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CategoriesLand Investment

GST on Land and Plotted Development in India 2026: Complete Guide

THE EDGE — Direct Answer

The outright sale of land in India is not subject to GST — under Schedule III of the CGST Act 2017, “sale of land” is treated as neither a supply of goods nor a supply of services, so it falls entirely outside GST’s scope. This applies to plotted development plots too, provided what you are buying is genuinely land with a completed or non-existent construction component. GST becomes relevant only when a construction or works-contract element is bundled into the transaction — such as an under-construction villa, clubhouse, or internal infrastructure billed separately from the land itself, which can attract GST at rates typically between 1% and 18% depending on the exact structure. Stamp duty and registration charges are separate, state-level taxes that apply regardless of GST and are never replaced by it.

TL;DR — KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Pure land sale is outside GST entirely — Schedule III of the CGST Act excludes it from being treated as a supply.
  • GST applies to construction/works-contract components, not to the land value — this matters for plotted developments with amenities or built structures.
  • Ready-to-move properties with an Occupancy Certificate are GST-exempt; only under-construction components attract GST.
  • Stamp duty and registration are unaffected by GST — they are separate state-level levies charged regardless.

One of the most common questions land buyers ask is whether GST applies on top of the price they’ve negotiated. For a straightforward plot purchase, the answer is usually no — but the moment a developer bundles construction, infrastructure development, or amenities into the sale, GST can enter the picture in ways that are easy to miss until the final invoice.

Reading time: 10 minutes | Last updated: July 2026 | Author: Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO, THE EDGE Developments

Schedule III of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 lists activities or transactions that are treated as neither a supply of goods nor a supply of services — and therefore fall entirely outside the GST framework. Entry 5 of this schedule covers “sale of land and, subject to clause (b) of paragraph 5 of Schedule II, sale of building.” This is why a plain land transaction in India carries no GST component, regardless of the sale value. — Source: CGST Act 2017, Schedule III

Why doesn’t GST apply to land sales?

GST is a tax on the supply of goods and services. Land itself is immovable property — it is neither “goods” (which must be movable) nor a “service” under GST’s statutory definitions. Schedule III explicitly carves land sales out of the GST net, which is why registration of a plain sale deed for land does not generate a GST liability, no matter how large the transaction.

This is distinct from stamp duty, which is a state subject charged on the instrument of transfer (the sale deed itself) and has nothing to do with GST’s central framework. Every land transaction still attracts stamp duty and registration charges — GST exemption does not reduce or replace these.

When does GST become relevant in a plotted development purchase?

GST enters the picture the moment a construction or works-contract element is part of what you’re paying for — not the land itself, but something built on or for it.

Scenario GST treatment
Pure land/plot sale, no construction obligation No GST — outside Schedule III scope entirely
Ready-to-move property with Occupancy/Completion Certificate already issued No GST — sale of completed immovable property is exempt
Under-construction villa or built unit sold before completion certificate GST applicable on the construction value — typically 5% without input tax credit for standard residential, 1% for affordable housing category
Development/infrastructure charges billed as a separate works contract (roads, common amenities under construction) GST typically applicable on that specific component at works-contract rates

Rates and treatment reflect the GST Council’s 2019 restructuring of real estate GST rates and general CGST Act principles; specific project structuring can affect actual liability — always confirm the applicable rate with your developer’s GST invoice and, where material, a chartered accountant.

How do developers typically structure plotted developments to manage GST?

Most organised plotted-development projects structure the transaction as a sale of land with infrastructure already completed at the time of sale — internal roads, boundary walls, and utility connections built and paid for by the developer before individual plots are sold. When this is the case, the buyer is purchasing completed land, not commissioning ongoing construction, and the transaction falls under the land-sale exemption.

Where a project instead sells plots with infrastructure development ongoing or promised as part of the buyer’s payment obligation, tax authorities and various Advance Ruling decisions have taken the view that the development-charge component can be treated as a taxable supply, separate from the land value itself. This is an area where structuring matters — buyers should ask specifically whether infrastructure is complete at the time of booking, and whether any portion of the price is invoiced separately as a development or construction charge.

What about GST on brokerage and legal services?

Unlike the land itself, professional services connected to a land transaction — brokerage/agency commission, legal fees for title verification and drafting, and architect or surveyor fees — are standard taxable services under GST, typically at 18%. These are charged on the service fee, not on the land value, and are a routine, expected cost separate from the land-sale exemption discussed above.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to pay GST when buying a plot of land in India?

No. The outright sale of land is excluded from GST under Schedule III of the CGST Act 2017. You will still pay stamp duty and registration charges, which are separate state-level taxes unaffected by GST.

Is GST applicable on plotted development projects?

Generally no, if what you’re buying is completed land with infrastructure already built. GST can apply if a construction or development-charge component is billed separately as an ongoing works contract rather than being part of a completed land sale.

What GST rate applies to under-construction property in India?

Following the GST Council’s 2019 restructuring, under-construction residential property typically attracts 5% GST without input tax credit for standard housing, and 1% for projects qualifying under the affordable housing category. Ready-to-move property with a completion certificate is GST-exempt.

Does GST replace stamp duty on a land purchase?

No. GST and stamp duty are entirely separate levies — GST is a central tax on supply of goods/services, while stamp duty is a state tax on the transfer instrument. Land sales are GST-exempt but always attract stamp duty and registration charges.

Is GST charged on brokerage fees for a land transaction?

Yes. Brokerage, legal, and professional service fees connected to a land transaction are standard taxable services, typically at 18% GST, charged on the service fee — this is separate from and unaffected by the land sale itself being GST-exempt.

Citations & Sources

  1. Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 — Schedule III
  2. GST Council — 33rd & 34th GST Council Meeting decisions on real estate GST rates (2019)
  3. Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) — GST FAQs on real estate sector

Buy Clear-Title Land With No Hidden Tax Surprises

THE EDGE Developments sells completed, RERA-registered plotted land in the Karjat–MMR corridor — infrastructure built before sale, transparent pricing with no ambiguous development charges.

Contact: connect@theedgedevelopments.com | +91-9664662938 | edgere.in

This article is general information, not tax advice. Consult a qualified chartered accountant for your specific transaction.


Dark hero image with the title 'Developer vs Land Aggregator, Who to Trust' overlaid; logo 'The Edge' bottom-right, conveys article topic.
CategoriesMarket Insights

Real Estate Developer vs Land Aggregator vs Broker: Who Should You Actually Trust?

THE EDGE — Direct Answer

In India’s land market, three entities sell property: a RERA-registered developer, a land aggregator, and a broker — each with fundamentally different accountability. A RERA developer is your safest option: they maintain a mandatory escrow account holding 70% of buyer payments, have a legally binding possession date, and are answerable to MahaRERA. A land aggregator operates in a regulatory grey zone — they pool parcels from multiple owners and often sell before NA conversion or RERA registration is complete, leaving your money unprotected. A broker is a commission-paid intermediary who works for the developer, not you — never rely on them for due diligence. The rule: only pay a developer with a valid MahaRERA registration number. Verify it independently on maharerait.maharashtra.gov.in before paying any amount, including a token.

TL;DR — KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Three sellers exist: a RERA developer (full legal accountability), a land aggregator (grey zone, little protection), and a broker (commission-driven, no accountability).
  • Only a RERA-registered developer offers escrow, binding delivery dates, and MahaRERA recourse.
  • A broker works for the developer’s commission — never expect them to do your due diligence; hire your own advocate.
  • Never pay before RERA registration is complete and active — it is illegal for a developer to take bookings first.

In India’s land market, you will encounter three types of entities selling you plots: a RERA-registered developer, a land aggregator, and a broker. Each has a fundamentally different accountability structure, legal standing, and incentive system. Understanding who you are dealing with — and what that means for your protection — is the single most important buyer intelligence decision. This guide breaks down each role, what they can and cannot do for you, and who to trust with your money.

Reading time: 12 minutes | Last updated: July 2026 | Author: Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO, THE EDGE Developments

The land aggregator model is the grey zone of Indian real estate — not quite a developer, not quite a broker, not always RERA-registered, and often not legally accountable in the way a registered developer is. Buyers who confuse a land aggregator with a RERA developer consistently end up with the same problems: delayed possession, incomplete amenities, and no legal recourse. — Girish Chhalwani, THE EDGE Developments

What is the difference between a developer, aggregator, and broker?

A RERA developer builds and sells with full legal accountability and escrow; a land aggregator pools parcels and sells plots in a regulatory grey zone; a broker is a commission-paid intermediary with no accountability to you. The table shows how they differ.

Role What They Do RERA Registration Legal Accountability
RERA-Registered Developer Buys land, obtains all approvals (NA, layout sanction, RERA registration), develops and sells plots with full legal infrastructure Mandatory (for projects above threshold) Full — bound by RERA Act, escrow obligation, delivery commitments
Land Aggregator Pools together multiple private land parcels and sells them as a “project” — often without full development infrastructure or RERA registration Often absent or selective Limited — operates in regulatory grey zone; may or may not have RERA
Broker / Channel Partner Facilitates transactions between buyers and sellers or developer projects; earns commission from developer or seller Must be RERA-registered (RERA Agents) for registered projects None — broker is not a principal to the transaction

What does a RERA-registered developer actually guarantee?

A RERA-registered developer has verified land title, approvals in place, a mandatory escrow account, a legally binding possession date, quarterly progress reporting, and a MahaRERA grievance route. This is your gold standard.

  • Land ownership verified: MahaRERA verifies the developer has clear title or development rights over the project land
  • Approvals in place: Layout sanction, NA conversion, environmental clearance, and other approvals must be submitted at registration
  • Escrow account mandated: 70% of buyer payments go into a designated escrow — withdrawable only in proportion to construction completion
  • Possession date committed: A legally binding possession date with penalty for delay
  • Quarterly progress reporting: The developer must update MahaRERA quarterly on construction progress
  • Grievance mechanism: Buyers can file complaints with MahaRERA and seek compensation

Every plot you buy should be in a RERA-registered project from a developer with a verified track record.

Why is the land aggregator grey zone dangerous?

Land aggregators assemble parcels from multiple owners and often start selling before NA conversion, layout approval, or RERA registration are complete — funding the legal process with your money and leaving you without escrow protection or a binding delivery date.

How They Work

Land aggregators typically:

  • Identify agricultural or NA land from multiple village owners
  • Sign MOUs or option agreements with those landowners
  • Begin marketing and selling “plots” in the assembled parcel before completing all legal approvals
  • Use collected buyer funds to complete NA conversion, layout approvals, and other formalities — essentially funding the legal process with your money

Why This Is Risky

  • NA conversion not complete at booking: You pay for a “NA plot” that is still agricultural land
  • No RERA registration: Your money is not protected by escrow; there is no legally binding delivery date
  • Landowner disputes: The aggregator’s MOU with original landowners may not survive disputes — you could end up with a plot whose underlying ownership is contested
  • No legal recourse: Without RERA registration, you cannot file a MahaRERA complaint; you must approach civil courts (expensive and slow)

How to Identify a Land Aggregator (Not Developer)

  • Cannot provide a MahaRERA RERA registration number
  • Shows “under process” for NA conversion or layout approval
  • Agreement is an MOU or “Expression of Interest” rather than a registered Agreement for Sale
  • Multiple landowners’ names appearing in the title documentation for different plots
  • No mention of escrow account in payment terms

What can a broker do — and what can’t they?

A broker (Channel Partner) is a sales intermediary paid 1–3% commission by the developer or seller. Their incentive is to close the sale, not protect you — so never expect them to do your legal due diligence.

What a RERA-Registered Agent Can Do

  • Show you RERA-registered projects and provide accurate project information (as disclosed by developer on RERA portal)
  • Facilitate introductions, site visits, and documentation collection
  • Earn the developer’s agreed commission

What a Broker Cannot Do — and You Should Not Expect Them To

  • Guarantee the developer’s delivery — the broker has no legal accountability for that
  • Perform independent legal due diligence on your behalf — they are not your advocate
  • Represent your interests in a dispute — they work for the developer’s commission
  • Be held responsible if the project fails or the developer misrepresents

RERA Agent Registration

Under RERA, real estate agents who facilitate sales in RERA-registered projects must themselves register with MahaRERA. If a broker is selling a RERA project, verify their RERA agent registration number. Unregistered agents operating in RERA projects is itself a violation.

Who should actually get your money? The trust hierarchy

In order: a track-record RERA developer first; a clean-title private NA plot with independent verification second; a land aggregator only with deep legal scrutiny; and never a pre-RERA, pre-approval offer.

  1. RERA-registered developer, verified track record, MahaRERA-compliant project — Maximum trust, maximum protection. This is where your money belongs.
  2. Private NA plot with clear title, 30-year title search, independent advocate verification — Acceptable if legal process is rigorous. No RERA protection, but clean title reduces risk.
  3. Land aggregator with partial approvals, no RERA — High risk. Avoid unless you have deep independent legal verification and are comfortable with the regulatory exposure.
  4. Pre-launch, pre-RERA registration, pre-approval offers — Do not pay. Booking before RERA registration is a RERA violation by the developer and exposes you to full default risk.

What should you ask any land seller before paying?

Ask for the MahaRERA number, the committed possession date, the original NA order, the escrow account details, past delivery records, and whether you can appoint your own advocate. Verify each independently.

  1. What is your MahaRERA registration number? (Verify independently on maharerait.maharashtra.gov.in)
  2. What is the possession date committed on the RERA registration?
  3. Is the land NA-converted? Show me the original NA order.
  4. What is the escrow account number and which bank holds it?
  5. What are your previous completed projects? Can you show me delivery records?
  6. Who is your legal advocate for this project? Can I appoint my own?

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a developer and a land aggregator in India?

A RERA-registered developer has full legal approvals, mandatory escrow, binding delivery commitments, and regulatory accountability under RERA. A land aggregator assembles land from multiple owners and sells plots — often without complete approvals or RERA registration, operating in a legal grey zone with far less buyer protection.

Can I trust a real estate broker to do due diligence on my behalf?

No — a broker’s incentive is to earn their commission from the developer or seller. They are not your fiduciary. Always hire an independent property advocate who is paid by you alone for legal due diligence. Never rely on the developer’s or broker’s recommended advocate.

What is RERA agent registration and why does it matter?

Under RERA, real estate agents who facilitate sales in RERA-registered projects must themselves be registered with the state RERA authority. Verify your broker’s RERA agent number on maharerait.maharashtra.gov.in. An unregistered agent operating in RERA projects is violating RERA law.

Is it safe to book a plot before RERA registration is completed?

No — it is actually illegal for a developer to accept bookings before RERA registration is complete. Any payment before RERA registration gives you zero regulatory protection. If the project subsequently fails to register (or registers with different terms), you have only civil court recourse. Always verify RERA registration is complete and active before paying any amount, including token.

About the Author — Girish Chhalwani

Girish Chhalwani is the Founder & CEO of THE EDGE Developments, a RERA-registered plotted-development company in the Karjat–MMR corridor. With 20+ years in Maharashtra land acquisition, NA conversion, and infrastructure-led land investment, he advises HNI and NRI investors on land strategy near Mumbai.

· About THE EDGE Developments

Buy from a RERA-Registered Developer You Can Verify

THE EDGE Developments is a RERA-registered developer with NA-converted plots, escrow-backed payments, and full documentation in the Karjat corridor. Ask us for our MahaRERA number and delivery track record before you decide.

Verify & Book a Consultation →

NRI family with property-sale papers and a wire-transfer receipt — NRI selling property in India, tax and repatriation
CategoriesNRI Guides

NRI Selling Property in India: Tax, TDS, Repatriation and How to Bring Money Home

THE EDGE — Direct Answer

When an NRI sells property in India, the buyer must deduct TDS before paying — approximately 13–18% for long-term capital gains (property held 24+ months) or 30%+ for short-term gains. The most important step is applying for a Lower Deduction Certificate (Form 13) before the sale to prevent excess TDS from being locked up for 8–12 months in a refund cycle. After the sale, file an Indian Income Tax Return to claim Section 54F exemption (reinvest in residential property) or Section 54EC (invest up to ₹50 lakh in NHAI/REC bonds within 6 months). To repatriate sale proceeds abroad, submit Form 15CA and 15CB to your Indian bank — up to USD 1 million per year from an NRO account, unlimited from an NRE account. Total processing typically takes 5–15 business days.

TL;DR — KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • The buyer must deduct TDS of ~13–18% (LTCG) or 30%+ (STCG) before paying an NRI seller.
  • Apply for a Lower Deduction Certificate (Form 13) BEFORE the sale to avoid locking up cash in excess TDS.
  • Repatriate via Form 15CA/15CB — up to USD 1M/year from an NRO account, unlimited from an NRE account.
  • File an Indian ITR even if TDS was fully deducted, to claim refunds and Section 54F/54EC exemptions.

When an NRI sells property in India, the buyer must deduct TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) at 12.5–23% before paying — and the NRI must file an Indian Income Tax Return to claim any excess refund. After tax compliance, repatriation of sale proceeds to your overseas account is governed by RBI rules. This guide walks through the entire process — from sale to wire transfer abroad.

Reading time: 13 minutes | Last updated: July 2026 | Author: Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO, THE EDGE Developments

The most common mistake NRI property sellers make is not applying for a Lower TDS Certificate before the sale. If the buyer deducts 20–23% TDS at source and the NRI’s actual tax liability is only 12.5%, they must wait 8–12 months for an ITR refund. A Lower Deduction Certificate from the Income Tax Department, applied for before the sale, allows TDS to be deducted at the actual liability rate — dramatically improving cash flow. — Source: Income Tax Department Circular, NRI TDS Guidelines 2024

What is the step-by-step process for an NRI to sell property in India?

Five steps: calculate your capital gains tax, apply for a Lower TDS Certificate before selling, execute the registered sale, file your Indian ITR, and repatriate the proceeds using Form 15CA/15CB. Doing them in this order protects your cash flow.

Step 1: Determine Capital Gains Tax Liability

Before anything else, calculate what you owe:

  • LTCG (held 24+ months): 12.5% flat rate on gains (post-Budget 2024); no indexation for properties acquired after July 23, 2024
  • STCG (held under 24 months): Taxed at applicable income slab rate (30% at highest bracket + surcharge + cess)
  • Add surcharge (10–37% of tax depending on gain amount) and cess (4%) to arrive at effective rate

Step 2: Apply for Lower TDS Certificate (Form 13) — Do This First

Before the sale, apply to the Income Tax Department for a Lower Deduction Certificate under Section 197. This certificate specifies the TDS rate applicable based on your actual tax liability — preventing over-deduction.

Timeline: Apply 30–60 days before expected sale date. Income Tax Department typically processes in 2–4 weeks.

Documents required: PAN, calculation of capital gain, purchase documents, sale agreement draft

Without this certificate: buyer deducts TDS at default NRI rates (significantly higher than actual liability in many cases).

Step 3: Execute the Sale

  • Agree on sale price and terms with buyer
  • Execute registered Agreement for Sale (AFS)
  • Buyer deducts TDS (as per Lower Deduction Certificate or standard rates) and deposits with Income Tax Department via Challan 26QB
  • Buyer provides TDS certificate (Form 16B) to seller
  • Execute and register Sale Deed at Sub-Registrar office in India (NRI can attend in person or via registered POA)

Step 4: File Indian Income Tax Return (ITR)

NRI sellers must file ITR in India for the financial year of sale — even if all tax was deducted at source. Benefits of filing:

  • Claim refund of any excess TDS deducted
  • Claim Section 54F exemption (if reinvesting in residential property)
  • Claim Section 54EC exemption (if investing in NHAI/REC bonds)
  • Provide documentation for repatriation clearance

File ITR before July 31 of the assessment year following the sale. You can file online through incometax.gov.in.

Step 5: Repatriate Funds from India to Abroad

What can be repatriated:

  • Sale proceeds from the sale of immovable property (up to 2 residential properties per NRI per year)
  • Repatriation limit: USD 1 million per financial year for NRO account (which includes all sources)
  • From NRE account: freely repatriable with no upper limit

Documents required for repatriation:

  • Form 15CA (self-declaration) and Form 15CB (CA certificate) — uploaded to Income Tax portal
  • Proof of property ownership and sale
  • Evidence that TDS was deducted/paid (Form 16B / Challan 26QB receipt)
  • ITR filing acknowledgement for the relevant year
  • Original FIRC(s) from the purchase — proving original funds were remitted from abroad

What TDS rates apply to NRI property sellers in 2026?

For LTCG, TDS runs ~13% to ~18% of the sale value depending on the surcharge band; for STCG it starts at 30% and can exceed 42%. A Lower Deduction Certificate reduces this to your actual liability.

Sale Type Standard TDS Rate Effective Rate with Surcharge & Cess
LTCG (held 24+ months, sale consideration ≤₹50L) 12.5% ~13.0%
LTCG (sale consideration ₹50L–₹1Cr) 12.5% + 10% surcharge ~14.3%
LTCG (sale consideration ₹1Cr–₹2Cr) 12.5% + 15% surcharge ~15.0%
LTCG (sale consideration ₹2Cr–₹5Cr) 12.5% + 25% surcharge ~16.3%
LTCG (sale consideration above ₹5Cr) 12.5% + 37% surcharge ~17.9%
STCG (held less than 24 months) 30% ~31.2% to 42.7% with max surcharge

A Lower Deduction Certificate can reduce these rates to actual liability. Consult a chartered accountant before any NRI property sale.

What exemptions can an NRI seller claim?

NRIs can claim the same LTCG exemptions as residents: Section 54F (reinvest the full sale consideration in an Indian residential property) and Section 54EC (invest up to ₹50 lakh in NHAI/REC bonds within 6 months).

Section 54F: Reinvest in Residential Property

Same as for residents: reinvest entire net sale consideration (not just gain) in a residential property within 1 year before or 2 years after sale (purchase) or 3 years (construction). Exempts entire LTCG. The new residential property must be in India.

Section 54EC: Infrastructure Bonds

Invest up to ₹50 lakh in NHAI or REC bonds within 6 months of sale. Exempt LTCG up to ₹50 lakh. 5-year lock-in period.

Can NRIs sell agricultural land they inherited?

Yes — NRIs who inherited agricultural land (or received it as a gift from a resident Indian) can sell it to a resident Indian only (not to another NRI). The sale proceeds can be credited to NRO account and repatriated within the USD 1 million annual limit after tax compliance.

Frequently Asked Questions

What TDS is deducted when NRI sells property in India?

For LTCG (held 24+ months): TDS ranges from ~13% to ~18% depending on sale value, due to surcharge on higher amounts. For STCG (held under 24 months): TDS at 30% plus surcharge and cess, which can reach 42%+. Apply for a Lower Deduction Certificate before sale to avoid over-deduction.

How does an NRI bring money to the US/UK/UAE after selling property in India?

File Form 15CA and 15CB with Income Tax portal. Submit to your Indian bank (NRO account) along with sale documents, Form 16B, ITR acknowledgement, and original FIRC from purchase. The bank will then execute the international wire transfer. Processing typically takes 5–15 business days.

How much money can an NRI repatriate from sale of property in India per year?

From an NRO account: up to USD 1 million per financial year (covering all sources including property sale proceeds). From an NRE account: unlimited repatriation (if original purchase was funded from NRE account or foreign remittance). There is no restriction on repatriation from NRE accounts.

Does an NRI need to file ITR in India when selling property?

Yes — if any capital gain arises from the sale, the NRI must file an ITR in India for that financial year. Even if TDS has been fully deducted, filing is necessary to claim exemptions (Section 54F, 54EC), claim any refund on excess TDS, and comply with Indian tax law.

About the Author — Girish Chhalwani

Girish Chhalwani is the Founder & CEO of THE EDGE Developments, a RERA-registered plotted-development company in the Karjat–MMR corridor. With 20+ years in Maharashtra land acquisition, NA conversion, and infrastructure-led land investment, he advises HNI and NRI investors on land strategy near Mumbai.

 ·  About THE EDGE Developments

Planning to Buy or Sell as an NRI?

THE EDGE Developments helps NRI investors buy, hold, and exit RERA-registered land near Mumbai with full tax and repatriation documentation. Speak with our team for a remote consultation.

Book an NRI Consultation →

This article is general information, not tax advice. Consult a qualified chartered accountant for your specific situation.

NRI Indian couple reviewing property documents abroad with a world map and mixed currency — NRI buying property in India
CategoriesNRI Guides

NRI Buying Property in India 2026: Step-by-Step Process, FEMA and Bank Rules

THE EDGE — Direct Answer

NRIs can freely buy residential property, commercial property, and NA (Non-Agricultural) plots in India without any RBI permission under FEMA. Agricultural land, farmhouses, and plantation property require prior RBI approval — which is rarely granted — and should be avoided. All payment must route through an NRE or NRO bank account; cash is banned under FEMA. The 8-step process: open an NRE/NRO account, get a PAN card, verify the property independently (7/12, NA order, RERA, encumbrance certificate), execute a notarised and apostilled Power of Attorney if not physically present in India, transfer funds and obtain the FIRC from your bank, register the Sale Deed, update mutation records (Ferfar) at the Talathi office, and complete post-purchase tax compliance. Keep every FIRC — it is mandatory for repatriation when you sell.

TL;DR — KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • NRIs can freely buy residential/commercial property and NA plots in India — no RBI permission needed.
  • Agricultural land, farmhouses and plantations need RBI approval (rarely granted) — avoid them.
  • All payment must route through an NRE/NRO account; cash is banned under FEMA.
  • Keep every FIRC and use an apostilled, India-registered POA if you cannot attend registration in person.

NRIs can freely buy residential and commercial property (including NA plots) in India without any special RBI permission. Agricultural land, farmhouses, and plantation properties require RBI approval — and are practically unavailable. This step-by-step guide covers the complete process — FEMA rules, which properties you can buy, how to pay, POA requirements, and the specific gotchas that catch NRI buyers off guard.

Reading time: 14 minutes | Last updated: July 2026 | Author: Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO, THE EDGE Developments

NRI investment in Indian real estate crossed ₹1.5 lakh crore in FY2024–25 — the highest in India’s recorded history. The combination of rupee depreciation (20–25% weaker vs 2015 for most major currencies), improving regulatory clarity under RERA, and robust infrastructure investment is making Indian property compelling for the diaspora. NRIs who bought NA plots near Mumbai in 2019–2021 have seen 120–180% appreciation in rupee terms — and even more in dollar or dirham terms. — Source: RBI Annual Report 2025, ANAROCK NRI Survey 2025

What properties can an NRI buy in India under FEMA?

NRIs can freely buy residential flats, commercial property, and NA plots — no RBI permission required. Agricultural land, farmhouses, and plantation property need prior RBI approval, which is rarely granted. FEMA is the Foreign Exchange Management Act that governs these rules.

Property Type Can NRI Buy? RBI Permission Needed?
Residential flat / apartment Yes, freely No
NA plot (Non-Agricultural) Yes, freely No
Commercial property / office Yes, freely No
Agricultural land No (general rule) Yes — prior RBI approval needed
Farmhouse No (general rule) Yes — prior RBI approval needed
Plantation property No (general rule) Yes — prior RBI approval needed
Inherited agricultural land Yes — can retain/sell, cannot buy No for inheritance; approval for purchase

OCI (Overseas Citizen of India) cardholders follow the same rules as NRIs for property purchase.

What is the step-by-step process for an NRI to buy property in India?

The process has eight steps: open an NRE/NRO account, get a PAN, verify the property, execute a POA if absent, transfer funds and obtain the FIRC, register the sale deed, update revenue records, and complete post-purchase compliance.

Step 1: Open an NRE/NRO Account in India

All property purchase payments must route through an Indian bank account. NRIs need either:

  • NRE account (Non-Resident External): For foreign income remitted to India; fully repatriable
  • NRO account (Non-Resident Ordinary): For India-sourced income (rental, salary from Indian employer, etc.); limited repatriation (up to USD 1 million/year)

Most NRI property purchases are funded through NRE accounts — cleanest for repatriation of sale proceeds later.

Step 2: Get Your PAN Card

A PAN (Permanent Account Number) is mandatory for any property purchase above ₹5 lakh in India. NRIs can apply for PAN online through the NSDL portal with passport and overseas address proof. Allow 2–4 weeks for delivery.

Step 3: Shortlist and Verify the Property

  • For NA plots: Verify 7/12 extract, NA order, RERA registration, encumbrance certificate
  • Confirm the property is not agricultural land (NRI cannot buy without RBI approval)
  • Engage an independent property advocate in India (not the developer’s advocate)
  • Check MahaRERA registration for plotted development projects

Step 4: Execute Power of Attorney (If Not Present in India)

If you cannot be physically present in India for the registration, execute a Power of Attorney (POA) authorising a trusted person in India to sign on your behalf.

POA for property transactions must be:

  • Executed in your country of residence before a Notary Public
  • Apostilled (for Hague Convention countries: USA, UK, UAE, Australia, Canada, Singapore, etc.) OR attested by the Indian Embassy/Consulate
  • Adjudicated and registered at the Sub-Registrar office in India before it can be used for property registration

Step 5: Fund Transfer and FIRC

Transfer funds from your overseas bank account to your NRE/NRO account in India. When making payment to the seller, obtain a FIRC (Foreign Inward Remittance Certificate) from your Indian bank. This document proves the funds came from abroad and is essential for repatriation when you sell.

Step 6: Token, Agreement for Sale, Registration

  • Pay 10% token after RERA and legal verification
  • Execute registered Agreement for Sale (AFS) — contains possession date, price, payment schedule
  • Pay stamp duty and registration charges (6% + 1% in most Maharashtra cases)
  • Execute and register Sale Deed at Sub-Registrar office in India (you or POA holder must be present)

Step 7: Update Revenue Records

After registration, file for mutation (Ferfar) at the Talathi office to update the 7/12 extract with your name as owner. This is separate from the sub-registrar registration and must be done proactively.

Step 8: Compliance Post-Purchase

  • File Indian Income Tax Return (ITR) if you have any Indian income — including notional rental value of a second property
  • Declare foreign assets in the country of residence as required by local tax laws (FATCA in USA, FBAR for US taxpayers)
  • Maintain all purchase documents for future repatriation

How can an NRI legally pay for property in India?

Payment must come through banking channels into an NRE/NRO account. Foreign currency notes, traveller’s cheques, and cash are all prohibited under FEMA and PMLA.

  • Remittance from overseas through normal banking channels (to NRE/NRO account) — most common
  • Funds from NRE or NRO account
  • Foreign currency itself — not permitted; must be converted to INR first
  • Traveller’s cheques or foreign currency notes — not permitted for property transactions
  • Payment in cash — not permitted under FEMA and PMLA regulations

What TDS rules apply when NRIs transact property?

When an NRI sells property, the buyer must deduct TDS at 12.5%+ (LTCG) or 30%+ (STCG), plus surcharge and cess. If you buy from an NRI seller, this compliance obligation is yours.

  • LTCG transactions (held 24+ months): 12.5% + surcharge + cess (effective 14–23% depending on sale value)
  • STCG transactions: 30% + surcharge + cess

What red flags should NRI buyers watch for?

Watch for cash-payment pressure, verbal POA, agricultural land mislabelled as “RERA plot,” and missing FIRCs — each can trigger FEMA penalties or block future repatriation.

  • Pressure to pay in cash: Any portion of cash payment violates FEMA and can complicate future repatriation. Insist on 100% cheque/RTGS through NRE/NRO account.
  • Verbal POA: Never rely on verbal authority. All POA must be properly documented, notarised, apostilled, and registered in India.
  • Agricultural land offered as “RERA plot”: Verify NA status independently. An NRI buying agricultural land without RBI approval violates FEMA and attracts penalties.
  • No FIRC: Always obtain FIRC for every payment. Without it, repatriation of sale proceeds will face RBI documentation challenges.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can NRI buy land in India without RBI permission?

Yes — NRIs can freely buy residential, commercial property and NA plots without any RBI permission. Agricultural land, farmhouses, and plantation properties require prior RBI approval, which is generally not granted. NRIs should only buy NA-converted plots, not agricultural land.

What is the process for NRI to buy property in India?

Key steps: (1) Open NRE/NRO account, (2) Get PAN card, (3) Verify property legally (7/12, NA order, RERA), (4) Execute notarised and apostilled POA if not present in India, (5) Transfer funds via NRE/NRO account and obtain FIRC, (6) Register Sale Deed via POA holder, (7) Update mutation in revenue records.

Can NRI buy agricultural land in Maharashtra?

No — NRIs cannot purchase agricultural land in Maharashtra (or anywhere in India) without prior approval from the Reserve Bank of India. This approval is rarely granted. NRIs can purchase NA plots freely. Inherited agricultural land can be retained or sold, but not purchased.

How does an NRI repatriate money after selling property in India?

Sale proceeds from NRI property sale can be repatriated via NRE account (if original purchase was funded from NRE account or foreign remittance). Form 15CA/CB is required. Maintain all FIRCs from purchase for smooth repatriation.

About the Author — Girish Chhalwani

Girish Chhalwani is the Founder & CEO of THE EDGE Developments, a RERA-registered plotted-development company in the Karjat–MMR corridor. With 20+ years in Maharashtra land acquisition, NA conversion, and infrastructure-led land investment, he advises HNI and NRI investors on land strategy near Mumbai.

 ·  About THE EDGE Developments

NRI-Ready Plots in the Karjat–MMR Corridor

THE EDGE Developments helps NRI investors buy RERA-registered, NA-converted plots near Mumbai — with FEMA-compliant payment routing, POA support, and full documentation. Speak with our team for a remote consultation.

Book an NRI Consultation →

RERA registration documents with a seal and a buyer reviewing papers with a developer — what is RERA buyer protection
CategoriesMarket Insights

What Is RERA? How It Protects Buyers and What to Check Before You Sign

THE EDGE — Direct Answer

RERA — the Real Estate Regulation and Development Act 2016 — requires every real estate developer to register their project with the state authority before any marketing or sale, hold 70% of buyer payments in a designated escrow account withdrawable only against construction progress, commit to a legally binding possession date with delay compensation at SBI MCLR + 2% per year, and use a standard sale agreement format. In Maharashtra, MahaRERA has registered over 48,000 projects and resolved over 28,000 complaints as of 2025. Before paying any amount — including a booking token — verify the project on maharerait.maharashtra.gov.in. Plotted development projects above 500 sq.m are also covered: NA plot buyers in branded projects have full RERA protection. Selling without RERA registration is a criminal offence under Section 59 of the Act.

TL;DR — KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • RERA (Real Estate Regulation and Development Act, 2016) legally forces developers to register projects, hold 70% of your money in escrow, and compensate you for delays.
  • Verify any project free at maharerait.maharashtra.gov.in before paying even a booking token.
  • Plotted projects above 500 sq.m of land must be MahaRERA-registered — so this protects NA-plot buyers, not just flat buyers.
  • RERA does not guarantee price appreciation or resolve land title disputes — do separate title due diligence.

RERA (Real Estate Regulatory Authority) is India’s real estate regulation law, enacted in 2016, that requires developers to register projects, maintain escrow accounts for your funds, and deliver what they promise — with legal penalties if they do not. In Maharashtra, MahaRERA has been one of the most active and effective state RERA implementations. Here is everything you need to know before you sign any real estate agreement.

Reading time: 12 minutes | Last updated: July 2026 | Author: Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO, THE EDGE Developments

Before RERA, Indian real estate buyers had no standardised protection. Developers could change layouts, delay indefinitely, divert your funds to other projects, and sell the same unit to multiple buyers. RERA (Real Estate Regulation and Development Act 2016) ended all of this — or at least gave buyers enforceable legal recourse when it happens. — Source: Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, RERA Impact Report 2024

What does RERA actually do to protect buyers?

RERA gives buyers seven enforceable protections — mandatory registration, fund escrow, a standard agreement, delay liability, defect liability, a complaint mechanism, and disclosure obligations. Below is what each means in practice.

1. Mandatory Project Registration

Any real estate project with more than 500 sq.m of land or 8 units must be registered with the state RERA authority before any sale or marketing. In Maharashtra, this is MahaRERA (maharerait.maharashtra.gov.in). Selling without RERA registration is a criminal offence.

What this means for you: Before paying any amount — even a booking token — search the project on MahaRERA. If it does not appear, do not pay.

2. Escrow Account for 70% of Funds

Developers must deposit 70% of all money received from buyers into a designated escrow account. Funds from this account can only be withdrawn in proportion to construction completion — verified by a chartered engineer and architect. This prevents fund diversion to other projects (the most common cause of project failure before RERA).

3. Standardised Sale Agreement

RERA mandates a standard format for the Agreement for Sale. Developers cannot use one-sided agreements with excessive clauses. Key protected terms:

  • Penalty for buyer delay cannot exceed penalty for developer delay
  • Possession date must be stated clearly in the agreement
  • Carpet area (not super built-up) must be stated

4. Possession Date Liability

If a developer misses the promised possession date, buyers are entitled to either:

  • Full refund with interest (SBI MCLR + 2%), or
  • Continue the project with interest compensation at SBI MCLR + 2% per year for the delay period

The developer cannot simply say “project delayed — wait.” They are liable to compensate.

5. Structural Defect Liability for 5 Years

After possession, if any structural defect is found within 5 years, the developer must repair it at no cost to the buyer. This applies to built residential properties and constructed villas.

6. Complaint and Grievance Mechanism

Any buyer can file a complaint with MahaRERA online — free of charge. MahaRERA adjudicating officers have the power to order refunds, interest payments, and compensation. The Appellate Tribunal can hear appeals. This formal mechanism replaced the earlier approach of filing civil suits (which took years).

7. Developer Disclosure Obligations

Every registered project on MahaRERA must display:

  • Land title status and encumbrances
  • Layout plans and building permissions
  • List of approvals obtained and pending
  • Quarterly construction progress updates
  • Financial accounts of the project

What is MahaRERA and how effective has it been?

MahaRERA is Maharashtra’s state Real Estate Regulatory Authority — and one of India’s most effective implementations. As of 2025 it has registered over 48,000 projects and disposed of the majority of complaints filed.

  • Projects registered: Over 48,000 as of 2025
  • Complaints disposed: Over 28,000 (78% disposed rate)
  • Conciliation forum: MahaRERA’s mediation mechanism has resolved thousands of disputes without formal adjudication
  • Plotted development registration: Mandatory for plots above 500 sq.m land in Maharashtra since 2017

How do I check if a project is RERA registered in Maharashtra?

Go to maharerait.maharashtra.gov.in, open “Registered Projects,” and search by project name, developer name, or RERA number. Verify status, completion date, layout plan, and any complaints — all before you pay.

  1. Go to maharerait.maharashtra.gov.in
  2. Click on “Registered Projects” or “Search Project”
  3. Enter the project name, developer name, or RERA registration number
  4. Check: Project status (active/lapsed), completion date, number of units registered, developer details
  5. Download the registered layout plan and compare with what the developer is showing you
  6. Check if the project has any complaints filed against it

What should I check on MahaRERA before I sign?

Check nine things before signing: valid registration, realistic completion date, developer track record, open complaints, matching layout plan, disclosed land title, confirmed NA status, visible escrow details, and the agent’s own RERA licence.

  1. RERA registration number is valid (not expired or lapsed)
  2. Project completion date: What date has the developer committed? Is it realistic?
  3. Developer track record: How many previous projects registered? All delivered on time?
  4. Complaints filed: Any open complaints against this project or developer?
  5. Layout plan matches: The plan on RERA matches what you are being shown on-site
  6. Land title disclosed: Is the land title status marked as “clear” or are there encumbrances listed?
  7. NA status confirmed: Is the land listed as NA converted on the MahaRERA registration?
  8. Escrow account details visible: RERA registration must include escrow account information
  9. Agent registration: The real estate agent selling to you must also be RERA-registered — check their license number

What does RERA NOT protect you from?

RERA governs developer accountability — not market outcomes. It does not guarantee appreciation, fix falling demand, or adjudicate land-title disputes, and it does not cover sub-threshold or already-completed projects.

  • Price appreciation: RERA does not guarantee your plot will increase in value
  • Market risk: If demand falls in your area, RERA cannot fix that
  • Land value disputes: RERA governs developer accountability — it does not adjudicate title disputes
  • Projects below threshold: Projects under 500 sq.m of land or fewer than 8 units do not require RERA registration
  • Already-completed projects: RERA does not apply retrospectively to delivered projects

Frequently Asked Questions

Is RERA registration mandatory for all real estate projects in India?

Yes, for all projects with more than 500 sq.m land area or 8 units, RERA registration is mandatory before any marketing or sale. In Maharashtra, even plotted development projects above this threshold require MahaRERA registration. Selling without RERA registration is a criminal offence under Section 59 of RERA.

How do I check if a project is RERA registered in Maharashtra?

Visit maharerait.maharashtra.gov.in → “Registered Projects” → search by project name or developer name. You will see the RERA number, project status, completion date, and any complaints filed.

What can I do if my developer has violated RERA in Maharashtra?

File a complaint on MahaRERA’s online portal (maharerait.maharashtra.gov.in → “File Complaint”). You can claim refund with interest, delay compensation, or seek specific performance. MahaRERA’s Conciliation Forum may resolve your issue faster than formal adjudication.

Does RERA apply to land purchases (NA plots)?

Yes — in Maharashtra, plotted development projects with more than 500 sq.m of total land area must register under MahaRERA. This is a crucial protection for buyers of NA plots in branded projects. Always verify MahaRERA registration before booking any plot in a developer’s project.

About the Author — Girish Chhalwani

Girish Chhalwani is the Founder & CEO of THE EDGE Developments, a RERA-registered plotted-development company in the Karjat–MMR corridor. With 20+ years in Maharashtra land acquisition, NA conversion, and infrastructure-led land investment, he advises HNI and NRI investors on land strategy near Mumbai.

 ·  About THE EDGE Developments

Buy Only RERA-Registered Plots in the Karjat Corridor

THE EDGE Developments offers MahaRERA-registered, NA-converted plots with escrow-backed payments and full title disclosure. Speak with our team for the RERA number, current pricing, and a guided site visit.

Book a Consultation →

Bank building and a plot-loan meeting between banker and buyer — how to get a plot loan in India 2026
CategoriesLand Investment

How to Get a Plot Loan in India 2026: Banks, Eligibility and Hidden Rules

THE EDGE — Direct Answer

A plot loan finances 60–70% of a bank’s assessed value of an NA (Non-Agricultural) plot at 8.5–11.5% interest — higher than a standard home loan’s rate. Banks will not finance agricultural land; only NA-converted plots are eligible. The critical trap: banks use their own valuers who typically price the plot 20–30% below market value, so the actual loan disbursed will be less than 65% of what you paid — budget for this shortfall with your own funds. Most banks also require construction to begin within 2–3 years of disbursement or they can recall the loan. RERA-registered plots get faster approval and better LTV. Major lenders: SBI (8.5–9.8%), HDFC (8.7–10.2%), ICICI (8.9–10.5%), Bajaj Housing Finance (8.6–10.5%). Maximum tenure is 15 years. No Section 24 interest deduction applies during the pure land-holding phase.

TL;DR — KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • A plot loan finances 60–70% of an NA plot’s bank-valued price at 8.5–11.5% interest — higher than a home loan.
  • Agricultural land is not eligible — only NA plots — and most banks require construction to start within 2–3 years.
  • LTV is on the bank’s valuation (often 20–30% below market), so budget a larger down payment.
  • RERA-registered plots and a 700+ CIBIL score get faster approval and better terms.

A plot loan (also called a land loan or LAP — Loan Against Property) lets you borrow up to 60–70% of the market value of an NA plot to finance your purchase. Interest rates in 2026 range from 8.5% to 11.5% depending on bank and borrower profile — higher than home loans. This guide covers eligibility, which banks offer the best terms, and the hidden rules that catch buyers off guard.

Reading time: 11 minutes | Last updated: July 2026 | Author: Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO, THE EDGE Developments

Plot loans are significantly less standardised than home loans in India. Terms, LTV ratios, and permitted uses vary widely across lenders. A borrower who does not understand the conditions — particularly the construction clause and the agricultural land exclusion — can find their loan recalled or their interest rate revised upward post-disbursement. — Source: RBI Banking Supervision Annual Report 2025

How is a plot loan different from a home loan?

A plot loan finances only NA land at a higher rate (8.5–11.5%), a lower LTV (60–70%), and a shorter tenure (15 years) — and it usually carries a construction obligation and no interest tax deduction while you just hold the land.

Parameter Plot Loan Home Loan
Purpose Purchase of land (NA plot) Purchase/construction of residential property
Interest rate (2026) 8.5–11.5% 8.0–9.5%
LTV (Loan-to-Value) 60–70% of plot value 75–90% of property value
Tenure Typically up to 15 years Up to 30 years
Tax benefit (Section 80C) No (only principal after construction starts) Yes (both principal and interest)
Agricultural land eligible? No — NA plots only N/A
Construction obligation Often yes — must start construction within 2–3 years N/A

Which banks offer plot loans in India in 2026?

Major lenders include SBI, HDFC, ICICI, Axis, PNB Housing, and Bajaj Housing Finance — rates from 8.5% and LTVs of 60–70%, with each imposing location and construction conditions.

Bank / NBFC Interest Rate (2026) Max LTV Max Tenure Notable Condition
SBI (State Bank of India) 8.5–9.8% 70% 15 years Plot must be within municipal limits or approved layout
HDFC Ltd 8.7–10.2% 65% 15 years Approved project preferred; RERA verified
ICICI Bank 8.9–10.5% 65% 15 years Construction must start within 2 years
Axis Bank 9.0–11.0% 60% 15 years Location must be in bank’s approved list
PNB Housing Finance 9.2–11.5% 65% 15 years Charges higher rate for non-RERA projects
Bajaj Housing Finance 8.6–10.5% 70% 15 years Flexible on RERA projects; CIBIL 700+ required

Interest rates are indicative as of July 2026 and subject to change.

What are the hidden rules of plot loans?

Eight conditions trip up buyers: agricultural land is ineligible, construction must start within 2–3 years, LTV is on bank valuation (not price), the plot must be in an approved location, there’s no interest deduction while holding, RERA improves approval, a co-applicant raises eligibility, and NRI loans are restricted.

Rule 1: Agricultural Land Is Ineligible

No Indian bank will finance the purchase of agricultural land with a plot loan. The plot must have valid NA (Non-Agricultural) conversion. If you are buying agricultural land intending to convert, you must fund the purchase from your own sources — bank financing is available only after NA conversion is complete.

Rule 2: Construction Must Start Within 2–3 Years

Most banks require construction to begin within 2–3 years of plot loan disbursement. If construction has not started by then, the bank can: (a) recall the loan, or (b) revise the interest rate to a higher “LAP” rate. Always read this clause carefully.

Rule 3: LTV Is on Bank’s Valuation, Not Market Price

Banks use their own empanelled valuers who often value plots 20–30% below actual market price. If you pay ₹50L for a plot the bank values at ₹35L, you will get a loan of only 65% of ₹35L = ₹22.75L — not 65% of your actual price. Budget for this gap with your own funds.

Rule 4: The Plot Must Be in an Approved Location

Banks maintain internal lists of approved locations. A plot in a village outside city limits, or in an area the bank has not approved for financing, will be rejected regardless of legal quality. Rural plots in remote locations often do not qualify.

Rule 5: No Income Tax Deduction on Interest During Holding

Unlike a home loan (where Section 24 allows ₹2L/year deduction on interest), plot loan interest is not deductible during the land-holding phase. Once construction completes and you convert to a home loan, deductions apply. Pure land holding gets no Section 24 benefit.

Rule 6: RERA Registration Improves Your Approval Chances

Banks strongly prefer RERA-registered plotted projects. For RERA projects, banks often have pre-approved tie-ups with developers, which means faster processing, better LTV, and sometimes slightly lower rates. Non-RERA private plots face higher scrutiny and lower LTV.

Rule 7: Joint Loan Can Increase Eligibility

Adding a co-applicant (spouse, parent) with income significantly increases eligible loan amount. Banks consider combined income for EMI capacity calculations. A couple earning ₹80L combined can qualify for significantly higher plot loan than a single earner at ₹40L.

Rule 8: NRI Plot Loans Are Available but Restricted

NRIs can get plot loans from some Indian banks (SBI NRI Home Loan, ICICI NRI services) for NA plots. However: repayment must come from NRE/NRO account, agricultural land is ineligible, and power of attorney is usually required. Check with your specific bank.

How do you apply for a plot loan, step by step?

Pre-qualify on CIBIL and EMI capacity, compare at least three lenders, submit your documents, get the plot appraised, receive the sanction letter, pass legal verification, and reach disbursement.

  1. Pre-qualification: Check your CIBIL score (700+ preferred). Calculate your EMI capacity (banks typically allow EMI of 40–50% of net monthly income).
  2. Choose lender: Compare at least 3 banks/NBFCs on rate, LTV, processing fees, and construction clause terms.
  3. Document collection: PAN, Aadhaar, 3 months payslip (or 3 years ITR for self-employed), Form 16, bank statements, property documents (7/12, NA order, RERA certificate, sale agreement)
  4. Property appraisal: Bank sends empanelled valuer to assess plot value
  5. Sanction letter: Bank issues sanction specifying approved amount, rate, and conditions
  6. Legal verification: Bank’s advocate verifies title documents
  7. Disbursement: Amount credited to seller’s account; mortgage registered

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I get a bank loan to buy land in Maharashtra?

Yes — most nationalised and private banks offer plot loans for NA plots in Maharashtra. The plot must have valid NA conversion, clear title, and ideally be in a RERA-registered project or an approved location. LTV is typically 60–70% of bank valuation.

What is the maximum tenure for a plot loan in India?

Maximum tenure for a plot loan is typically 15 years at most banks. This is significantly shorter than home loans (30 years), resulting in higher EMIs per lakh borrowed. Plan accordingly when calculating affordability.

Can I get a home loan for a plot purchase in India?

A standard home loan cannot be used for bare land purchase. However, a composite loan — covering both plot purchase and construction — can be structured as a home loan with home loan rates and tax benefits. This requires simultaneous or immediate construction commitment.

Is there any tax benefit on plot loan interest?

No income tax deduction is available on plot loan interest under Section 24 during the land-holding phase. Once you start construction and convert to a home loan, Section 24 (interest deduction up to ₹2L/year) becomes available. Section 80C (principal repayment) benefits also apply only post-construction.

About the Author — Girish Chhalwani

Girish Chhalwani is the Founder & CEO of THE EDGE Developments, a RERA-registered plotted-development company in the Karjat–MMR corridor. With 20+ years in Maharashtra land acquisition, NA conversion, and infrastructure-led land investment, he advises HNI and NRI investors on land strategy near Mumbai.

 ·  About THE EDGE Developments

Buy a Bank-Financeable Plot in Karjat

THE EDGE Developments offers RERA-registered, NA-converted plots — the kind banks prefer to finance, with clean title and approved-location status. Speak with our team about plot loan tie-ups and current pricing.

Book a Consultation →

Banner cover: 'Capital Gains Tax on Land Sale 2026' with a calculator and pen on a financial document behind The Edge Developments logo.
CategoriesLand Investment

Capital Gains Tax on Land Sale in India 2026: Complete Guide with Examples

THE EDGE — Direct Answer

When you sell land held for 24+ months in India, you pay Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) tax at a flat 12.5% — with no indexation for properties purchased after 23 July 2024. For land bought before 23 July 2024, you may choose between 12.5% flat or the old 20% with indexation — whichever gives the lower tax bill. Land sold within 24 months is Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG) taxed at your income slab rate, up to 30%. Two legal routes to eliminate LTCG entirely: Section 54F — reinvest the full sale consideration (not just the gain) into a new residential property within 2 years of sale — or Section 54EC — invest up to ₹50 lakh in NHAI or REC bonds within 6 months. For NRI sellers, the buyer must deduct TDS at 12.5%+ (LTCG) or slab rate (STCG) before payment — the seller must apply for a Lower Deduction Certificate (Form 13) to reduce this burden.

TL;DR — KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Land held 24+ months = LTCG at 12.5% flat (no indexation for property bought after 23 July 2024).
  • Land held under 24 months = STCG taxed at your income slab rate (up to 30%).
  • Property bought before 23 July 2024 can pick 12.5% flat or 20% indexed — whichever is lower.
  • Save tax legally via Section 54F (reinvest in a home) or Section 54EC (up to ₹50L in NHAI/REC bonds).

When you sell land in India, you pay capital gains tax on the profit. The rate depends on how long you held the land: Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG) if sold within 24 months — taxed at your income tax slab rate. Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) if held for 24+ months — taxed at 12.5% without indexation (post-Union Budget 2024 amendment). This guide explains every scenario with worked examples.

Reading time: 13 minutes | Last updated: July 2026 | Author: Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO, THE EDGE Developments

The Union Budget 2024 changed the LTCG tax structure for real estate. The indexation benefit (which reduced taxable gains by adjusting for inflation) was removed for properties acquired after July 23, 2024, with a flat LTCG rate of 12.5%. For properties acquired before July 23, 2024, taxpayers can choose between the old indexed 20% rate or the new 12.5% flat rate — whichever results in lower tax. — Source: Union Budget 2024, Income Tax Act Section 112A, Finance Act 2024

What is the difference between STCG and LTCG on land?

Land sold within 24 months is STCG, taxed at your slab rate (up to 30%). Land held 24+ months is LTCG, taxed at a flat 12.5% (with the pre-July-2024 option to use 20% with indexation).

Parameter Short-Term Capital Gain (STCG) Long-Term Capital Gain (LTCG)
Holding period Less than 24 months 24 months or more
Tax rate Your income tax slab rate (5%, 20%, or 30%) 12.5% flat (post-Budget 2024, no indexation)
Indexation benefit Not applicable Not available for assets bought after July 23, 2024
Old regime option Not applicable 20% with indexation for properties bought before July 23, 2024
Exemptions available Very limited Section 54F (invest in residential property), Section 54EC (bonds)

How do you calculate capital gains on a land sale?

Take the higher of your sale price or the stamp-duty value, subtract the cost of acquisition (indexed only for pre-July-2024 property), then subtract improvement and transfer costs — the balance is your taxable gain.

Step 1: Determine Sale Consideration

Sale Consideration = Higher of (Actual Sale Price) or (Stamp Duty Value / Circle Rate of property)

If the buyer pays below stamp duty value, the stamp duty value is treated as the actual sale consideration for tax purposes.

Step 2: Determine Cost of Acquisition

For land purchased after July 23, 2024: Cost of acquisition = actual purchase price (no indexation adjustment)

For land purchased before July 23, 2024: You may choose either:

  • Option A: Actual purchase price (for 12.5% flat LTCG calculation)
  • Option B: Indexed purchase price = Purchase Price × (CII of Sale Year ÷ CII of Purchase Year) for 20% LTCG calculation

Choose whichever gives you lower tax outflow.

Step 3: Calculate Capital Gain

Capital Gain = Sale Consideration − Cost of Acquisition − Improvement Costs − Transfer Expenses

Transfer expenses include: stamp duty paid by seller (if any), registration costs, brokerage, legal fees for the sale transaction.

Worked Example 1: Karjat NA Plot Purchased in 2021, Sold in 2026

Parameter Amount
Purchase Year March 2021
Sale Year July 2026
Holding Period 5 years 4 months (LTCG — held 24+ months)
Purchase Price ₹40,00,000
Sale Price ₹1,05,00,000
Transfer expenses (brokerage, legal) ₹2,00,000
Net Sale Consideration ₹1,03,00,000
Capital Gain (12.5% flat, no indexation) ₹1,03,00,000 − ₹40,00,000 = ₹63,00,000
LTCG Tax @ 12.5% ₹7,87,500

Compare with old indexed method (purchased before July 23, 2024 option): CII 2021 = 317, CII 2026 (est.) = 395

Indexed cost = ₹40L × (395/317) = ₹49.84L. Indexed gain = ₹1.03Cr − ₹49.84L = ₹53.16L. Tax @20% = ₹10.63L

Result: 12.5% flat rate (₹7.87L) is better than 20% indexed (₹10.63L) in this case.

Worked Example 2: STCG — Plot Sold Within 18 Months

Parameter Amount
Purchase Price ₹35,00,000
Sale Price (18 months later) ₹44,00,000
Capital Gain (STCG) ₹9,00,000
Investor income tax slab 30% (income above ₹10L/year)
STCG Tax @ 30% slab ₹2,70,000

How can you legally save capital gains tax on a land sale?

Two main routes for LTCG: Section 54F (reinvest the entire sale consideration in a residential property) and Section 54EC (invest up to ₹50 lakh in NHAI/REC bonds within 6 months). A Capital Gains Account Scheme parks funds if you can’t reinvest immediately.

Section 54F: Buy a Residential Property (LTCG Only)

If you reinvest the entire net sale consideration (not just the gain) into a new residential property within:

  • 1 year before or 2 years after the sale date (purchase), OR
  • 3 years after the sale date (construction)

…you get full LTCG exemption. Conditions: You must not own more than one other residential property at the date of sale.

Example: Sell land for ₹1.03 Cr. Reinvest full ₹1.03 Cr into a new residential flat within 2 years → LTCG tax = NIL.

Section 54EC: Capital Gains Bonds (LTCG Only)

Invest up to ₹50 lakh in NHAI or REC infrastructure bonds within 6 months of land sale → LTCG exemption up to ₹50 lakh. Lock-in period: 5 years. Interest rate: ~5.25–5.75% (taxable).

Capital Gains Account Scheme (CGAS)

If you cannot immediately invest in property or bonds, deposit the gains in a CGAS account with a nationalised bank before the ITR filing deadline. Funds must be used within the prescribed period.

What TDS must the buyer deduct on a land sale?

Under Section 194-IA, if the sale consideration exceeds ₹50 lakh, the buyer must deduct 1% TDS before paying the seller. This is not the buyer’s tax — it is an advance deduction from the seller’s tax liability. The seller gets credit for this TDS when filing ITR.

How are capital gains different for NRI sellers?

For NRI sellers, TDS is deducted at much higher rates — 12.5%+ (LTCG) or slab rate (STCG) plus surcharge and cess. A Lower TDS Certificate (Form 13) can reduce this to the actual liability.

  • LTCG properties: Buyer must deduct 12.5% + applicable surcharge + cess (effective rate can be 14–23%)
  • STCG properties: Buyer deducts at income slab rate applicable to NRI
  • Lower TDS certificate: NRI sellers can apply to Income Tax Department for a lower deduction certificate (Form 13) if actual tax liability is lower than standard TDS rate

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the capital gains tax on sale of land in India in 2026?

If held for 24+ months: 12.5% LTCG (flat rate, no indexation for properties bought after July 23, 2024). For properties bought before July 23, 2024: choose between 12.5% flat or 20% with indexation — whichever is lower. If held under 24 months: taxed at your income tax slab rate (up to 30%).

How can I avoid paying capital gains tax on land sale in India?

Legal exemptions: Section 54F (reinvest in residential property — full exemption if entire consideration reinvested), Section 54EC (invest up to ₹50L in NHAI/REC bonds). These are the two main legally sanctioned routes to reduce or eliminate LTCG on land sale.

Is indexation benefit available on sale of land in India in 2026?

No indexation for properties acquired after July 23, 2024 — flat 12.5% LTCG applies. For properties acquired before July 23, 2024: you have the option to use either the old 20% indexed method or the new 12.5% flat method — and can choose whichever results in lower tax.

Do I need to pay GST when selling land in India?

No. GST does not apply to the sale of land (only to construction services). Stamp duty and registration charges apply but these are state-level taxes, not GST. Plot sales in RERA-registered projects also do not attract GST on the land component. See THE EDGE’s complete guide to GST on land for the full explanation of when GST does and doesn’t apply.

About the Author — Girish Chhalwani

Girish Chhalwani is the Founder & CEO of THE EDGE Developments, a RERA-registered plotted-development company in the Karjat–MMR corridor. With 20+ years in Maharashtra land acquisition, NA conversion, and infrastructure-led land investment, he advises HNI and NRI investors on land strategy near Mumbai.

 ·  About THE EDGE Developments

Planning a Land Investment in the Karjat Corridor?

THE EDGE Developments offers RERA-registered, NA-converted plots with clean title and full documentation — the foundation for a tax-efficient long-term hold. Speak with our team for current pricing and a guided site visit.

Book a Consultation →

This article is general information, not tax advice. Consult a qualified chartered accountant for your specific situation.


Vacant land plot in India with a caution sign under an overcast sky — risks of buying land
CategoriesLand Investment

What Are the Risks of Buying Land in India? And How to Avoid Each One

TL;DR — KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Main land risks in India: title disputes, fraudulent NA claims, hidden encumbrances, government acquisition, illiquidity, and developer non-delivery.
  • Every one is avoidable — a 30-year title search prevents the most common and most costly disputes.
  • Verify NA status at the Collector, check CERSAI/encumbrance for loans, and DP maps for acquisition risk.
  • Only buy from RERA-registered projects, and only with capital you can lock away 5+ years.

The biggest risks of buying land in India are title disputes, fraudulent NA claims, encumbrances, government acquisition, liquidity constraints, and developer non-delivery. Each is avoidable with proper due diligence. This guide covers every major risk, why it occurs, and the exact steps to protect yourself.

Reading time: 13 minutes | Last updated: July 2026 | Author: Girish Chhalwani, Founder & CEO, THE EDGE Developments

India has over 66 lakh pending property dispute cases in courts — the majority involving land. Most could have been prevented with a 30-year title search and proper document verification before purchase. The risk in Indian land investment is not in the asset class — it is in skipping due diligence. — Source: National Judicial Data Grid 2025, Ministry of Law and Justice

Risk 1: Title Disputes and Unclear Ownership

What it is: The land you purchase has competing ownership claims — from family members, previous buyers, creditors, or the government — that emerge after your purchase.

Why it happens: India’s land records have evolved across multiple legal systems (British survey, post-independence revenue codes, urban development acts). Ownership can be fragmented across family members, inherited across generations without formal partition, or disputed between government and private owners. See THE EDGE’s guide to common land dispute patterns in Maharashtra for a deeper breakdown of exactly how these disputes surface.

How to protect yourself:

  • Conduct a 30-year title search through a qualified property advocate
  • Verify the 7/12 extract and property card from official government portals
  • Check for “Rights in Dispute” entry in revenue records
  • Obtain a title insurance policy for high-value transactions
  • If HUF or inherited property — get succession certificate and consent of all family members

Risk 2: Fraudulent NA (Non-Agricultural) Claims

What it is: Sellers present agricultural land as “NA converted” with forged or expired NA orders. Buyers pay NA plot prices for agricultural land they legally cannot develop.

Why it happens: NA conversion is a government process that takes 6–24 months and significant cost. Some sellers forge conversion documents or sell land with pending NA applications as if conversion is complete.

How to protect yourself:

  • Verify the NA order number directly with the District Collector’s office — not just from the seller
  • Check the 7/12 extract which shows the type of use (agricultural/NA)
  • For NRIs: buying agricultural land without RBI approval violates FEMA — penalties apply
  • In RERA-registered projects, NA conversion is a mandatory disclosure

Risk 3: Hidden Encumbrances and Bank Loans

What it is: The seller has pledged the land as collateral for a loan. If the seller defaults, the bank can legally auction the property — even after you buy it.

Why it happens: Banks do not always update public records promptly. A seller can conceal a mortgage from a buyer by not disclosing it.

How to protect yourself:

  • Obtain an encumbrance certificate (30-year search) from the Sub-Registrar office
  • Check CERSAI (Central Registry of Securitisation Asset Reconstruction and Security Interest) for registered mortgages
  • Ensure the seller provides a No Dues Certificate from their bank before you pay any amount

Risk 4: Government Land Acquisition

What it is: Land you purchase is subsequently acquired by the government for infrastructure projects, with compensation that may be lower than your purchase price.

Why it happens: India’s Land Acquisition Act allows the government to acquire private land for public purposes. Infrastructure projects — highways, metro, airports — frequently trigger acquisitions in peri-urban areas.

How to protect yourself:

  • Check the District Development Plan (DP) and Town Planning scheme for the land’s zoning
  • Verify if any acquisition notification has been issued under Section 4 or Section 6 of the Land Acquisition Act
  • Consult MMRDA, MSRDC, or NHAI project maps for planned infrastructure corridors
  • Avoid land marked as “No Development Zone” or “Reserved for Public Use” in DP maps

Risk 5: Liquidity Risk — You Cannot Exit When You Need To

What it is: Land is inherently illiquid. Unlike a mutual fund or even an apartment, you cannot exit in days or weeks. Finding a buyer, negotiating, conducting due diligence, and completing registration takes 3–6 months minimum — often longer.

Why it matters: Investors who buy land with capital they may need in the next 1–3 years frequently find themselves in distress sales at below-market prices.

How to protect yourself:

  • Only invest capital you can lock away for minimum 5 years
  • Do not stretch your finances to buy land — maintain emergency liquidity separately
  • Buy in locations with active secondary markets (Karjat, Alibaug, Panvel) rather than remote or illiquid micro-markets

Risk 6: Developer Non-Delivery in Plotted Projects

What it is: You book a plot in a developer’s project, pay instalments, and the developer either goes bankrupt, does not complete promised amenities, or delays possession indefinitely.

Why it happens: India’s real estate sector had rampant under-regulation before RERA. Even post-RERA, some developers divert funds from escrow accounts or stall projects.

How to protect yourself:

  • Verify RERA registration before any payment — maharerait.maharashtra.gov.in
  • Check the developer’s past project track record — delivered on time, quality, compliance
  • Ensure 70% of your payments go into the designated RERA escrow account
  • Avoid developers with pending RERA complaints — check the MahaRERA complaint portal

Risk 7: CRZ and Forest Land Restrictions

What it is: Land in Coastal Regulation Zones (CRZ) or near forest boundaries has severe restrictions on construction — and purchases in CRZ areas can be legally challenged.

Why it happens: Sellers in coastal areas often do not disclose CRZ classification. Buyers construct villas only to face demolition notices from the Maharashtra Coastal Zone Management Authority.

How to protect yourself:

  • For any land within 500 metres of the high-tide line, check CRZ classification
  • Obtain a CRZ clearance certificate from the Maharashtra Coastal Zone Management Authority
  • For land near forests, check Forest Department records for any reserved forest adjacency

Risk 8: Measurement and Boundary Disputes

What it is: The plot you purchase is smaller than what was sold on paper, or boundaries overlap with adjacent plots or government land.

How to protect yourself:

  • Conduct an official survey (Mojani) before purchase — compare with revenue records
  • Verify boundary markers physically on-site
  • Check for road access — ensure approach road is on government record, not just informal arrangement

Risk Summary: Quick Reference

Risk Likelihood Key Protection
Title dispute High in rural areas 30-year title search
Fraudulent NA claim Medium Verify NA order at Collector’s office
Hidden encumbrance Medium Encumbrance certificate + CERSAI check
Government acquisition Low in residential zones Check DP map and acquisition notifications
Liquidity risk Always present Minimum 5-year investment horizon
Developer non-delivery Low with RERA projects RERA verification + track record check
CRZ/Forest restriction High near coast/forest CRZ certificate, Forest Department check
Boundary dispute Medium Official survey (Mojani)

Frequently Asked Questions

Is buying land in India risky?

Land in India carries specific legal risks that are well-documented and avoidable with proper due diligence. The asset class itself — particularly NA plots near Mumbai in infrastructure corridors — has delivered strong returns. The risk is not in the investment category but in skipping verification steps. Most land disputes in India involve preventable title and documentation errors.

What is the biggest risk when buying agricultural land in India?

Title disputes and fraudulent conversion claims are the two biggest risks in agricultural land. Many sellers present agricultural land as NA-converted without valid orders. NRIs face the additional risk of FEMA violation if they purchase agricultural land without RBI approval.

How do I verify if a land seller is legitimate?

Verify the seller’s name on the 7/12 extract matches their ID documents. Cross-check ownership history through Index II (30-year title search). If the property was inherited, verify succession certificate. Engage an independent property advocate — not the developer’s recommended lawyer.

Can the government take my land after I buy it in India?

Yes — the Land Acquisition Act allows compulsory acquisition for public purposes. However, acquisition with proper compensation is your legal right. To minimise risk: avoid land in planned infrastructure corridors, check DP maps, and avoid areas with Section 4 acquisition notifications.

About the Author — Girish Chhalwani

Girish Chhalwani is the Founder & CEO of THE EDGE Developments, a RERA-registered plotted-development company in the Karjat–MMR corridor. With 20+ years in Maharashtra land acquisition, NA conversion, and infrastructure-led land investment, he advises HNI and NRI investors on land strategy near Mumbai.

 ·  About THE EDGE Developments

Explore RERA-Registered Plots in the Karjat–MMR Corridor

THE EDGE Developments offers legally clear, NA-converted, RERA-registered plots with full title verification in Mumbai’s fastest-growing infrastructure corridor. Speak with our team for current pricing and a guided site visit.

Book a Consultation →

Guide to avoiding common land investment mistakes in India — due diligence, zoning, and legal checks for safe land buying
CategoriesLand Investment tips & tricks

5 Mistakes People Make While Buying Land in India

5 Mistakes People Make While Buying Land in India

Introduction:

Buying land in India can be a lucrative investment, but the process is far from simple. Many investors, especially first-timers, fall into common traps that can cost them dearly. Whether it’s a scam, title dispute, or wrong investment location, the risks are high. In this article, we will discuss the 5 most common mistakes people make when buying land in India and, more importantly, how to avoid them.


Mistake #1: Ignoring Legal Due Diligence

The Risk: One of the biggest mistakes people make when buying land is skipping proper legal checks. Land purchases in India can involve complex regulations, and overlooking the legalities of the property can result in hefty fines or even losing the property entirely. Title disputes, encumbrances, or illegal ownership claims can severely affect your investment.

How to Avoid It: Always ensure that the land has clear legal title. Verify the land’s ownership history and check for any pending dues or legal cases. It’s highly recommended to consult with a real estate lawyer to examine the legal documents before making any transaction.


Mistake #2: Not Researching the Land’s Zoning and Land Use

The Risk: Land is often sold with specific zoning requirements and land use restrictions. If the land you’re interested in is meant for agricultural use, converting it to residential or commercial use might not be possible without government approvals. This can delay or completely halt any development plans you might have.

How to Avoid It: Check the zoning laws and land use before purchasing land. Visit the local municipal authority or revenue department to confirm whether the property can be used for your intended purpose. Research if the land is within industrial zones, agricultural zones, or residential zones.


Mistake #3: Overlooking the Area’s Future Development Potential

The Risk: One of the biggest reasons people invest in land is for future appreciation. However, buying land in an area with little to no future infrastructure development or growth potential is a sure way to watch your investment stagnate. Many investors focus solely on the land’s current value and miss out on future developments that can significantly increase the land’s value.

How to Avoid It: Always consider the future potential of the area. Research whether new infrastructure projects, such as roads, metro lines, airports, or commercial developments, are planned in the vicinity. Areas with developing infrastructure tend to appreciate much faster over time.


Mistake #4: Not Factoring in Land Maintenance and Upkeep Costs

The Risk: While land might seem like a low-maintenance investment, land upkeep costs can quickly add up, especially in remote or agricultural areas. Issues like water supply, irrigation, security, and fencing can become recurring costs that eat into your profit margins.

How to Avoid It: Before purchasing, evaluate the costs of maintaining the land. Consider factors like accessibility, proximity to basic amenities, and security. If the land is in an area that’s difficult to reach or prone to encroachments, make sure to plan for extra costs to keep the land in a usable condition.


Mistake #5: Rushing the Process and Skipping Negotiation

The Risk: Many buyers are so eager to close a land deal that they rush through the negotiation process, accepting the seller’s terms without pushing for a better deal. Land prices can be negotiated based on several factors, including market trends, the seller’s urgency, and land condition. Rushing through the transaction can cost you a better price or cause you to miss out on more profitable land opportunities.

How to Avoid It: Take the time to negotiate the price and terms of the deal. Don’t accept the first offer, especially if it seems too high. Research similar properties in the area and use this data to your advantage when discussing price with the seller. Patience and negotiation can help you save a lot of money in the long run.


Conclusion:

Buying land can be one of the best investments you can make, but only if you avoid these common mistakes. Proper due diligence, legal checks, understanding zoning laws, evaluating the land’s future potential, and negotiating the price can help ensure that your land purchase is a sound investment.

By being cautious and well-informed, you can maximize the value of your investment and enjoy the long-term benefits of owning land