Compared to pure-play hotel stocks, K Raheja Corp company Chalet Hotels sits at the intersection of India’s hospitality upcycle and a growing commercial real estate annuity. It is largely an owner and developer of hotel properties, alongside a commercial leasing portfolio and a smaller residential arm. It has 3,359 operational keys and a pipeline of about 1,200. Its commercial portfolio spans about 2.4 million sq ft, with another 0.9 million sq ft under development.
After it listed in early 2019, we covered the stock at ₹327 in May 2019 as a high-end, metro-heavy hotel owner where the bull case rested on expansion and a cleaner balance sheet. Six years on, the hotel cycle still matters, but Chalet is increasingly a two-engine platform, with high-margin office rentals playing a bigger role in smoothing cash flows.
The upside triggers are clear. Commissioning of the pipeline and better visibility on the next leg of office lease-up, alongside continued room-rate-led growth as new inventory ramps are potential positives. The risks are clear too, with execution and approval delays, slower leasing, cost intensity during room ramp-up and the leadership transition due by end-January 2026.
After a five-fold rally from 2021-end (₹216) and hitting record high of ₹1,080 in August 2025, Chalet has corrected a bit and now trades at ₹867. At about 20x FY26 EV/EBITDA (Bloomberg consensus), it is not cheap for a mid-cap consumption play stock. On the same FY26 consensus metric, Chalet screens at the lower end versus some listed hotel peers such as IHCL, ITC Hotels and Lemon Tree, though business-mix differences limit one-to-one comparability. In terms of price to earnings (P/E) multiple, thanks to residential earnings boost, Chalet trades at around 36x FY26 estimates versus about 125x on FY25 earnings.
Investors should ‘hold’ the stock for now and await better entry points. We shall revisit the investment thesis if the stock corrects materially.
Business model
Chalet Hotels operates three engines. As opposed to asset-light route for many large peers, its model is asset-heavy, with 11 hospitality assets (and five in pipeline) forming the core. Here earnings move with occupancy and room rates. It owns premium, metro-centric business hotel assets in MMR, Bengaluru, Pune, Hyderabad etc, giving it pricing power but also cyclicality.
Commercial leasing is the stabiliser. Chalet’s portfolio of office and retail space, including The Orb, Cignus Powai and Cignus Whitefield, deliver steady rental income.
Residential is the smallest and least predictable leg, currently limited to the Bengaluru Vivarea project. Here, revenue is booked only on possession. This segment can inflate quarterly results (as seen in Q1 and Q2).
Together, this mix makes Chalet’s earnings base more diversified than typical hotel peers, but it also makes quarterly reported numbers noisy when residential handovers spike.

Recent performance
The company’s core performance, excluding residential handovers, has remained firm through FY26 so far. In H1FY26, consolidated core revenue grew 24 per cent year on year and EBITDA rose 31 per cent, with margins improving 238 basis points to 43.9 per cent.
The hospitality segment recorded about 46 per cent of H1FY26 revenue and 84 per cent, if we exclude residential sales. Segmental topline was up 16 per cent, with an EBITDA margin of 40.9 per cent. While average daily rates rose 16 per cent to ₹12,188, its occupancy, however, slipped to about 67 per cent. Heavy rains, seasonal resort softness and new room additions in Bengaluru temporarily diluted utilisation. Its business hotels occupancy is usually much higher than resorts. The management expects both hospitality occupancy and rate momentum to improve in H2 on festival, corporate and MICE demand. Note that the first two weeks of December saw a spate of Indigo flight cancellations and this is expected to have some impact on hotel business. However, things have normalised now.
Commercial real estate (CRE) has become Chalet’s most stable profit pool. In H1FY26, the segment delivered 90 per cent year-on-year revenue growth, with an exceptionally-high EBITDA margin of 82.7 per cent. Leased area occupancy stood at 77 per cent. The company’s exit rental run-rate is ₹24.5 crore a month and the management targets ₹30 crore by March 2026 as pending leases close. Having said that, recent leasing activity has been muted for two quarters, while negotiations on larger tenants continue; so, H2 performance will indicate whether the ₹30-crore-per-month target is met. The management states that debt servicing is now fully covered by cash flows from the leasing/CRE portfolio. As new buildings such as Cignus II Powai come on stream, this annuity base could lift consolidated margins and smooth earnings volatility through hotel cycles.
On the residential segment, Chalet recognised revenue of over ₹721 crore for handing over 150 units and ₹270.1-crore EBITDA at 37.5 per cent margin for H1FY26. Going forward, only seven units remain unsold from the first project. The next project will be in FY27, and thus investors should not anticipate immediate earnings boost.
The company has repaid ₹200 crore towards preference share capital from promoters. Its net debt stood at about ₹2,200 crore, which is manageable (net debt/equity of 0.7x).
Catalysts and risks
Chalet’s next two years hinge on project execution. The company has outlined a ₹2,500-crore capex plan, funded mainly through internal accruals and CRE cash flows. Just days ago, its board approved a ₹171-crore proposed acquisition of a firm with a 150-room Udaipur resort.
Key asset milestones include Taj Delhi airport (385-390 keys, target opening H1FY27), Cignus Powai Tower II (0.9-million-sq-ft office space, completion Q4FY27), and Athiva Varca Goa (about 190 keys, target FY28). Hyatt Regency Airoli Navi Mumbai, Athiva Bambolim Goa and Athiva Thiruvananthapuram assets are in the planning stage.
While these projects offer clear scale-up visibility, each carries execution and approval dependencies. If Delhi Airport and Cignus II stay on schedule, earnings could compound from FY27. Bloomberg consensus estimates so far pencil a mere 11 per cent adjusted revenue growth in FY27, which would be the slowest annual run-rate since FY21. Any delays can shift the cash-flow trajectory and keep valuation multiples in check. Also, heightened cost intensity and hotel room-addition-linked total occupancy drops are monitorables.
Select locations such as Navi Mumbai show double-digit supply additions, raising near-term rate risk for new assets.
The management is framing new-age hospitality brand Athiva, which targets the affluent young, as “not a pivot” but an evolution. But the brand-building part is execution heavy. Investors must track if Athiva room rates, especially at the Khandala property, remain durable when the novelty fades.
Given the CRE business, investors should track leasing momentum. The commercial engine depends on leasing activity picking up after two quiet quarters; a slow pipeline could undermine the “debt covered by annuity” comfort.
Chalet’s MD & CEO Sanjay Sethi, after an eight-year stint, is stepping down January 31, 2026; continuity of execution and investor confidence will need watching given the size of the company. Executive Director Shwetank Singh (previously Chief Growth and Strategy Officer) shall take over from February 1.
In conclusion, these risks cluster over the next 12-18 months, when project delivery and lease-up must match expectations. Given the valuation and execution-heavy pipeline, we recommend investors hold the stock.
Published on December 27, 2025


