7 Hidden Builder Agreement Clauses Every Homebuyer Must Check

7 Hidden Builder Agreement Clauses Every Homebuyer Must Check — Before Signing Anything

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7 Hidden Builder Agreement Clauses

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Hidden Builder Agreement Clauses India — Legal Guide 2026

Hidden Builder Agreement Clauses | Legal Buyer Protection Guide India 2026

🏛 Legal Buyer Guide | Based on RERA 2016 + 2024–26 Landmark Judgments

7 Hidden Builder Agreement Clauses Every Homebuyer Must Check — Before Signing Anything

A legally grounded, clause-by-clause breakdown of the terms Indian builders bury in your agreement — written in plain language. With a 10-point red-flag checklist, a builder-vs-buyer clause comparison table, and a practical signing checklist. No legal jargon. Just everything you need to protect lakhs of rupees.

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Manindar Verma — Managing Director, Royals Property Consultant
📅 Updated July 2026  |  ⏱ 18 min read  |  🏛 RERA: PBRERA-CHD04-REA0390

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The most dangerous hidden builder agreement clauses in India are: Force Majeure misuse, one-sided delay compensation, forfeiture on cancellation, escalation cost clauses, unilateral layout changes, reduced defect liability periods, and unfair arbitration terms. Under RERA 2016, many of these are legally unenforceable — but you must know them before you sign. Ignorance costs homebuyers lakhs every year in Mohali, Zirakpur, Chandigarh, Panchkula, and New Chandigarh.


Why Hidden Builder Agreement Clauses Cost Indian Buyers Lakhs Every Year

Here is how most home purchases in India actually go. The buyer falls in love with the location. The family approves of the floor plan. The bank sanctions the loan. Everyone celebrates — and then somewhere between the sales pitch and the signing table, a 40-page document lands in front of you. The builder’s team says, “it’s standard.” The sales person says, “everyone signs this.” And most people do, without reading a word of it.

That document — the Builder Buyer Agreement (BBA), or Agreement for Sale — is where your actual legal rights live. It is more important than the brochure, the site visit, and the verbal promises combined. And it is full of hidden builder agreement clauses that, when written in the builder’s favour, can legally lock you out of compensation, refunds, and basic protections that you thought were guaranteed.

This is not a theoretical risk. Courts and RERA authorities across India — including HRERA in Panchkula, MahaRERA in Mumbai, and the Supreme Court — have consistently adjudicated cases where buyers in Mohali, Chandigarh, Zirakpur, New Chandigarh, and every other major market lost crores because of clauses they signed without understanding. The good news is that RERA 2016 has made many of these clauses legally unenforceable. But you still need to spot them, challenge them, or walk away from a project whose agreement is drafted entirely against you.

This guide covers the seven most dangerous hidden builder agreement clauses in Indian real estate, what each one means, how to spot it, and exactly what RERA says about it.


Clause 1 — Force Majeure Misuse: The “Anything Goes” Delay Excuse

⚡ Quick Take

Force majeure — Latin for “superior force” — is a legitimate legal concept covering genuine events like earthquakes, floods, or government lockdowns. But in many Indian builder agreements, this clause is written so broadly it covers any delay the builder finds inconvenient. Know the difference.

What the Clause Looks Like

A typical builder-friendly force majeure clause reads something like: “The company shall not be liable for any delay in construction or delivery due to force majeure events, including but not limited to natural calamities, government restrictions, strikes, labour shortage, shortage of materials, or any other circumstance beyond the company’s control.”

The problem is that phrase “any other circumstance beyond the company’s control.” Courts have seen builders invoke this clause for routine construction delays, contractor disputes, funding issues, and even slow material procurement — none of which are genuine force majeure events.

Why Builders Include It

A broad force majeure clause effectively removes the builder’s liability for almost any delay. Without it, under RERA Section 18, a delayed possession automatically entitles the buyer to either a full refund with interest (SBI MCLR + 2%) or continued possession with ongoing compensation. A broad clause is an attempt to bypass that right entirely.

Real-Life Example

In the landmark 2024 case of Raheja Developers Ltd. vs Harpreet Singh Sethi, HRERA (Haryana) ordered Raheja to refund ₹18 crore+ to multiple buyers with interest at 10.45% per annum after comprehensively rejecting Raheja’s force majeure claims based on COVID-19. The authority noted that Raheja had already received a six-month COVID extension under RBI/RERA relief — any delay beyond that was categorically not force majeure.

What RERA Says

Under Section 6 of RERA, force majeure grants a builder only a ONE-TIME extension of registration — not an indefinite escape from compensation. Force majeure clauses drafted so broadly as to cover any commercial inconvenience are not enforceable under RERA, as multiple state authorities have now confirmed.

How to Protect Yourself

  • Insist the force majeure clause lists only specific, verifiable events (natural disaster, government-declared emergency, specific statutory order)
  • Ensure the clause states a maximum extension period (typically 6–12 months) rather than open-ended “until resolution”
  • Confirm that any invocation of force majeure requires the builder to provide written documentary evidence to the buyer
  • If the builder delays possession beyond any force majeure window, you retain your right under Section 18 regardless of what the clause says
Risk to Buyer
Very High
RERA Enforceability
Strong Protection
Dispute Frequency
Very Common

Clause 2 — One-Sided Delay Compensation: ₹5/sqft vs 18% Interest

⚡ Quick Take

Many agreements charge buyers 18% interest per annum for late payment instalment — but offer the buyer only ₹5 per square foot per month (roughly ₹1,200/month for a 2BHK) if the builder delays possession. This asymmetry is a textbook unfair clause — and courts have called it out repeatedly.

What the Clause Looks Like

Builder-side: “In case of delay in possession, the company will pay a compensation of Rs. 5 per sq. ft. per month of the super built-up area.”

Buyer-side (same document): “In case of default in payment of instalment, the buyer shall pay interest at 18% per annum compounded monthly.”

Why Builders Include It

The gap between what the builder owes you for a delay versus what you owe for a missed payment is designed to make the agreement heavily one-sided — the builder profits from late payment interest far more than they are penalised for late possession.

What RERA Says

RERA Section 18 is explicit: if the builder fails to hand over possession by the agreed date, the buyer is entitled to compensation at the same interest rate the builder charges for delayed payment — i.e., typically SBI MCLR + 2% per annum on the amount paid. Any clause that reduces this below the statutory rate is not enforceable under RERA. The Supreme Court in NBCC vs Shri Ram Trivedi (2021) specifically struck down a ₹2 per sqft compensation clause as “one-sided and unfair, favouring the developer.”

How to Protect Yourself

  • Verify that the delay compensation rate in the agreement matches the interest rate charged to you for late payment — they must be equivalent under RERA
  • If the agreement specifies a flat per-sqft rate significantly below MCLR+2%, this is a red flag — negotiate or flag it with your legal advisor
  • Even if you sign an agreement with a lower compensation clause, your statutory right under Section 18 remains — file with RERA if delayed
Risk to Buyer
High
RERA Enforceability
Strong Protection
Dispute Frequency
Very Common

Clause 3 — Forfeiture on Cancellation: Can They Keep Your Booking Amount?

⚡ Quick Take

Many booking forms include a clause saying the builder can forfeit 10–20% (or more) of the total amount paid if you cancel. A landmark January 2026 MahaRERA Appellate Tribunal order made it clear: RERA has no provision permitting builders to forfeit a booking amount. The entire amount must be refunded with interest.

What the Clause Looks Like

“In the event of cancellation of booking by the allottee for any reason, the company shall be entitled to forfeit 10% of the total sale consideration as earnest money. The balance amount, if any, shall be refunded within 90 days without interest.”

Why Builders Include It

Forfeiture clauses are a financial deterrent — they discourage buyers from cancelling even when the builder is at fault (delays, misrepresentation, layout changes). They also serve as a cash-flow tool for builders who have already spent the booking amount on construction.

Real-Life Example

In a 2026 MahaRERA case, a Mumbai family paid ₹27.10 lakh as booking amount, discovered false claims in the draft Agreement for Sale, cancelled within 75 days, and demanded a refund. The builder refused, citing a forfeiture clause in the booking form. MahaRERA Appellate Tribunal ordered the builder to refund the entire ₹24.33 lakh with interest, ruling: “There is no express provision in the RERA Act, 2016 by which the promoter is entitled to forfeit earnest amount or part thereof in the event of cancellation of booking by the allottee.”

What RERA Says

Under RERA, a builder must refund the booking amount within 45 days after deducting only minimal, pre-agreed processing charges. Disproportionate forfeiture clauses — especially when the cancellation is triggered by the builder’s own delay or misrepresentation — have been consistently struck down by RERA authorities in 2024–25. Haryana RERA has specifically ruled that a builder can retain a maximum of 10% of the property cost as earnest money in cases of genuine buyer default, and must refund the rest.

How to Protect Yourself

  • Before paying any booking amount, ask specifically: “What is the forfeiture clause if I cancel within 30 days?”
  • Verify that the booking form is uploaded on the state RERA portal — forms not on the portal may not be enforceable against you
  • If the builder delays possession and you want to cancel, your cancellation is triggered by their breach — RERA Section 18 entitles you to a full refund with interest regardless of any forfeiture clause
Risk to Buyer
Very High
RERA Enforceability
Very Strong
Dispute Frequency
Extremely Common

Clause 4 — Escalation Cost Clause: The Price That Keeps Going Up

⚡ Quick Take

Some agreements include a clause allowing the builder to pass on increases in construction material costs (steel, cement, labour) to the buyer. In a fixed-price, RERA-registered project, this should not be possible — but poorly worded agreements still try to include it.

What the Clause Looks Like

“The sale price mentioned herein is provisional and subject to revision based on escalation in construction costs, government levies, taxes, or any other statutory charges. Any such increase shall be payable by the allottee.”

Why Builders Include It

Construction inflation is real — steel and cement prices do fluctuate significantly. Builders use escalation clauses to transfer that commodity risk entirely onto the buyer, effectively converting a “fixed price” contract into an open-ended one.

What RERA Says

Under RERA Section 13, the Agreement for Sale must specify the total price and payment schedule clearly. The builder is bound by the registered sale price. Any escalation above the agreed amount — unless the escalation clause was clearly disclosed and agreed to in the RERA-registered document — is not enforceable. Legitimate escalation clauses must be capped, linked to an auditable cost index (like a government material price index), and cannot be applied retroactively. Charges not disclosed in the RERA-registered prospectus are per-se illegal under Sections 11 and 12.

How to Protect Yourself

  • Insist on a fixed-price contract with no escalation clause, particularly for RERA-registered projects
  • If an escalation clause is included, ensure it is capped (e.g., maximum 5%), linked to a government index, and requires audited cost certification
  • Cross-check the sale price in your agreement with what is registered on the state RERA portal — any discrepancy is a red flag
Risk to Buyer
Medium-High
RERA Enforceability
Strong Protection
Dispute Frequency
Common

Clause 5 — Unilateral Layout & Specification Changes: The Flat You Signed Up For vs. the One You Get

⚡ Quick Take

Some agreements allow the builder to change the floor plan, layout, specifications, or amenities “as required during construction” without your consent. Under RERA, this is only permissible if two-thirds of buyers in the project consent in writing — a right builders must not sign away unilaterally.

What the Clause Looks Like

“The company reserves the right to make changes, alterations, additions, or modifications to the building plan, layout, specifications, and amenities as may be deemed necessary by the company without prior intimation or consent of the allottee.”

Why Builders Include It

Construction plans change due to statutory requirements, design optimisation, or cost-cutting. While minor technical changes are inevitable, this clause is sometimes used to justify significant reductions in amenities (removing a clubhouse, reducing parking, changing flooring grade) that the buyer was sold on during the booking.

What RERA Says

Section 14 of RERA is clear: the promoter cannot make any addition, alteration, or modification to the sanctioned plan or specifications without the prior consent of at least two-thirds of allottees. Any unilateral change — regardless of what the agreement says — is a violation of RERA. You are entitled to receive exactly what was registered and sold to you, or to compensation for any deviation.

How to Protect Yourself

  • Ensure the agreement attaches the approved building plan, specifications, and list of amenities as annexures — what is physically attached and signed is what is legally promised
  • If the builder makes changes after signing without seeking your written consent as part of a two-thirds majority, file a complaint with your state RERA authority
  • For NRI buyers in Mohali, Panchkula, and New Chandigarh: appoint a trusted local representative or authorised consultant to monitor construction progress and flag any deviations early
Risk to Buyer
High
RERA Enforceability
Strong Protection
Dispute Frequency
Common

Clause 6 — Reduced Defect Liability Period: When “5 Years” Becomes “1 Year”

⚡ Quick Take

RERA mandates a 5-year structural defect liability from the date of possession. Some builder agreements quietly reduce this to 1–2 years in the fine print. This is a clear RERA violation — but buyers who don’t spot it often discover it only when they try to claim warranty.

What the Clause Looks Like

“The company warrants the apartment against structural defects for a period of twelve months from the date of possession. Any defects reported after this period shall not be the responsibility of the company.”

Why Builders Include It

Structural issues — seepage, cracks, waterproofing failure, electrical defaults — often surface 18–36 months after possession, not immediately. A builder who successfully reduces the defect liability window to 12 months effectively avoids paying for the most common post-possession complaints.

What RERA Says

Section 14(3) of RERA is non-negotiable: the promoter is liable for structural defects for five years from the date of possession. This is a statutory right — the builder cannot reduce it contractually. Any clause limiting defect liability to less than five years is legally void, regardless of what you signed. If a builder refuses to rectify defects within five years of possession, you can file a complaint with the RERA authority.

How to Protect Yourself

  • Search for the word “defect” in your agreement and verify the liability period explicitly — it must state five years or more
  • If it says anything less, demand the clause be corrected to match RERA’s statutory requirement before signing
  • Document all defects in writing (photographs + email to builder) as soon as you discover them within the five-year window
Risk to Buyer
Medium-High
RERA Enforceability
Absolute Statutory Right
Dispute Frequency
Moderately Common

Clause 7 — Unfair Arbitration & Jurisdiction Clauses: Your Right to RERA, Taken Away

⚡ Quick Take

Some builder agreements include a clause saying all disputes must go to private arbitration in a city of the builder’s choice — removing your right to approach RERA or consumer courts. This is not legally valid. RERA is a mandatory statute; you cannot sign away your right to use it.

What the Clause Looks Like

“All disputes arising out of or in connection with this agreement shall be exclusively resolved through arbitration in accordance with the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. The arbitrator shall be appointed by the company. The venue of arbitration shall be [City]. Courts in [City] alone shall have jurisdiction.”

Why Builders Include It

Private arbitration is faster than courts — but when the builder appoints the arbitrator, it tilts the process significantly. More importantly, some buyers are told that signing this clause means they cannot go to RERA — which is incorrect and designed to intimidate.

What RERA Says

Section 79 of RERA bars civil courts from entertaining matters under RERA’s jurisdiction — but this is to direct buyers to RERA, not to arbitration. Your right to approach the RERA authority or an adjudicating officer cannot be contracted away. RERA is a mandatory statute. Parties cannot contract out of the law. Even if your agreement includes an arbitration-only clause, you can still file with your state RERA authority. Courts in 2024–25 have consistently affirmed this position. Additionally, under NRI cases, arbitration clauses have been particularly scrutinised — the Supreme Court has held that NRI homebuyers retain full access to Indian consumer protection mechanisms regardless of arbitration clauses in their agreements.

How to Protect Yourself

  • Confirm that the dispute resolution clause does not say “exclusive arbitration” in a way that attempts to block RERA access
  • If a builder insists you cannot approach RERA because of an arbitration clause, this is factually incorrect — your statutory rights remain intact
  • Ensure the jurisdiction clause names a city that is practically accessible to you — not a city 2,000 km away where the builder is headquartered
Risk to Buyer
High (NRIs especially)
RERA Enforceability
Mandatory Protection
Dispute Frequency
Common (NRI + Luxury)

10 Red Flags You Should Never Ignore Before Signing a Builder Agreement

🚩 Red Flag 1

No RERA registration number on the agreement or brochure. Any project above 500 sqm or 8 units must be RERA registered. No number = no legal protection.

🚩 Red Flag 2

Vague possession date — phrases like “tentatively,” “approximately,” or “subject to availability” where an exact date should be stated. RERA requires a specific, enforceable possession date.

🚩 Red Flag 3

Price stated in “super built-up area” rather than carpet area. RERA mandates pricing on carpet area only. A ₹5,000/sqft price on SBA can translate to ₹7,000–8,000/sqft on actual carpet area.

🚩 Red Flag 4

Builder asking for more than 10% before the Agreement for Sale is executed. Under RERA Section 13, no more than 10% of sale price can be collected as advance before the formal agreement is signed.

🚩 Red Flag 5

Delay compensation lower than MCLR+2% — a flat ₹5–10/sqft/month compensation clause is almost certainly below the statutory minimum. Do not accept it without challenge.

🚩 Red Flag 6

Force majeure clause with no defined event list — “any other event beyond our control” is not a valid force majeure clause. Demand specificity.

🚩 Red Flag 7

Hidden charges at possession — items like “covered parking,” “club membership,” “EDC/IDC top-up,” “electrification,” or “maintenance corpus” that were not disclosed in the original agreement are illegal under RERA Sections 11–12.

🚩 Red Flag 8

Defect liability shorter than 5 years — any clause stating 1 or 2 years for structural defects is a direct violation of RERA Section 14(3). Do not accept it.

🚩 Red Flag 9

“Exclusive arbitration” blocking RERA access — any clause claiming disputes can ONLY go to arbitration and not to RERA or consumer courts. Your statutory rights cannot be contractually removed.

🚩 Red Flag 10

“Sales team says sign fast — offer expires today” — artificial urgency is a pressure tactic to prevent you from reviewing the document. No legitimate RERA-registered project requires you to sign without reading.


Builder-Friendly Clause vs Buyer-Friendly Clause — Side-by-Side

Clause❌ Builder-Friendly Version✅ Buyer-Friendly Version
Force Majeure“Any event beyond our control, including labour or material shortage”“Only notified government-declared emergencies; max 6-month extension; documented in writing”
Delay Compensation“₹5 per sqft per month on SBA”“SBI MCLR + 2% per annum on amount paid — matching RERA Section 18”
Cancellation / Forfeiture“10–25% of total paid amount forfeited”“Refund of 100% within 45 days (per RERA); minimal processing charges only”
Escalation“Price provisional; escalation payable by buyer on demand”“Fixed price; no escalation unless capped, indexed, and disclosed upfront”
Layout Changes“Builder reserves right to alter plans without notice”“Changes require written consent of 2/3 allottees (RERA Section 14)”
Defect Liability“12 months from possession date”“5 years from possession date (RERA Section 14(3) — non-negotiable)”
Dispute Resolution“Exclusive arbitration; builder appoints arbitrator; venue: [remote city]”“RERA authority + consumer courts; arbitration optional for minor disputes only”
Hidden Charges“Additional charges may apply at possession”“All charges itemised and fixed in the agreement; no additional demand at possession”

How RERA Protects You — And What It Cannot Do

What RERA Can Do for You

  • Section 18: Full refund with interest (MCLR+2%) if builder fails to deliver on time — your strongest protection
  • Section 14: Mandates that you receive exactly what was registered and approved — no unilateral layout changes
  • Section 14(3): 5-year structural defect warranty — non-waivable
  • Section 13: No advance beyond 10% before a formal Agreement for Sale is signed
  • Section 3: All eligible projects must be registered — check on your state RERA portal before paying anything
  • Section 4: Builder must deposit 70% of project funds in a separate escrow account — protects against fund diversion
  • Section 31: Any allottee or allottees’ association can file a complaint directly with the RERA authority

What RERA Cannot Always Guarantee

  • Enforcement speed: Getting an order from RERA is one step; getting the builder to actually pay or complete is another. Courts in Telangana, Karnataka, and Haryana have noted enforcement lag as a genuine challenge.
  • Builder insolvency: If a builder goes into insolvency under IBC, homebuyers are financial creditors — but recovery still depends on the available assets in the estate.
  • Unregistered projects: RERA only covers registered projects. For smaller projects (under 500 sqm / 8 units) or projects that illegally avoid registration, Consumer Courts under the Consumer Protection Act 2019 may be your primary forum.
  • Already-signed agreements: If you have already signed a problematic agreement, RERA can still protect your statutory rights — but negotiating better terms before signing is always easier than litigating after.

When to Consult a Property Lawyer

Before signing any builder agreement for a transaction above ₹50 lakh. For NRI buyers transacting remotely in Mohali, Panchkula, or New Chandigarh, a legal review is non-negotiable. The cost of a lawyer’s agreement review (typically ₹10,000–30,000) is a rounding error compared to the risk of signing a poorly-drafted agreement on a one-crore-plus purchase.


Practical Signing Checklist — Before You Put Pen to Paper

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RERA checklist, builder tips, NRI guide & buyer checklist — free PDF

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Use this checklist before signing any builder buyer agreement in India:

  • ✅ Verify RERA registration number on state RERA portal — takes under 5 minutes
  • ✅ Confirm possession date is specific and in writing — not “approximately” or “tentatively”
  • ✅ Confirm pricing is based on carpet area, not super built-up area
  • ✅ Confirm no more than 10% has been demanded before the formal agreement
  • ✅ Read the force majeure clause — it must list specific events, not a blanket phrase
  • ✅ Verify delay compensation rate equals the interest rate charged to you for late payment
  • ✅ Confirm defect liability period is 5 years — not 1 or 2
  • ✅ Read the cancellation clause — if it says “forfeit 10–20%,” this is challengeable under RERA
  • ✅ Confirm the escalation clause is either absent or capped and indexed
  • ✅ Confirm all promised amenities, specifications, and layout are attached as a signed annexure
  • ✅ Verify the dispute resolution clause does not block access to RERA or consumer courts
  • ✅ Confirm all additional charges (parking, club, EDC/IDC, maintenance corpus) are itemised in the agreement — zero surprises at possession
  • ✅ Get the agreement reviewed by an independent property lawyer before signing

NRI Buyers — Extra Risks You Must Know

NRI homebuyers in cities like Mohali, Zirakpur, Chandigarh, and New Chandigarh face all of the above risks with additional complications. Verifying documents from abroad is difficult. Many NRI buyers sign agreements electronically without a physical review. And builders sometimes include arbitration clauses in a different city specifically because they assume NRI buyers will not travel to contest them.

Key additional points for NRI buyers:

  • RERA protections apply equally to NRIs as to resident buyers — you are not in a weaker legal position just because you are abroad
  • All builder obligations under the agreement are binding regardless of your residency status
  • Appoint a reliable, RERA-certified local consultant with authority to review and flag agreement terms before you sign remotely
  • Any charges demanded at possession that were not in the original agreement are equally illegal for NRI buyers — the possession threat (“no keys until you pay”) is a coercive tactic that RERA has consistently ruled against
  • Ensure your FEMA compliance for the transaction is in order — a property purchase agreement signed under duress is not the only problem if the remittance structure is also non-compliant

Expert Insights — 15 Years on This Market

💬 “In 15 years of helping families buy property across Mohali, Zirakpur, Chandigarh, Panchkula, and New Chandigarh, the single most preventable source of disputes I see is a buyer who signed an agreement without reading it. Not because they are careless — but because no one explained to them what to look for. The builder’s team is never going to walk you through the clauses that protect you. That is our job, and it costs you nothing to ask us before you sign.”

— Manindar Verma, Managing Director, Royals Property Consultant


Frequently Asked Questions — Builder Agreement Clauses India

What is a hidden builder agreement clause? ▼

A hidden builder agreement clause is a term buried in the fine print of a Builder Buyer Agreement that limits the buyer’s rights or expands the builder’s powers — often in ways the buyer was not clearly told about during the sales process. The most dangerous ones involve force majeure, delay compensation, forfeiture on cancellation, and defect liability.

Can a builder legally forfeit my booking amount under RERA? ▼

No. The MahaRERA Appellate Tribunal has confirmed there is no provision in RERA 2016 allowing builders to forfeit a booking amount on cancellation. You are entitled to a full refund with interest. Even if you signed a forfeiture clause, it is not enforceable under RERA — provided your project is RERA registered.

What is the statutory defect liability period under RERA? ▼

RERA Section 14(3) mandates a five-year structural defect liability from the date of possession. Any builder agreement clause reducing this to 1 or 2 years is legally void — you retain your five-year right regardless of what you signed.

Can a builder invoke force majeure for COVID-19 delays in 2026? ▼

No, not legitimately. HRERA’s 2024 Raheja Developers ruling is the clearest judicial statement on this — builders had already received COVID extensions under RBI/RERA relief. Any delay beyond the granted COVID extension window is not force majeure, and buyers are entitled to refund plus interest under RERA Section 18.

What should the delay compensation rate be under RERA? ▼

Under RERA Section 18, delay compensation must be paid at SBI’s highest Marginal Cost of Lending Rate plus 2% per annum on the amount paid. This must equal the interest rate the builder charges you for delayed payment instalment — anything less than this symmetric rate is challengeable.

Can a builder change the floor plan or amenities after I sign? ▼

Only with written consent of at least two-thirds of allottees in the project, per RERA Section 14. A unilateral change clause in the agreement does not override this statutory requirement. If the builder changes the approved plan without this consent, it is a RERA violation and you can file a complaint.

Does an arbitration clause in my agreement mean I cannot approach RERA? ▼

No. RERA is a mandatory statute and your right to approach the RERA authority or adjudicating officer cannot be removed by a private arbitration clause in a builder’s agreement. Courts have consistently held that parties cannot contract out of RERA — your statutory rights remain intact regardless of what the dispute resolution clause says.

What hidden charges at possession are illegal under RERA? ▼

Under RERA Sections 11 and 12, the builder must adhere strictly to the registered sale agreement — any demand at possession that was not itemised in the original agreement is illegal. This includes covered parking, club membership, EDC/IDC top-ups, electrification charges, and maintenance corpus if these were not specified in your agreement.

Should I get a lawyer to review my builder agreement before signing? ▼

Yes — for any transaction above ₹50 lakh, a one-time legal review by a property lawyer costs ₹10,000–30,000 and is one of the best investments a homebuyer can make. For NRI buyers transacting remotely in Mohali, Zirakpur, Panchkula, or New Chandigarh, it is non-negotiable. A RERA-certified property consultant can also flag major red flags before the legal review stage.

How do I verify if a project is RERA registered? ▼

Visit your state RERA portal: Punjab RERA at hrera.org.in, MahaRERA at maharera.mahaonline.gov.in, or search “state name + RERA portal.” Enter the project name or registration number. This takes under 5 minutes and is the single most important pre-purchase check — never pay a token amount to an unregistered project.


Final Verdict — Read Every Clause. Every Single One.

✅ Independent Assessment

RERA 2016 gave Indian homebuyers the strongest statutory protections in the history of Indian real estate. Force majeure clauses are now limited. Forfeiture is heavily restricted. Delay compensation is symmetrical by law. Defect liability is five years — full stop. These are not negotiable provisions; they are statutory rights.

But statutory rights only protect you when you know they exist. A buyer who signs a 10-page force majeure clause, a 25% forfeiture clause, and a 12-month defect liability clause — without challenging any of them — has effectively given the builder exactly what they wanted: a document that will be waved in front of them in court to show they “agreed.”

Read the agreement. Check these seven clauses specifically. Use the comparison table and the signing checklist above. And if you are buying in Mohali, Zirakpur, Chandigarh, Panchkula, or New Chandigarh — contact Royals Property Consultant before signing. We review builder agreements as part of our buyer support, at no cost to you. That one conversation could save you lakhs.


Explore More from Royals Property Consultant

📚 Authoritative External References

  • RERA Act 2016 — Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs: mohua.gov.in
  • Punjab RERA Portal: hrera.org.in
  • MahaRERA: maharera.mahaonline.gov.in
  • Supreme Court of India — NBCC vs Shri Ram Trivedi (2021) 5 SCC 273
  • HRERA — Raheja Developers Ltd. vs Harpreet Singh Sethi (2024)

Need Expert Guidance Before Signing a Builder Agreement?

Buying, selling, or investing in property across Mohali, Zirakpur, Chandigarh, Panchkula, and New Chandigarh? Contact Royals Property Consultant for professional assistance, agreement review support, and independent market insights. Zero brokerage for buyers. RERA certified.

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MV

Manindar Verma

Managing Director · Royals Property Consultant · RERA: PBRERA-CHD04-REA0390

With 15+ years of active real estate experience across Zirakpur, Mohali, Chandigarh, Panchkula, and New Chandigarh, Manindar Verma has guided over 500 families through property transactions. He reviews builder agreements as part of standard buyer support — at zero charge — and is RERA registered, Google 5-star rated, and available on WhatsApp at +91 98787 59508.

Tags: Hidden Builder Agreement Clauses, Builder Buyer Agreement India, RERA Buyer Rights, Property Legal Tips India, Force Majeure Clause RERA, Cancellation Forfeiture Clause, Defect Liability Period, Arbitration Clause Property, Hidden Charges Builder, Home Buying Checklist India

Legal disclaimer: This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. For specific legal concerns regarding your builder agreement, consult a qualified property lawyer licensed to practise in your state. RERA sections cited are from the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016 — always refer to current state RERA rules as state-level amendments may apply.

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