February 24, 2026
AI drives faster sales closures, cuts response time and helps wins over young homebuyers

AI drives faster sales closures, cuts response time and helps wins over young homebuyers

Read Time:2 Minute, 29 Second

AI adoption is delivering improvements in sales and customer engagement, say industry experts. It is proving particularly effective in engaging with young, first-time buyers

Snapshot AI
  • AI adoption in real estate cuts response times and boosts sales
  • AI tools help engage Gen Z and millennial homebuyers effectively
  • Virtual tours and AI-driven listings attract younger buyers

India’s real estate sector is increasingly leveraging artificial intelligence (AI) to drive faster sales closures, sharply cut response times and connect better with younger, digital-first homebuyers, as developers move toward data-led decision-making.

AI adoption is delivering improvements in sales and customer engagement, industry experts say. Real estate professionals said AI is proving particularly effective in engaging with Gen Z and millennial buyers.

“Industry estimates show that developers using AI-led customer engagement tools have seen up to a 68 percent reduction in response time, a 53 percent jump in qualified leads, and a 15–25 percent improvement in lead-to-conversion ratios,” consultancy firm Vestian CEO Shrinivas Rao said.

Firms are deploying AI-driven chatbots and large language model (LLM) agents across websites, messaging platforms and voice interfaces.

Rao said AI-powered CRMs and predictive lead-scoring models are also helping shorten decision-making, resulting in a 10–20 percent reduction in overall sales cycle timelines.

AI resonates with young homebuyers

AI is proving particularly effective in engaging Gen Z and younger millennial buyers, a group that increasingly dominates first-time home purchases.

“Gen Z buyers expect immediacy, personalisation and transparency. AI enables firms to speak their language — quick responses, tailored property recommendations and frictionless digital journeys — driving deeper engagement and faster closures,” said an executive at a Mumbai-based real estate developer who didn’t wish to be identified.

Vimal Nadar, National Director and Head of Research at Colliers India, said AI is transforming how properties are discovered and evaluated. AI-led platforms are matching buyers and tenants, especially Gen Z and millennials, with the most relevant listings using micro-market insights, while automated valuation models are improving pricing accuracy based on real-time data.

“AI-enabled virtual tours and 3D walkthroughs are significantly reducing the need for physical site visits, particularly among younger buyers relocating across cities. Lease abstraction, compliance filings and regulatory documentation are also being automated, cutting transaction friction,” he said.

Industry experts said as Gen Z’s share in the home-buying population rises over the next decade, AI-led sales and engagement models will shift from being a competitive advantage to a necessity, reshaping how homes are marketed, sold and managed in India.

“Virtual property tours, 3D walkthroughs and real time market and property development inputs are something which attract the new generation buyers the most. All this is now being increasingly being used by developers with the help of AI to woo Gen Z and millennial homebuyers,” a Bengaluru-based builder said. He didn’t wish to be identified as he is not authorised to speak to media/

Courtsey To : Moneycontrol

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %

Average Rating

5 Star
0%
4 Star
0%
3 Star
0%
2 Star
0%
1 Star
0%

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Haryana CM says Rs 556 crore recovered from IDFC First Bank, lender's shares in green Previous post Haryana CM says Rs 556 crore recovered from IDFC First Bank, lender’s shares in green
GDP base revision may push FY26 growth higher; history points to upward bias Next post GDP base revision may push FY26 growth higher; history points to upward bias