Key takeaways
- REITs let retail investors own a slice of commercial real estate (Grade A office, retail) without buying property — typical investment ₹100 minimum.
- India has 4 SEBI-listed REITs as of 2026: Embassy Office Parks, Mindspace Business Parks, Brookfield India Real Estate, and Nexus Select Trust (the only retail-mall REIT).
- REITs distribute at least 90% of their net distributable cash flow to unit-holders quarterly — typical yields 5.5–7.5% for office REITs, ~6% for retail REIT.
- Distributions split into 3 components for tax: dividend (taxed at slab), interest (taxed at slab), and capital repayment (reduces cost base, no immediate tax). The latter is the tax-favoured part.
- For a ₹1 lakh investment in a REIT yielding 6% with 50% as capital repayment, post-tax cash yield is ~5% — comparable to FD but with property-price upside.
What a REIT actually is
A Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) is a SEBI-regulated investment vehicle that owns income-generating real estate — typically office buildings, retail malls, hotels, or warehouses. The REIT holds the properties on a trust basis and distributes most of the rental income to unit-holders. Units trade on NSE/BSE just like stocks, providing liquidity that physical real estate cannot.
India introduced REIT regulations in 2014, but the first listing (Embassy Office Parks REIT) only happened in 2019. The SEBI framework requires:
- Minimum 80% of REIT assets must be in completed, rent-generating real estate.
- At least 90% of net distributable cash flow distributed to unit-holders.
- Maximum 49% leverage (loan as % of total assets).
- Minimum 50 unit-holders, none owning more than 25%.
- Quarterly disclosures and audited annual reports.
The four listed Indian REITs in 2026
| REIT | Asset type | Key cities | Indicative yield (FY 2026-27) | AUM (₹ crore) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Embassy Office Parks REIT | Grade A office | Bengaluru, Pune, NCR, Mumbai | ~6.0% | ~50,000+ |
| Mindspace Business Parks REIT | Grade A office | Mumbai, Pune, Hyderabad, Chennai | ~5.8% | ~25,000+ |
| Brookfield India Real Estate Trust | Grade A office | Mumbai, NCR, Kolkata, Pune | ~7.0% | ~24,000+ |
| Nexus Select Trust | Retail malls (urban consumption) | Mumbai, Bengaluru, Delhi NCR, Chennai, Pune | ~6.2% | ~12,000+ |
(Yields vary with quarterly distributions and unit price. Always check the latest exchange data.)
How REIT distributions are taxed
This is where REIT mechanics get complex. The REIT structures its quarterly payout as a mix of three components, disclosed in the distribution circular:
Component 1: Dividend
The portion that comes from the REIT's own taxable income. Treated as your dividend — taxed at your slab rate, no exemption (post-2020 dividend tax abolition).
Component 2: Interest
The portion that flows from interest income earned by the REIT (e.g., on its cash holdings or inter-company loans). Taxed at your slab rate as interest income.
Component 3: Repayment of capital
The portion that is treated as return of your invested capital. NOT taxed in the year of receipt; instead, it reduces your cost base for capital gains calculation when you eventually sell. From Budget 2023 onwards, this component is treated as long-term capital gain in advance, taxed at 12.5% if it exceeds your original cost.
Worked tax example
You invest ₹1 lakh in Embassy REIT, units yielding 6% annually = ₹6,000 distribution. The breakdown announced by the REIT might be:
- Dividend: ₹2,000 (33% of distribution)
- Interest: ₹2,500 (42%)
- Capital repayment: ₹1,500 (25%)
For someone in the 30% slab:
- ₹2,000 dividend tax: ₹624 (slab + cess)
- ₹2,500 interest tax: ₹780
- ₹1,500 capital repayment: ₹0 in current year (your cost base reduces to ₹98,500)
Total tax on ₹6,000 distribution: ₹1,404. Post-tax yield: 4.6% on the ₹1 lakh.
Capital gains on REIT units
When you sell REIT units on the exchange:
- Short-term (held under 12 months): 20% STCG (raised from 15% in Budget 2024).
- Long-term (held 12+ months): 12.5% LTCG above ₹1.25 lakh annual exemption (raised from 10% above ₹1 lakh in Budget 2024).
Note: capital gains tax kicks in on the difference between sale price and your reduced cost base (after capital repayment adjustments).
How to actually buy REITs
Through an exchange
REIT units trade on NSE and BSE just like any stock. Open a Demat account (Zerodha, Groww, ICICI Direct, etc.), search the REIT name (Embassy, Mindspace, Brookfield, Nexus Select), and place a buy order. Lot size is 1 unit (₹300–500 per unit currently).
Through a mutual fund
Some debt-hybrid mutual funds invest in REIT units indirectly. Check fund factsheets for REIT exposure if you prefer the wrapper.
NFO subscription
When a new REIT lists or an existing one issues fresh units, you can subscribe through ASBA (the same mechanism as IPO subscription). Watch SEBI announcements.
REIT vs other income-generating assets
| Aspect | REIT | FD | Debt mutual fund | Direct rental property |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-tax yield | 5.5–7.5% | 6.5–7.5% | 6–7.5% | 2–3.5% (rental yield) |
| Capital appreciation potential | Yes (property + rent escalation) | None | Limited (rate-driven) | Yes (location-dependent) |
| Liquidity | Listed; daily trading | Penalty before maturity | T+1 redemption | Months to sell |
| Min ticket | ₹300–500 | ₹1,000 | ₹100 (SIP) | ₹50 lakh+ |
| Quarterly dividend taxation | Mixed (slab + capital repayment) | Slab on interest | Slab if held under 36 months; LTCG otherwise | Slab on rental, deductions allowed |
Risks specific to REITs
- Interest rate sensitivity. When RBI raises rates, REIT prices fall (they compete with bonds). Embassy REIT lost ~25% in 2022 during the rate-hike cycle.
- Tenant concentration. Embassy and Mindspace have IT/ITeS-heavy tenant bases. A downturn in IT services (offshoring, hybrid work) hits occupancy.
- Regulatory changes. SEBI periodically tweaks the framework — leverage limits, distribution percentages, taxation. The 2023 capital-repayment-as-capital-gain change reduced the post-tax yield by ~50 bps for high-slab investors.
- Asset cycle. Office REIT performance depends on commercial real estate cycles (10+ year cycles). Retail REIT (Nexus) depends on consumer spending and footfall recovery post-COVID.
Strategy — how to use REITs in a portfolio
For most retail investors, REITs are a moderate-yield income asset with a property-price kicker. Reasonable allocation:
- Conservative income portfolio: 5–10% in REITs, mixed across office and retail.
- Balanced portfolio (60% equity / 40% debt): Replace 5% of debt with REITs for the diversification.
- Aggressive portfolio: REITs can be a small (3–5%) tactical allocation, picked when yields exceed comparable bonds by 100+ bps.
REITs sit between equity and debt — equity-like ownership of the property, bond-like quarterly distributions. They are not substitutes for direct property investment (no leverage, no rental control); they are a wrapper for owning commercial real estate without the heavy ticket size.
Common mistakes
- Chasing yield without checking distribution composition. A 7% "yield" with 80% in capital repayment is mostly your own money coming back — true cash yield could be only 3-4%.
- Ignoring leverage. Some REITs have 30%+ leverage; in a downturn, that compresses distributions.
- Confusing InvIT with REIT. Infrastructure Investment Trusts (InvITs) own infrastructure (toll roads, power transmission). Different asset, different cycles. Don't mix the two in your head.
- Treating REIT as fixed-income. Distributions can be cut. In FY 2020-21, Embassy distributed less than expected when occupancy dropped during COVID.
Plan your REIT allocation in the context of your broader portfolio. Consult a SEBI-registered advisor for tax planning, especially around capital repayment treatment for high-income investors.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are REITs safe in India?
SEBI's REIT framework is well-regulated — minimum 80% in completed assets, leverage cap, 90% mandatory distribution. The 4 listed REITs have professional managers and quality tenants. They are NOT risk-free though — interest rate sensitivity and tenant concentration remain.
Can I do SIP in REITs?
Not directly — REITs aren't open-ended. But you can buy a small lot quarterly when distributions arrive. Some brokers (Groww, Zerodha) offer scheduled buy orders that work like SIPs for any listed security.
How are REIT distributions taxed?
Distributions are split into dividend (taxed at slab), interest (taxed at slab), and capital repayment (reduces your cost base, future LTCG of 12.5% if it exceeds original cost). Each REIT publishes the breakdown quarterly.
Can NRIs invest in Indian REITs?
Yes — through NRE/NRO Demat accounts, subject to FEMA limits. Distributions and capital gains follow the standard NRI tax treatment with TDS at higher rates than residents.
Which REIT has the best returns?
It varies year to year. As of Q2 2026, Brookfield India offers the highest indicative yield (~7%), but Nexus Select benefits from retail consumption recovery. Compare yield + occupancy + tenant quality + leverage before picking — never pick on yield alone.