How luxury housing is changing Mumbai's housing landscape

A triplex penthouse in Malabar Hills, over 18,000 square feet, eight car parking spots, and a view of the Arabian Sea: all for the price of Rs 252.5 crore. A penthouse in Three Sixty West tower in Worli, 30,000 square feet, plus a terrace of 5,000 square feet and free sale land of 1.3 lakh square feet, 14 parking spaces: for the slightly lower price of Rs 230 crore.

These are outliers in Mumbai’s – and India’s – housing market, one dethroning the other for the spot of the most expensive property deal in the country. But due to the sheer size of their price tag, they make a splash.

This is what happened in February. The Maharashtra state government’s revenue collection from property registrations in Mumbai – comprising of minimum 5% stamp duty and Rs 30,000 registration fees – hit a five-year high at Rs 1,102 crore. Compared to February 2022, the number of properties registered was 8% lower, but revenue collection, 80% higher.

What changed between the two months was the cost of the properties; the average cost of the houses bought last month was Rs 1.9 crore.

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