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A ₹6.5 crore 3BHK apartment on Bengaluru’s Miller Road has gone viral online, with many users saying home ownership now feels impossible.

(Image credits: @r/BangloreRealEstates)
A luxury apartment listing from Bengaluru has gone viral after social media users were left stunned by the price of a 3BHK flat located on the city’s upscale Miller’s Road. The property, reportedly priced at ₹6.5 crore, quickly became the subject of discussion across platforms like X and Reddit, with many users questioning whether owning a home in metro cities is slowly becoming impossible for the average middle-class buyer.
The viral post showcased the apartment’s premium interiors, spacious rooms, and prime central location. While some users acknowledged that luxury homes in elite Bengaluru neighbourhoods are naturally expensive, many still felt the pricing was shocking for a standard 3BHK apartment.
As the post spread online, it reignited conversations around rising real estate prices in cities like Bengaluru, Mumbai, and Delhi-NCR. Many users pointed out that salaries have not increased at the same pace as property prices, making homeownership feel increasingly unrealistic for young professionals.
Comments and reactions curated from X and Reddit reflected a mix of frustration, humour, and disbelief. “I’ll never be able to afford this,” one user wrote.
While another commented, “At this point, we should just accept that our generation will live on rent forever.”
One person joked, “For ₹6.5 crore, the flat should come with free therapy for financial stress.”
Some users blamed Bengaluru’s tech boom for the skyrocketing prices. “IT salaries and investor money have completely changed the city,” a user wrote.
Another commented, “People earning ₹20 lakh per year still can’t buy homes comfortably anymore.”
Others defended the pricing, saying Miller’s Road is one of Bengaluru’s premium locations. “You’re not just paying for the apartment; you’re paying for the address,” one comment read.
Still, frustration remained the dominant mood online. “Middle-class dreams now cost crores,” one user wrote.
While another summed it up by saying, “This isn’t a house; it’s a reminder that the housing market has left ordinary people behind.”
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