Investing in Currencies

NRI investors eye leaseback and managed home models amid currency advantage


For a long time, buying a home in India as an NRI wasn’t really a structured decision. It was instinct more than anything else—emotional. A connection back to where you came from. A place for parents, or a future base you’d figure out later.
What happened after purchase didn’t get much attention.

Many homes stayed locked for months. Some were rented out, but often informally—managed from a distance, with all the friction that comes with remote ownership. Tenant changes, maintenance delays, small issues that were harder to resolve from another country.

That gap is what’s starting to shift now.

NRIs are still emotionally connected to Indian real estate, but evaluation has become more deliberate. The question is less about where to buy and more about what the asset is doing when they’re not there.

Currency has played a role. A weaker rupee has made Indian real estate more attractive for buyers earning in stronger currencies like the US dollar or UAE dirham, but it has also made decisions more selective.