Legal Knowledge Center Punjab Property : Legal Due Diligence Punjab — The Complete Verification Guide

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Property Legal Due Diligence Punjab — The Complete Verification Guide

Every document, red flag, and verification step buyers in Mohali, Chandigarh, Zirakpur, Kharar, Dera Bassi and New Chandigarh need to check before paying a single rupee — explained the way a property lawyer would explain it across a table, not a textbook.

✍ By Manindar Verma, Managing Director 🏛 RERA: PBRERA-CHD04-REA0390 🔄 Updated: July 2026
📖 This guide is part of the Ultimate Tricity Property Buying Guide — the complete pillar page covering every step of buying property in the Tricity.

Every year, buyers across Punjab lose lakhs of rupees — sometimes their entire life savings — not because they picked the wrong location or overpaid for a flat, but because they skipped a document check that would have taken an afternoon. A missing mutation entry, an unverified GPA, a builder who never actually got CLU approval — these aren’t rare horror stories from the news. They’re recurring, preventable patterns that show up in Mohali, Zirakpur, Kharar, Dera Bassi and New Chandigarh every single month.

Legal due diligence isn’t a formality your lawyer does after you’ve already paid the token amount. It’s the work that happens before you pay anything — and it’s almost always the difference between a smooth registry and a years-long court case. This guide walks through exactly what to verify, in what order, and what each red flag actually means.

Why this matters more than people think: Most property fraud in this region isn’t sophisticated. It’s ordinary — a seller who isn’t the real owner, a plot sold to two buyers, a “completed” project missing its Occupation Certificate. These are all catchable with basic document verification, which is exactly why skipping it is the single costliest mistake a buyer can make.

What is Property Due Diligence?

Property due diligence is the process of independently verifying that a property’s legal status, ownership, and approvals are exactly what the seller or builder claims — before any money beyond a refundable token changes hands. It covers three layers: who actually owns it (title verification), is it legally approved for its intended use (RERA, CLU, completion certificates), and is it free of hidden liabilities (loans, disputes, unpaid dues).

Who Should Perform It

Ideally, a property lawyer conducts the formal title search and document verification, while you or your property consultant handle the practical checks — RERA portal verification, builder background research, site visit cross-checks. Relying solely on the builder’s or seller’s word, or on a broker who benefits from the sale closing quickly, is how buyers miss red flags that a neutral check would have caught.

When It Should Begin

Due diligence should start the moment a property is shortlisted — before any booking amount is paid, not after. Once a token amount changes hands, buyers psychologically commit to the deal and are far less likely to walk away even when problems surface. The leverage to negotiate, verify, or exit cleanly is highest before any payment at all.

What Happens If Buyers Skip It

The consequences range from expensive to catastrophic: stuck in litigation over disputed ownership, unable to get a home loan because the project lacks bank approval, discovering the “completed” flat has no Occupation Certificate and can’t be legally registered, or — in the worst cases — losing the entire payment to a seller who never had legal ownership to sell.

Complete Property Legal Verification Checklist

Here’s every document worth checking, what it proves, who issues it, where to verify it, the fraud pattern associated with skipping it, and how serious the risk is if you don’t.

DocumentPurposeWho Issues ItWhere to VerifyCommon FraudRisk
RERA RegistrationConfirms project is legally registered and regulatedRERA Punjabrera.punjab.gov.inUnregistered project marketed as “RERA approved”High
Title Deed / Sale DeedProves clear, undisputed ownershipPrevious owner / registrar recordsSub-registrar officeSeller isn’t the actual owner; forged deedHigh
JamabandiRevenue record of land ownershipPunjab Revenue Departmentjamabandi.punjab.gov.inOutdated or unmutated ownership recordHigh
Mutation RecordConfirms ownership transfer is updated in revenue recordsTehsildar’s officeLocal revenue office / online portalMutation never done after a previous saleHigh
CLU CertificateConfirms agricultural land legally converted for the intended useGMADA / Department of Town & Country PlanningGMADA office / DTCP portalProject built on land without valid CLUHigh
Completion/Occupation CertificateConfirms building is legally fit for occupancyMunicipal Corporation / GMADALocal municipal office“Ready to move” flats with no OC, blocking registrationHigh
Bank ApprovalConfirms reputed lenders have vetted the projectIndividual banksDirectly with the bankBuilder claims “bank approved” without any lender actually financing the projectMedium
Encumbrance CertificateConfirms property is free of loans, mortgages, or legal claimsSub-registrar officeSub-registrar / online EC portalProperty already mortgaged to a bank, undisclosedHigh
Power of Attorney (if applicable)Confirms legal authorization for someone acting on the owner’s behalfRegistered at sub-registrarSub-registrar recordsFake or expired GPA used to sell property without owner’s knowledgeHigh
Property Tax ReceiptsConfirms no pending municipal duesMunicipal CorporationLocal municipal officeUnpaid dues transferred silently to new buyerMedium
Fire/Environment/Pollution NOCsConfirms project cleared safety and environmental requirementsRespective departmentsMunicipal/state department recordsProject operating without mandatory safety clearancesMedium
Expert Tip: Don’t verify these documents in isolation. A RERA registration doesn’t mean the CLU is valid, and a clean title doesn’t mean the Occupation Certificate exists. Buyers who verify one or two documents and assume the rest are fine are exactly who this checklist is designed to protect.

RERA Registration — What It Actually Protects You From

RERA (Real Estate Regulatory Authority) registration is mandatory for any project above 500 square meters or more than 8 units, in most states including Punjab. Registration means the project’s plans, timelines, and land title have been submitted to and reviewed by the regulator, and the builder is legally accountable for delays and misrepresentation.

How to Verify RERA Registration

Visit the Punjab RERA portal (rera.punjab.gov.in), search by project name or registration number, and cross-check that the promoter name, project address, and sanctioned plan match exactly what’s being marketed to you. A mismatch — even a slightly different project name or address — is worth immediate clarification.

Red Flags

  • Builder shows a RERA number on marketing material that doesn’t match any actual registration when searched
  • Registration exists but for a different phase or block than the one being sold to you
  • Project marketed as “RERA approved” despite being below the size threshold and never actually needing registration — a technically true but misleading claim

Common Misconceptions

RERA registration doesn’t guarantee construction quality, doesn’t verify the CLU or land title independently, and doesn’t mean the builder has bank approval. It’s one necessary layer, not a complete legal clearance — treat it as the first check, not the only one.

Title Deed — Understanding the Chain of Ownership

A title deed establishes legal ownership, but ownership on paper is only as strong as the chain of transactions behind it. This is where most legal problems in resale properties and independent plots actually originate — not in the current sale, but in a break somewhere earlier in the ownership history.

What “Chain of Title” Means

Every time a property changes hands — through sale, gift, inheritance, or partition — that transaction needs to be properly documented and registered. A complete chain traces ownership back at least 12-13 years (often further, depending on the lawyer’s recommendation), showing an unbroken, legally valid sequence of transfers.

Transfer TypeWhat to Verify
Sale DeedRegistered at the sub-registrar, stamp duty paid, seller matches the title holder on record
Gift DeedProperly registered, and the relationship between donor and recipient is genuine and documented
InheritanceLegal heirs are correctly identified, and if there are multiple heirs, all have either transferred their share or are party to the current sale
Partition DeedFamily property division is registered and each party’s share is clearly and legally demarcated
Real Scenario: A buyer in Zirakpur purchased an independent floor from a seller who inherited it from his father. What wasn’t disclosed: two siblings also had an inheritance claim, neither of whom had signed off on the sale. The buyer discovered this only when one sibling filed a court case a year later — a check on legal heirs before purchase would have caught this immediately.

Verification Methods

  • Request certified copies of the last 2-3 registered transactions, not just the most recent one
  • Cross-check the seller’s name and identity documents against the title deed exactly
  • If inheritance is involved, ask for a legal heir certificate and confirm all heirs are accounted for in the transaction
  • Have a property lawyer conduct a formal title search at the sub-registrar’s office, not just a document review

Jamabandi — Punjab’s Revenue Record, Explained

Jamabandi is Punjab’s periodic land record, maintained by the revenue department, showing who owns which parcel of land, its area, and its revenue classification. It’s revised every 4-5 years and is the single most important document for verifying land ownership independent of what a seller tells you.

The Related Terms You’ll See

TermWhat It Means
KhasraA unique number identifying a specific parcel of agricultural land in revenue records
KhataA ledger-style account grouping land parcels under a particular owner or group of owners
FardAn extract or certified copy of the jamabandi record for a specific parcel — the actual document you’ll request and verify

In Punjab, jamabandi records are available online through the state land records portal — always cross-check the online record against any physical copy the seller provides, since discrepancies between the two are a meaningful red flag.

Mutation — Why It’s Often the Missing Step

Mutation is the process of updating revenue records to reflect a change in ownership after a sale, inheritance, or gift. A registered sale deed alone doesn’t automatically update the jamabandi — mutation is a separate, subsequent step, and it’s the one buyers and even sellers most commonly skip or delay.

Why It Matters

Without mutation, the revenue records still show the previous owner, which can create serious complications for the current owner trying to sell, mortgage, or pass on the property later. It’s also relevant for property tax assessment and eligibility for certain government schemes tied to landholding records.

How to Verify

Request the mutation certificate (intkal) and cross-check the mutation number against the tehsildar’s office records or the online portal. If a property has changed hands multiple times, verify that mutation was completed at each transfer, not just the most recent one.

Common Mistake: Buyers verify the current seller’s sale deed but never check whether mutation was completed from the seller’s own purchase. If it wasn’t, the current sale can inherit that same gap, compounding the problem for you as the next buyer.

Timeline

Mutation typically takes a few weeks to a few months depending on the tehsil’s processing load and whether any objections are raised during the process — it’s not instantaneous, which is exactly why it’s often left incomplete.

CLU (Change of Land Use) — Why This Single Approval Matters So Much

Most land in Punjab starts out classified as agricultural. Before it can legally be used for residential, commercial, industrial, or mixed-use development, the owner or developer must obtain CLU approval from the competent authority — typically GMADA or the Department of Town & Country Planning, depending on the area.

Why Buyers Should Care

A project built without valid CLU approval is, legally, still agricultural land with unauthorized construction on it — regardless of how finished or marketed the buildings look. This creates serious risk: such projects can face demolition orders, be denied bank financing, and leave buyers unable to register the property cleanly.

Government Approval Process

CLU applications go through the relevant development authority, involve site inspection, verification against the master plan, and payment of conversion charges, before a formal CLU certificate is issued. This process takes time — which is exactly why some developers skip it and begin construction based on land purchase alone, hoping to regularize it later.

Real Scenario: A small residential project near the outskirts of the Tricity marketed units for over a year before buyers discovered the CLU application had been rejected, not approved. Buyers who had already paid substantial amounts found themselves in a legal grey zone with no clear path to registration.

Completion Certificate vs Occupation Certificate vs Possession

These three terms get used interchangeably by sales teams, but they mean very different things — and confusing them is one of the most common ways buyers end up in a flat they legally can’t register or even safely occupy.

TermWhat It Means
Completion Certificate (CC)Confirms construction is finished as per the sanctioned building plan — issued by the municipal/development authority
Occupation Certificate (OC)Confirms the building is safe and legally fit for people to live in — a separate, subsequent certification after CC
PossessionPhysical handover of the unit to the buyer — this can happen informally even without an OC, which is where risk creeps in
RegistryLegal registration of ownership in the buyer’s name at the sub-registrar’s office — ideally should not happen without OC in hand
Electricity ConnectionUtility providers typically require an OC before granting a permanent connection — a useful independent check on whether OC actually exists
Practical Check: If a builder offers possession but can’t produce the Occupation Certificate, ask directly why. A permanent electricity connection request that gets stuck or requires “temporary” arrangements is often a sign the OC isn’t actually in place yet.

Bank Approval — Why “Bank Approved Project” Claims Need Verification

Builders frequently advertise projects as “bank approved” to build buyer confidence, but this claim is worth verifying directly rather than trusting the marketing material. Banks perform their own legal and technical due diligence before approving a project for home loans — title verification, RERA status, and construction progress checks — which makes bank approval a genuinely useful third-party signal, if it’s real.

How to Verify

Call the bank directly (not through the builder’s in-house loan facilitation desk) and ask whether the specific project, phase, and tower you’re considering is currently on their approved list. Approval can vary by phase within the same project, so a blanket “yes, we approve this builder” answer isn’t sufficient.

Which Approvals Actually Matter

Approval from multiple public sector and private banks carries more weight than approval from a single lender, especially a smaller NBFC with looser due diligence standards. If only one obscure lender has approved a project that a dozen major banks haven’t touched, that’s worth asking about directly.

Builder Background Verification

A builder’s brand name in the Tricity doesn’t guarantee every project they launch is equally sound — verification needs to happen at the project level, not just the company level.

What to CheckHow
Company History & Past ProjectsList of completed projects, actual possession dates vs promised dates
RERA Case HistorySearch the builder’s name on the RERA portal’s complaints/orders section
Court CasesSearch the builder and project name for pending litigation via public court record searches
Google Reviews & Local ReputationRead reviews specifically from possession-stage buyers, not just booking-stage reviews
Financial HealthCheck for loan defaults, NCLT proceedings, or project funding stress reported in local news
Customer ComplaintsConsumer forums, RERA complaint filings, and local buyer WhatsApp/Facebook groups often surface issues before they become public news
Expert Tip: Visit a different, already-possessed project by the same builder and talk to residents directly — not the sales office. Ask specifically about delays, quality issues, and how responsive the builder was after possession, not before.

Property Tax Verification

Unpaid property tax dues can transfer to the new owner in some circumstances, particularly if not settled clearly at the time of sale. Request the latest property tax receipt from the seller and independently verify with the municipal corporation that there are no outstanding dues on the property, regardless of what the seller claims.

Encumbrance Certificate — In Simple Language

An Encumbrance Certificate (EC) is a document confirming whether a property is free of registered loans, mortgages, or legal claims for a specified period. If a property is currently mortgaged to a bank (common when the seller took a loan against it) and that loan hasn’t been cleared, the EC will show it — and buying without checking this can mean inheriting someone else’s debt obligation on the property.

Request an EC covering at least the last 12-15 years from the sub-registrar’s office, and treat any unexplained gap or unclear entry in the certificate as a reason to dig further before proceeding.

Power of Attorney — When It’s Valid, When It’s Risky

A Power of Attorney (POA) allows someone to act on a property owner’s behalf — common when an NRI owner or a seller residing elsewhere authorizes a local representative to handle a sale. A registered, specific, and current POA is legitimate. An unregistered, vague, or old POA is where fraud most often happens.

How Fraud Happens

A common pattern: a POA is used to sell a property years after the original owner has passed away, moved abroad and lost contact, or explicitly revoked it — with the buyer having no easy way to verify the POA is still valid at the time of sale. Always confirm the POA is registered, verify its exact scope of authority (some POAs authorize specific acts only, not a full sale), and where possible, get direct confirmation from the actual property owner that the POA is current and intended for this transaction.

NOCs Required — The Full List

NOCWhy It’s Needed
Fire NOCConfirms fire safety systems meet mandatory standards
Airport Authority NOCRequired for projects within specified height/distance limits near Chandigarh International Airport
Pollution Control NOCConfirms environmental compliance, especially relevant for larger projects
Electricity Board NOCConfirms power infrastructure is cleared for the project’s load requirements
Water/Sewerage NOCConfirms water supply and sewage disposal infrastructure is approved
Municipal NOCGeneral clearance from the local municipal body
Environment ClearanceMandatory for larger projects above specified size thresholds
Highway/Road NOCRelevant for projects near highways or major roads, confirming setback and access compliance

For projects near Chandigarh International Airport specifically — relevant to several Aerocity and PR7-corridor developments — the Airport Authority NOC deserves particular attention, since height restrictions in these zones are strictly enforced.

Hidden Legal Risks Buyers Ignore

Beyond the standard document checklist, these are the risk patterns that catch even careful buyers off guard — because they don’t show up in a routine document review, only in a more thorough investigation.

🏗️ Illegal Construction / Unauthorized Floors

A building sanctioned for 3 floors with a 4th added without approval. The extra floor may be sold as a legitimate unit, but it can face demolition orders and can’t be legally registered as sanctioned construction.

🛣️ Road Widening / Government Acquisition

Land earmarked for future road widening or government acquisition under a master plan can be sold without disclosure, leaving the buyer with a property that may partially or fully face acquisition later, often at compensation far below market value.

🌳 Forest Land / Protected Land Classification

Some land parcels carry forest or protected classifications that restrict or prohibit construction entirely, regardless of what a local seller claims about “converting it later.”

⚖️ Court Stay / Pending Litigation

A property under an active court stay order cannot be legally transacted, even if the seller presents seemingly clean documents — a title search will surface pending litigation that a casual document review won’t.

🏦 Undisclosed Mortgage

A seller who took a loan against the property and hasn’t disclosed or cleared it — the Encumbrance Certificate is the specific check that catches this.

📄 Duplicate Registry / Double Selling

The same property sold to two different buyers using manipulated or duplicate documentation — a title search and mutation check at the point of purchase is the primary defense.

🖋️ Fake GPA (General Power of Attorney)

A forged or expired GPA used to execute a sale without the actual owner’s knowledge or consent — verify directly with the registered POA records, not just the document the seller shows you.

👤 Benami Transactions

Property held in someone else’s name to conceal the real beneficial owner — carries legal risk for both the nominal owner and any buyer, since benami transactions can be voided under law.

📋 Fake Allotment Letters

A builder issuing allotment letters for units that don’t actually exist in the sanctioned plan, or for land the builder doesn’t legally control — common in early-stage, pre-launch project scams.

💸 Builder Bankruptcy / Insolvency

A financially distressed builder can leave a project stalled indefinitely, with buyer payments trapped in insolvency proceedings — financial health checks on the builder matter as much as the property’s own documents.

Real Scenario: A buyer in the New Chandigarh corridor paid a substantial booking amount for a plot, only to later discover a portion of it fell within a road-widening reservation under the master plan. The seller hadn’t disclosed this, and the buyer’s usable land area shrank significantly once the acquisition proceeded — a master plan cross-check before booking would have flagged this.

How Royals Property Consultant Verifies Every Property

We don’t verify properties by taking a builder’s or seller’s word for it — every property we recommend goes through a structured screening process before it reaches a buyer’s shortlist.

  • Document Screening: RERA status, title chain, jamabandi and mutation records, and CLU status are checked against official records, not just the documents provided by the seller.
  • Builder Verification: Past project delivery history, RERA complaint history, and financial stability signals are reviewed before we recommend any developer’s project.
  • Local Knowledge: Fifteen-plus years working across Mohali, Zirakpur, Chandigarh, Panchkula and New Chandigarh means we recognize which specific pockets, developers, and land parcels have had recurring legal issues in this market.
  • Buyer Protection: We flag concerns directly, even when it means a buyer walks away from a property they were excited about — our role is to help buyers avoid problems, not to close every possible deal.

Want a Property Legally Verified Before You Pay?

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Frequently Asked Questions

RERA & Registration

What is property legal due diligence?
The process of independently verifying a property’s ownership, legal approvals, and freedom from hidden liabilities before making any payment beyond a refundable token.
Is RERA registration mandatory in Punjab?
Yes, for most projects above 500 square meters or with more than 8 units — verify any specific project’s status directly on the Punjab RERA portal.
How do I check if a project is RERA registered?
Search the project name or registration number on rera.punjab.gov.in and confirm the promoter name and address match exactly what’s being marketed to you.
Does RERA registration guarantee construction quality?
No — RERA confirms regulatory registration and accountability, not construction quality, land title independently, or bank approval. It’s one necessary check among several.

Title & Ownership

What is a chain of title?
The documented sequence of ownership transfers for a property, ideally traced back 12-13 years or more, showing an unbroken, legally valid history.
How far back should I check property ownership history?
Most lawyers recommend at least 12-13 years, though tracing further back is safer, especially for older independent properties or plots.
What if the property was inherited by the seller?
Verify all legal heirs are accounted for and have either signed off on the sale or transferred their share — undisclosed co-heirs are a common source of later disputes.
What’s the difference between a sale deed and a gift deed?
A sale deed transfers ownership for consideration (payment); a gift deed transfers ownership without payment, typically between family members — both must be registered to be legally valid.

Jamabandi, Mutation & Land Records

What is jamabandi?
Punjab’s periodic land revenue record showing ownership, area, and classification of a land parcel, revised every 4-5 years.
What is the difference between khasra and khata?
Khasra is a unique number identifying a specific land parcel; khata is a ledger-style account grouping parcels under a particular owner.
What is mutation and why does it matter?
Mutation updates revenue records to reflect a change in ownership after a sale or inheritance. Without it, official records still show the previous owner, complicating future transactions.
How long does mutation take in Punjab?
Typically a few weeks to a few months, depending on the tehsil’s processing load and whether objections are raised.
Can I buy a property if mutation hasn’t been completed from an earlier sale?
It’s risky — an incomplete mutation chain can complicate your own future mutation and resale. Best to have the seller complete pending mutation before you proceed.

CLU & Approvals

What is CLU in property terms?
Change of Land Use — the legal conversion of agricultural land for residential, commercial, or industrial use, approved by GMADA or the Department of Town & Country Planning.
What happens if a project doesn’t have CLU approval?
The land remains legally agricultural despite construction, risking demolition orders, loan denial, and inability to register the property cleanly.
How do I verify CLU status for a project?
Check directly with GMADA or the Department of Town & Country Planning for the specific land parcel’s CLU certificate status.

Completion, Occupation & Possession

What is the difference between Completion Certificate and Occupation Certificate?
A Completion Certificate confirms construction matches the sanctioned plan; an Occupation Certificate separately confirms the building is safe and legally fit for occupancy.
Can I take possession without an Occupation Certificate?
Physically, builders sometimes hand over possession without an OC, but this is risky — registration and permanent utility connections typically require it.
How can I check if a project has an Occupation Certificate?
Request it directly from the builder and independently verify with the municipal corporation or GMADA. A stuck permanent electricity connection request is also a useful indirect signal.

Builder & Bank Verification

How do I verify a builder’s background?
Check past project delivery timelines, RERA complaint history, court cases, financial stability signals, and talk to residents of an already-possessed project by the same builder.
Should I trust a builder’s “bank approved” claim?
Verify directly with the bank rather than relying on the builder’s marketing — approval can vary by specific phase or tower within the same project.
Why does bank approval matter for legal verification?
Banks conduct independent legal and technical due diligence before approving a project for home loans, making genuine bank approval a useful third-party verification signal.

Encumbrance, POA & Fraud Prevention

What is an Encumbrance Certificate?
A document confirming whether a property is free of registered loans, mortgages, or legal claims for a specified period, obtained from the sub-registrar’s office.
How many years should an Encumbrance Certificate cover?
At least 12-15 years is commonly recommended to capture any past mortgages or disputes on the property.
When is a Power of Attorney risky in a property deal?
When it’s unregistered, outdated, unusually broad in scope, or can’t be independently confirmed as still valid and intended for this specific transaction.
What is a benami transaction?
Property held in someone else’s name to conceal the real beneficial owner — legally risky and can be voided under the Benami Transactions law.
How does double selling / duplicate registry happen?
The same property is sold to two buyers using manipulated documentation — a thorough title search and mutation check at the time of purchase is the primary defense.
What should I do if I suspect a fraudulent GPA?
Verify the POA’s registration directly at the sub-registrar’s office and, where possible, get direct confirmation from the actual property owner before proceeding.

Taxes, NOCs & General

How do I check pending property tax dues?
Request the latest receipt from the seller and independently verify with the municipal corporation, since unpaid dues can transfer to a new owner in some circumstances.
What NOCs should I check before buying?
Fire, environment/pollution, electricity, water/sewerage, municipal, and — for projects near Chandigarh airport — Airport Authority NOC specifically.
Why does Airport Authority NOC matter for Mohali properties?
Height restrictions near Chandigarh International Airport are strictly enforced, particularly relevant for Aerocity and PR7-corridor developments.
Should I hire a lawyer for property due diligence?
Yes, for the formal title search and document verification — a property lawyer can access and interpret records more thoroughly than most buyers can independently.
When should due diligence begin in the buying process?
Before any booking amount is paid — once money changes hands, buyers are far less likely to walk away even when problems surface later.
What happens if I skip due diligence entirely?
Risks range from stuck litigation over disputed ownership to being unable to register or get loan approval for the property, or in the worst cases, losing the entire payment.
Is road widening reservation disclosed by sellers?
Not always — this requires an independent cross-check against the local master plan, since it’s rarely volunteered by a seller.
Can a builder go bankrupt mid-project?
Yes — financially distressed builders can leave projects stalled with buyer payments trapped in insolvency proceedings, which is why builder financial health checks matter alongside document checks.
Does Royals Property Consultant verify properties before recommending them?
Yes — every recommended property goes through document screening, builder background checks, and local market knowledge review before it reaches a buyer’s shortlist.
What is the single biggest legal mistake buyers make?
Paying a substantial amount before verifying documents, based on trust in the seller, builder, or broker rather than independent checks.
Are unauthorized floors a common issue in the Tricity?
Yes, particularly in independent floor and plot construction, where an extra floor is sometimes added beyond the sanctioned plan without approval.
What documents should I never skip regardless of time pressure?
RERA registration, title deed chain, jamabandi/mutation status, and CLU approval — these four carry the highest risk if skipped.

Legal Mistakes Checklist — Tick Before You Pay

Final Action Plan — Before You Pay Even ₹1

  1. Shortlist the property — but treat this as the starting point for verification, not a decision.
  2. Verify RERA registration independently on the official portal before any further discussion.
  3. Request the complete document set — title deed chain, jamabandi, mutation records, CLU certificate, CC/OC.
  4. Engage a property lawyer for a formal title search at the sub-registrar’s office.
  5. Verify the builder independently — past delivery record, RERA complaints, resident feedback from a different possessed project.
  6. Confirm bank approval directly with at least one major lender, not through the builder’s loan desk.
  7. Obtain an Encumbrance Certificate covering at least 12-15 years.
  8. Cross-check the master plan for road widening, acquisition, or land-use reservations affecting the property.
  9. Only then — pay a refundable token, and proceed to full payment only after every check above is complete.

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