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Property Rates in Mumbai (June 2026): Area-Wise Prices, Trends & Buying Costs

Mumbai’s property market is famously layered — a sea-facing apartment in Malabar Hill and a new build in Vasai can differ twenty-fold in price per square foot. As of June 2026, rates across the metropolitan region run from roughly ₹6,000 per sq.ft in the far peripheries to over ₹1,20,000 per sq.ft in prime South Mumbai. This data-backed guide maps the latest area-wise rates, the infrastructure driving them, realistic rents and yields, and the true cost of buying once stamp duty and registration are added — so you can benchmark any deal with confidence.

As of June 2026, property rates in Mumbai range from about ₹6,000 to over ₹1,20,000 per sq.ft, depending on the locality. Core city localities broadly average ₹18,000–₹45,000 per sq.ft; prime sea-facing South Mumbai exceeds ₹70,000–₹1 lakh. Stamp duty is 6% for men and 5% for women (incl. Metro Cess) plus 1% registration. For FY2026-27, Maharashtra kept Ready Reckoner rates unchanged.

Updated June 2026 · By Dasadia Developers LLP · ~10 min read

Executive Summary

Current Property Rates in Mumbai

There is no single “Mumbai rate” — the city is a patchwork of micro-markets. In broad terms, South Mumbai (Malabar Hill, Cuffe Parade, Nariman Point, Worli) remains the costliest, with ultra-luxury sea-facing homes crossing ₹70,000 and even ₹1 lakh per sq.ft. The western suburbs — Bandra, Juhu, Andheri, Goregaon, Borivali — offer the widest spread, from premium to mid-segment. The central suburbs (Powai, Chembur, Mulund, Ghatkopar) and the extended region (Thane, Navi Mumbai, Vasai-Virar) anchor the affordable-to-mid end. One important nuance: portal asking rates typically sit well above the government Ready Reckoner and actual registration rates — a gap worth remembering when you benchmark a quote.

Area-Wise Property Rates in Mumbai (2026)

The table below gives indicative 2026 asking rates per sq.ft across Mumbai’s major zones. Figures are locality averages; specific buildings, floors and sea views can sit well above these bands.

Zone / key localities

Rate (₹/sq.ft)

Segment

South Mumbai — Malabar Hill, Cuffe Parade, Worli

₹45,000–₹1,20,000+

Ultra-luxury

Bandra (W) / Juhu

₹40,000–₹70,000+

Luxury

Lower Parel / Prabhadevi / Mahim

₹35,000–₹55,000

Premium

Andheri (W) / Versova / Santacruz

₹25,000–₹40,000

Premium

Powai / Chembur / Wadala

₹22,000–₹35,000

Upper-mid

Andheri (E) / Goregaon / Malad

₹17,000–₹32,000

Mid-segment

Borivali / Kandivali / Mulund

₹17,000–₹25,000

Mid-segment

Navi Mumbai

₹12,000–₹28,000

Affordable–mid

Thane

₹6,000–₹14,500

Affordable–mid

Mira-Bhayandar / Vasai-Virar

₹6,000–₹12,000

Affordable

Indicative asking rates from portal data (99acres, NoBroker, Bajaj Finserv), mid-2026. Rates vary by building age, floor, view, amenities and negotiation.

What’s Driving Mumbai Property Rates in 2026

Mumbai’s 2026 market is less about hype and more about infrastructure that has actually been delivered. The Metro network is now substantially operational — including the fully-underground Aqua Line 3 (Cuffe Parade–BKC–SEEPZ–Aarey, completed October 2025) — reshaping commute times and lifting values near stations. The Mumbai Coastal Road and the Atal Setu (Mumbai Trans Harbour Link) have cut travel times across the harbour, while the new Navi Mumbai International Airport (opened October 2025) is catalysing the so-called “Third Mumbai” growth corridor. Add steady home-loan rates and a wave of redevelopment in prime areas, and the result is a market driven more by genuine end-users than speculators.

Rent & Rental Yield in Mumbai

Mumbai’s rental market is deep and active, fed by a constant inflow of professionals and students. Monthly rents scale with configuration and location; rental yields typically run a modest 2–4% per annum, with compact homes in well-connected suburbs delivering the stronger end of that range.

Configuration

Typical monthly rent

1 RK

₹15,000–₹30,000

1 BHK

₹25,000–₹60,000

2 BHK

₹35,000–₹90,000

3 BHK

₹80,000–₹2,20,000

Rental yield (residential)

~2–4% p.a.

Indicative city-wide ranges (NoBroker, 2026). Actual rent depends on locality, furnishing, floor and building age.

Cost of Buying: Stamp Duty, Registration & Ready Reckoner

The quoted price is only part of the cost. In Mumbai, stamp duty is 6% for men and 5% for women (both inclusive of the 1% Metro Cess), plus a 1% registration fee capped at ₹30,000 for homes above ₹30 lakh. Charges are calculated on the higher of the agreement value or the government Ready Reckoner (RR) rate. The women’s 1% concession applies when a woman is the sole or primary registered owner.

Charge

Male buyer

Female buyer

Stamp duty (incl. Metro Cess)

6% → ₹9,00,000

5% → ₹7,50,000

Registration (capped)

₹30,000

₹30,000

Approx. total add-on

~₹9.30 lakh

~₹7.80 lakh

Worked on a ₹1.5 crore agreement value. For under-construction homes, add GST; budget broadly 6–7% of price for government charges.

Ready Reckoner update: for FY2026-27 (effective 1 April 2026), the Maharashtra government kept Ready Reckoner rates unchanged (status quo), following the 2025-26 revision that raised Mumbai’s RR by about 3.39% (statewide average ~3.89%). A separate 2026-27 Budget measure introduced a penalty of up to ₹1 lakh for under-stamped documents. Always confirm your locality’s current RR rate on the official IGR Maharashtra e-ASR portal before registering.

Price Trends & Appreciation

Appreciation in Mumbai is highly local. Infrastructure-led corridors and well-connected suburbs have been the steadier performers, while some prime South Mumbai pockets have moved sideways or even softened over recent years as prices already sit near their ceiling. The pattern below is indicative — always check the specific locality’s history before drawing conclusions.

Segment

Recent trend (indicative)

Connectivity/infra corridors (Navi Mumbai, Thane)

Stronger — mid-to-high single digits

Well-connected suburbs (Andheri, Powai, Chembur)

Steady — low single digits to ~5%/yr; ~17% over 5 yr

Prime South Mumbai (select pockets)

Flat to mildly negative recently

Indicative locality trends from 99acres data, mid-2026. Mumbai’s FY25 stamp-duty revenue hit ₹12,899 crore, up ~22% year-on-year — a sign of healthy transaction volumes.

Buying in Mumbai (2026): Pros & Trade-offs

Pros

Trade-offs

Frequently Asked Questions

As of June 2026, rates range from about ₹6,000 to over ₹1,20,000 per sq.ft depending on locality. Core city localities broadly average ₹18,000–₹45,000 per sq.ft, with prime sea-facing South Mumbai exceeding ₹70,000–₹1 lakh.

South Mumbai — Malabar Hill, Cuffe Parade, Nariman Point and Worli — along with Bandra (West) and Juhu, are the priciest, where ultra-luxury sea-facing homes cross ₹70,000 and even ₹1 lakh per sq.ft.

The extended region offers the keenest entry points: Vasai-Virar, Mira-Bhayandar, parts of Thane and Navi Mumbai, where rates can start around ₹6,000–₹12,000 per sq.ft.

Prime South Mumbai typically ranges from about ₹45,000 to ₹1,20,000+ per sq.ft, with ultra-luxury sea-facing residences crossing ₹1 lakh per sq.ft.

No. For FY2026-27 (effective 1 April 2026), the government kept Ready Reckoner rates unchanged (status quo). This followed the 2025-26 revision, which had raised Mumbai’s RR by about 3.39%. Verify your locality’s rate on the IGR Maharashtra e-ASR portal.

Stamp duty is 6% for men and 5% for women (both incl. the 1% Metro Cess), plus a 1% registration fee capped at ₹30,000. It is charged on the higher of the agreement value or the Ready Reckoner rate.

Yes — a 1% concession (5% versus 6%), applicable when a woman is the sole or primary registered owner of the property.

Indicatively: 1 RK ₹15,000–₹30,000, 1 BHK ₹25,000–₹60,000, 2 BHK ₹35,000–₹90,000 and 3 BHK ₹80,000–₹2.2 lakh per month, varying by locality, furnishing and building age.

Residential rental yields typically run a modest 2–4% per annum. Compact homes in well-connected suburbs tend to deliver the stronger end of that range.

Mostly yes, but unevenly. Infrastructure corridors and well-connected suburbs are the steadier performers, while some prime South Mumbai pockets have moved sideways or softened. Transaction volumes are healthy — Mumbai’s FY25 stamp-duty revenue rose ~22% to ₹12,899 crore.

The operational Metro network (including the underground Aqua Line 3), the Mumbai Coastal Road, the Atal Setu (MTHL) and the new Navi Mumbai International Airport are the biggest 2026 catalysts, especially for peripheral and corridor markets.

Beyond the price, budget roughly 6–7% for stamp duty and registration, plus GST on under-construction homes, brokerage where applicable, and society/maintenance deposits. Note the new ₹1 lakh penalty for under-stamped documents.

Fact-check & Sources

Sources & references

Official government and transit portals are listed first, followed by supporting 2026 market sources. Property rates change frequently — verify current numbers on the source portals before any decision.

Disclaimer: For informational purposes only. Property rates are indicative (2025–26 portal data) and subject to change. Stamp duty, registration charges, Ready Reckoner and RERA details should be verified on official government portals before any decision.

The Bottom Line

In June 2026, Mumbai remains a market of extremes — but a more rational one than in past cycles. Infrastructure is delivered, supply is being renewed through redevelopment, and demand is led by genuine end-users. Whatever your budget, the smart approach is the same: benchmark the locality’s asking, Ready Reckoner and registration rates against each other, shortlist RERA-registered, freehold homes near operational transit, and factor in the full 6–7% of government charges before you commit.

Looking for value in Andheri East?

Explore 153 East by Dasadia Developers LLP in J.B. Nagar, Andheri East — a well-connected mid-premium address. Get the full brochure with floor plans, pricing and amenity details, or book a site visit. No pressure, only clarity.

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