For investors, the most interesting feature of Lodha Sadahalli may not be the architecture at all — it is the price gap between the airport corridor and the established city-side luxury belt. Positioned as a pre-launch garden estate, the project offers an entry point that looks modest against comparable Hebbal addresses, while sitting on one of Bangalore’s strongest infrastructure-led appreciation runways. The thesis is straightforward: buy into a maturing corridor before the connectivity fully arrives, and let the rate gap close over the holding period.
The Pricing Arbitrage Along the Airport Corridor
Indicative pre-launch pricing opens at around ₹3.10 Cr for the 3 BHK. The Lodha Sadahalli 3 BHK price and Lodha Sadahalli 4 BHK price (from around ₹5.12 Cr) translate to a band broadly in line with peers such as Birla Trimaya and ahead of Godrej MSR City, yet meaningfully below the city-side luxury rate. To put that in context, branded launches around Sadahalli sit in roughly the ₹12,000–15,000 per sft range, while comparable Hebbal-side product trades far higher:
|
Reference Point |
Location |
Indicative Rate / Price |
|---|---|---|
| Lodha Sadahalli (3 BHK onwards) | Sadahalli | ₹3.10 Cr onwards |
| Embassy Greenshore | Sadahalli | ~₹11,000+ per sft |
| Embassy Sky Terraces (resale) | Hebbal (city-side) | ~₹21,000–24,000 per sft |
| Brigade Insignia | Yelahanka | ~₹17,500 per sft |
The Embassy comparison is instructive. Embassy Greenshore, also in Sadahalli, sits at around ₹11,000+ per sft, anchoring the local band, while Embassy Sky Terraces at Hebbal commands roughly ₹21,000–24,000 per sft on resale. The gap between the two markets is the arbitrage Lodha Sadahalli apartments are positioned to capture as the corridor matures and the rate differential between airport-side and city-side luxury narrows. Put simply, a buyer is paying a fraction of established Hebbal rates for branded luxury on a corridor where the infrastructure runway is still being laid.
Appreciation, Rental Yields and Who’s Buying
Devanahalli has delivered strong recent appreciation — roughly 20% over one year, around 62% over three years and close to 98% over five years on broad market measures, with the top-performing projects running higher still. Base-case outlooks point to 10–12% annualised, with the window around metro commissioning across 2026–28 potentially stronger as connectivity converts into demand. Rental yields for A-class developer stock sit at roughly 3.5–4.0% per annum semi-furnished and 4.0–4.5% furnished, supported by aviation, aerospace and corporate leasing demand from tenants who value proximity to the airport.
The buyer mix reflects this. End-users are largely CXO and senior-management families seeking a low-density estate address; NRIs value Lodha’s second-home management service, which keeps a home ready in the owner’s absence; and HNI investors are positioning for the corridor’s compounding cycle. The Lodha Sadahalli status as a pre-launch with EOI open means early entrants aim to lock indicative pricing before formal RERA registration, when final numbers, floor-rise and PLC charges are confirmed. As always, these figures are indicative, and buyers should treat them as a starting point for their own due diligence rather than guaranteed returns. The corridor’s direction of travel is clear, but the pace of appreciation will ultimately track how quickly the metro and ring road deliver.