India Office Leasing Hits Record 45.5 Million Sq Ft in H1 2026
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India Office Leasing Hits Record 45.5 Million Sq Ft in H1 2026
India’s office market just posted its strongest half-year on record. Here’s the complete breakdown — who’s leasing, which cities are winning, what it means for commercial investors, and where the Tricity fits into the story.
Quick Answer
India recorded 45.5 million sq. ft. of office space absorption in H1 2026 — the highest ever for a half-year period — with new supply also hitting a record ~32 million sq. ft. Global Capability Centres (GCCs) drove 43% of demand, while flex, technology and BFSI firms together accounted for 58% of H1 leasing. Bengaluru, Delhi-NCR and Mumbai together absorbed 61% of the total.
Breaking News Summary — What Happened
According to CBRE India’s H1 2026 office market report, India’s commercial real estate sector recorded its strongest-ever half-year performance, with gross absorption touching 45.5 million square feet — surpassing every previous half-year period on record. Q2 2026 alone contributed roughly 24.6 million sq. ft., itself the highest single-quarter figure ever recorded, up 18% quarter-on-quarter and 14% year-on-year.
Supply kept pace, with developers delivering approximately 32 million sq. ft. in H1 — also a record for the January-June period, up 91% quarter-on-quarter in Q2 alone. Notably, 76% of new Q2 completions were green-certified, and 74% were located within integrated technology parks, signaling a structural shift toward higher-quality, sustainability-focused stock.
Why It Matters
This isn’t a one-quarter blip. It’s the ninth consecutive half-year period with strong absorption, occurring against a backdrop of global economic uncertainty and ongoing debate about AI’s impact on office-based employment. That combination — record demand despite macro headwinds — is the signal commercial investors, developers, and occupiers are watching most closely.
Who Leased the Space
| Occupier Segment | Share of H1/Q2 2026 Leasing |
|---|---|
| Global Capability Centres (GCCs) | 43% of H1 demand; GCC leasing hit 10.3M sq ft in Q2 alone |
| Flexible Workspace Operators | Largest single occupier segment in Q2 at 27% |
| Flex + Technology + BFSI combined | 58% of H1 leasing, 62% of Q2 leasing |
| Fortune 500 Companies | 6.8M sq ft leased in Q2, a 28% share |
| Large-format deals (2 lakh+ sq ft) | Up 57% quarter-on-quarter |
Why Demand Remains Strong
Three forces are compounding simultaneously: GCCs continuing to deepen their India footprint rather than just entering it, flexible space operators scaling aggressively across both gateway cities and emerging markets, and a broader flight-to-quality trend where occupiers are willing to pre-commit to under-construction Grade A space rather than settle for older stock. CBRE’s own India CEO Anshuman Magazine described the strength as “broad-based” — not concentrated in one segment or city, which is itself a resilience signal.
Office Market Explained — Key Terms
Before diving into the analysis, here’s what the terminology actually means — written for readers who aren’t commercial real estate specialists.
Gross Leasing
Total office space leased in a period, regardless of whether tenants are moving in, renewing, or expanding — the headline absorption number.
Net Absorption
Gross leasing minus space vacated — a cleaner measure of actual net demand growth in the market.
Vacancy Rate
The percentage of total office stock currently unoccupied — a falling vacancy rate typically precedes rental growth.
Grade A Office
Premium-quality buildings with modern specifications, professional management, strong infrastructure and often green certification — the segment institutional capital and REITs focus on.
Built-to-Suit (BTS)
A building constructed or customized specifically to a single occupier’s requirements, common for large GCC and corporate campuses.
Managed Offices
Fully furnished, serviced office space typically leased through an operator rather than directly from a landlord — a step between flex space and a traditional lease.
Co-working / Flex Space
Shared or flexible office space, leased on shorter, more adaptable terms than traditional long leases — now a major demand driver in its own right.
Pre-Leasing
Space leased before construction is complete — a strong signal of occupier confidence and a way to secure future Grade A stock ahead of delivery.
GCC Leasing
Space leased by Global Capability Centres — captive offshore units of multinational companies handling technology, operations, or R&D functions.
Institutional Leasing
Large-scale leasing by well-capitalized, credit-worthy tenants — typically the segment REITs and institutional landlords prioritize for lease stability.
REIT Ownership
Office assets held within a Real Estate Investment Trust structure, allowing investors to gain commercial property exposure through publicly traded units rather than direct ownership.
Rental Appreciation
The rate at which lease rents rise over time in a given micro-market, driven by falling vacancy and rising quality-stock demand.
Why Record Leasing Happened
No single factor explains a record this broad-based. It’s the convergence of several structural trends, some accelerating for years and others newly compounding in 2026.
The AI Boom — Adding Demand, Not Just Replacing It
Despite widespread anxiety about AI reducing office-based headcount, 2026’s leasing data tells a more nuanced story: AI-related hiring — model training, applied AI engineering, data infrastructure — is itself becoming a significant new demand driver, often requiring specialized, high-power, high-density office space rather than reducing overall footprint. The net effect so far has been additive rather than subtractive to office demand.
Global Outsourcing & India’s Talent Pool
India’s scale advantage in engineering and technical graduates remains the single biggest structural driver of GCC expansion — multinational companies aren’t just outsourcing support functions anymore, they’re building core product, R&D and AI capability centres in India, which require larger, longer-term, higher-specification leases than traditional back-office operations.
Cost Advantage & Digital Transformation
Even as Indian office rents rise, they remain meaningfully lower than comparable Grade A space in most Western markets and other Asian hubs, while digital transformation initiatives across global enterprises continue to require dedicated technology and operations teams — a combination that keeps India’s cost-to-capability ratio attractive even as absolute costs increase.
Hybrid Work Has Stabilized, Not Eliminated Office Demand
The most-asked question of the past few years — “will hybrid work permanently shrink office demand” — has effectively been answered by the data itself. Hybrid work has stabilized as a norm rather than a threat, with occupiers now leasing for flight-to-quality (fewer, better buildings) rather than simply less space overall.
Government Policy Support
Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes, continued Ease of Doing Business reforms, and state-level investment promotion (particularly aggressive in Hyderabad, Gujarat/GIFT City, and increasingly Punjab for industrial and IT-adjacent development) have kept India structurally attractive for FDI-linked office expansion, alongside tax incentive frameworks that continue to favor GCC and export-oriented services setups.
City-Wise Analysis
Office demand in 2026 remains concentrated but is beginning to diversify. Bengaluru, Delhi-NCR and Mumbai together absorbed 61% of H1 2026 demand, while Bengaluru, Pune and Ahmedabad contributed 72% of new supply — meaning the demand and supply leadership isn’t perfectly overlapping, which itself creates city-specific opportunity and risk profiles.
| City | H1 2026 Position | Primary Demand Driver | Investor Read |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bengaluru | Leads city-wise leasing (~27% Q2 share) | GCCs — ORR corridor, Whitefield, Sarjapur; India’s largest GCC hub | Highest liquidity, highest competition, premium pricing |
| Delhi-NCR (incl. Gurugram, Noida, Greater Noida) | Top-3 city by absorption; record quarterly flex leasing | Government-linked & BFSI GCCs — Gurugram Cyber City, Aerocity | Diversified demand base, strong flex-space momentum |
| Mumbai / Navi Mumbai | Top-3 city by absorption | BFSI, financial services headquarters demand | Highest rental base, financial-sector-anchored stability |
| Hyderabad | Among top large-format transaction markets | Fastest-growing GCC market — competitive land cost, strong state support | Best growth-to-cost ratio among top-tier GCC hubs |
| Pune | Highest-ever quarterly leasing; major supply contributor | Manufacturing & BFSI GCCs | Strong fundamentals, more moderate pricing than Bengaluru/Mumbai |
| Chennai | Steady mid-tier demand | Engineering, manufacturing-linked GCCs | Consistent, less volatile absorption pattern |
| Ahmedabad / GIFT City | Major H1 2026 supply contributor | Financial services, IFSC-linked demand at GIFT City specifically | Early-stage growth story, policy-driven upside |
| Kochi, Indore & other Tier-2 cities | Smaller but emerging absorption | Cost-driven decentralization from Tier-1 saturation | Higher risk, higher long-term upside for early movers |
Mohali & Chandigarh Tricity — Where It Fits
The Tricity isn’t yet a headline city in national CBRE/JLL office leasing tables — its commercial office market operates at a different scale than Bengaluru or Hyderabad. But the underlying demand logic driving the national GCC and IT boom applies directly here: IT City Mohali’s Phase 2 commercial development, GMADA’s continued push on Aerocity and the broader airport corridor, and the region’s cost advantage relative to Delhi-NCR are positioning the Tricity as a genuine secondary/emerging market for IT-adjacent and back-office commercial demand, even if not yet at GCC-anchor scale.
For a detailed breakdown of Mohali’s commercial and IT infrastructure specifically, see our GMADA Mohali Complete Guide.
“This strength is broad-based — GCCs are deepening their footprint while flexible space operators scale rapidly across gateway and emerging cities alike. We expect this momentum to continue through the rest of 2026.”
The GCC Boom — Complete Guide
Global Capability Centres are the single most important story in Indian commercial real estate right now, so it’s worth understanding them properly rather than treating “GCC” as industry jargon.
What GCCs Actually Are
A GCC is a captive offshore unit set up by a multinational company — not outsourced to a third-party vendor, but owned and operated directly — handling technology development, product engineering, R&D, analytics, or global operations functions. The shift from traditional outsourcing to owned GCCs reflects multinationals wanting tighter control over IP, quality, and strategic technology work, not just cost arbitrage on routine tasks.
Why Companies Choose India
- The world’s largest pool of English-speaking engineering and technical graduates
- Significant cost advantage versus equivalent talent in the US, UK, or Western Europe, even as Indian salaries rise
- A mature, proven ecosystem — two decades of IT services experience means the operational playbook for setting up and scaling a GCC is well-established
- Time zone coverage that enables near-24-hour global operations when combined with other regional offices
Why Bengaluru
Bengaluru’s dominance as India’s largest GCC hub isn’t accidental — decades of IT services and startup ecosystem density created the deepest specialized talent pool in the country, concentrated specifically around the ORR (Outer Ring Road) corridor, Whitefield, and Sarjapur, which now function as globally recognized GCC address zones in their own right.
Why Hyderabad
Hyderabad has emerged as the fastest-growing GCC market largely on the back of aggressive, consistent state government support, competitive land and construction costs relative to Bengaluru, and a growing talent base that increasingly rivals Bengaluru’s for specific technical skill sets — making it the market GCCs increasingly consider as a genuine alternative or complementary location, not just an overflow option.
GCC Real Estate Requirements — Why They Filter Buildings Before Price
GCCs typically apply strict, non-negotiable procurement criteria before a building even reaches price discussion: LEED Gold/Platinum or IGBC-equivalent green certification, minimum contiguous floor plates of 20,000-50,000 sq ft, in-building expansion capacity, 100% power backup with redundant connectivity, current fire and occupancy certifications, and a preference for 5-7 year lease terms with structured break clauses. This specification-first approach is why GCC-anchored buildings command premium rents and why developers are increasingly building to these specs speculatively, ahead of signed tenants.
Expected Hiring & Future of GCCs
CBRE projects GCCs will drive over 40% of total office space absorption through the rest of 2026, with the segment’s share of Grade A leasing having already touched a record 44% in Q1 2026 alone. This isn’t expected to be a peak-and-decline pattern — the structural drivers (talent, cost, control over strategic work) point toward continued, if not accelerating, GCC expansion through the remainder of the decade.
Impact Beyond Office Demand
GCC-driven office demand doesn’t stay contained to commercial real estate — it has measurable downstream effects on residential prices and rentals in the immediate catchment areas of major GCC clusters, as the high-paying jobs these centres create drive housing demand in nearby residential corridors, a pattern already visible around Bengaluru’s ORR and increasingly around Hyderabad’s Financial District.
Sector-Wise Demand Comparison
| Sector | 2026 Demand Pattern |
|---|---|
| Technology / IT | Core driver, increasingly GCC-anchored rather than pure services outsourcing |
| AI Companies | Emerging as a distinct, additive demand category — high-density, high-power specification requirements |
| BFSI | Among the top-3 contributing sectors to H1 2026 leasing, alongside flex and tech |
| Consulting & Professional Services | Steady institutional demand, typically premium Grade A space |
| Engineering & Manufacturing-Linked GCCs | Strong in Pune and Chennai specifically |
| Healthcare | Growing but smaller share, often linked to pharma/healthtech GCC expansion |
| Semiconductors & Electronics | Early-stage but policy-supported growth category, linked to PLI incentives |
| E-commerce | Demand tied more to warehousing/logistics than traditional office, but corporate HQ leasing continues |
| Data Centres | A distinct, fast-growing commercial real estate category, though structurally different from office leasing |
| Gaming | Small but emerging niche demand, concentrated in specific tech hubs |
Commercial Property Investment — Should You Buy?
Record office leasing data is encouraging, but it doesn’t automatically mean every commercial asset class is a good buy right now. Here’s how the main categories compare.
| Asset Type | Typical Rental Yield | Liquidity | Risk | Entry Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grade A Office (institutional-scale) | Moderate, stable | Low for individual investors (typically institutional/REIT territory) | Low | Very High |
| SCO / Retail Shops | Higher, tenant-dependent | Medium | Medium | Medium-High |
| Warehouses / Industrial | Strong, e-commerce/logistics-driven | Medium | Medium | Medium |
| Business Parks / Managed Offices | Moderate to high | Medium | Medium | High |
| Co-working / Flex Operator Space | Variable, operator-dependent | Low-Medium (harder to exit mid-lease) | Higher | Medium |
| REIT Units | Dividend yield, market-linked | High (publicly traded) | Lower | Low (accessible entry) |
✓ Arguments For Direct Commercial Investment
Higher potential yield than residential, tenant demand backed by verified record-breaking national data, GCC-driven demand creates specific pre-leasing opportunities in emerging corridors.✗ Arguments For Caution
High entry cost and lower liquidity than REITs for individual investors, vacancy risk concentrated in non-Grade-A or poorly located assets, requires active tenant/lease management unlike passive REIT exposure.REIT Analysis
| REIT | Portfolio | Occupancy | Approx. Yield | Positioning |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Embassy Office Parks REIT | ~51M sq ft — Bengaluru, Mumbai, Pune, NCR, Chennai (India’s largest office REIT) | ~91-92% | ~5-7% range (varies by quarter) | Stability, scale, long lease expiries — GCC-heavy tenant base |
| Mindspace Business Parks REIT | ~34M sq ft — Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Chennai | High, diversified | Competitive with Embassy | Lowest volatility among peers, strongest CAGR since listing |
| Brookfield India REIT | ~14M sq ft — Mumbai, NCR, Kolkata | Improving trend (reported 82% → 92% range) | ~5% range | 100% institutionally managed, global Brookfield backing |
| Nexus Select Trust | 19 malls across 15 cities (retail, not office) | ~97% | Competitive, retail-driven | Only listed retail REIT — consumption story, not office/GCC exposure |
| Knowledge Realty Trust | Newest listed REIT (2025) | — | — | Expands the REIT universe; shorter track record |
Future Outlook
REIT distributions across India’s listed trusts have grown steadily, with the combined REIT universe now managing well over ₹2 lakh crore in gross assets. Record office leasing directly supports this outlook — higher occupancy and rental escalation across GCC-heavy portfolios like Embassy’s and Mindspace’s should continue feeding into distribution growth, provided the current absorption trend holds.
Risks
- REITs are regulated by SEBI, not RERA — different investor protections than direct property buying
- Distributions are not guaranteed and move with occupancy, rental escalation, and leverage levels
- Interest rate sensitivity — REIT valuations behave partly like interest-rate-sensitive instruments
- Concentration risk if a REIT’s tenant base is heavily skewed toward one sector (e.g., GCC-heavy portfolios facing sector-specific demand shifts)
Investor Suitability
REITs suit income-focused investors, retirees, and NRIs seeking real estate exposure without the operational burden of direct property ownership or tenant management — typically recommended as a portfolio allocation (commonly cited in the 10-15% range) rather than a sole real estate holding.
Market Forecast
The following scenarios are Royals Property Consultant’s own analytical framework, not official forecasts from CBRE or any research firm — clearly labeled as informed projection, not verified data.
| Scenario | 2026-27 | 2028-30 | 2030-35 | Key Assumption |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Optimistic | Absorption sustains 40M+ sq ft/half-year pace | GCC share crosses 50% of total leasing | Tier-2 cities meaningfully absorb overflow demand | AI/GCC expansion accelerates, no major global recession |
| Base Case | Absorption moderates but stays above pre-2025 levels | Steady, single-digit rental growth in Grade A markets | Gradual geographic diversification beyond top-6 cities | Current structural drivers persist without major shocks |
| Conservative | Absorption plateaus or dips modestly | Vacancy rises in oversupplied micro-markets | Slower Tier-2 diversification, capital concentrates in proven hubs | Global recession or AI-driven headcount reduction materially offsets GCC growth |
All three scenarios assume no major disruption to India’s core cost and talent advantages — the variable that moves the needle most is global macro conditions and the net employment effect of AI adoption within GCCs themselves.
Risks to This Outlook
| Risk | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Global Recession | Multinational parent companies could pause GCC expansion or headcount growth during a global downturn |
| AI Replacing Jobs | If AI reduces required headcount faster than it creates new AI-specific roles, net office space demand could soften |
| Automation in Back-Office Functions | Traditional GCC support functions are more automatable than strategic/product roles, a structural shift already underway |
| Remote Work Resurgence | A renewed shift toward remote-first policies at major occupiers would directly reduce office footprint needs |
| Interest Rates | Higher rates increase financing costs for developers and can pressure REIT valuations |
| Oversupply in Specific Markets | Record 32M sq ft H1 supply, if absorption slows, could tip specific micro-markets into oversupply and rising vacancy |
| Construction Delays | Pre-leasing on under-construction stock carries execution risk if developers miss delivery timelines |
| Geopolitical Tensions | Trade tensions or shifts in global outsourcing policy could affect GCC expansion decisions |
| Currency Risk | Rupee volatility affects the cost calculus for dollar-denominated global occupiers evaluating India |
Suggested Visual Assets
For the design/social team — quick reference list rather than full production specs.
- Charts (10): H1 absorption trend (last 5 half-years), GCC share of leasing over time, city-wise absorption pie, sector-wise demand bar chart, supply vs absorption line chart, REIT occupancy comparison, REIT yield comparison, vacancy rate by city, rental growth trend, forecast scenario fan chart
- Maps (10): City-wise absorption heat map, GCC cluster map (Bengaluru ORR/Whitefield/Sarjapur), Hyderabad Financial District map, Delhi-NCR commercial corridors, Mumbai BFSI zones, Pune IT corridors, Tricity/Mohali commercial zones, Tier-2 emerging markets map, national supply pipeline map, REIT portfolio distribution map
- Interactive Ideas: City comparison selector tool, REIT yield/occupancy comparator, “which asset class fits your budget” investor quiz, forecast scenario toggle (optimistic/base/conservative)
Frequently Asked Questions
The Headline Numbers
GCCs
Office Market Basics
City-Wise
Investment & REITs
Risks & Outlook
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Related Reading
External References: CBRE India H1 2026 Office Market Report · RBI Monetary Policy Committee releases · SEBI REIT Regulations · Ministry of Commerce & Industry (PLI scheme documentation) · Individual REIT quarterly investor disclosures (Embassy, Mindspace, Brookfield, Nexus)
The Bottom Line
ROYALS EXPERT OPINION
A national record like 45.5 million sq ft doesn’t directly move the needle on a Tricity commercial deal — but the underlying story does. GCCs, flex operators, and quality-focused occupiers are the same forces reshaping IT City Mohali and the airport corridor, just at an earlier stage of the curve. That’s exactly the kind of window worth understanding before it becomes obvious to everyone.
Whether the right move for you is a REIT allocation, a commercial retail unit, or watching how Mohali’s IT-adjacent corridors develop over the next few years, the record H1 2026 data is a useful signal — not a standalone reason to act. Pair it with the specifics of your own budget, timeline, and risk appetite.
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