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Investing · 6 min read

REITs in India: How to Invest in Real Estate Without Buying Property

Real Estate Investment Trusts let you own commercial property with mutual fund-like simplicity. How REITs work in India, returns, taxation, and which ones to consider.

By Jarviix Editorial · Apr 19, 2026

Modern commercial buildings in a city skyline
Photo via Unsplash

For decades, commercial real estate was off-limits to retail Indian investors. Office buildings, malls, and warehouses — the assets generating reliable rental income — required ₹50 lakh to several crores of capital. REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts) changed that.

Today, you can own a fractional stake in Mumbai's premier office buildings, Bengaluru tech parks, and pan-India warehousing — for as little as ₹15,000. Here's how it works.

What is a REIT?

A REIT is essentially a mutual fund for commercial real estate. The structure:

  1. The REIT raises money from public investors (IPO + ongoing trading)
  2. Uses the capital to buy income-producing commercial properties
  3. Collects rent from tenants (typically multinational companies, IT firms, retail chains)
  4. Distributes 90%+ of net rental income to investors quarterly
  5. Lists on the stock exchange — investors can buy/sell anytime

REITs are regulated by SEBI in India, with strict requirements:

  • 80% of assets in completed, income-producing commercial properties
  • Maximum 20% in under-construction properties
  • 90% of net distributable cash flow paid to investors
  • Maximum 25% leverage initially (now 49%)

Active REITs in India

As of 2026, India has three publicly listed REITs:

1. Embassy Office Parks REIT (EOPP)

  • Portfolio: 51+ million sq ft of premium office space across Bengaluru, Mumbai, Pune, Noida
  • Tenants: Microsoft, IBM, JP Morgan, Cognizant, and many other Fortune 500 companies
  • Listed: April 2019 (India's first REIT)
  • Distribution yield: ~5.5-6.5%
  • Market cap: ~₹35,000 crore

2. Mindspace Business Parks REIT

  • Portfolio: 30+ million sq ft across Mumbai, Hyderabad, Pune, Chennai
  • Tenants: Accenture, Capgemini, Wipro, Cognizant
  • Listed: August 2020
  • Distribution yield: ~5.5-6.5%
  • Market cap: ~₹22,000 crore

3. Brookfield India Real Estate Trust (BIRET)

  • Portfolio: ~25 million sq ft across Mumbai, Gurugram, Noida, Kolkata
  • Tenants: TCS, Sapient, RBS, Cognizant
  • Listed: February 2021
  • Distribution yield: ~6-7%
  • Market cap: ~₹15,000 crore

4. Nexus Select Trust (Retail REIT)

  • Portfolio: India's first retail REIT — 9.8 million sq ft of urban consumption assets (malls)
  • Tenants: Reliance Retail, Lifestyle, McDonald's, Starbucks, Apple stores
  • Listed: May 2023
  • Distribution yield: ~7-8%

How REITs make money (and pay you)

The cash flow waterfall:

  1. Tenant rent flows to the REIT (long-term lease contracts, usually 9-12 years with annual escalations)
  2. Operating expenses deducted (property maintenance, security, utilities, property taxes)
  3. Interest on debt paid (REITs use some leverage)
  4. Net Operating Income is what's left
  5. 90%+ of this is distributed to investors quarterly as:
    • Interest income (taxed at slab)
    • Dividends (taxed at slab)
    • Capital repayment (tax-free at receipt)

Returns analysis

Distribution yield

  • Currently 5.5-7.5% annually across listed REITs
  • Paid quarterly (every 3 months)
  • Generally grows 3-5% annually as rents escalate

Price appreciation

  • Historically 0-5% annually (REIT prices reflect interest rates and commercial real estate cycle)
  • 2020-2021: prices fell during COVID work-from-home concerns
  • 2022-2024: recovered as offices reopened
  • 2025-2026: relatively stable

Total returns

  • 8-12% annualized for top REITs over multi-year periods
  • Less volatile than equity (typical beta 0.4-0.6)
  • More yield than equity, less appreciation than equity

Why REITs make sense in your portfolio

1. Diversification from equity: REITs have moderate correlation with stocks, providing diversification benefits.

2. Inflation hedge: rental income generally rises with inflation through escalation clauses.

3. Regular income: quarterly distributions create predictable cash flow.

4. Lower volatility: tangible asset backing reduces wild swings.

5. Tax efficiency vs direct property: avoid stamp duty, registration, maintenance, tenant management.

6. Liquidity: sell anytime on exchange vs months to liquidate property.

Risks to know

Tenant concentration: top 10 tenants typically contribute 30-50% of revenue. Loss of major tenants hurts.

Work-from-home shifts: hybrid work has reduced office demand. Vacancy rates moved from 5% (pre-COVID) to 15%+ in some markets.

Interest rate sensitivity: rising rates hurt REIT prices (bond-like behavior).

Property cycle risk: commercial real estate has cycles. Currently mid-cycle in India.

Geography concentration: Indian REITs concentrate in 6-7 cities. Regional economic downturns affect them.

Limited supply: only 4 listed REITs limits diversification within the asset class.

How to invest

Option 1: Buy units directly

Use any broker (Zerodha, Groww, Upstox, ICICI Direct) — REITs trade like stocks.

  • Minimum: 1 unit (₹300-400 typically)
  • Settlement: T+1 like equity
  • Held in demat account

Option 2: REIT-focused mutual funds

Some mutual funds invest in REITs as part of broader real estate exposure:

  • Kotak International REIT FoF
  • ICICI Prudential Equity & Debt Fund (small REIT exposure)

Higher fees but more diversification.

Option 3: REIT IPOs

When new REITs list (or follow-on issues), IPO subscription is an option.

Allocation in your portfolio

For most investors, 5-10% allocation to REITs is reasonable as an alternative asset class.

Conservative investor (30s, ₹50 lakh portfolio):

  • 60% equity, 30% debt, 5% gold, 5% REITs (~₹2.5 lakh)

Aggressive investor (40s, ₹2 crore portfolio):

  • 65% equity, 20% debt, 5% gold, 10% REITs (~₹20 lakh — split across all 4 listed REITs)

REITs vs other income-generating options

Option Yield Tax Liquidity Risk
FD 6-7% Slab rate Penalty for premature Very low
Debt MF 6-7% Slab rate (post-2023) T+1 Low
REIT 5.5-7.5% Mixed (slab + LTCG) T+1 Moderate
Direct property 2-3% rental Slab + maintenance 6-12 months Moderate-high
Dividend stocks 1-3% Slab rate T+1 High

REITs are best for investors who want real estate exposure with stock-like liquidity.

Tax planning with REITs

Strategies to optimize tax:

Hold in lower tax slab: REIT distributions taxed at slab rate. If spouse/family member is in lower tax bracket, holding in their name reduces tax (within gift/loan compliance rules).

Long-term capital gains: hold REIT units >1 year for 10% LTCG (above ₹1 lakh) instead of 15% STCG.

Capital repayment portion: this component is tax-free at receipt — track basis carefully for future sale tax calculation.

Reinvest distributions: use SIP-like discipline to reinvest quarterly distributions into more REIT units, growing yield base.

Use the calculators

REITs democratize commercial real estate investing for Indians. With 5-10% portfolio allocation, you get diversification, regular income, and inflation protection — without the headache of managing properties yourself. As the REIT market matures (more listings expected over the next 5 years), it'll become an even more important tool for building diversified, income-generating portfolios.

Frequently asked questions

How are REITs different from real estate mutual funds?

REITs directly own income-producing commercial real estate (offices, malls, warehouses) and distribute 90%+ of net rental income to investors. They trade on the stock exchange like shares. Real estate mutual funds invest in REITs, real estate company stocks, or property-related debt — they're a fund-of-funds. REITs offer more direct exposure with lower fees; real estate MFs offer more diversification with higher fees.

What returns can I expect from Indian REITs?

Total returns historically: 8-12% annualized (combination of distribution yield + price appreciation). Distribution yield: 5-7% annually paid quarterly. Price appreciation: variable, depends on commercial real estate cycle and interest rates. Lower than equity returns (12-15% historical) but higher than FDs (6-7%) with tangible asset backing. Suitable as a portfolio diversifier, not core holding.

How are REIT distributions taxed?

REIT distributions have multiple components: (1) Interest portion — taxed at slab rate, (2) Dividend portion — taxed at slab rate (post-Budget 2020), (3) Capital repayment — tax-free at receipt but reduces cost basis for future sale. Capital gains: held >1 year — 10% LTCG above ₹1 lakh; held <1 year — 15% STCG. Less tax-efficient than equity MFs but better than direct rental income (taxed at slab + property maintenance hassles).

Should I buy REITs or commercial property directly?

REITs win for most investors: minimum investment ₹10-15k vs ₹50 lakh+ for commercial property, professional management, instant liquidity (sell on exchange), diversified across multiple Grade A properties, no maintenance/tenant headaches, transparent governance. Direct property only makes sense if you have ₹2 crore+ to deploy, can hold 7-10 years minimum, and want appreciation upside on a specific location bet.

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