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What is the absorption rate for industrial land locally?

Current Absorption Trends in Key Industrial Clusters

The local absorption rate for industrial land has remained strong over the past 12–18 months, particularly in well-zoned and infrastructure-enabled corridors. According to industrial park developers and brokerage reports:

  • In government-developed estates (e.g., SIPCOT, MIDC, KIADB), 65–80% of allotted plots are absorbed within 1–2 years of release
  • In private industrial parks, especially those near highways and logistic hubs, absorption is 5–7 acres per quarter for small- to mid-sized users
  • In peripheral areas, raw land with CLU potential sees slower absorption—typically 8–12 months post-approval

This reflects growing demand from e-commerce, EV, and export-oriented sectors across Tier 1 and Tier 2 belts.

Influencing Factors Driving Absorption

Absorption rates vary based on the following criteria:

  • Zoning status: Pre-approved industrial land absorbs faster than land requiring conversion
  • Infrastructure readiness: Plots with power, internal roads, water, and sewage attract quicker interest
  • Proximity to industrial anchors: Land near OEMs, ports, or existing parks sees rapid uptake
  • Plot size and modularity: Smaller plots (1–3 acres) for MSMEs and mid-scale factories get leased/sold faster than larger blocks
  • Policy support and incentives: Areas under PLI-linked sectors or SEZ zones show faster land take-up

Parks offering BTS (build-to-suit) and leasing options also see faster land activation.

Market Outlook for Industrial Land Absorption

The forecast for 2024–2026 indicates a stable to increasing absorption rate, supported by:

  • Expansion of global and domestic manufacturing under India’s production-linked incentive schemes
  • Continued growth in third-party logistics (3PL) and cold chain operators
  • Rising land banking by industrial REITs and institutional investors
  • State-level reforms to speed up land conversion, layout approval, and utility access

In high-potential corridors, the annual absorption rate is expected to range from 15 to 30 acres, with faster turnover in plotted parks and industrial nodes along national highway spines.

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