Alibag is becoming a focal point for real estate investment as infrastructure improves, changing perceptions of distance. Buyers are now viewing land not just for second homes, but as strategic assets, indicating a significant shift in market dynamics.
India’s premium real estate markets have historically followed a familiar rhythm. Capital arrives first, conviction follows later.
South Mumbai once represented the centre of gravity for wealth creation. Then came Bandra-Kurla Complex. Later, investors expanded toward the western suburbs, Navi Mumbai and peripheral growth corridors unlocked by infrastructure. Each transition looked ambitious at first—until it became obvious in hindsight.
Sonali Rajput believes the next shift is already underway.
As Group CEO and Executive Director of Samira Habitats (I) Ltd., Rajput has spent years studying land movement and acquisition behaviour across Alibag’s evolving micro-markets. Her reading of the region is not rooted in hospitality or weekend-home narratives. Instead, she sees the coastline as something larger: a structural extension of Mumbai’s economic geography.
Her framework is simple.
“Mumbai 1.0 was the island city. Mumbai 2.0 was the expansion into the western and eastern suburbs—Thane, Navi Mumbai and the corridors unlocked by infrastructure. Mumbai 3.0 is the harbour crossing. Panel, Alibag, Rewas and Karanja—what we call the PARK region—represent the next chapter.”
For Rajput, this isn’t a future forecast. It is a transition she believes has already begun.
Unlike many real estate conversations that rely on aspiration, her argument is built around infrastructure.
The opening of the Mumbai Trans Harbour Link—better known as Atal Setu—marked a turning point in how distance across the region is perceived. Travel time between South Mumbai and Navi Mumbai compressed dramatically, changing not just mobility but the economics of land accessibility.
Simultaneously, the Mandwa fast-ferry corridor has steadily increased movement between Mumbai and the Alibag coast, creating a commuter and lifestyle bridge that did not exist at scale a decade ago.
The next inflection point, Rajput says, lies in the Revas–Karanja Bridge.
Once operational, the project is expected to remove one of the last major connectivity barriers between Mumbai’s southern edge and the Alibag coastline, fundamentally altering how the region is accessed.
“When infrastructure compresses distance, it doesn’t just improve convenience—it reprices land,” she says. “Every serious investor understands that dynamic. The window to acquire before that repricing fully reflects is never indefinite.”
Her view reflects a principle seen repeatedly across urban growth cycles: infrastructure rarely creates value overnight, but it changes long-term land equations permanently.
That shift, she argues, is already becoming visible.
Across selected R-zone land parcels in emerging Alibag micro-markets such as Parhur and Mhatroli, interest has strengthened alongside each major infrastructure milestone. Rajput believes the current movement is less about speculative enthusiasm and more about market correction—buyers who once viewed Alibag as too distant are recalibrating their assumptions.
Distance, historically the market’s biggest objection, is gradually losing relevance.
Yet Rajput identifies another change as even more meaningful than pricing.
The buyer profile itself has evolved.
“Five years ago, most conversations were around second homes and weekend retreats,” she says. “Today, I’m sitting across family offices, global NRIs and founders post-liquidity who are evaluating land differently—not as lifestyle consumption, but as long-term wealth allocation.”
That distinction matters.
According to Rajput, today’s high-net-worth and ultra-high-net-worth investors are increasingly approaching land through a portfolio lens rather than an emotional one. The conversation has shifted from holiday ownership to asset positioning.
The pattern mirrors broader global wealth behaviour, where affluent investors increasingly seek exposure beyond dense urban residential markets. As rental yields compress and appreciation moderates in mature city centres, interest often rotates toward finite land markets with improving accessibility and stronger long-term scarcity dynamics.
Her thesis is that Alibag now sits at the intersection of four conditions that rarely converge simultaneously: constrained supply, improving infrastructure, adjacency to one of Asia’s largest wealth concentrations, and a lifestyle proposition that cannot easily be replicated through vertical urban development.
What distinguishes Rajput’s outlook is that she does not frame Alibag as an aspirational escape. She speaks about it as a market in transition—one shaped by the interplay of finite land supply, evolving buyer demand, improving connectivity and infrastructure-led value creation. Her confidence in the region, she says, stems not from short-term enthusiasm but from forces she believes will continue to reshape the geography over the long term.
“The Revas–Karanja Bridge is not a hypothetical event in our assessment—it is committed infrastructure,” she says. “When accessibility changes at that scale, buyer psychology changes with it. The question is rarely whether value moves. It is whether investors enter before or after the market fully recognises the shift.”
For investors evaluating Alibag today, Rajput believes the opportunity is not about finding the perfect entry point.
It is about recognising that infrastructure-led transitions tend to become obvious only after value has already migrated.
Her central argument remains unchanged: Alibag should no longer be viewed as Mumbai’s weekend destination.It should be viewed as the geography that may define Mumbai’s next phase of expansion.
Note to readers: This article is part of Mint’s paid consumer connect Initiative. Mint assumes no editorial involvement or responsibility for errors, omissions, or content accuracy.
Want to get your story featured as above? click here!