
REITs in India have fundamentally changed how retail investors can access commercial real estate. Until 2019, owning a slice of a Grade-A office park or a premium shopping mall in India required either crores of capital or participation in illiquid, opaque private vehicles. The listing of India’s first REIT — Embassy Office Parks REIT — on the NSE in April 2019 changed that. Today, five REITs in India are publicly listed, regulated by SEBI, and tradeable in a demat account exactly like a stock. This guide covers how they work, what the data shows about their actual returns, and what investors need to understand before buying units.
All performance figures in this guide are drawn from published sources: SEBI filings, issuer annual reports, and independent analysis by ETMoney, ICICI Direct, and BCA. No figures have been projected or estimated beyond what those sources state.
A Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) is a trust that owns and manages income-generating real estate. In India, REITs are governed by the SEBI (Real Estate Investment Trusts) Regulations 2014 (most recently amended in December 2025) and must meet the following structural requirements:
The income an investor receives comes from the rents paid by tenants — multinational corporations, domestic enterprises, retail brands — who occupy the office parks, IT campuses, or malls owned by the REIT. That rental income, after expenses, is distributed quarterly. Unit prices also fluctuate on the exchange based on market perception of the underlying asset quality, occupancy outlook, and interest rates.
As of early 2026, five REITs are listed on Indian stock exchanges. The table below is based on data from ICICI Direct (NAV as of December 2025) and BCA/5paisa analysis (distributions and yields).
| REIT | Ticker | Listed | Issue Price | NAV (Dec 2025) | Total Distribution Since Listing | Asset Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Embassy Office Parks REIT | EMBASSY | Apr 2019 | ₹300 | ₹445.91 | ₹152.46/unit | Office, hospitality |
| Mindspace Business Parks REIT | MINDSPACE | Aug 2020 | ₹275 | ₹483.70 | ₹105.70/unit | Office (IT parks) |
| Brookfield India Real Estate Trust | BIRET | Feb 2021 | ₹275 | ₹349.00 | ₹95.20/unit | Office (Grade-A) |
| Nexus Select Trust | NXST | May 2023 | ₹100 | ₹159.00 | ₹22.22/unit | Retail (malls) |
| Knowledge Realty Trust | KRT | Aug 2025 | ₹100 | ₹118.00 | ₹3.13/unit | Office |
Source: ICICI Direct REIT tracker (NAV as of December 2025); BCA analysis dated February 2025 (distributions); Jiraaf (listing dates and issue prices).
India’s first publicly listed REIT and, by portfolio size, the largest REIT in Asia at the time of its 2019 listing. Backed by Embassy Group and initially co-sponsored by Blackstone, Embassy owns approximately 51 million square feet of Grade-A office space across Bengaluru, Mumbai, Pune, Noida, and Chennai. Portfolio occupancy was approximately 92% as reported in 2025 (5paisa). Embassy REIT delivered a unit price increase of approximately 17% during 2025, with a dividend yield of 6.1–6.5% (5paisa). Total distributions from listing through December 2025 amount to ₹152.46 per unit against an issue price of ₹300 (ICICI Direct).
Backed by the K. Raheja Corp group, Mindspace owns approximately 34 million square feet of premium IT park space across Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, and Chennai. Mindspace is rated India’s highest REIT for ESG standards. In 2025, Mindspace delivered approximately 28.5% unit price appreciation — the strongest capital return among the four incumbent REITs (5paisa). Dividend yield was reported at 5.9–6.0% (5paisa). NAV reached ₹483.70 per unit as of December 2025 against an issue price of ₹275, reflecting significant NAV growth since listing (ICICI Direct).
Sponsored by Brookfield Asset Management, one of the world’s largest real estate investors. BIRET’s portfolio is 100% institutionally managed Grade-A office space. The REIT delivered a 1-year return of 13% and a 2-year return of 38% (as of March 2025, ETMoney). Distribution yield for FY24 was 6.97% — the highest among listed Indian REITs at that point — on a per-unit distribution of ₹17.75 in FY24 (BCA, February 2025). BIRET units traded at approximately 14% discount to NAV as of March 2025 (ETMoney).
India’s first publicly listed retail REIT, owning a portfolio of premium shopping malls across major urban centres. Listed in May 2023 at ₹100 per unit. NAV reached ₹159 by December 2025 (ICICI Direct), and units traded at a slight premium to NAV as of March 2025 — the only listed Indian REIT to do so at that time (ETMoney). 1-year return was 25% and 2-year return 30% as of March 2025. Distribution yield was 5.54% in FY24 (BCA, February 2025).
The newest Indian REIT, listed in August 2025 at ₹100 per unit. As of December 2025 NAV stands at ₹118 with total distributions of ₹3.13 per unit since listing. As a recently listed trust, KRT has limited historical performance data and a shorter distribution track record. Investors should review its prospectus and SEBI filings for asset portfolio details before making any assessment (ICICI Direct).

REIT returns in India come from two sources: distributions (the quarterly cash payouts) and unit price appreciation (or depreciation) on the exchange. The table below uses ETMoney’s data as of March 2025 — the most recent multi-REIT comparison with verified figures from that period.
| REIT | NAV (Mar 2025) | Market Price (Mar 2025) | Discount/Premium to NAV | 1-Year Return | 2-Year Return |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brookfield (BIRET) | ₹336 | ~₹289 | -14% | 13% | 38% |
| Embassy (EMBASSY) | ₹423 | ~₹366 | -14% | 16% | 12% |
| Mindspace (MINDSPACE) | ₹432 | ~₹375 | -13% | 34% | 41% |
| Nexus (NXST) | ₹152 | ~₹159 | +5% | 25% | 30% |
Source: ETMoney REIT comparison (13 March 2024 – 13 March 2025). Returns include distributions received plus unit price change. Knowledge Realty Trust (KRT) was not listed at this date.
A few observations from this data: Mindspace delivered the strongest total returns over both 1-year and 2-year periods. Embassy’s 2-year return of 12% is notably lower than its peers, though this varies depending on the measurement period. All four REITs traded at a discount to NAV as of March 2025, with Nexus being the exception — trading at a slight premium. A discount to NAV does not automatically make a REIT a better buy; it can reflect concerns about asset quality, lease expiries, or debt levels that the market is pricing in.
Investing in REITs in India follows the same process as buying any stock. Here is the complete process:
You need a demat account (to hold REIT units) and a linked trading account (to place buy/sell orders on NSE or BSE). This can be done through any SEBI-registered broker — full-service or discount brokers (Zerodha, Groww, Upstox, ICICI Direct, etc.) all support REIT trading. If you already have a demat account for equity investing, you can buy REIT units immediately through the same account.
REIT units trade on the NSE (and BSE) during market hours. Check the current price using your broker’s platform or NSE’s website. The ticker symbols are: EMBASSY, MINDSPACE, BIRET, NXST, and KRT. Note that REIT unit prices can vary significantly — as of the NAV data above, Embassy and Mindspace units were trading at ₹366–₹375 per unit, while Nexus and KRT were in the ₹130–₹160 range.
Following SEBI’s reduction of minimum lot sizes, you can buy a minimum of 1 unit of any listed Indian REIT. Place a limit or market order through your broker. Settlement follows the standard T+1 cycle (units credited to your demat account the next trading day).
Once you hold REIT units, you are entitled to quarterly distributions. These are credited to your bank account linked to your demat account. The amount per unit varies each quarter based on the REIT’s net distributable cash flows. REITs are required by SEBI to distribute at least 90% of distributable cash flows.
REIT distributions in India are not a single, uniformly taxed amount. Each quarterly distribution from a REIT consists of up to three components, each taxed differently:
Each quarter, when a REIT distributes income, it specifies the breakdown between these three components in its distribution notice. Your broker or the REIT’s registrar (typically KFin Technologies or CAMS) will also provide annual tax statements (Form 26AS updation, REIT distribution summaries) to assist with filing.
Capital gains on sale of REIT units: If you sell REIT units:
The tax treatment of REIT distributions is more complex than a simple FD or dividend stock. Investors in higher tax brackets should factor in the full tax impact when comparing REIT yield against other fixed-income alternatives.
No single “best REIT in India” suits every investor. The right choice depends on your income vs appreciation preference, tax situation, and risk tolerance. Here is a framework for comparison:
If maximising quarterly income is your primary goal, focus on distribution yield (annual distribution per unit ÷ current market price). Brookfield’s FY24 distribution yield of 6.97% was the highest among listed Indian REITs at that time. Embassy’s was 5.78%. However, yield alone is insufficient — a high yield combined with declining occupancy or rising debt is a warning sign, not an opportunity. Always check the occupancy rate and debt-to-asset ratio alongside the yield.
If NAV growth and unit price appreciation are more important, Mindspace’s 41% 2-year total return and Nexus’s 30% 2-year return (ETMoney, March 2025) are relevant data points. However, past returns do not predict future returns — and REIT unit prices are sensitive to interest rate movements (when rates fall, REIT yields become relatively more attractive, typically driving prices up; when rates rise, the opposite applies).
Office REITs (Embassy, Mindspace, Brookfield, KRT) derive income from corporate tenants — their performance is linked to India’s office demand, GCC growth, and IT sector hiring cycles. Nexus Select Trust is a retail REIT — its income depends on India’s urban mall performance, consumer spending, and retail tenant health. These are different risk profiles even though both are classified as REITs in India.
Many investors consider REITs in India alongside direct property investment. The comparison is not straightforward because the assets and risk profiles differ significantly.
| Factor | REIT Investment | Direct Property (Residential) |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum investment | ~₹130–₹500 per unit (1 unit minimum) | ₹50 lakh–₹5+ crore |
| Liquidity | High — sell on exchange any trading day | Low — 6–24 months to exit at fair value |
| Income | Quarterly distributions (mandatory 90%+ payout) | Monthly rent (if tenanted), or zero if vacant |
| Yield (gross) | 3.8%–7.0% (distribution yield, FY24) | 2%–5% gross rental yield (residential Goa) |
| Capital appreciation | Unit price moves with market and asset value | Property value appreciation over time |
| Management | Fully professional — investor is passive | Active (unless managed) — maintenance, tenants, legal |
| Diversification | Instant — dozens of properties per REIT | Single property unless multiple acquisitions |
| Regulation | SEBI-regulated with quarterly disclosures | Limited disclosure requirements for resale transactions |
| Tax complexity | Moderate (3-component distributions) | Complex (rental income + capital gains + TDS) |
REITs in India are not a direct substitute for physical property ownership. They are a complementary instrument — providing income, liquidity, and professional management that direct property cannot match, while forgoing the personal-use utility and the concentrated appreciation potential of a well-selected physical asset in a high-demand micro-market.
As of early 2026, five REITs are listed on Indian stock exchanges: Embassy Office Parks REIT (EMBASSY), Mindspace Business Parks REIT (MINDSPACE), Brookfield India Real Estate Trust (BIRET), Nexus Select Trust (NXST), and Knowledge Realty Trust (KRT). The first four focus on office parks (Embassy, Mindspace, Brookfield) or retail malls (Nexus); Knowledge Realty Trust is the newest, listed in August 2025. Source: ICICI Direct REIT tracker, Jiraaf.
Following SEBI’s reduction of minimum lot sizes, the minimum investment in any listed Indian REIT is 1 unit. Depending on the REIT’s current market price, this typically requires between ₹130 and ₹500. You need a demat account and trading account with a SEBI-registered broker (Zerodha, Groww, ICICI Direct, etc.) to buy REIT units. Source: Jiraaf, SEBI investor education portal.
Based on ETMoney’s data as of March 2025: Mindspace delivered 34% 1-year and 41% 2-year total returns; Nexus delivered 25% 1-year and 30% 2-year returns; Embassy delivered 16% 1-year returns; Brookfield delivered 13% 1-year and 38% 2-year returns. These returns include both unit price change and distributions received. Past performance is not a guarantee of future returns.
REIT distributions have three components: dividend income (taxed at your income tax slab rate), interest income (taxed at your slab rate), and capital repayment (not taxed when received — reduces your cost of acquisition). When you sell REIT units, capital gains apply: long-term (held ≥ 36 months) at 12.5%, short-term at your slab rate. Consult a tax advisor for the current rules, as REIT taxation has seen regulatory changes in recent years.
This depends on your tax bracket and risk tolerance. REIT distribution yields (5–7% for established REITs in FY24) are generally higher than FD rates for the same period. However, REIT distributions are variable (not guaranteed), REIT unit prices can fall, and the tax treatment of REIT distributions is more complex than FD interest. REITs also offer potential unit price appreciation, which FDs do not. They are different instruments suited to different investor profiles.
REITs in India have moved from a novel instrument — with just one listed REIT in 2019 — to a meaningful asset class with five listed trusts, a combined portfolio spanning tens of millions of square feet of Grade-A commercial space, and a demonstrated track record of quarterly distributions and capital appreciation. For investors who want regular income, professional management, and liquidity that physical property cannot offer, REITs in India present a structurally sound option — provided investors understand the tax complexity, the interest rate sensitivity, and the distinction between distribution yield and total return. As with any investment, past returns are not a guarantee of future performance, and investors should review the latest filings and occupancy data before committing capital.
If you are evaluating REITs in India alongside a direct property investment and want to understand how they compare for your specific financial profile, submit your enquiry below and our team will respond within 24 hours.






