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India Affordable Housing Finance Market 2026: Size, Growth & What Lies Ahead

Anurag Sodani • June 1, 2026

India’s affordable housing finance market has quietly become one of the most consequential sectors in the country’s financial system — not because of headlines, but because of the sheer depth of human demand it serves. In 2026, the sector stands at a structural inflection point: a maturing credit ecosystem, a government doubling down on housing subsidies, and a borrower base that is younger, more aspirational, and more creditworthy than it has ever been.

This article breaks down the state of the market today — its size, the growth forces at work, the lending landscape, what the addressable opportunity truly looks like, and where CRISIL and EY project the market to go through fiscal 2028.


How Big Is India’s Affordable Housing Finance Market in 2026?

India’s affordable housing finance market is far larger than most mainstream financial coverage suggests. As of the first half of fiscal 2026, affordable housing loan outstanding stood at approximately ₹19.48 trillion, according to CRIF HighMark data analysed by CRISIL Intelligence. This represents a compound annual growth rate of 8.34% between fiscal 2021 and fiscal 2025 — steady, resilient growth achieved even through a post-pandemic recalibration and a period of elevated interest rates.

What makes this figure particularly striking is how the segment is defined. Affordable housing finance covers all housing loans up to a ticket size of ₹3.5 million at the time of disbursement. Within this bracket, the segment accounts for 46.29% of total housing loan outstanding by value — nearly half the entire housing credit market in India, despite being the lower-ticket portion of it.

By volume, the picture is even more telling. Affordable housing loans constitute 81.96% of all active housing loan accounts in the country as of H1 FY26. That means more than four out of every five home loan accounts active in India today belong to borrowers in the affordable segment. This is not a niche market — it is the foundation of India’s housing credit system.

The EY report New Horizons for Affordable Housing in India (April 2025) projects the sector’s total outstanding to reach ₹67 trillion by FY2030, supported by urbanisation, rising incomes, and the sustained policy focus on housing for economically weaker and lower-income households. That projection implies the market more than tripling in size over five years.

For context on the global opportunity: India’s mortgage-to-GDP ratio stands at just 12.18% as of FY25, compared to 76% in the United States and 64% in the United Kingdom. The underpenetration is not a temporary lag — it is a structural gap driven by the high proportion of informal income earners who have historically been excluded from formal housing credit. Closing even a fraction of this gap represents a decade-long growth runway.


Why 81.96% of Active Home Loan Accounts Are in the Affordable Segment — And What It Means

The volume dominance of affordable housing loans is not accidental. It reflects the fundamental income distribution of India’s population and the specific way housing demand is structured across the country’s urban and semi-urban geographies.

India’s housing shortage was estimated at 61.5 million units in 2025, projected to grow marginally to 64 million units by 2030, even accounting for completions under government-led programmes — as per CRISIL Intelligence estimates. Of this shortage, the economically weaker section (EWS) accounts for approximately 56% and the low-income group (LIG) for approximately 39%, according to the Ministry of Housing’s own assessments based on the Twelfth Five-Year Plan data.

These borrowers — small traders, kirana store owners, construction workers, self-employed service professionals — typically have stable but undocumented income. They have cash flows, but not the formal payslips or ITR filings that banks require. For them, housing credit access is not a product feature comparison exercise; it is a question of whether formal credit exists for them at all.

The high volume share of affordable housing loans reflects the scale of first-time homebuyer demand in Tier 2, Tier 3, and semi-urban India, where affordability is more accessible relative to income, aspirations for ownership are intensifying, and formal credit infrastructure has been expanding through specialised housing finance companies. A peer-reviewed study published in the Journal of Computational Analysis and Applications (Muneeswaran & Chandramohan, 2024) emphasises that the urbanisation of nuclear families — household sizes declining from 5.5 members in 1991 to 4.5 in 2011 and continuing to shrink — directly multiplies the number of households seeking independent housing, regardless of income level.

For anyone trying to understand the scale of this market: a population of 1.4 billion, a median age of 28, 40% urbanisation by 2030, and shrinking household sizes creates a structural demand engine that does not depend on economic cycles to sustain itself.

If you are evaluating your own eligibility for a home loan, home loan eligibility calculator can give you a preliminary sense of what loan amount you may qualify for based on your income and profile.


The ₹1.5–3.5 Million Sweet Spot: Why Mid-Ticket Affordable Loans Are the Fastest-Growing Sub-Segment

Not all affordable housing loans are growing at the same pace. The segment is internally bifurcated — and understanding that split is critical to understanding where the market is actually headed.

Loans below ₹1.5 million grew at a 4-year CAGR of just 3.73% between FY21 and FY25. These are very small-ticket loans — typically serving EWS borrowers in smaller towns — where rising construction input costs, property price appreciation, and tighter underwriting standards have dampened origination volumes. Their share of total affordable housing loan outstanding, by value, has declined from 36.69% in FY21 to 30.40% in H1 FY26.

The ₹1.5–3.5 million bracket tells a very different story. This segment clocked a 4-year CAGR of 10.77% between FY21 and FY25 and has increased its share of affordable housing outstanding from 63.31% to 69.60% over the same period. In volume terms, the share of this bracket within the affordable segment rose from 31.19% to 38.13% — a meaningful structural shift.

CRISIL projects loans in the ₹1.5–3.5 million ticket size band to grow at 10–12% CAGR between FY25 and FY28, outpacing the overall affordable housing market growth rate of 8–10% during the same period.

What is driving this? Several things converging: rising construction costs pushing ticket sizes up within the affordable band (without exiting the ₹3.5 million threshold), gradual income progression among borrowers who were in the sub-₹1.5 million bracket a few years ago, and stronger demand from first-time buyers in Tier 2 cities where flat and independent house prices have risen but remain within the affordable bracket.

The Knight Frank India Affordable Housing 2025 report reinforces this, noting that satellite cities around metros — areas like Hoskote near Bengaluru, peripheral zones in Hyderabad, and emerging corridors in Pune — are experiencing the sharpest demand-side activity from exactly this borrower profile: families with a combined household income between ₹40,000 and ₹80,000 a month, seeking their first owned home.

This is the cohort that the Indian housing finance system is most actively building capacity to serve in 2026.


Who Is Lending to Affordable Homebuyers? Banks vs HFCs vs NBFCs — The Shifting Market Share Story

The affordable housing lending landscape has undergone a quiet but significant reshaping over the last five years. Public sector banks — which once dominated this segment — have been gradually ceding ground, while Housing Finance Companies (HFCs) have been consolidating their position.

As of H1 FY26, the lender composition for affordable housing loan outstanding was broadly:

Public sector banks: 38.55% share (down from 42.36% in FY21, 4-year CAGR of 5.91%) Private sector banks: ~27% share (broadly stable) HFCs: 25.83% share (up from 24.73% in FY21, 4-year CAGR of 9.34%) NBFCs and Others: ~6.8% and rising (4-year CAGR of 19.93%)

(Source: CRIF HighMark, CRISIL Intelligence)

In terms of disbursements — which is the more forward-looking metric — HFCs have been even more aggressive, with their disbursement share rising to 30.12% in H1 FY26 from 24.03% in FY21, reflecting a disbursement CAGR of 13.70% over the period.

The structural reason for this shift is straightforward. Banks prioritise salaried, formally documented borrowers with verified ITR history. HFCs and specialised affordable housing finance companies, by contrast, have built proprietary underwriting models that assess informal-income borrowers using surrogate data — cash flow patterns, business vintage, banking behaviour, local market knowledge. This gives them a meaningful origination advantage in exactly the geographies and borrower profiles where demand is strongest.

CRISIL data shows that as of September 2025, HFCs had a new-to-credit (NTC) customer share of 10.51%, versus just 5.69% for banks. This is not a trivial difference — it reflects the role that specialised housing financiers are playing in expanding the formal credit perimeter, reaching borrowers who have never had a loan account of any kind before.

For homebuyers looking to understand their options, this page explains the type of borrower profiles typically served and the range of home loan products available.


From ₹19.48 Trillion to ₹24.87 Trillion: The Growth Roadmap to FY28 and Beyond

The trajectory for the affordable housing finance market through fiscal 2028 is well-supported by both demand-side and supply-side evidence.

CRISIL’s base case: Total affordable housing credit outstanding is projected to reach approximately ₹24.87 trillion by FY28, growing at a 3-year CAGR of 8–10%. The ₹1.5–3.5 million sub-segment is expected to grow faster at 10–12% CAGR.

EY’s long-range view: The sector’s total loan portfolio could reach ₹67 trillion by FY30, driven by the broadening of credit access to the next 100–200 Indian cities beyond the current top-40 urban markets, where the urban-rural divide in housing demand is increasingly blurring.

Metastat Insights (April 2026) values India’s affordable housing finance market at USD 3.9 billion in 2025, projecting growth to USD 16.5 billion by 2033 at a CAGR of 19.8% — reflecting both the absolute size expansion and the formalisation of lending infrastructure.

The drivers underpinning these projections are structural rather than cyclical:

PMAY 2.0: Launched in September 2024, the revamped scheme targets 30 million additional homes (10 million urban, 20 million rural) through FY2029. Under PMAY-U 2.0, eligible borrowers receive an interest subsidy of 4% across EWS and LIG categories, disbursed in five annual instalments. The government has allocated ₹35 billion specifically for the interest subsidy scheme in FY26, up 133% over the previous year’s allocation — signalling sustained fiscal commitment to the segment. As of December 2025, over 9.63 million homes had already been completed under the cumulative PMAY programme.

Repo rate trajectory: The RBI’s Monetary Policy Committee reduced the repo rate by a cumulative 125 basis points through calendar year 2025. This directly reduces EMI burdens for floating-rate home loan borrowers and improves affordability thresholds — bringing a larger portion of the population within the viable borrower pool.

Infrastructure-led demand: Housing Price Index data from NHB shows that residential property prices in India’s top 10 districts appreciated 58% between FY18 and March 2025, with even the next 30 districts seeing 40% appreciation. While this compresses affordability at the margin, it also creates wealth effects for existing property owners who are upgrading — and spills demand into adjacent Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities where affordability is better maintained.

Digital underwriting expansion: API-led integration with Aadhaar, Account Aggregator frameworks, and bureau data is enabling lenders to process loans for informal-income borrowers with significantly reduced turnaround times and field verification costs. This is not theoretical — it is already underway at scale.

The combination of these factors means the ₹19.48 trillion market of mid-FY26 is not a ceiling. If anything, it marks the beginning of a longer and more deeply penetrated growth cycle — one that reaches borrowers and geographies the market has never formally served before.

For those navigating their first home loan decision, EMI calculator offers a practical starting point to model repayment scenarios based on different loan amounts and tenures.


The Bottom Line

India’s affordable housing finance market in 2026 is not a story about government support propping up a weak sector. It is a story about a structurally sound market with genuine demand, improving credit infrastructure, and an expanding institutional capacity to serve borrowers who were previously invisible to formal finance.

The numbers tell a consistent story: 61.5 million units of housing shortage, 81.96% of active loan accounts in the affordable bracket, a mortgage-to-GDP ratio barely above 12%, and a young population where the average age of a home loan borrower has already declined to approximately 30 years as of FY25 estimates. The runway here is measured in decades, not quarters.

For investors, analysts, and homebuyers alike, understanding this market — its architecture, its borrower base, and its trajectory — is increasingly essential context for understanding India’s broader economic story.


Sources & Further Reading:

  • CRISIL Intelligence: Analysis of the Housing Finance Market in India, February 2026
  • Knight Frank India: India Affordable Housing — Tackling Urban Housing Deficits Through Supply-Side Reforms, 2025
  • EY India: New Horizons for Affordable Housing in India, April 2025
  • Muneeswaran, M.M. & Chandramohan, B.P.: Trends in Affordable Housing Financing in India, Journal of Computational Analysis and Applications, Vol. 33, No. 07, 2024
  • Metastat Insights: India Affordable Housing Finance Market Size, Share, Trends, 2033, April 2026
  • National Housing Bank (NHB), CRIF HighMark, Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA)

Disclaimer: The information shared in this article — including interest rates, EMI calculations, subsidy amounts, property prices, eligibility criteria, and market trends — is meant for general information only. The data is based on publicly available sources, working knowledge, and industry trends available at the time of publication. All figures, examples, and estimates are indicative in nature and should not be treated as official commitments, guarantees, or offers from Home First Finance.

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