Guest Column
War’s Effects on Indian Real Estate When Conflict Meets Concrete


By Prashant Thakur


Delhi, May 9, 2025: War rarely leaves anything untouched, especially real estate. We may not necessarily be talking about decimated buildings—though those must be factored in within the actual conflict zones.
Armed conflicts generally negatively affect economies except if a country has reconfigured itself as a ‘war economy’. Such economic reinvention happens only during protracted wars and comes with several human costs.
Wars also stall construction and dampen end-user and investor confidence. Aspiring homebuyers put decisions on hold. Retailers put a brake on their expansion plans and tourists postpone their travel plans. Real estate markets adapt, pause and then bounce back.
If we consider India’s last two most significant military engagements—the 1971 War and the 1999 Kargil War—we see this process unfold in all four critical real estate sectors: residential, commercial, retail and hospitality.
War-The ‘Real’ Impact
War creates several economic effects and side-effects which impact the real estate market in different ways:
- Reduced end-user and investor confidence: Homebuyers delay purchases, businesses delay office leases and investors seek safer havens like gold (and, these days, cryptocurrencies)
- Raw materials get scarce: The key inputs for construction, steel and cement, may be diverted to fortify the country’s defence infrastructure and/or see steep price hikes
- Government spending pivots: Governments will spend more on military and reduce spending on infrastructure and consumer real estate
- Capital values may take a hit: While armed conflicts do not impact rentals much, housing capital values may reduce because of lower demand


1971 Indo-Pak War: Construction Screeches to Standstill
The 13-day conflict in December did a lot more than redraw India’s borders—it brought the economy to a virtual standstill. There was a huge dip in GDP growth from 5.4 per cent in FY1970 to 1 per cent in FY1972. Simultaneously, inflation spiked beyond 11 per cent and construction was largely restricted to military sites.
- Impact on the Housing Market
In the financial capital of Mumbai—then Bombay—the state government put an iron grip on cement and steel, which resulted in a 12 per cent reduction in the approval of housing projects. Thankfully, the rent control laws remained unyielding. So, housing rental rates did not spike even though inflation was out of control. Not surprisingly, property registrations in the city reduced by almost 10 per cent in 1971.
- Impact on Commercial Real Estate
There was no FDI inflow worth mentioning. The development of private office spaces came to a grinding halt. Locations like Mumbai’s Fort area and Delhi’s Connaught Place saw massive vacancy rates. However, office rentals did not sink because of the limited supply and due to inflexible regulations.
- Impact on Retail Real Estate
In 1971, India’s high-street retail scene was mostly unorganised and uncharted, but local shops in Old Delhi and Kolkata saw a significant drop in footfall. According to available court records from 1971, shop rent disputes in Mumbai rose by 18 per cent due to increased stress among tenants.
- Impact on Hospitality Real Estate
Unsurprisingly, tourism in India was impacted by the war. From 2.02 million in 1970, Foreign Tourist Arrivals reduced to 1.96 million in 1971. In Delhi, hotel occupancy dropped to under 45 per cent and even the hospitality major of the day—the Indian Hotels Company—saw revenues drop in double-digits, especially in areas that were directly affected by the way, especially Srinagar.
The 1999 Kargil War: A Short but Hard Impact
The Kargil standoff, which lasted three months, resulted in considerable short-term market panic. However, India’s economy was liberalised and far more resilient by then, and recovered quickly.
- Impact on the Housing Market
In 1999, the real estate market was already reeling under the impact of the Asian financial crisis. This time, housing rental values did take a direct hit—in Delhi and Mumbai’s prime residential locations, rental values plummeted by anywhere between 3 per cent and 8 per cent in these three months and bottomed out by 1999-end. Interestingly, despite the conflict and all its ramifications, luxury apartments in Mumbai’s Cuffe Parade still commanded then-handsome prices of between INR 20,000 and INR 23,200 sq ft.
- Impact on Commercial Real Estate
1999 saw approximately 4.8 million sq ft of new office space hitting the main cities. In CBDs like Connaught Place, vacancies increased anywhere between 11 per cent and 15 per cent, and rentals dropped marginally. Large international companies did not cancel their leases, but did defer them in most cases.
Back then, Bengaluru was not yet India’s fully-established Silicon Valley, but places like Koramangala had full-fledged IT parks which saw undeterred leasing at rents ranging between INR 35 and INR 65 sq ft per month.
- Impact on Retail Real Estate
The Kargil War coincided with the finishing touches being made to the pioneering malls—Mumbai’s Crossroads and Delhi’s Ansal Plaza. Premium retail real estate, a shiny novelty in 1999, commanded higher rents than commercial real estate, but the conflict prompted most enlisted retailers to put their store openings on hold.
- Impact on Hospitality Real Estate
Surprisingly, except in regions directly affected, the tourism industry remained remarkably robust. 1999 saw a 5.3 per cent increase in Free Trade Agreements, thanks largely to the then-incumbent government’s push to tourism and a subdued rupee.
North India saw spiralling hotel cancellations to the tune of anywhere between 20 per cent and 30 per cent in these three months. Hotels in Delhi and Kashmir took a major body blow with MICE bookings getting cancelled en masse. Interestingly, Kargil became a popular tourism destination after peace was restored and by 2003 with tourist footfall doubling to 44,000 per year over the pre-war numbers.
Real Estate Resilience – What Lies Beneath
The real estate market benefited from three major factors after both these wars: pent-up demand (the need for homes and offices obviously continued), stricter regulations (RBI’s conservative lending norms kept leverage low, which helped curtail panic), and a quick stock market recovery. While the Nifty dropped approximately five per cent at various points of these two conflicts, it snapped back within five to six months to deliver positive returns.
Today – The Cost of Escalation
If the current conflict broadens, we should be prepared for certain ramifications:
- Housing: Residential absorption in Delhi-NCR and other parts of north India may witness a short-term dip of in the 5–10 per cent range. Luxury housing buyers tend to delay purchases in periods of uncertainty. Demand for mid-income housing will be the first to recover once normalcy is restored. However, prices of cement and steel would remain elevated over the medium term unless the government intervenes.
- Commercial real estate: If the conflict persists or widens, we can reasonably expect MNCs to put their entry/expansion plans into India on temporary hold. This would obviously impact absorption numbers, but long-term demand—most notably from the GCC, BFSI and IT sectors—will return and strengthen within 12 months or less.
- Retail real estate: Larger malls have less to worry about because of long-term leases and rent-waiver clauses. They can therefore weather such a storm more adroitly than high-street retail. We may see a drop in footfall and store launches being postponed. Nevertheless, consumption will overcome these odds quickly and Indian retailers have perfected the art of nimbleness during COVID-19 expect highly imaginative promotions to draw the crowds back in.
- Hospitality real estate: Naturally, Delhi, Kashmir and other impacted regions are going to see a flurry of cancellations if the conflict persists or widens. We may see hotel occupancies drop by anywhere between 10 per cent and 15 per cent in these areas. However, domestic leisure travel—which accounts for almost 90 per cent of room nights—will not flounder and we can expect a massive surge of ‘victory tourism’ such as was seen in Kargil once hostilities cease.
Prices and Rentals
We do not expect any significant drop in housing capital values unless hostilities stretch longer than one fiscal year. Today’s market is dominated by large, listed and financially robust developers who do not carry excessive leverage. This gives them prolonged ‘holding power’, and the major banks are also well-capitalised. There may be a pause on price hikes, followed by a sharp hike in prices on account of higher construction costs next year.
The Bottomline
If past wars and conflicts have taught us anything, it is this: they can temporarily slow down sentiment and freeze decisions, but they cannot break the real estate market. In 1971, Mumbai was deploying the satellite city Navi Mumbai even as the war raged on.
In 1999, the demand for luxury homes was unabated. The first malls threw open their doors, and revenge tourism plans were being charted even before the war ended.
We may see some short-term sluggishness in the market, but there is no question of an outright plunge. Much has changed since the bombs last flew at scale—the economy has strengthened considerably; its real estate sector has become more disciplined and regulated; and homebuyers showed their strongest side during what was expected to be the death-knell of the housing market—COVID-19.
We are good to go for the short or the long haul.
The author is Regional Director of ANAROCK Group
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