Reading time: 13 minutes | Last updated: July 2026 | Author: Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO, THE EDGE Developments
TL;DR — Key Takeaways
- Stamp duty on land in Maharashtra is charged on the higher of the agreement value or the Ready Reckoner (RR) Rate — never on whichever figure is lower, so under-declaring the agreement price does not reduce your duty.
- Standard stamp duty is 6% for male buyers in Mumbai (5% base + 1% metro cess) and 5% for female buyers; in Pune, Nagpur, and Thane it is 7% for male buyers and 6% for female buyers.
- Registration charges are 1% of the property value, capped at ₹30,000 for properties valued above ₹30 lakh.
- The Ready Reckoner Rate is revised every April by the Maharashtra government; 2026 saw an average 3–5% increase, with localities near new infrastructure — Metro Line 3, Coastal Road, and the Navi Mumbai International Airport (NMIA) — seeing up to 8–10% increases.
- The applicable RR rate is looked up by district, taluka, village, and survey number on the state’s e-ASR portal (part of igrmaharashtra.gov.in) — not negotiated or estimated.
- On a typical ₹50 lakh land purchase in an MMR growth corridor, total transaction cost (stamp duty + registration + legal) typically adds up to 6.5–8.5% on top of the purchase price — a cost every land investor must model before comparing “net returns” across markets.
Executive Summary
How much will I actually pay in stamp duty and registration when I buy land in Maharashtra? You will pay stamp duty (5–7% depending on city and buyer gender) plus registration charges (1%, capped at ₹30,000) — calculated on whichever is higher: your agreement price or the government’s Ready Reckoner Rate for that specific plot. This single rule is the most misunderstood part of Maharashtra land transactions, and it is the reason two buyers paying the same negotiated price for similar plots in different villages can end up with materially different total costs.
Introduction: The Cost Line Every Land Investor Underestimates
Land investment return calculations across MMR routinely account for purchase price, holding period, and expected CAGR — but frequently understate the acquisition cost stack, which is dominated by stamp duty and registration. Because Maharashtra calculates duty on the higher of the agreement value or the government Ready Reckoner Rate, an investor cannot simply negotiate a lower price to reduce this cost.
This matters even more in infrastructure-linked growth corridors — Karjat, Khopoli, Panvel, Uran, Boisar — because RR rates in these belts have been revised upward faster than the state average precisely because of the infrastructure projects driving investor demand in the first place.
What Is the Ready Reckoner Rate?
The Ready Reckoner (RR) Rate — officially the Annual Statement of Rates (ASR) — is the Maharashtra government’s minimum benchmark valuation for land and property in every village, taluka, and district in the state. It is published and revised annually (typically every April) by the Inspector General of Registration (IGR), Maharashtra, and serves two core purposes: it sets the floor value on which stamp duty is calculated, and it is used as a reference for property tax assessments and bank loan valuations.
Maharashtra Stamp Duty Rates 2026 — City-Wise Comparison
| City / Region | Stamp duty (Male buyer) | Stamp duty (Female buyer) | Registration charge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mumbai (Municipal Corporation limits) | 6% (5% base + 1% metro cess) | 5% (4% base + 1% metro cess) | 1%, capped at ₹30,000 |
| Pune, Nagpur, Thane (Municipal Corporation) | 7% | 6% | 1%, capped at ₹30,000 |
| Municipal Council areas (e.g., Karjat, Khopoli town limits) | ~4–5% | ~3–4% | 1%, capped at ₹30,000 |
| Gram Panchayat / rural areas | ~3–4% | ~2–3% | 1%, capped at ₹30,000 |
Rates are indicative and vary by local body classification — always confirm the exact applicable rate for the specific taluka before transacting. Sources: ClearTax, Godrej Capital, Bajaj Finserv Markets, 1acre.in stamp duty calculators (2026).
How Stamp Duty Is Actually Calculated: A Worked Example
| Scenario | Agreement price | Applicable RR rate value | Duty calculated on | Stamp duty (at 6%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A: Agreement price above RR rate | ₹60,00,000 | ₹50,00,000 | ₹60,00,000 (agreement price, since it’s higher) | ₹3,60,000 |
| B: Agreement price below RR rate | ₹40,00,000 | ₹55,00,000 | ₹55,00,000 (RR rate, since it’s higher) | ₹3,30,000 |
Scenario B is the case that catches buyers off guard: even though the buyer negotiated and paid ₹40 lakh, they must pay stamp duty as though they paid ₹55 lakh, because that is the government’s minimum benchmark value for that plot.
Step-by-Step: How to Look Up the Ready Reckoner Rate for Any Plot
- Visit the Maharashtra IGR portal (igrmaharashtra.gov.in) and navigate to the e-ASR (Annual Statement of Rates) section.
- Select the district, taluka, and village where the plot is located.
- Select the property type — open land (NA or agricultural), residential, commercial, or industrial — since RR rates differ by land-use category.
- Enter the survey number / CTS number if prompted, or select the applicable zone within the village.
- Note the rate per square metre (for land) — this is the government’s minimum benchmark value for that specific parcel.
- Multiply by the plot area to arrive at the RR-based valuation, then compare against your negotiated agreement price — stamp duty applies to whichever figure is higher.
2026 Ready Reckoner Revision: What Changed
The Maharashtra government’s 2026 RR revision applied an average increase of 3–5% across most localities statewide. However, revisions were not uniform — villages and zones near completed or advancing infrastructure projects (Mumbai Metro Line 3, the Coastal Road, and the Navi Mumbai International Airport corridor) saw disproportionately higher revisions of up to 8–10%.
Total Transaction Cost Comparison Table
| Cost component | Typical rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Stamp duty | 5–7% (varies by city/local body and buyer gender) | Calculated on higher of agreement price or RR rate |
| Registration charge | 1%, capped at ₹30,000 | Applies above ₹30 lakh property value |
| Legal/documentation (title search, drafting) | 0.5–1% | Varies by advocate and complexity of title chain |
| Brokerage (if applicable) | 1–2% | Negotiable; not applicable on direct developer purchases |
| Typical total | 6.5–8.5% (excluding brokerage) | Must be added to purchase price when calculating net entry cost and CAGR |
Documents Required at the Time of Registration
| Document | Purpose |
|---|---|
| 7/12 extract (Satbara Utara) | Confirms current ownership, area, and land classification |
| Sale agreement / sale deed draft | The instrument being stamped and registered |
| PAN cards of buyer and seller | Mandatory for property transactions above specified thresholds |
| Aadhaar cards of buyer and seller | Identity verification at the sub-registrar’s office |
| NA order (if applicable) | Confirms non-agricultural conversion status |
| Encumbrance certificate | Confirms no pending mortgages or legal claims on the property |
| Proof of stamp duty payment (e-challan/GRAS receipt) | Required before the sub-registrar will proceed with registration |
Expert Opinion
“Buyers spend weeks negotiating the last two or three percent off a plot’s price, and then get blindsided by a stamp duty bill calculated on a Ready Reckoner Rate they never checked. The RR rate lookup takes five minutes and should happen before you make an offer, not after you sign the agreement.” — Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO, THE EDGE Developments
Risk Factors and Common Mistakes
- Assuming stamp duty is calculated only on the agreement price — it is calculated on whichever is higher between agreement price and RR rate.
- Using a generic online stamp duty calculator without checking the specific village’s RR rate — generic calculators frequently default to city-wide averages, not the exact survey number’s rate.
- Not accounting for the April revision cycle — if you are close to finalising a purchase in March, confirm whether the current or upcoming RR rate will apply at your actual registration date.
- Overlooking the female co-ownership discount — registering a property solely or jointly in a woman’s name can reduce the stamp duty rate by 1% in most Maharashtra cities.
- Ignoring local body classification — the same village can straddle Municipal Council and Gram Panchayat jurisdiction with different applicable rates.
Actionable Insights
- Always check the e-ASR portal for the specific survey number before signing an agreement — never rely on a broker’s verbal estimate of the RR rate.
- Model total transaction cost at 6.5–8.5% of the higher of agreement price or RR value when calculating expected net returns.
- Consider registering jointly with a female family member where legally and practically appropriate, to access the 1% stamp duty discount.
- Time registration around the April RR revision cycle if a purchase is near finalisation and the current year’s rate is more favourable.
- Re-run the RR rate check for every parcel separately — even adjoining plots can carry different RR valuations.
Conclusion
Stamp duty and registration charges are not a rounding error in a Maharashtra land transaction — they are a 6.5–8.5% cost line that can shift meaningfully higher if the applicable Ready Reckoner Rate is not checked before the agreement is signed. For land investors and developers operating across MMR’s fast-moving growth corridors, a five-minute e-ASR lookup, done before every offer, is the single most cost-effective piece of due diligence available.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Ready Reckoner Rate in Maharashtra?
It is the state government’s minimum benchmark valuation for land and property in every village and taluka, published annually by the Inspector General of Registration and used to calculate stamp duty.
Is stamp duty calculated on the agreement price or the Ready Reckoner Rate?
On whichever is higher — if the RR rate for a plot exceeds the agreement price, stamp duty is charged on the RR rate, not the negotiated price.
What is the current stamp duty rate in Mumbai?
6% for male buyers (5% base plus 1% metro cess) and 5% for female buyers.
What are the registration charges in Maharashtra?
1% of the property value, capped at a maximum of ₹30,000 for properties valued above ₹30 lakh.
Does GST apply on top of stamp duty for a land purchase?
No. GST and stamp duty are entirely separate levies — pure land sales are exempt from GST under Schedule III of the CGST Act, while stamp duty always applies regardless. See THE EDGE’s complete guide to GST on land for the full breakdown.
How often is the Ready Reckoner Rate revised?
Typically every year in April, by the Maharashtra government.
Citations & Sources
- ClearTax — “Stamp Duty and Registration Charges in Maharashtra 2026”
- Godrej Capital — “Stamp Duty and Registration Charges in Maharashtra 2026”
- Bajaj Finserv Markets — “What is the Ready Reckoner Rate 2026 & How Does It Affect Property Value?”
- 1acre.in — Maharashtra Stamp Duty Calculator 2026
- Maharashtra IGR (Inspector General of Registration) — e-ASR portal, igrmaharashtra.gov.in
Model Your Total Acquisition Cost Correctly
THE EDGE Developments helps investors verify RR rates and calculate true transaction costs before committing to any land purchase in the Karjat–MMR corridor.
Contact: connect@theedgedevelopments.com | +91-9664662938 | edgere.in
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