMI-to-income ratio indicates that households spend a smaller proportion of their income on home loan EMIs, making housing more affordable for potential buyers.
Mumbai Achieves Historic Affordability Milestone
A key milestone was recorded in Mumbai, where housing affordability improved meaningfully, with the EMI-to-income ratio declining to 47%. This marks the first time in the city's history that affordability has fallen below the critical 50% threshold, a level beyond which banks typically become cautious in underwriting home loans. Knight Frank India noted that this signals a more sustainable affordability environment for India's most expensive residential market.
Interest Rate Cycle Drives Market Dynamics
The improvement in affordability comes after a volatile interest-rate cycle over the past few years. While affordability strengthened between 2010 and 2021 and further improved during the pandemic due to ultra-low interest rates, it temporarily weakened in 2022 following a sharp 250 basis point hike in the RBI's repo rate to combat inflation. Stability in rates from early 2023, followed by recent repo rate cuts, has once again tilted conditions in favor of homebuyers.
Mixed Performance Across Other Markets
Among other cities, Bengaluru and Hyderabad saw affordability levels remain stable, as improvements in income and demand were matched by a rise in housing prices. NCR was the only market to see a marginal deterioration in affordability, driven by a premium-led rise in weighted average prices. Despite this, affordability levels in NCR remain well within comfortable limits and significantly better than the stress threshold of 50%.
Market Outlook and Expert Commentary
Knight Frank India observed that this supportive rate environment has helped residential sales remain close to the post-pandemic peak, with momentum expected to carry forward, supported by resilient economic growth and easing inflation. Shishir Baijal, International Partner, Chairman and Managing Director, Knight Frank India, noted that income growth has outpaced price increases in recent years, and when combined with declining interest rates, has strengthened home affordability across markets. With the RBI projecting strong GDP growth and a benign interest-rate outlook, affordability levels are expected to remain supportive of housing demand in the near future as well.


























