Business

Regulatory Shift in 2026 Could Mark the Next Growth Wave for India's REIT Market

Dec 08, 2025

VMPL
New Delhi [India], December 8: India's real estate investment trust landscape is entering a pivotal phase, and 2026 is shaping up to be a breakout year. With new rules that classify REITs as equity for mutual funds and open the door for equity index inclusion, the segment is expected to experience stronger liquidity, deeper participation, and heightened investor awareness. This shift arrives at a moment when India's listed commercial real estate market is already expanding rapidly, making the regulatory change both timely and transformative.
Since the launch of the first Indian REIT in 2019, the market has grown into a significant platform that houses some of the country's largest Grade A commercial assets. These vehicles collectively represent hundreds of thousands of unitholders, signalling how quickly the structure has been adopted by both institutional and retail investors.
A regulatory shift that changes the flow of capital
From 1 January 2026, mutual funds and specialised investment funds will classify their REIT investments as equity. Until now, REITs were treated as hybrid or debt oriented exposures, which limited how much equity oriented funds could deploy into them. The reclassification removes that constraint. Equity mutual funds that need to maintain minimum equity exposure will finally be able to allocate to REITs without breaching regulatory restrictions. For the REIT market, this can significantly broaden the pool of potential capital from domestic fund managers who previously had structural limitations.
A second major milestone arrives on 1 July 2026, when REITs become eligible for inclusion in equity indices. The six month transition window gives markets time to adjust, but once the eligibility threshold is crossed, index providers can include REITs based on standard rules related to market capitalization and liquidity. Index inclusion typically leads to higher trading volumes as passive funds and benchmark linked portfolios rebalance. Over time, this can improve liquidity, compress bid ask spreads, and create more efficient price discovery.
These two policy moves signal greater confidence in REITs as equity like instruments that can offer both yield and growth exposure. For a market still in an early stage of evolution, this combination of regulatory support and index visibility can be a powerful growth catalyst.
A market with substantial expansion potential
Despite strong progress since 2019, only about one third of REIT ready office stock in India is currently listed. Many developers and institutional owners continue to hold large Grade A commercial portfolios that can potentially be monetised through future REIT launches. With demand for premium office space improving and leasing cycles stabilising, the next three to five years present an attractive window for new listings.
Between 2026 and 2029, industry observers expect a healthy pipeline of commercial assets entering the REIT ecosystem. This could include fresh acquisitions, portfolio consolidation by existing REITs, and new sponsors entering the market. As more assets are listed, the scale and diversity of the segment will improve, which can help REITs attract deeper pools of institutional money seeking long term rental income visibility.
What 2026 means for investors
For retail investors, the biggest advantage in 2026 will be easier access. As equity mutual funds build REIT allocations into their portfolios, individuals can gain indirect exposure without needing to evaluate or trade each REIT directly. This broadens the investor base and normalises REITs as part of mainstream equity investing.
Liquidity improvements can also make REITs more appealing for investors who previously worried about trading volumes. Higher participation, especially from index linked flows, can reduce volatility over time and create a more transparent market.
However, even with regulatory support, REIT performance will ultimately depend on fundamentals. Investors should focus on portfolio quality, vacancy levels, tenant strength, rental growth, leverage, and distribution consistency. Brookfield India REIT, for example, highlights the value of high quality assets managed by experienced global sponsors. The same evaluation principle applies across all listed REITs.
REITs versus InvITs in 2026
While InvITs invest in infrastructure assets such as roads, power, and telecom, REITs concentrate on commercial real estate. The 2026 changes apply only to REITs, making them equity instruments for mutual fund classification and eligible for equity index inclusion. InvITs remain hybrid instruments with income linked to infrastructure concessions. Investors seeking rent linked income and exposure to India's growing office and retail economy may find REITs better aligned with their goals.
A new phase for India's REIT ecosystem
The 2026 regulatory shift marks a structural upgrade for the sector. It blends investor protection, improved liquidity, and stronger visibility, all while keeping REITs anchored to real world assets that generate steady rental income. For sponsors, developers, institutions, and retail investors, this represents an inflection point that can unlock broader growth over the next decade.
(ADVERTORIAL DISCLAIMER: The above press release has been provided by VMPL. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of the same.)

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