logo
DLF, Godrej, Prestige lead: Biggest realtors in India ranked by area built

DLF, Godrej, Prestige lead: Biggest realtors in India ranked by area built

India's biggest builders are not just shaping skylines — they're driving the economy. The 2025 GROHE-Hurun India Real Estate 150 has also ranked India's top real estate developers by total square footage built. At the top is DLF with a staggering 349 million sq. ft., followed by Godrej Properties and Prestige Estates.
With a primary focus on commercial developments, DLF's 349 million sq. ft. portfolio includes corporate hubs, tech parks, and premium office spaces across India's metro cities.
DLF tops list
DLF leads with 349 million sq. ft. developed, focused primarily on commercial projects, and holds a valuation of Rs 2,07,400 Cr.
Godrej Properties ranks second with 223 million sq. ft. in the residential segment and a valuation of Rs 70,600 Cr.
Prestige Estates Projects is third with 180 million sq. ft. developed, valued at Rs 71,500 Cr.
SOBHA is fourth with 136 million sq. ft. in the residential sector and a valuation of Rs 15,700 Cr.
BL Kashyap & Sons ranks fifth with 125 million sq. ft. developed, valued at Rs 1,500 Cr.
Valor Estate is sixth with 100 million sq. ft. of commercial projects and a valuation of Rs 12,700 Cr.
Lodha Developers shares the rank at sixth with 100 million sq. ft. developed in the residential sector, valued at Rs 1,38,200 Cr.
Brigade Enterprises is eighth with 86 million sq. ft. of residential development and a valuation of Rs 27,200 Cr.
Sattva Group is ninth with 74 million sq. ft. in commercial projects, valued at Rs 3,200 Cr.
Capacit'e Infraprojects completes the list with 70 million sq. ft. developed, focused on commercial, and a valuation of Rs 2,900 Cr.
Beyond brick and mortar, India's real estate sector has produced a generation of high-impact entrepreneurs:
76 individuals from real estate feature in the 2024 Hurun India Rich List, underscoring their role in wealth creation.
25 real estate firms are now part of the Hurun India 500, highlighting the sector's growing financial clout.
On the global front, 17 Indian developers feature in the 2025 Hurun Global Rich List, cementing their presence on the international map.
Perhaps most striking is the recognition of 11 self-made real estate entrepreneurs in the Hurun India Self-Made Entrepreneurs of the Millennia list .
The rankings also honor India's oldest surviving real estate institutions, many of which have stood for over a century:
Peninsula Land, founded in 1871, is the oldest on the list but holds a modest valuation of ₹1,000 crore.
Indian Hotels Company, dating back to 1899, shows how hospitality and real estate intersect, with a valuation of ₹1,08,300 crore.
The Phoenix Mills (1905), EIH (1934), and Eros Group (1940) round out a cohort of pre-independence companies still relevant in today's market.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

PM-KISAN payout helps farmers buy diesel for tractors in State
PM-KISAN payout helps farmers buy diesel for tractors in State

Hans India

time11 minutes ago

  • Hans India

PM-KISAN payout helps farmers buy diesel for tractors in State

New Delhi: As Prime Minister Narendra Modi released the 20th installment of the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) scheme, farmers in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu on Saturday expressed gratitude, saying the scheme has significantly helped them buy diesel for tractors, and pay wages to labourers. The PM-KISAN scheme has been a crucial support for farmers during difficult times. In Karnataka's Dharwad district, farmers said that the PM-KISAN initiative is making a positive impact on their agricultural activities. The funds help not only in purchasing seeds and fertilisers but also in managing household expenses, including school and college fees for their children. The scheme, launched by the PM Modi government, aims to provide income support to small and marginal farmers across the country. Under PM-KISAN, eligible farmers receive Rs 6,000 annually in three equal installments directly into their bank accounts. Speaking to IANS, farmers shared how the scheme has improved their lives. Nagappa Ganiger, a farmer from Dharwad, said, 'The PM-KISAN scheme has been a great help during tough times. It has enabled me to buy diesel for tractors and pay wages to labourers on time. So far, 20 installments have been credited to my account without fail. I am thankful to Prime Minister Modi.' Another farmer, Basavaraj Gunjal, added, 'With the aim of doubling farmers' income, Prime Minister Modi has introduced several farmer-friendly initiatives. The Rs 6,000 annual support through PM-KISAN has been a real benefit. On behalf of all farmers, I express my sincere thanks to him.'

Big Tech continues to hire in India even as local majors downsize
Big Tech continues to hire in India even as local majors downsize

Time of India

time11 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Big Tech continues to hire in India even as local majors downsize

Academy Empower your mind, elevate your skills ETtech Indian IT services majors may be trimming their workforce, but for Big Tech, it's still hiring season in giants under the FAAMNG umbrella – Facebook parent Meta, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Netflix, and Google – have grown their India headcount across their own and their affiliate entities by 16% over the past 12 months, data from staffing firm Xpheno pace of growth is slightly higher than 15% in the 12 months to August saw over 28,000 net employee additions in the past one year. The current estimated collective headcount across their entities in India is over 208,000, according to hiring rate 'is relatively healthy, especially with the buzz of AI potentially impacting pace and volume of hiring,' said Kamal Karanth, cofounder of companies continue to post healthy hiring demand in the country, with active openings at 4,500 currently, despite executing large-scale layoffs in the US, with an estimated 100,000 laid off Covid pandemic-induced hiring surge saw net additions for the FAAMNG cohort grow 35% year-on-year in 2022, followed by a slowdown to 6% growth in comparison, the top six Indian IT services firms saw headcount additions soar 22% on year in 2022, followed by declines by 0.2% and 3.1% in 2023 and 2024, respectively. As of June 2025, combined headcount in these firms grew 1.3% year-on-year to 1,625, the country's IT bellwether Tata Consultancy Service (TCS) on Sunday caused shockwaves as it announced layoff of 12,000 employees in mid-to-senior levels, citing skills mismatch in project global giants have also announced major layoffs in recent times, India has seen a lesser impact compared to many other geographies, experts noted.'While we do see some of this affecting India, the volumes so far are not as high as global numbers,' said Neeti Sharma, CEO of IT staffing firm TeamLease hiring in the industry is increasingly selective, with a focus on specialised skills, especially in artificial intelligence (AI) and cloud.'There is a high demand for skills such as AI, cloud and cybersecurity,' while hiring is down for support and routine roles, especially in conventional technologies, Sharma said.'Few older roles will gradually become redundant. However, newer roles are being defined,' she said. 'This transition is tough now, but it's needed to stay relevant.'Employees face more pressure to perform and upskill, especially in AI and cloud, as companies focus on keeping top talent and building leaner teams, Sharma per Quess IT staffing, hiring by large tech firms in India dipped by 3-6% in the fourth quarter of FY2025 ended in March. However, it was up by about 8-10% in the first quarter FY2026, it said.'While global tech firms are making headlines for layoffs abroad, many are increasing hiring in India, especially through their GCCs,' said Kapil Joshi, CEO of Quess IT global capability centres (GCCs) are now doing more high-end work, such as developing AI tools, cloud platforms, and new digital products, he the same time, companies are seeing the need to balance costs while increasing focus on innovation, experts said.'They need to train people faster, close talent gaps, and compete for the best candidates in a tight market,' Joshi said.

Tavleen Singh writes: Trump and his trumpeter
Tavleen Singh writes: Trump and his trumpeter

Indian Express

time11 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Tavleen Singh writes: Trump and his trumpeter

This week I was planning to write about Narendra Modi's image both here and in foreign lands. Readers of this column regularly berate me for writing more often about the Dynasty than the Prime Minister. They charge me with 'hatred' of the Gandhi family and troll me viciously. I was planning to bow to the demands of the box office and comment on Modi's stature at home and abroad. Especially abroad where on the world stage the most powerful leaders today are a collection of clowns, tyrants and brutal warmongers. This subject will have to be postponed for another time because Rahul Gandhi, always irresistible, said something that was so weird and mysterious that I found it hard to ignore. Days after he challenged the Prime Minister to say 'Donald Trump, you are a liar' inside the Lok Sabha, he suddenly found himself on Trump's side. The President of America, as has now been widely reported, said that the Indian economy was dead. A comment that in the eyes of most political analysts was both offensive and foolish but not in the opinion of the Leader of the Opposition. When reporters accosted him outside Parliament House and asked what he thought about Trump's remark, he said, 'But the Indian economy is dead. Trump is right. Everybody knows that the Indian economy is a dead economy…except the Prime Minister and the finance minister.' He added that the BJP had destroyed the Indian economy to help Gautam Adani. Now I am no economist, but you do not need to be one to know that this remark is both bizarre and bewildering. But, very much in keeping with the economic ideas Rahul Gandhi expressed during the election campaign in 2019 when it was Anil Ambani he was obsessed with. Remember those days when he and his sister campaigned with toy fighter jets in their hands to make the point that Modi made money out of buying Rafale jets. Mr. Ambani, in his view, was the launderer of this bribe. This was never established. Never proved. So Ambani was forgotten. To come back, though, to the 'dead Indian economy', may I say that Rahul Gandhi appears not to have any memories of those years when Granny was prime minister and the Indian economy was dead, dead, dead. Ask anyone who lived through those times, and they will tell you what shopping for groceries used to be like. There were shortages of the kind that countries experience only when there has been a war or a massive natural disaster. We queued and queued and queued. Daily necessities like bread, milk and sugar were always in short supply. And, when it came to 'luxuries' like cars, you could remain in the queue for ten years. The richest Indians did not dare invest for the fear that if they exceeded their quotas to produce cars, scooters and air-conditioners, they could be fined and sometimes jailed. The only businessmen who thrived in those times were smugglers. They smuggled in gold and household goods like toasters, irons, kettles, coffee makers and mixers and sold them for a huge profit. As for us ladies, we would sneak off to smugglers in Karol Bagh to buy cosmetics, perfumes and fancy underwear. Things began to change only when the license raj ended. And one of the beneficiaries of this was Narendra Modi. I have never forgotten that first campaign of his when he talked of how government had no business to be in business. One of the reasons why people like me supported him was because of the hope that he would dismantle what remains of the licence raj and curb the evil officials who end one regulation only to make two more. They lived better in those central planning days than big businessmen and they had more power. They could destroy major industrialists with just a single signature. And they knew that they would get away with this because the political leaders who were their bosses were all lefties of the most committed kind. If the Leader of the Opposition wants to understand the real meaning of a 'dead economy', he needs to go back to his economics tutor and ask him to loan him some books on Nehruvian socialism. A short course is all he needs, not a degree, but a short course is essential because he leads our oldest political party and the only one that can challenge the BJP. Meanwhile, he would do well to keep his economic ideas to himself because they are ideas that are truly dead. My grievance against Modi is that he has failed to dismantle the remnants of the licence raj. He allows his bureaucrats too free a hand to make rules and regulations that crush real enterprise. Government-sponsored startups and unicorns are just a new incarnation of the public sector. What we need is a new generation of economic reforms that would truly make it easier to do business and India will take off beyond anyone's imagination. Trump's tariffs could turn into a real opportunity for India instead of being the threat that they currently appear to be. But for this to happen, Modi needs to remember that he once believed that the government had no business to be in business. Meanwhile, Rahulji can go back to his economics tutor and ask him to explain clearly why the Indian economy is not dead.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store