Sri Lanka’s real estate sector is in the early stages of a structural recovery following the 2022 crisis. The CBSL’s Condominium Market Survey and Real Estate Market Analysis (Q1 2025) track the sector’s gradual normalisation. Colombo’s property market — particularly the condominium and mixed-use segments — experienced significant price corrections during the crisis, creating entry opportunities for investors with a medium-term horizon. The World Bank notes that well-functioning land, property, and urban systems are fundamental to investment, productivity, and livability, and Sri Lanka’s urban development agenda is being actively supported through the UDA’s project pipeline.

The BOI’s mixed-use development portfolio is the most extensive of any sector, with 17 active mixed-use projects across Colombo and regional growth centres, plus 2 industry development projects, 2 residential development projects, and 1 leisure project in Jaffna. This breadth reflects the UDA’s strategy to drive urban transformation across the island — not just in Colombo — creating opportunities in cities like Kandy, Galle, Kurunegala, and Kataragama that are less competitive and potentially higher-yielding than the capital.

The investment thesis for Sri Lankan real estate rests on several pillars. First, the post-crisis price correction has created a valuation gap relative to regional peers. Second, the recovery in tourism, IT services, and manufacturing is driving demand for quality commercial, hospitality, and residential space. Third, the diaspora — estimated at over 3 million Sri Lankans living abroad — represents a natural demand base for residential investment, with remittances reaching significant levels annually. Fourth, the government’s urban development programme, channelled through the UDA, provides a pipeline of pre-approved, infrastructure-connected sites with clear development mandates.


BOI-Listed Pipeline Projects — Mixed Development
  • Makumbura: High-rise mixed development — Western Province
  • Battaramulla: Mixed development — Western Province (government/commercial hub)
  • Colombo 09: Mixed development — Colombo city
  • Colombo 10: Mixed development (2 projects) — Colombo city
  • Galle: Mixed development — Southern Province (UNESCO heritage city)
  • Kandy: Mixed development — Central Province (cultural capital)
  • Kurunegala: Mixed development — North Western Province (regional commercial hub)
  • Kataragama: Mixed development — Uva Province (major pilgrimage/tourism destination)
  • Thalawathugoda / Battaramulla / Rajagiriya: Suburban Colombo mixed developments
  • Jaffna Leisure Project: Leisure development — Northern Province (200% ECA)
  • Padukka & Arabokka: Industry development projects — Western/Southern Province
  • Madiwela & Pannipitiya: Residential development projects — Western Province

BOI Incentives — Real Estate / Infrastructure
  • Section 16 minimum: USD 250,000 (full foreign ownership, no fiscal concessions)
  • Section 17 — Hospital construction: USD 500,000 minimum
  • Section 17 — Large-scale infrastructure/industrial estates: USD 12,500,000 minimum
  • UDA lease terms: 30 years (standard); 50 years available for select projects
  • Long-term residence visa available for qualifying real estate investors
💡 INVESTOR SNAPSHOT

17 mixed-use development sites. From Colombo’s skyline to Kandy’s hills to Galle’s heritage streets to Jaffna’s emerging economy. Sri Lanka’s urban transformation is underway — and the UDA has pre-approved the sites, cleared the land, and set the development mandates. For diaspora investors, this is the opportunity to build the Sri Lanka you remember — and the one your children will inherit.

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