The Kaggadasapura Reality
Every Street Here Has a Maid Shortage. Generic Agencies Make It Worse.
Kaggadasapura exists in a strange in‑between: not quite the old Bangalore of pensioners’ bungalows, not yet the planned gated enclave of the outer ring. Its housing stock is overwhelmingly mid‑rise apartments — three or four floors, no lifts, narrow staircases, and often a single shared gate. This might seem like a minor architectural detail, until you realise it’s the number one reason domestic workers quit here. A candidate who’s fine in a ground‑floor flat in Indiranagar will quit a fourth‑floor walk‑up in Kaggadasapura within a fortnight.
Then there’s the density problem. Because the neighbourhood packs so many households into such a small area, the same small pool of domestic workers is constantly being fought over. A maid who lives in a nearby slum rehabilitation pocket might commit to four different homes — and drop the least convenient one the moment a closer offer comes. Reliability in Kaggadasapura isn't about character; it's about geography and physical workload. If your candidate isn't living within walking distance and isn't physically up to your building spec, they won't last.
Our Kaggadasapura placements start with two hard filters: the candidate must reside within a 3 km radius (Murgeshpalya, Vimanapura, or the immediate Kaggadasapura settlement cluster), and they must have demonstrable experience in homes with equivalent stair and floor conditions. We've found that if you get these two factors right, the rest — skill, punctuality, attitude — follows far more predictably.
A pattern we see repeatedly: Many Kaggadasapura households share a single maid with neighbours to save costs — but the arrangement collapses the moment one neighbour changes their schedule. We place dedicated candidates who work for one household at a time, removing the scheduling fragility entirely.