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.