Known for her instinct for high-stakes land deals, Anita Verma-Lallian is quietly reshaping one of the country's most dynamic real estate markets—brokering billion-dollar transactions in Arizona's booming West Valley for clients who are building the infrastructure of the future.
In the latest Realtor.com® video series, which follows a day in the life of top luxury agents, Verma-Lallian opens the doors to her world, offering an unfiltered look at her latest deals—and the vision, tenacity, and cross-sector leadership it takes to operate at the very top of commercial land investment.
"There are a lot of people looking for land, so we try to stay ahead of the competition as much as we can," she says. "We try to buy a little bit farther out than where existing developments are happening—that's been a little bit of our strategy."
As founder and CEO of Arizona Land Consulting, Verma-Lallian has built a portfolio valued at over $1.5 billion, closing some of the largest transactions in Arizona's history. Her focus is the West Valley, which has emerged as a premier destination for AI data center development—and where she has become the go-to broker for developers and global capital partners staking their claim in the desert.
Her company has purchased hundreds of acres of land with the purpose of building data centers, with a minimum threshold of 100 acres per project.
Her biggest deal to date: a $51 million land acquisition closed alongside venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya, positioned among high-profile neighbors that include Bill Gates, Toll Brothers, and the Howard Hughes Corp.
"The data center we bought with Chamath, it's right next to a smart city that Bill Gates owns," she says. "We all just want to see as much development in that area, and it helps everybody."
Sustainability is central to her approach. Verma-Lallian is actively exploring eco-friendly cooling technologies that use less water and is looking at deploying AI to run the data centers more efficiently.
"We want to be as efficient with our resources and to optimize how we're running it," she explains.
Her passion for real estate runs in the family.
"My dad's been buying and selling land for 40 years or so," she says. "Post-COVID, there was this big boom toward industrial development—and with that came data centers."
Her eye for investing extends beyond Arizona. In October 2024, Verma-Lallian purchased Matthew Perry's home in the Pacific Palisades for $8.55 million. The Southern California property survived the deadly January 2025 wildfires with only minimal damage to the backyard.
Beyond real estate, Verma-Lallian launched Camelback Productions in 2023—Arizona's first South Asian, female-owned film company. Its debut film, "Doin' It," starring Lilly Singh, premiered at SXSW 2024 and was released in theaters in September 2025. She is signed with United Talent Agency and has launched a private equity film fund dedicated to uplifting underrepresented voices in Hollywood.
Named an Outstanding Woman in Business 2025 by the Phoenix Business Journal and a Forbes Business Council member, she also co-hosted a fundraiser with Jay Shetty earlier this year that raised over $800,000 for Baby2Baby to aid victims of the L.A. wildfires.
As for what's next in the desert, Verma-Lallian is thinking for the long term.
"The site's massive," she says. "The whole site maybe could be a 10-year project—but we do hope to start breaking ground on phases in the next few years."
