New Delhi, 18 June 2026- Generative AI (GenAI) has the potential to drive significant performance gains in India’s real estate sector, with EY-Parthenon-CREDAI latest report titled, GenAI in Indian Real Estate indicating that developers could see a 30–50% improvement in sales velocity and around 30% faster product launches. These possibilities stem from AI-driven customer intelligence, automated design workflows and predictive project monitoring, signaling a shift from scale-driven operations to a more intelligence-led approach to real estate.
Early adopters could experience strong operational benefits, including 20-50% improvement in workforce productivity, 20–50% lower customer acquisition costs, and decision cycles that may compress from “months to weeks or days.” The EY Parthenon- CREDAI report notes that such advancements have the potential to reshape how developers assess feasibility, plan projects, manage construction and engage with customers.
Chaitanya Seth, Partner - Real Estate practice, EY-Parthenon India, said, “GenAI is fast becoming central to value creation and competitiveness, making inaction a growing strategic risk. We see GenAI-led transformation unlocking 2–3X enterprise value within the short to medium horizon, by compressing land-to-launch cycles by 20–30%, driving 30%+ sales acceleration, and delivering a 5–20% step-change in efficiency across cost and timelines. This is not about incremental digitization, rather, it is about rewiring the operating model, redefining customer experience, strengthening brand advocacy, and building brands that scale faster and sell smarter.”
Speaking on the launch of the report, Shekhar G. Patel, President, CREDAI said, “The next phase of growth in Indian real estate will be driven not only by scale, but increasingly by intelligence, speed and the ability to make better decisions across the project lifecycle. The findings of this report suggest that Generative AI has the potential to significantly improve sales velocity, accelerate project launches and enhance productivity across multiple functions, making it a significant opportunity for the sector. What is particularly encouraging is that the impact of GenAI extends beyond operational efficiency. Its application across planning, design, construction, sales and customer engagement can help developers become more responsive to market needs, improve execution quality and deliver a better experience for homebuyers.”
He further, added, “India's real estate sector is entering a new era shaped by rapid urbanisation, expanding infrastructure and rising consumer aspirations. Going forward, the focus should be on harnessing these capabilities to build a smarter, more efficient and resilient real estate sector that can deliver greater value to homebuyers and support India's urban growth ambitions.”