Is Farmland a Good Investment in 2026? An Honest Analysis
Mutual funds are at all-time highs. Gold is rallying. Real estate is expensive. So where does farmland actually fit in an Indian portfolio in 2026 — and where does it not?
The honest answer first
Farmland is a good investment for some people, in some portions of their portfolio, on some corridors. It is a poor investment if you bring expectations from another asset class to it. Most disappointed farmland buyers were people expecting it to behave like equity or like a city flat.
Three things farmland is genuinely good for, and one it isn't:
- Long-horizon capital appreciation on corridors with structural growth (industrial, infrastructure, urbanisation).
- Inflation hedging — land doesn't depreciate; produce keeps pace with prices.
- Tax-favourable treatment for capital gains on rural agricultural land under prevailing Indian tax rules.
- Not liquidity. You will not "sell tomorrow" the way you can with mutual funds. Plan for 3–5 years minimum.
Farmland vs mutual funds — the comparison people actually want
Indian equity mutual funds have delivered roughly 12–15% CAGR over long periods. Some categories have done better, some worse. So the simple version of the question is: is farmland likely to do better than that, after fees and taxes?
Honest answer: on a generic farmland purchase, no. On a well-chosen plot in a structurally appreciating corridor, often yes — but with much higher variance. Consider the actual numbers:
Spring Dales – 1 (NH44 corridor, launched 2024) — owner-reported appreciation of approximately 70% in 2 years, or about 30% CAGR. Daffodils (same developer, 2024) — approximately 60% in 2 years, or about 26% CAGR. Both materially outperformed equity over the same window.
But — and this matters — those numbers reflect a specific corridor (NH44 near Bagepalli, with KIA, Hyundai, aerospace, and the Penukonda corporate belt all driving land demand). Pick a different corridor, or buy without doing diligence on the underlying industrial story, and the same return profile won't follow.
What about real estate (apartments)?
This is the comparison most Indian buyers are actually weighing. The structural problem with apartments as an investment:
- Built-up depreciates. The fixtures, paint, plumbing, lifts — all degrade. Only the land share appreciates, and on apartments, your land share is tiny.
- Maintenance scales with age. A 20-year-old building costs significantly more to live in or rent than a new one. That eats into your returns.
- Resale liquidity drops sharply for older units. Buyers want new.
Farmland, structurally, doesn't have any of these problems. Land doesn't get older in a way that matters. You aren't competing with newer construction. The asset stays the asset.
What about gold?
Gold is a hedge. It's liquid. It's culturally portable in India. But it produces nothing — no rent, no fruit, no use. Farmland produces in two ways: appreciation (because of underlying demand) and lifestyle (because you can use it). For Indian portfolios, both gold and farmland have a role; they aren't substitutes.
The portfolio framing
If you're thinking clearly about this in 2026, here's a defensible framing:
- Equity (mutual funds, direct stocks) — 40–60%. Liquid, compounding, growth.
- Real estate (primary residence + one investment) — 20–30%. Use-asset plus inflation hedge.
- Gold + bonds — 10–15%. Stability and liquidity.
- Alternatives (farmland, REITs, alternatives) — 5–15%. Where farmland sits.
Farmland fits in that last bucket. It's not meant to replace equity. It's meant to add an asset class that doesn't correlate with the others, that hedges inflation, that you can actually use, and that — on the right corridor — can deliver outsized returns.
The 2026-specific argument
Three things make farmland on the NH44 corridor specifically interesting right now:
- Industrial momentum. KIA's expansion, Hyundai's Andhra plant, the aerospace SEZ, Apollo Tyres, J.K. Tyres, UE Press Tools, and over a hundred other corporates have committed to the Bagepalli–Penukonda belt. This isn't speculation — it's poured concrete.
- Airport effect. Bangalore's airport keeps expanding. The 1-hour drive to NH44 farmland keeps becoming more valuable.
- Pricing inefficiency. Comparable managed-farmland projects on the same corridor are priced ₹450–650/sq.ft. Spring Dales – 2 is at ₹329 launch. The pricing gap will close.
The honest risks
Things that could go wrong:
- Liquidity event. If you need cash in 6 months, farmland can't deliver. Equity can.
- Specific corridor risk. If KIA cancels its expansion or aerospace SEZ delays, the appreciation thesis weakens.
- Title issues. If you don't do diligence, you can buy a problem. This is mitigable, but only if you do the work.
- Developer execution risk. The amenities, infrastructure, and maintenance promises matter. Developer track record matters.
So — yes or no?
For an Indian investor with a long horizon, an existing diversified portfolio, and 5–15% to allocate to alternatives — farmland on a structurally growing corridor is one of the better risk-adjusted plays available in 2026. The asset class isn't broken. The expectations many buyers bring to it are.
If you want appreciation backed by industrial growth and you want something you can also drive your kids to on weekends, this fits. If you want liquidity, growth, and a number on a screen, stay in equity.
See the corridor for yourself
Walk Spring Dales – 2 with our team. Bring your CA. Ask hard questions.
Book a site visitThis article is informational only and not investment, legal, or tax advice. Past returns referenced are owner-reported figures for specific plots in past projects and do not guarantee future returns. Please consult a qualified financial advisor before allocating to any asset class.