How to Buy Land in Maharashtra: Step-by-Step Guide for Investors
Buying land in Maharashtra — especially near Mumbai — is one of the most rewarding wealth-building decisions an investor can make. It is also one of the most legally complex real estate transactions in India. Unlike buying a flat in a registered building, land purchases require independent legal verification of documents most buyers have never seen before.
This step-by-step guide by Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO of THE EDGE Developments, walks you through the complete process of buying land in Maharashtra — from identifying the right plot to registering the sale deed. Follow every step. Skip none.
Key Takeaways
- Land purchase in Maharashtra has 8 distinct legal steps — skipping any one can invalidate your ownership or block future development.
- The 7/12 Extract (Satbara Utara) is the primary document — access it free on mahabhulekh.gov.in before spending a rupee.
- Always commission independent legal due diligence (₹15,000–₹50,000) — the single best money spent in any land transaction.
- Budget stamp duty (5% of market value) and registration fee (1%, max ₹30,000) before you commit — these are non-negotiable government charges.
- After sale deed registration, file for Mutation (Ferfar) at the Talathi office — critical, often skipped, and legally essential.
Step 1: Define Your Investment Goal
Before searching for land, answer three questions clearly:
- What is the purpose? Capital appreciation, weekend home, farming, eco-resort development, or all of the above?
- What is the holding period? 3 years (speculative), 5-7 years (growth), 10+ years (legacy)?
- What is the budget? Include purchase price, registration costs (5-6% stamp duty), legal fees, development costs, and a 10-15% contingency.
These answers determine whether you are looking at an NA residential plot, agricultural land with conversion potential, a farmhouse plot, or a commercial development site — all of which have different legal frameworks.
Step 2: Identify the Right Location
For land investment near Mumbai, the key criteria are:
- Infrastructure pipeline: Which new roads, airports, ports, or corridors will reduce time-distance to Mumbai in the next 5 years?
- Current vs. potential pricing: Look for locations where prices reflect current status, not future potential.
- Legal clarity: Some corridors have cleaner NA conversion records than others. Karjat and Khopoli have well-established NA plot markets. Coastal and forest-adjacent areas carry more legal complexity.
- Accessibility today: Can you reach the plot easily? Remote locations with no current connectivity have uncertain timelines to appreciation.
Step 3: Request and Verify Land Documents
For any plot you are seriously considering, collect and verify these documents:
- 7/12 Extract (Satbara Utara): The primary revenue document. Shows land area, survey number, owner name, crops, and any encumbrances or NA orders. Access online via mahabhulekh.gov.in or request from the Talathi office.
- 8-A Extract: Shows ownership records and right-of-way entries. Confirms that the seller is the recorded owner.
- NA Order Certificate (if applicable): Government certificate converting the land from agricultural to non-agricultural use. Verify the order number matches the 7/12 entry.
- Title Chain Documents: All previous sale deeds going back at least 30 years. Confirms unbroken chain of ownership with no gaps, disputes, or conflicting claims.
- Encumbrance Certificate (EC): Issued by the Sub-Registrar’s office. Confirms no outstanding mortgages, loans, or legal charges on the property.
- Village Map (Gaon Naksha): Shows the plot’s position within the village survey map. Verify the survey number and boundary match the physical plot.
- Zone Certificate: Confirms the land’s position in the local Development Plan (DP) or Regional Plan. Determines permitted uses and FSI/FAR.
- CRZ Map Check: For coastal properties, verify the plot’s CRZ zone status with the Maharashtra Coastal Zone Management Authority.
Step 4: Commission Independent Legal Due Diligence
Do not rely on the seller’s lawyer or the broker’s verbal assurances. Appoint an independent advocate who specialises in Maharashtra land law to:
- Verify all documents listed in Step 3
- Search the local Sub-Registrar’s records for any pending disputes
- Confirm the seller’s identity and legal capacity to sell
- Check for any government acquisition or reservation notices on the plot
- Confirm there are no tenancy rights (Kul Kaydha) registered against the land
Legal due diligence fees for land in Maharashtra typically range from ₹15,000 to ₹50,000 depending on the complexity of the title chain. This is the single best money you will spend in any land transaction.
Step 5: Commission a Physical Survey
Hire a licensed government surveyor to physically demarcate the plot boundaries. This step confirms:
- The plot area matches the 7/12 entry
- There are no encroachments by neighbours or public roads
- The plot shape and boundaries match the village map
- Access roads exist and are legally demarcated
Step 6: Negotiate and Execute a Sale Agreement
Once due diligence is complete, execute a registered Agreement for Sale:
- Specifies the agreed price, payment schedule, possession date, and conditions
- Must be registered at the local Sub-Registrar office (stamp duty on agreement: 0.1% of consideration in Maharashtra)
- Provides legal protection during the payment and title transfer period
Step 7: Pay Stamp Duty and Execute the Sale Deed
The final step is registration of the Sale Deed at the Sub-Registrar office:
- Stamp duty: 5% of the market value (government-assessed ready reckoner rate) or actual consideration — whichever is higher
- Registration fee: 1% of the consideration (maximum ₹30,000 in Maharashtra)
- Both buyer and seller must be present with original identity documents
- Two witnesses are required
- Original documents are submitted and a certified copy is returned within 30-60 days
Step 8: Update Revenue Records (Mutation)
After sale deed registration, file for Mutation (Ferfar) at the Talathi office to update the 7/12 extract in the new buyer’s name. This is a critical, often-skipped step. Until mutation is complete, the government’s revenue records still show the previous owner’s name — which can create complications for future sales, development permissions, or dispute resolution.
Mutation is typically completed within 3-6 months of application. Track it on the Mahabhulekh portal.
Summary: Land Purchase Checklist in Maharashtra
- ✅ Define investment goal and budget (including 5-6% stamp duty + legal costs)
- ✅ Identify location based on infrastructure pipeline and legal clarity
- ✅ Collect and verify 7/12, 8-A, NA Order, Title Chain, EC, Zone Certificate
- ✅ Commission independent legal due diligence
- ✅ Commission physical boundary survey
- ✅ Register Sale Agreement
- ✅ Pay stamp duty and register Sale Deed
- ✅ File for Mutation at Talathi office
Looking for a legally clear NA plot near Mumbai with full documentation? Explore Edge County Estate in Karjat — RERA-registered, NA-clear, fully surveyed eco-luxury plots.
Explore the investment landscape: What Is Mumbai 3.0? The Vision Redefining Urban Growth in MMR
“The most expensive mistake I see investors make is skipping independent legal due diligence to save ₹30,000. That ₹30,000 can uncover a mortgage, a pending dispute, or a title gap that protects a ₹50 lakh purchase. In 20 years of land transactions, I have never seen a properly executed due diligence that didn’t pay for itself a hundred times over.”
Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO, THE EDGE Developments — 20+ years in MMR real estate, ₹8,500 Cr in influenced transactions
About the Author
Girish Chhalwani is the Founder & CEO of THE EDGE Developments, a Mumbai-based real estate strategist with 20+ years of experience across 45+ project launches and ₹8,500 Cr in influenced real estate transactions in the Mumbai Metropolitan Region. He specialises in land investment, NA plots, branded plotted developments, and eco-luxury villa advisory in Karjat and the wider MMR. Read Girish’s full profile →
