For most professionals, real estate has been the default investment category beyond mutual funds and FDs. Buying an apartment in Whitefield or a BDA plot in North Bangalore has been the conventional wisdom for wealth building. But over the past five years, a comparison between real estate returns and Coorg farmland performance tells an increasingly compelling story.
Bangalore Real Estate: The Five-Year Picture
Bangalore’s residential market has had a mixed five years. Premium micro-markets — Indiranagar, Koramangala, parts of Whitefield — have seen reasonable appreciation of 8–12% per year in capital values. However, the broader market tells a less exciting story.
Mid-range apartments in Sarjapur Road, Electronic City, and outer Whitefield, which were purchased between 2019 and 2022 at ₹60–80 lakhs, appreciated modestly — 5–8% per year in many cases — partly due to significant new supply entering the market from large developers. Rental yields in these corridors remain stuck at 2–3% of capital value annually, unchanged for nearly a decade.
After accounting for maintenance charges (₹3,000–6,000 per month), property tax, and periodic renovation, the net annual return on many Bangalore apartments over the past five years has been 7–10% total — before income tax on rental income.
Coorg Farmland: The Five-Year Picture
Coorg agricultural land, particularly in the Madikeri zone, has appreciated at 12–15% per year over the same period, driven by several concurrent factors: the 2020 Karnataka Land Reforms Act amendment opening the market to urban investors, growing awareness of managed farmland as an investment category, rising domestic tourism and farmstay demand increasing the lifestyle value of Coorg property, and limited supply of high-quality agricultural land with good water access.
A plot purchased for ₹10 lakhs per acre in Madikeri in 2021 is conservatively valued at ₹17–20 lakhs per acre in 2026 — a 70–100% capital appreciation over five years, compared to 35–50% for a typical mid-market Bangalore apartment over the same period.
Adding the Income Component
Capital appreciation alone does not tell the full story. Both asset classes generate income — but the tax treatment is dramatically different.
A Bangalore apartment generating ₹25,000 per month in rent produces ₹3 lakhs per year in gross rental income. For a buyer in the 30% tax bracket, net income after tax is ₹2.1 lakhs. A Coorg farmland plot producing ₹2.5 lakhs per year in crop income is 100% tax-free as agricultural income — there is no tax liability, regardless of the investor’s salary bracket.
The effective after-tax income from Coorg farmland is therefore higher than its face value suggests — particularly for high-bracket professionals.
The Management Burden Comparison
Urban apartment investment comes with management realities: finding and retaining tenants, handling maintenance requests, dealing with vacancy periods, paying for repairs, and managing broker relationships. For busy professionals, this is a genuine time and energy cost.
Managed farmland in Coorg outsources all agricultural management to a professional team. Monthly updates arrive via photo and video. Income arrives after harvest. The investor visits when they choose. The management burden is objectively lower.
The Lifestyle Dividend
This is the comparison that no spreadsheet can fully capture. A Bangalore apartment you own but do not live in generates income and sits in a city you are already in. A Coorg farmland you own is in one of India’s most beautiful landscapes — a place you want to visit, where your family can spend time, where the air and pace of life are genuinely different.
The lifestyle benefit of owning a productive farm in the Western Ghats is a real asset value that compounds with every visit.
A Balanced View
Bangalore real estate has its place in a diversified portfolio — particularly for investors who want liquid urban assets or plan to eventually live in the property. The argument here is not that farmland is always better, but that for many urban professionals who already own their primary residence and are looking for the next investment, Coorg farmland has demonstrably outperformed a second Bangalore apartment over the past five years on almost every measurable dimension.
