growth in 200m+ buildings since 2020
prime office vacancy rate
flagship tower height
height related cost premium
MOMENTUM
Economic growth and urbanisation driving Mumbai upwards
Mumbai’s stock of 200m tall buildings has tripled since 2020
India is one of the fastest growing economies in the world, and its cities are expanding to support its progress. This brings a focus on high-rise, supported by construction industry deregulation, relaxation in external trade policies and rising foreign investment.
Mumbai’s stock of 200m tall buildings has tripled since 2020 and its high-rise market is entering a new phase, driven by intensifying urban densification, redevelopment incentives and climate-resilient design requirements. Key factors include:
- Land scarcity and premium costs - Mumbai's limited land pushes developers toward vertical expansion, increasing structural and logistical complexity.
- Regulatory and compliance challenges - frequent changes in Development Control Regulations (DCR), environmental clearances, and height restrictions add layers of complication.
- Infrastructure constraints - narrow roads and extremely congested neighbourhoods make material delivery and crane operations difficult and slow.
- Technology and engineering demands - super-tall structures require advanced construction techniques, seismic considerations, and high-strength materials.
- Labour and safety management - high-rise projects demand skilled labour and stringent safety protocols, especially in dense urban settings.
- Sustainability imperatives - increasing focus on energy efficiency, water recycling, and green certifications adds to design and execution challenges.
Central Mumbai is highly dense and while there has been a shift towards more polycentric development, the benefits of agglomeration combined with the natural constraints of the peninsula mean that the city core will continue to densify and grow upwards.
TRENDS SHAPING THE HIGH-RISE MARKET
MUMBAI
Projects shaping the skyline
PRESSURE
Construction cost landscape
10-18%
Cost premium for towers >250m
Tall-tower construction costs in Mumbai are expected to rise five to seven percent through 2026, slightly above the year-on-year inflation of 4-5 percent observed over the last 5 years.
The remaining inflationary pressure is being driven by stringent fire-safety requirements, demand for premium façades, increased podium/basement complexity (especially in coastal zones), and challenging site logistics.
Height remains a significant cost factor, with recent Mumbai projects showing a 10–18 percent cost premium when moving from 180–200m towers to 250–300m towers. This is due to heavier and more complicated structural steel frames, the use of high-strength concrete, more advanced façade systems, more involved crane and hoisting strategies, larger MEP plant and distribution systems, and enhanced fire safety systems.
Given the substantial pipeline of taller buildings in Mumbai, clients and teams should be conscious of this premium. The potential returns on investment from towers above 200m tend to be higher, but the value:cost relationship at these heights is a delicate one, and success will depend on the project team being able to minimise cost premiums through effectively addressing the key tall building commercial drivers.
Upward price pressure is set to continue, with rising demand for high-rise offices and residential towers, encouraged by international investors and developers, combined with stricter regulatory requirements and a push for more sustainable buildings.
BENCHMARK
Mumbai’s 2025 key cost ranges by sector
*Costs exclude finishes, demolition, external works and utilities.
FUTURE OUTLOOK
Moving beyond a megacity
A growing economy and population, urbanisation, a desire to make Mumbai a world-class city and the increasing focus of international investors are providing the landscape for a period of increased and sustained tall building development in India’s most densely populated city.
The Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA) projects a population of 36-38 million by 2047 as part of its economic masterplan. Tall buildings will have a critical part to play in ensuring that this growth is supported by successful and sustainable real estate. Equally importantly, these buildings must be supported by an expanded and effective transport network – together with the full range necessary infrastructure: utilities; logistics; social; digital.
Supportive regulation
The authorities will play a crucial role in continuing the push for unified and progressed building codes, FSI/FAR regulations that are more helpful to commercial developers, and a clear, strategic plan for the metropolitan area that ensures that tall buildings and infrastructure are mutually supportive.
Getting this right will enable Mumbai to move from a megacity to a modern, truly global economic engine, with an appropriate range of tall buildings that compete on the world stage in terms of their quality, amenities, technical innovation and sustainability credentials.
Value premiums in residential
Driven by urbanisation and economic progress, Mumbai continues to lead India’s luxury residential skyscraper market. CBRE research suggests that there are compelling value premiums that come with height in residential towers: 10-15% for every floor over level 25; 25% for every floor over level 40; another 25% for every floor over level 60.
The attraction of better views, privacy and exclusivity will remain important elements in driving value residential towers. Palais Royale is currently setting the benchmark for premium residential high-rise in Mumbai, alongside the World One project.
This residential growth may also come with more of a shift toward sustainability, reflecting evolving consumer and industry demands. Palais Royale was designed with sustainability in mind, incorporating a LEED Platinum certification target, energy-efficient systems, rainwater harvesting, low-carbon materials, and green building practices.
EXPERTS
"As buildings climb higher in Mumbai, costs continue to rise—driven by structural complexity, vertical logistics, premium facades, and the compounded risks associated with additional floors."
Arunava Parial Director, Mumbai
