Punjab's Greater Mohali Expansion Plan

Punjab’s Greater Mohali Expansion Plan

Punjab’s Greater Mohali Expansion: Why the Government Is Now Promising to Develop Villages, Not Just Acquire Them

Royals Property Consultant is a trusted name for buying, selling, renting, and investing in residential and commercial properties in Zirakpur, Mohali, Chandigarh, and New Chandigarh.

Punjab's Greater Mohali Expansion Plan

Punjab’s Greater Mohali Expansion: Why the Government Is Now Promising to Develop Villages, Not Just Acquire Them

For the first time, Punjab has committed to developing villages alongside the GMADA townships built on their land — with a binding three-year deadline. Here’s what it actually means for homebuyers, farmers, investors and NRIs.

📰 Updated June 2026 🏛️ GMADA · 11,103 Acres ✍️ By Manindar Verma

For nearly two decades, the story of urban expansion around Mohali and New Chandigarh has followed a predictable script. GMADA notifies a village’s farmland for acquisition, builders and planners move in, gleaming sectors rise around the boundary, and the village itself — the houses, the lanes, the handful of streets locals call home — gets left behind. No new sewerage line. No proper road. No drainage. A village can sit inside a township worth thousands of crores and still flood every monsoon.

That pattern is what the Punjab government says it is now breaking. In a decision reported by The Tribune in late June 2026, the state announced that villages surrendering agricultural land for the ongoing 11,103-acre Greater Mohali and New Chandigarh expansion will be developed at the same time as the townships being built around them — not afterward. There’s a fixed deadline attached: three years from the date GMADA takes physical possession of a village’s land.

If you own land in this corridor, are planning to buy a flat or plot anywhere between Mohali, Kharar, Banur and New Chandigarh, or are simply trying to understand why prices keep climbing in this part of Punjab, this decision is worth understanding properly.

Quick Summary

  • Punjab has decided, in principle, that villages giving up land for GMADA’s Greater Mohali and New Chandigarh expansion will get their own infrastructure — roads, sewerage, water supply, drainage — developed in parallel with the new townships, not after.
  • A binding three-year deadline now applies: all development work tied to a village must be completed within three years of GMADA taking possession of the acquired land.
  • Houses along a village’s traditional boundary road (the phirni) are fully exempt from acquisition. Houses standing in fields beyond the phirni will be relocated, with GMADA managing the process.
  • The decision follows a three-week Pucca Morcha protest by farmers outside GMADA’s Sector 62 headquarters, layered on top of an already-revised Land Pooling Policy that increased plot entitlements in April 2026.
  • This sits within a much larger 11,103-acre acquisition drive covering Aerotropolis, Eco City-3, Eco City-4, and new residential townships in New Chandigarh.
11,103 AcresTotal Acquisition Drive
3 YearsBinding Village Development Deadline
₹5Cr → ₹8CrLand Value, Pre vs Post Notification (per acre)
~₹16 CrCombined Developed-Plot Value per Acre
5,500 AcresAerotropolis — 9 Pockets, Near Airport
Phirni ExemptBoundary-Road Houses Protected

What Has the Punjab Government Actually Announced?

It helps to be precise here, because policy announcements in this space tend to get inflated in re-reporting. What the government has confirmed, through an in-principle decision taken at a high-level meeting and reported by The Tribune on June 24, 2026, is this: villages whose agricultural land is acquired under the ongoing Greater Mohali / New Chandigarh expansion will have their own settlement infrastructure upgraded and integrated with GMADA’s systems, on a fixed three-year timeline, as a condition attached to the acquisition process.

Three Specific Commitments

  • Utility integration — Village sewerage, water supply networks and drainage will be physically connected to GMADA’s own infrastructure grid, the same systems serving the new sectors, rather than left on separate, ageing village arrangements.
  • Guaranteed road funding — GMADA has committed to providing gap funding so that no village road project stalls for lack of money, with multiple government departments jointly responsible for execution.
  • Phirni exemption — Houses standing along the phirni, the customary boundary road that has marked the physical edge of a Punjabi village for generations, are fully exempt from land acquisition. Houses outside the phirni but within the planning area will instead be relocated, with GMADA taking responsibility.
Important distinction: This is a Punjab government decision layered on top of an already-active Land Pooling Policy — it is not a separate scheme. It is best understood as a course-correction to a land acquisition programme that had run into serious farmer resistance.

Why Is Greater Mohali Expanding in the First Place?

Greater Mohali — broadly the SAS Nagar district stretching from Mohali city through Kharar, Banur, Zirakpur and Derabassi, up to New Chandigarh and Mullanpur — has been the fastest-growing urban corridor in Punjab for over a decade. Chandigarh itself is a fixed, planned city with essentially no room left to expand. Every overflow of population, business and capital that Chandigarh can’t absorb has gone into this belt instead.

GMADA’s response has been a series of large, named townships: Aerocity, IT City, Eco City (in its first and second phases), and now the much larger Aerotropolis — a 5,500-acre, nine-pocket township built around Shaheed Bhagat Singh International Airport. Eco City-3 (roughly 717 acres) and the newly notified Eco City-4 (526 acres across four villages in Kharar tehsil) extend this further into New Chandigarh. Altogether, the current acquisition drive covers 11,103 acres.

All of this land has one thing in common: it used to be — and in many cases still is, until possession is formally taken — agricultural land belonging to villages that have farmed it for generations. The expansion is happening because Punjab needs more planned urban land near Chandigarh and the airport, and the only way to get it is by acquiring it from existing villages.

What Role Does GMADA Play in All This?

GMADA — the Greater Mohali Area Development Authority — is the statutory body that does almost everything in this story. Constituted in 2006 under the Punjab Regional and Town Planning and Development Act, 1995, GMADA is responsible for development and redevelopment across Mohali, Banur, Zirakpur, Derabassi, Kharar, Mullanpur, Fatehgarh Sahib, Mandi Gobindgarh and Rupnagar.

In practice, GMADA does four things in any expansion like this: it notifies and acquires land, it prepares master plans and lays out sectors, it builds primary infrastructure (roads, sewerage trunk lines, water supply), and it allots developed plots — either to the open market or, under the Land Pooling Policy, back to the farmers who gave up their land in the first place.

The village-development commitment effectively adds a fifth function GMADA has not historically performed at scale: extending and maintaining infrastructure inside existing village settlements, not just around them. This is the part that is genuinely new. Read more about how GMADA’s broader projects are shaping the corridor in our GMADA Properties Mohali 2026 guide.

Villages Expected to Benefit

The commitment applies broadly to villages within the 11,103-acre acquisition footprint, spanning multiple GMADA projects. Based on official notifications and reporting through mid-2026, the villages most directly affected include:

  • Aerotropolis-area villages in SAS Nagar tehsil, across Pockets A through J of the 5,500-acre township, including villages around the early-phase Pockets A–D and those now under acquisition for Pockets E onward.
  • Eco City-3 villages in New Chandigarh: Hoshiyarpur, Rasulpur, Takipur, Dhode Majra, Majra, Salamatpur, Kansala, Rajgarh and Kartarpur — nine villages covering roughly 717 acres, where compensation awards were announced in December 2025.
  • Eco City-4 villages in Majri sub-tehsil, Kharar tehsil: Kartarpur, Kansala, Rajgarh and Boothgarh, covering 526 acres notified in June 2026. Three of these villages overlap with Eco City-3.
  • Villages under the 309-acre low/high-density residential township in New Chandigarh.
  • Additional villages named in ongoing Section 4 and Section 5 notifications, such as Nadiayali and Banur (Tehsil Banur), where public hearings were held through May 2026.
Not exhaustive: GMADA’s notification pipeline is active and additional villages are likely to be added as Aerotropolis Pockets E through J and further New Chandigarh extensions move through acquisition. If your village or land falls in this belt, confirm status directly on GMADA’s notifications portal — not secondhand reporting.

Infrastructure Planned: Roads, Water, Sewerage, Drainage

Road Development

Village roads are to be funded and constructed with GMADA acting as financial backstop — providing gap funding wherever a project would otherwise stall — while execution responsibility is shared across departments. This is distinct from the major arterial road network already planned for these townships: 60-metre wide arterial roads, 45-metre collector roads and 30-metre primary roads under GMADA’s New Chandigarh development plan, plus large projects like the 200-foot road connecting Aerocity/Airport Road to the Kharar-Banur road (PR-9).

Water Supply & Sewerage

The commitment is to integrate village water supply and sewerage directly with GMADA’s own trunk systems — the same infrastructure being laid for the new sectors — rather than maintaining two parallel, unequal systems side by side. This addresses the oldest and most legitimate farmer grievance in this story: villages giving up land for urban development while remaining without basic civic services themselves.

Drainage

Drainage integration follows the same logic. Villages sitting inside or adjacent to new sectors have historically suffered worse flooding precisely because their land was absorbed into the urban grid without matching stormwater infrastructure.

Public Utilities & the Phirni Exemption

Beyond utilities, the phirni exemption is itself an infrastructure-adjacent protection — by keeping the village’s boundary road and the houses along it outside the acquisition footprint, the government preserves the physical core of the settlement while urbanisation proceeds around it rather than through it.

How This Impacts Property Prices

Will Land Prices Increase?

They already have, sharply. Pre-notification agricultural land values in the GMADA belt stood at roughly ₹5 crore per acre. After acquisition notifications were issued, market values rose to approximately ₹8 crore per acre — land confirmed to be absorbed into a planned township commands a premium even before infrastructure exists. Compensation awards already declared — for Eco City-3, the New Chandigarh township, and Aerotropolis Blocks A–D — have been pegged above ₹19 crore per acre, and combined developed-plot value under the Land Pooling Policy is estimated at around ₹16 crore per acre.

The village-development commitment adds a further layer: land and plots near villages with a guaranteed three-year infrastructure timeline are likely to be seen as lower-risk, because the historic pattern — sectors built while neighbouring villages stayed unserviced — depressed values at those exact boundary zones.

Will Apartment Prices Rise?

Indirectly, yes — though the mechanism is about confidence more than direct cause and effect. Apartment pricing in Mohali’s established corridors (IT City, Aerocity, Sector 82) responds primarily to employment growth and connectivity, not to land acquisition news in adjoining villages. But sustained, well-executed infrastructure expansion strengthens the overall growth narrative supporting apartment demand citywide, and reduces the “infrastructure that never arrives” discount buyers often price into under-construction Mohali projects.

Will Commercial Property Benefit?

This is where the effect is most direct. Aerotropolis and Eco City commercial plots depend heavily on the surrounding population actually moving in and staying, which in turn depends on civic infrastructure functioning from day one. A village development guarantee that keeps water, sewerage and roads working at the boundary of new commercial zones directly supports footfall and occupancy for businesses operating there.

Property Price Impact Table

SegmentPre-Notification ValuePost-Notification ValueLand Pooling Plot Value
Agricultural land (GMADA belt avg)~₹5 Cr/acre~₹8 Cr/acre
Eco City-3 acquisition (per village avg)~₹5 Cr/acre₹4.27–5.46 Cr/acre~₹16 Cr/acre (combined)
Aerotropolis Pocket A residential LOI₹50,000–57,000/sq yd
Aerotropolis Pocket B–D residential LOI₹37,000–44,000/sq yd
New Chandigarh township awardAbove ₹19 Cr/acre

Figures sourced from Tribune reporting and Mohali Aerotropolis dealer-network data current to June 2026. Secondary-market LOI prices fluctuate — verify independently before any transaction.

What Should Existing Homeowners Know?

If you already own property — a house, a flat, or agricultural land — anywhere in this corridor, three things matter immediately.

  • Check whether your specific village or land parcel has actually been notified under Section 4 or Section 5 — general news does not mean every plot in the district is affected
  • If your house sits along the phirni, confirm exemption status against the specific notification for your village, not general reporting
  • If you already own a flat/plot in an established township (Aerocity, IT City, earlier Eco City phases), this announcement doesn’t change your title — its relevance is about the broader growth trajectory of the corridor

Impact on Farmers, Landowners, Builders & NRIs

Impact on Farmers

For farmers surrendering land, the village-development commitment sits on top of an already significantly revised compensation framework. As of the April 2026 enhancement, the residential plot entitlement under the mixed-use category rose from 1,600 to 1,630 square yards per acre, and the commercial SCO entitlement rose from 200 to 210 square yards per acre, for holdings of one acre or more. Under the oustee category, farmers with smaller holdings receive fixed plot sizes of 200, 300 or 500 square yards depending on holding size, allotted at scheme price. All plots, including previously reserved preferential-location plots, now go into a single draw of lots.

The Sahuliyat Certificate — granting stamp duty exemption when reinvesting compensation in alternative Punjab land — has had its validity extended from two years to four, alongside the linked window for priority tubewell connections.

Impact on Landowners

For landowners whose land hasn’t yet been notified, compensation and plot-entitlement frameworks have moved consistently upward — three revisions in roughly a year. That trend, plus the new development guarantee, materially changes the calculus around resisting versus negotiating when a notification eventually arrives. Engaging early with GMADA’s land-owner cell and verifying entitlements against the current policy version remains essential.

Impact on Builders

Builders operating near these villages benefit from a lower long-term infrastructure risk profile — civic services at the township-village boundary are less likely to remain unfinished, historically a source of project delays. Builders should still expect continued acquisition activity and occasional protest-driven disruption to remain part of the operating environment for the next several years.

Impact on NRIs

NRI buyers eyeing Aerotropolis LOIs, Eco City plots, or flats in the wider Mohali corridor should read this as a risk-reduction signal rather than a price-appreciation trigger in itself. A credible, time-bound commitment to fix the village-infrastructure gap reduces one of the specific concerns NRI buyers raise most often: that government-led townships in Punjab have a poor track record of finishing what they start on schedule. See our NRI Property Investment Guide for the full buying process.

Investment Opportunities & Risks

The clearest opportunity sits in GMADA’s own Land Pooling and direct-allotment products — Aerotropolis pockets currently in early-phase acquisition (Pockets E onward), and any future Eco City tranches — via fresh allotment where eligible or the secondary LOI market for already-notified pockets. Developed-plot value under the current framework is estimated at roughly double the post-notification land price and three times the pre-notification price, though this value is only realised once GMADA actually delivers possession and registry — precisely what this village-development commitment and three-year deadline are meant to make more reliable.

This is not risk-free. Land acquisition in Punjab has a documented history of stalling, reversing and being challenged in court — the original June 2025 Land Pooling Policy was withdrawn entirely within two months after a High Court stay and mass protests. Pocket A of Aerotropolis carries an active 927-acre court dispute, and LOIs there cannot currently be registered. Eco City-3, first conceptualised in 2016, was halted in 2020 due to budget constraints, restarting only in 2022.

Read this carefully: The new three-year completion deadline is, as of writing, an in-principle commitment with a formal notification expected “shortly” — not yet a fully codified, court-tested legal guarantee with penalty clauses. Verify acquisition status, court-dispute status and infrastructure progress of any specific pocket before committing capital.

Benefits vs Risks

BenefitsRisks
Enhanced farmer compensation (~₹16 Cr/acre developed-plot value)Policy revised three times in a year — execution history uneven
First-ever binding 3-year village development deadlineDeadline not yet codified in a penalty-backed notification
Phirni-house exemption protects village residential coreHouses beyond phirni still face relocation — process still emerging
Village utilities integrated with GMADA’s own systemsPocket A (927 acres) remains under active court dispute
Closes historic township-village infrastructure gapEco City-3 was paused for years before restarting
Broad political consensus across party linesLand pooling LOIs are illiquid — secondary sales can take weeks

Investor Checklist

  • Confirm the specific pocket/village is not under active court dispute
  • Verify LOI authenticity directly at the GMADA office before transacting
  • Check grid road and trunk infrastructure progress for the specific pocket
  • Budget for transfer fee, stamp duty and registration on secondary LOI purchases
  • Treat this as a medium-to-long-term capital appreciation play, not a quick flip

Buyer Checklist (Ready/Resale Property)

  • Confirm RERA registration of any project on the Punjab RERA portal
  • Check proximity to villages under acquisition and their infrastructure status
  • Verify clear title and chain of ownership before booking resale
  • Get an independent market valuation before finalising price

NRI Checklist

  • Confirm eligibility under FEMA — residential/commercial yes, agricultural land no
  • Set up NRE/NRO account routing for payment before initiating any purchase
  • Arrange Power of Attorney if you cannot be present for registry
  • Factor in 1% TDS on transactions above ₹50 lakh

Infrastructure Timeline

  • June 2025Punjab notifies original Land Pooling Policy-2025 proposing compulsory pooling of 65,533 acres statewide; triggers immediate protests.
  • August 2025Policy withdrawn entirely after High Court interim stay and political pressure.
  • November 2025Revised, optional Land Pooling Policy introduced for the 11,103-acre Greater Mohali/New Chandigarh drive.
  • December 2025Eco City-3 compensation award announced — ₹3,690 crore across 716 acres, nine villages.
  • March 30, 2026Compensation award for 309-acre New Chandigarh township, pegged above ₹19 crore/acre.
  • April 2026Enhanced land pooling package: bigger plots, oustee quota, free conveyance deeds, four-year Sahuliyat Certificate validity.
  • June 2, 2026Eco City-4 Section 4(1) notification issued for 526 acres across four villages in Kharar tehsil.
  • Mid-June 2026Three-week Pucca Morcha protest at GMADA HQ, Sector 62, ends after government agrees to further concessions.
  • June 24, 2026Punjab announces in-principle decision to develop villages simultaneously with townships, with three-year deadline.
  • Expected 2027–2028Possession targeted for Phase 1 of several Aerotropolis pockets.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Punjab Greater Mohali expansion?

It refers to the Punjab government’s ongoing 11,103-acre land acquisition drive across Greater Mohali and New Chandigarh, run by GMADA, covering projects including Aerotropolis, Eco City-3, Eco City-4 and new residential townships, to create planned urban land near Chandigarh and the airport.

What has changed for villages under this acquisition?

For the first time, Punjab has committed to developing village infrastructure — roads, water supply, sewerage and drainage — simultaneously with the new townships, on a fixed three-year completion deadline, rather than after township development is complete.

Are village houses being acquired along with farmland?

Houses along the village phirni, the traditional boundary road, are exempt from acquisition. Houses standing in agricultural fields beyond the phirni, if they fall within the planning area, will be relocated, with GMADA managing the process.

What is GMADA’s Land Pooling Policy?

It is a scheme letting farmers exchange acquired agricultural land for developed residential and commercial plots instead of, or alongside, cash compensation, with entitlements currently set at 1,630 sq yd residential and 210 sq yd commercial SCO plot per acre under the mixed-use category.

How much compensation are farmers getting in this acquisition?

Compensation awards announced so far have exceeded ₹19 crore per acre for several projects, with combined developed-plot value under the Land Pooling Policy estimated at around ₹16 crore per acre — well above the pre-notification land value of roughly ₹5 crore per acre.

Will this expansion increase property prices in Mohali?

Land values in the GMADA acquisition belt have already risen from roughly ₹5 crore to ₹8 crore per acre since notifications began. Broader apartment and commercial pricing across Mohali tends to respond more to employment and connectivity trends, but reliable infrastructure execution generally supports values over time.

What is the Aerotropolis project?

Aerotropolis is GMADA’s 5,500-acre, nine-pocket planned township adjacent to Shaheed Bhagat Singh International Airport, Mohali, combining residential, commercial and institutional land use, with Pockets A–D in active secondary-market trading via tradeable Letters of Intent (LOIs).

What is Eco City-4?

Eco City-4 is a newly notified GMADA project covering 526 acres across four villages — Kartarpur, Kansala, Rajgarh and Boothgarh — in Kharar tehsil, notified for acquisition on June 2, 2026, following the resolution of farmer protests over the broader land pooling drive.

Is the three-year village development deadline legally binding?

As of June 2026, it is an in-principle government decision reported through official channels, with a formal notification expected. It is a strong policy commitment but should be tracked for formal, penalty-backed codification before being treated as a guaranteed legal deadline.

Should I invest in GMADA land pooling plots now?

Land pooling and LOI investments in this corridor offer significant upside based on the gap between pre-notification land value and developed-plot value, but carry real execution risk given the policy’s history of revisions and pauses. Independent verification of acquisition status, court disputes and project-specific timelines is essential before investing.

Expert Analysis — Should You Invest Now?

👤

Manindar Verma

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

“Infrastructure-led expansion around Chandigarh has historically rewarded patient capital and punished anyone expecting fast, linear returns. Aerocity and IT City both took the better part of a decade to go from notification to genuinely livable. What’s different this time is the government attaching a specific, dated commitment to the part of the process that’s historically been most neglected — the village left behind, not the sector built around it. Whether that holds will be visible within three years of each possession date. That’s a far shorter, more checkable horizon than the open-ended promises of earlier phases.”

If your interest is in GMADA-allotted land pooling plots or Aerotropolis LOIs specifically because of this announcement, the honest answer is: this strengthens the medium-term case, but it does not remove the underlying risks that have defined this market through 2025 and 2026 — policy revisions, court disputes in specific pockets, and a track record of delayed, not denied, delivery. If your interest is in established, fully built property in Mohali’s core sectors, this announcement is reassuring background context rather than a direct reason to act today.

Either way, the right move is the same one it always is in this corridor: verify the specific notification, project phase, and legal status of any land or plot before committing capital, and work with someone who tracks GMADA’s notifications as they are issued.

Conclusion

Punjab’s decision to develop villages alongside the townships built on their land is, on its own terms, an overdue correction to how Greater Mohali has expanded for nearly twenty years. It does not eliminate the real risks — court disputes, policy volatility, execution delays — that have shaped this market through 2025 and 2026. But it does close one of the most legitimate gaps in the entire expansion story, with a specific, dated commitment that is far easier to hold the government accountable to than the vague promises that preceded it. For anyone with land, a home, or capital in this corridor, that distinction is worth tracking closely over the next three years.

ROYALS PROPERTY CONSULTANT · RERA: PBRERA-CHD04-REA0390

Want to Know How This Affects Your Property or Investment?

Talk to Manindar Verma — 15+ years tracking GMADA notifications and Mohali’s growth corridor. Get a free, honest assessment of your specific situation.

⭐ 5.0 Google Rating · 51 Verified Reviews · 500+ Families Served

Punjab Greater Mohali Expansion 2026, Greater Mohali Expansion, GMADA Village Plan, GMADA Expansion 2026, GMADA News, Punjab Property News, Mohali Property News, Greater Mohali Development, GMADA Master Plan, GMADA Infrastructure Projects, New Chandigarh Development, Mohali Infrastructure News, Punjab Real Estate News, GMADA Land Acquisition, Mohali Expansion Project, GMADA New Sectors, Mohali Urban Development, Punjab Urban Development, Greater Mohali Master Plan, GMADA Township Development, Mohali Investment News, Mohali Real Estate Investment, New Township Mohali, GMADA Villages, Mohali Growth Corridor, Mohali Future Development, Punjab Infrastructure Projects, GMADA Regional Plan, Mohali Smart City, SAS Nagar Development, GMADA Housing Projects, Mohali Property Investment, Chandigarh Tricity Development, Aerotropolis Mohali, Aerocity Mohali, GMADA Planning, Mohali New Residential Sectors, Punjab Housing Development, Mohali Upcoming Projects, Property Investment Mohali, GMADA Approved Projects, Mohali Development Authority, Punjab Government Projects, Mohali Real Estate Market, GMADA Development News, Mohali Expansion News, Chandigarh Property News, Mohali Master Plan 2031, GMADA Notifications, Greater Mohali Urban Expansion

GMADA June 2026 Update

GMADA June 2026 Update

GMADA June 2026 Update: Aerotropolis, Eco City 4, New Chandigarh & Latest Announcements

Royals Property Consultant is a trusted name for buying, selling, renting, and investing in residential and commercial properties in Zirakpur, Mohali, Chandigarh, and New Chandigarh.

GMADA June 2026 Update
GMADA June 2026 Update: Aerotropolis, Eco City 4 & New Chandigarh
📍 June 2026 Update · GMADA · SAS Nagar, Mohali

GMADA June 2026 Update:
Aerotropolis, Eco City 4, New Chandigarh & Latest Announcements

The most important month for GMADA in recent years — Eco City 4 notified, villages to be developed alongside townships, and Aerotropolis moving forward. Here is everything an investor, end-user, or NRI buyer needs to know.

MV
Manindar Verma
Managing Director · Royals Property Consultant
📅 Updated June 27, 2026 ⏱ 16 min read 🏛 RERA: PBRERA-CHD04-REA0390
⚡ Quick Answer — Google SGE & AI Search

GMADA’s June 2026 updates include three landmark developments: the Section 4(1) notification for Eco City-4 covering 526 acres across four villages in Kharar tehsil, Punjab’s unprecedented commitment to develop villages contributing land to new townships within three years, and continued Aerotropolis expansion with the Banur belt extension notified at 2,489 acres. No fresh plot scheme has been launched this month — investors should monitor the official GMADA website for allotment announcements.

11,103
Acres Under Acquisition
526
Eco City-4 Acres Notified
5,500
Aerotropolis Total Acres
3 Yrs
Village Dev Commitment
7
GMADA Townships Planned

Overview: What Is GMADA and Why Does It Matter?

If you are investing in property anywhere in the Greater Mohali area — whether in Zirakpur, Kharar, Mohali, or New Chandigarh — there is one government body whose decisions will shape the value of your investment more than any other. That body is GMADA: the Greater Mohali Area Development Authority.

GMADA was constituted in 2006 under the Punjab Regional and Town Planning and Development Act, 1995. It is the statutory planning and development body for the SAS Nagar (Mohali) region. Its jurisdiction covers Mohali, Banur, Zirakpur, Dera Bassi, Kharar, Mullanpur, Fatehgarh Sahib, Mandi Gobindgarh, and Roopnagar. In practice, this means GMADA controls master planning, land acquisition, infrastructure development, and plot allotment across one of the fastest-growing urban corridors in North India.

Every major road that improves connectivity to your property, every new township that brings fresh demand, every plot scheme that sets market benchmarks — almost all of it flows through GMADA. That is why thousands of investors, NRI buyers, builders, and end-users follow GMADA’s announcements closely every single month.

June 2026 has been one of the most significant months in GMADA’s recent history. New acquisition drives have been notified, a landmark commitment to village development has been made, and the Aerotropolis expansion is continuing to take shape. This article breaks it all down for you — clearly, without hype, and with the context you actually need to make a smart decision.

What’s New in June 2026: The Big Developments

Three major developments stand out this month. Each one matters for a different reason, and together they paint a picture of a government that is moving forward with its Greater Mohali vision at a pace the market has not seen before.

🏘️

Eco City-4 Formally Notified

Section 4(1) notification issued June 2, 2026 for 526 acres across four villages in Kharar tehsil. Acquisition journey officially begins.

🤝

Village Development Commitment

Punjab Government commits to developing all villages contributing land — roads, sewerage, water supply — within three years of award. A first in Punjab’s history.

✈️

Aerotropolis Extension Notified

2,489 acres in the Banur belt formally notified as part of the broader 5,500-acre Aerotropolis township adjacent to Chandigarh Airport.

⚖️

Land Pooling Policy Scrapped

Punjab reverted to the Right to Fair Compensation Act 2013 after protests, bringing greater transparency and certainty to the acquisition process.

🏗️

Eco City-3 Launch Expected H2 2026

GMADA’s Chief Administrator has indicated the Eco City-3 township launch could happen before the end of 2026, with compensation awards already declared.

🛣️

PR-7 Road Progress

Physical ground work has commenced on the Zirakpur PR-7 six-lane highway, with heavy machinery mobilised for soil testing. A major connectivity upgrade for the region.

📊 June 2026 GMADA Updates — At a Glance

Development Date / Status Area / Scale Investor Relevance
Eco City-4 Section 4(1) NotificationJune 2, 2026 ✅526 acres, 4 villagesLong-term acquisition play
Village Development CommitmentJune 24, 2026 ✅All 11,103-acre zone villagesReduces farmer protest risk
Aerotropolis Banur Belt NotificationActive ✅2,489 acresStrong airport-proximity demand
Eco City-3 Launch TimelineH2 2026 Expected ⏳716 acresWatch for allotment dates
Land Pooling Policy WithdrawalConfirmed ✅All ongoing projectsGreater legal clarity
PR-7 Six-Lane Highway ConstructionGround Work Started ✅Zirakpur corridorDirect price uplift for Airport Road
Sector 87 Commercial City CentrePlanning Stage ⏳Sector 87, SAS NagarFuture commercial demand driver
New Plot Scheme / e-AuctionNone This Month ❌Monitor official website
Disclaimer: All information in this article is based on publicly available reports, official GMADA notifications, and reputable media sources including The Tribune and verified real estate publications. This article does not constitute financial or legal advice. Investors should verify all details independently and consult a qualified professional before making property decisions. Prices are not mentioned intentionally as they vary by location, plot size, and market conditions — call us for current market insights.

Latest GMADA Notifications — What’s Been Published

For anyone who tracks GMADA closely, June 2026 has had meaningful official activity. The authority’s notification board on gmada.gov.in has seen several significant entries this month.

Active Notifications This Month

📄
Land Acquisition

Eco City-4 Project Notification

Section 4(1) notice issued for 526.03 acres across Kartarpur, Kansala, Rajgarh, and Boothgarh villages in Kharar tehsil. This marks the formal start of the Eco City-4 acquisition journey.

📄
Aerotropolis

Banur Belt Corrigendum & Public Notice

GMADA published updated land pooling forms and public notices for the Aerotropolis scheme extension covering the Banur belt, with corrections to earlier notifications.

📄
Industrial

Industrial Park Sectors 101 & 103

Public notices issued for acquisition of land for Industrial Park in Sectors 101 and 103, SAS Nagar. Section 15 objection hearings scheduled.

📄
Commercial

Sector 87 Commercial City Centre

Section 15 hearing scheduled for land acquisition to set up commercial infrastructure in Sector 87 at SAS Nagar — the proposed new commercial hub for Greater Mohali.

Important for investors: No new residential e-auction or plot lottery has been announced in June 2026. If you see anyone offering “pre-booking” of Eco City-3 or Eco City-4 plots, this is unauthorised — no legitimate sale is possible through any channel other than GMADA’s official process. Always verify at gmada.gov.in before transacting.

GMADA Land Acquisition Updates — Project by Project

Aerotropolis — The Airport Township

The Aerotropolis is GMADA’s most ambitious project — a 5,500-acre integrated township built directly adjacent to Shaheed Bhagat Singh International Airport (IXC) in Mohali. To put that scale in perspective, it is larger than many of India’s planned smart cities. The township is designed to include residential pockets, commercial zones, institutional areas, and industrial parks — all within a single, planned development.

The Aerotropolis is being developed in multiple pockets — A through D in the existing scheme, with the Banur belt extension now adding 2,489 more acres. Pockets B, C, and D have active infrastructure development underway. Pocket A involves approximately 927 acres that remain under a legal dispute stemming from the Guava Scam case, which has caused delays in that specific zone.

For investors in the secondary LOI (Letter of Intent) market, Aerotropolis continues to show demand across all non-disputed pockets. LOIs — the transferable documents that precede formal registry in GMADA’s plot allotment process — trade actively in Mohali’s secondary market. Mid-2026 indicative rates for residential LOIs in Pocket A range broadly from ₹50,000 to ₹57,000 per square yard at the upper end, with other pockets at different levels. These are dealer-reported secondary market figures and not GMADA allotment prices. Call us for current verified rates before transacting.

Aerotropolis PocketSizeDevelopment StatusLegal StatusInvestor Position
Pocket A (Residential)~927 acresPartial — disputed zoneCourt Case PendingSecondary LOI market active
Pocket BActiveInfrastructure underwayClearGood secondary demand
Pocket CActiveInfrastructure underwayClearActive LOI trading
Pocket DActiveInfrastructure underwayClearActive LOI trading
Banur Belt Extension2,489 acresNotifiedAcquisition StageEarly-stage, long horizon
Sector 101 Industrial ParkActiveAcquisition/Objection StageSection 15 HearingCommercial/industrial play

Eco City-4 — The Newest Notification

Eco City-4 is the freshest entry in GMADA’s expansion plans and has generated significant attention since the Section 4(1) notification was issued on June 2, 2026. The acquisition covers 526.03 acres across four villages — Kartarpur, Kansala, Rajgarh, and Boothgarh — in the Kharar tehsil of SAS Nagar district.

It is important to understand where Eco City-4 sits in GMADA’s sequential development. Eco City-1 (approximately 419 acres near Mullanpur Garibdas) and Eco City-2 (approximately 387 acres in Hoshiarpur and Takipur) are already developed and allotted. Eco City-3 — at 716 acres, with the compensation award declared in December 2025 — is expected to launch allotments by end of 2026. Eco City-4 has just entered the acquisition process and will take considerably longer before any allotment is possible.

⚠️ Critical Note for Eco City-4 Buyers

Eco City-4 is at the very beginning of its legal journey. The Section 4(1) notification is only the first step. Further notifications, compensation awards, possession, infrastructure development, and then allotment will follow — a process that typically takes multiple years.

No authorised pre-booking or reservation of Eco City-4 plots exists through any channel. Any agent or developer claiming to offer “booking” of Eco City-4 plots is making an unauthorised claim. GMADA allotments happen only through official lottery or auction processes announced on gmada.gov.in.

  • Section 4(1) notified: June 2, 2026
  • Expected allotment timeline: Several years from now
  • Watch: gmada.gov.in for all official updates

Eco City-3 — The One to Watch in 2026

If Eco City-4 is the long-horizon play, Eco City-3 is the near-term opportunity that serious GMADA investors should focus on. The compensation award under Section 19 of the Land Acquisition Act was declared in December 2025, covering 716 acres acquired from nine villages. GMADA’s Chief Administrator has publicly indicated that a township launch could happen before the end of 2026.

Eco City-2’s extension scheme — announced in late 2025 and covering 96 acres in Hoshiarpur village with 153 residential and 68 commercial plots — gives some indication of what Eco City-3 allotments might look like in terms of draw-based pricing. For verified current pricing and allotment details as they are announced, contact us directly at Royals Property Consultant.

Village Development — The Policy That Changes Everything

This deserves more attention than it has received in mainstream coverage. On June 24, 2026, The Tribune reported that the Punjab Government has made a formal, unprecedented commitment: every village contributing agricultural land to Greater Mohali and New Chandigarh’s 11,103-acre acquisition drive will be developed simultaneously, not after the fact.

The commitment includes integration of village sewerage, water supply, and drainage with GMADA’s own infrastructure systems. Village roads will be constructed by the departments concerned, with GMADA providing gap funding. Houses along the village boundary road — the traditional “phirni” — will be completely exempt from acquisition, preserving each village’s physical identity. Development must be completed within three years of the acquisition award date.

Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann personally stated that this is a guarantee to farmers, not just a policy. A formal notification giving legal effect to these commitments is expected to be issued shortly.

For investors, this matters because farmer protests have been one of the most consistent sources of delay in GMADA’s acquisition drives. By addressing the root grievance — that villages are left to decay while planned townships are built around them — the government is reducing one of the primary risk factors for investors in GMADA projects.

Infrastructure Progress — What Is Actually Being Built

PR-7 Road — Zirakpur’s Game-Changer

The PR-7 six-lane highway through Zirakpur is arguably the single most impactful infrastructure project for property values in the immediate tricity market. Physical work has commenced, with heavy machinery — including equipment for deep soil testing at 100-foot depth — mobilised at the site. The contractor (RKECPL) is now active on the ground. For buyers considering Zirakpur properties on Airport Road or in the PR-7 corridor, this is the connectivity upgrade that will compress commute times significantly.

GMADA Ongoing Road Projects

ProjectDescriptionStatus
Aerocity Internal Roads (Left & Right)Internal roads, parks, civil + horticultureActive
200-ft Road (Aerocity to Kharar-Banur PR-9)Major arterial link road, SAS NagarActive
IT City Development (1,700 acres)Roads, utilities, urban estateActive
Airport to Aerocity Junction RoadDirect airport connectivityActive
New Chandigarh 200-ft Spine RoadUT boundary to Kurali-Siswan junction, 8 kmActive
PR-7 Six-Lane Highway (Zirakpur)Parwanoo-Zirakpur bypass and ring roadGround Work Started
2 Additional Vertical Roads, New ChandigarhPR-4 to New Chandigarh road links, 60m widePlanned

Utilities and Social Infrastructure

Road building is visible. What is less visible but equally important is the public health infrastructure — water supply, drainage, sewerage, and street lighting — being simultaneously developed across GMADA estates. In Eco City-1, for example, public health services work is currently active. The Aerocity estate is getting its utility systems upgraded as internal development progresses. These are the foundations that make a planned township livable rather than just mapped.

On the social infrastructure front, GMADA’s master plan for New Chandigarh envisages a self-sustaining medium-density urban area with educational institutions, healthcare facilities, and commercial centres at planned intervals. The Medicity area in New Chandigarh, Knowledge City, and the proposed Education City all contribute to this ecosystem — creating an employment and amenity base that supports long-term residential demand.

Upcoming GMADA Plot Schemes — What Buyers Need to Know

This is the question every investor asks: when is GMADA launching its next plot scheme? Here is an honest answer based on current publicly available information.

How GMADA Allotments Work

🎯
Method 1

Draw-Based Allotment

GMADA announces a scheme with a fixed application period. Eligible applicants submit earnest money. If oversubscribed, a public lottery determines allottees. Used for Eco City 1 and 2.

🔨
Method 2

e-Auction

GMADA auctions commercial SCOs, bay shops, institutional and chunk sites through online bidding. Results published transparently. Used regularly for commercial properties.

📜
Method 3

Land Pooling (LOI)

Farmers receive LOIs in lieu of their land. These LOIs trade on the secondary market. Used in Aerotropolis. Buyers purchase LOIs from existing holders through registered dealers.

Based on current GMADA activity, the next expected plot allotment is in Eco City-3, with a launch potentially before the end of 2026. For Eco City-4 and the Aerotropolis Banur belt, formal allotments remain years away. There is no confirmed date for a new residential draw scheme as of this writing.

Practical advice: Subscribe to GMADA’s official notification system at gmada.gov.in and bookmark this page. We will update this article as soon as any new scheme is announced. You can also WhatsApp Manindar Verma at +91 98787 59508 to receive alerts directly.

Property Market Analysis — Mohali, New Chandigarh & Tricity

GMADA’s June 2026 activity is playing out against a property market that is showing genuine momentum across the Tricity region. Understanding that context helps you interpret what these announcements actually mean for your investment.

Demand Drivers That Are Real

Three factors are genuinely driving demand in the Mohali-Zirakpur-New Chandigarh corridor right now. First, IT sector employment — both from established IT City tenants and from newer entrants drawn by Chandigarh airport’s expanding connectivity — continues to generate steady residential demand from working professionals and their families. Second, NRI buyers from Canada, the UK, the Middle East, and Australia are active in the market, with the relative strength of foreign currencies making Indian real estate look attractively priced even at current levels. Third, infrastructure momentum — specifically the PR-7 road, Aerotropolis development, and New Chandigarh township expansion — is giving buyers confidence that the location story will improve further.

Supply Picture

The supply side tells an interesting story. In the luxury and premium segments — apartments above 2,000 sq ft, plotted GMADA schemes — supply remains constrained relative to demand. Private builders in Zirakpur and Mohali are active, but the benchmark-setting quality of GMADA allotments means that secondary market prices for GMADA plots are holding well even as private sector inventory expands.

Rental Market

IT City Mohali, Airport Road Zirakpur, and the established sectors of Mohali (Sectors 66-90) are showing strong rental demand from corporate tenants, IT professionals, and airport-sector employees. Rental yields in well-located 3 BHK and 4 BHK apartments on Airport Road compare favourably with other major North Indian cities. For NRI investors using rental income to offset EMI or maintenance costs, this is a meaningful positive.

Investment Comparison: Aerotropolis vs Eco City vs IT City vs New Chandigarh

Parameter Aerotropolis Eco City (NC) IT City New Chandigarh (Private)
Development Stage Active (Pockets B-D) EC-1&2 Ready; EC-3 Due 2026; EC-4 Early Active Development Multiple stages
Liquidity High (active LOI market) Moderate (GMADA allotment) Moderate High (private resale)
Proximity to Airport Immediately adjacent 15-25 minutes Very close Moderate
Rental Demand Strong & Growing Developing Strong Moderate-Good
Price Entry Point Higher (premium location) GMADA draw rates (competitive); secondary market higher Moderate-High Wide range
Infrastructure Readiness Active construction EC-1&2 ready; others pending Good Varies by project
NRI Appeal Very High High Moderate Moderate
Long-Term Appreciation Potential Very High High High Moderate-High
Risk Level Medium (legal dispute Pocket A) Medium-Low (new areas long horizon) Low-Medium Varies by builder
Best For Investors, NRIs, HNI End-users, long-term investors IT professionals, investors Ready-to-move end-users

What Buyers Should Watch Next Month

Based on the current pace of GMADA activity, here is what serious investors should keep on their radar for July 2026 and the months that follow. These are possibilities to monitor — not confirmed events.

📋
High Priority

Eco City-3 Allotment Date

GMADA’s Chief Administrator has signalled a 2026 launch. Any official notification for Eco City-3 plot applications or lottery would be a major market event. Monitor gmada.gov.in weekly.

⚖️
Watch

Village Development Formal Notification

The Punjab Government’s commitment to develop villages requires a formal legal notification to give effect to it. Expect this in coming weeks — it will reduce acquisition resistance.

🏗️
Infrastructure

Aerotropolis Construction Milestones

Internal road development in Aerocity is active. Progress updates on Phase 1 completion, sector roads, and utilities will influence LOI pricing on the secondary market.

🏢
Commercial

Sector 87 Commercial Hub Progress

The proposed new commercial city centre at Sector 87 is at the Section 15 hearing stage for land acquisition. Any progression here will signal future commercial demand in the area.

📣
Policy

Eco City-4 Farmer Objections Period

Following the Section 4(1) notification, affected villages can file objections. The government’s response to these objections will determine how smoothly the acquisition proceeds.

🔨
Auction

GMADA e-Auction Activity

Commercial plots, SCOs, and institutional sites are regularly put on e-auction. Monthly monitoring of gmada.gov.in’s auction calendar can surface investment opportunities.

GMADA Investment — Honest Pros & Cons

✅ Advantages

  • Government authority — highest legal standing for plot allotments
  • Planned township development with dedicated infrastructure budgets
  • Airport adjacency (Aerotropolis) — rare in India at this scale
  • Active secondary LOI market provides liquidity for investors
  • IT City employment base drives consistent rental demand
  • Village development commitment reduces protest/delay risk going forward
  • NRI purchase allowed under FEMA through NRE/NRO accounts
  • Transparent e-auction and draw-based allotment process
  • New Chandigarh self-sustaining township ecosystem (health, education, IT, commerce)
  • Reversion to fair compensation Act increases farmer trust

⚠️ Risks to Consider

  • Pocket A legal dispute delays full Aerotropolis activation
  • Eco City-3 launch date not yet confirmed — could slip to 2027
  • Eco City-4 allotments are years away — not a near-term play
  • Secondary market prices can be significantly above draw allotment rates
  • GMADA development timelines have historically faced delays
  • Farmer protests, while reduced, remain a possibility in new acquisition zones
  • Collector rate vs market price gap creates capital gains complexity at resale
  • No new fresh allotment scheme this month — watch for announcement

Who Should Invest in GMADA Projects Right Now

🏠

End-Users

Ready-to-build on Eco City-1 or 2 resale plots, or upcoming Eco City-3 allotment. Best if you want GMADA legal standing and planned infrastructure.

💼

Long-Term Investors

LOI market in Aerotropolis or Eco City-3 allotment position. Hold for 5–10 years as airport-area infrastructure matures.

🌍

NRI Buyers

Aerotropolis LOIs and upcoming Eco City allotments. FEMA-compliant purchase via NRE/NRO. Strong appreciation story + potential rental income.

👑

HNI / Large Investors

Commercial plots via e-auction, chunk sites, or institutional land. Sector 87 commercial zone is an early-stage opportunity worth monitoring.

👨‍🌾

Land Owners / Farmers

With village development guarantee now committed, land pooling for Eco City-3 and Eco City-4 offers plot compensation without cash risk. Evaluate your land pooling options.

🏢

Builders & Developers

Group housing sites and institutional plots in GMADA estates offer a legitimate platform. Watch for next e-auction cycle for commercial and chunk site opportunities.

📬 Get Expert Guidance — Directly on WhatsApp

Tell us what you are looking for and we will respond on WhatsApp within hours with verified market information, available listings, and honest advice.

💬 Send to WhatsApp — Get Free Expert Advice

📞 Or call directly: +91 98787 59508 · RERA: PBRERA-CHD04-REA0390

Expert Opinion — June 2026 Analysis

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

15+ years in Tricity real estate · 500+ families served · Specialist in GMADA properties, NRI investment, and Mohali-Zirakpur-Chandigarh market

After 15 years of watching GMADA develop this region, I can say with confidence that June 2026 represents a meaningful inflection point — not because of any single announcement, but because of what the combination of decisions signals about government commitment and market direction.

Short-Term Outlook (6–18 Months)

The most important near-term event for the GMADA market is the Eco City-3 allotment launch. If GMADA delivers on its stated H2 2026 timeline, we will see significant market activity as buyers — both domestic and NRI — compete for a limited number of plots at draw-based pricing. The secondary market for existing Eco City-1 and 2 plots typically sees upward pressure before a new scheme launch as buyers look for alternatives if they miss out on the draw. Watch for that pattern.

In the Aerotropolis secondary market, LOI pricing in Pockets B, C, and D is supported by infrastructure activity on the ground. As more roads are completed and utilities are installed, the gap between paper promises and physical delivery narrows — and that typically translates to better pricing support in the secondary market.

Long-Term Outlook (3–10 Years)

The geographic arc that GMADA is building — from Mullanpur in the west through New Chandigarh sectors northward toward Kharar, connected to the airport township in the south — is one of the most ambitious planned urban expansions in North India. When you map this against the Employment City, Education City, IT City, Medicity, and Aerotropolis that are all part of the same master plan corridor, the long-term demand case is genuinely compelling.

The village development commitment — if executed as promised — could become a model for urban expansion in India. It addresses the single biggest friction point in planned township development: the displacement of existing communities. If villages grow alongside the township rather than being swallowed by it, farmer opposition reduces, acquisition pace improves, and the overall development story becomes more investible.

Advice for Different Buyer Types

First-time buyers: If you need a home in the next 2–3 years, GMADA plots are not the right choice because possession timelines are uncertain. Look at private RERA-registered projects in Zirakpur, Mohali Sectors 66–90, or existing Eco City-1 and 2 resale plots.

Investors with a 5+ year horizon: Aerotropolis LOIs in non-disputed pockets, and an Eco City-3 allotment position if the draw opens, are both strong plays. The infrastructure story is building, NRI demand is sustained, and the airport connectivity angle is genuinely unique.

NRI buyers: The Aerotropolis story is particularly strong for you. Airport proximity is a concept NRIs understand intuitively from their experience abroad. Purchase via NRE/NRO accounts is straightforward under FEMA. For home-buying for parents, the New Chandigarh private developer projects with better possession certainty are worth evaluating alongside GMADA options.

Land owners in acquisition zones: With the village development commitment now public and a three-year delivery guarantee attached, the case for participating in land pooling rather than resisting acquisition has become significantly stronger. Get proper legal advice on your compensation rights and land pooling options.

Aerotropolis Score
8.5/10
Eco City-3 Score
8.2/10
IT City Score
7.8/10
New Chandigarh Score
7.5/10
Market Sentiment
Positive

Frequently Asked Questions — GMADA June 2026

What is GMADA and what does it do?
GMADA (Greater Mohali Area Development Authority) is a government body constituted in 2006 under the Punjab Regional and Town Planning and Development Act, 1995. It handles master planning, land acquisition, infrastructure development, and plot allotment across the SAS Nagar (Mohali) region, including Zirakpur, Kharar, Mullanpur, and Dera Bassi. GMADA plots carry the highest legal standing of any plot type in the region.
Is GMADA launching any new plot scheme in June 2026?
No new residential plot draw scheme has been announced in June 2026. The most anticipated upcoming allotment is Eco City-3, which GMADA’s Chief Administrator has indicated could launch before the end of 2026. There are ongoing e-auctions for commercial plots. Monitor gmada.gov.in for all official announcements.
What is GMADA Aerotropolis and why is everyone talking about it?
The GMADA Aerotropolis is a 5,500-acre integrated planned township built adjacent to Shaheed Bhagat Singh International Airport in Mohali. It includes residential, commercial, and institutional zones. It is unique in India for its airport-proximity positioning. Investors buy transferable LOIs (Letters of Intent) in the secondary market. Pockets B, C, and D have active infrastructure development underway as of mid-2026.
What is Eco City-4 and when will it be available for purchase?
Eco City-4 is a proposed 526-acre residential township in Kharar tehsil, covering four villages — Kartarpur, Kansala, Rajgarh, and Boothgarh. A Section 4(1) land acquisition notification was issued on June 2, 2026. This is only the first step of a multi-year acquisition and development process. No authorised pre-booking exists. Allotment will not be possible for several years.
Is New Chandigarh a good investment in 2026?
New Chandigarh is considered a strong long-term investment for buyers with a 5+ year horizon. The self-sustaining township ecosystem — Medicity, Education City, IT City, Knowledge City, and planned Eco City expansions — creates a compounding demand story. For immediate possession needs, private RERA-registered projects in the area are more suitable than GMADA plot schemes that take years to develop.
What is the difference between GMADA and PUDA?
GMADA is a development authority that directly acquires land, develops infrastructure, and allots plots in its own right across Greater Mohali. PUDA (Punjab Urban Planning and Development Authority) licenses private colonisers across all of Punjab to develop their own colonies. GMADA allotments carry distinct legal standing. A GMADA plot and a PUDA-licensed private colony plot are fundamentally different products with different risk and return profiles.
Can NRIs buy GMADA plots?
Yes. NRIs can purchase GMADA plots and LOIs under FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act) provisions. Transactions must be conducted through NRE (Non-Resident External) or NRO (Non-Resident Ordinary) accounts. Both residential and commercial GMADA properties are eligible. Engage a property lawyer experienced in NRI transactions before proceeding to ensure full compliance.
What is an LOI in the context of GMADA Aerotropolis?
A Letter of Intent (LOI) is a document issued by GMADA to plot allottees confirming their preferential right to a specific Aerotropolis plot. It predates formal registry and is transferable. LOIs trade actively in Mohali’s secondary market through registered dealers. Buyers pay market rate per square yard and stamp duty at collector rates. GMADA eventually converts the LOI to a formal allotment letter and then to registry. Always verify LOI authenticity at the GMADA office.
What did the Punjab Government commit regarding village development in June 2026?
The Punjab Government committed on June 24, 2026 that all villages contributing land to Greater Mohali’s 11,103-acre acquisition drive would be developed simultaneously — with roads, sewerage, water supply, drainage, and public spaces — within three years of the acquisition award date. Houses along the village phirni will be exempt from acquisition. GMADA will provide critical gap funding. A formal notification was expected shortly. This is a first in Punjab’s land acquisition history.
How do I verify if a GMADA property is legitimate?
Visit the official GMADA office in SAS Nagar with the plot number and allotment details to verify authenticity. For LOIs, the GMADA office can confirm the original allottee and transfer history. Never transact without physical verification of documents at the GMADA office. Engage a registered property consultant (like Royals Property Consultant, RERA: PBRERA-CHD04-REA0390) and a property lawyer for end-to-end verification.
What is the current status of Eco City-3?
Eco City-3 covers 716 acres across nine villages in New Chandigarh. The compensation award under Section 19 of the Land Acquisition Act was declared in December 2025. GMADA’s Chief Administrator has publicly indicated a township launch before end of 2026, though no official allotment date has been confirmed. Land pooling plot size option forms have been updated and published on gmada.gov.in.
Where can I check GMADA notifications and updates?
The official GMADA website at gmada.gov.in publishes all notifications, public notices, e-auction calendars, allotment results, and land acquisition updates. Bookmark the Notifications and Development Plans sections. You can also WhatsApp Manindar Verma at Royals Property Consultant (+91 98787 59508) to receive expert summaries of important GMADA developments directly.
How does land pooling work for farmers in GMADA acquisition zones?
Under land pooling, farmers give their agricultural land to GMADA and receive developed residential and commercial plots within the new township instead of cash. For Eco City-3, farmers could opt for land pooling and receive plot options accordingly. These plots can be retained for personal use or sold in the secondary market after possession. With the village development commitment now in place, the land pooling proposition has become significantly more attractive for farmers.
What impact will the PR-7 highway have on Zirakpur property prices?
The PR-7 six-lane highway is expected to significantly reduce travel times through Zirakpur, which currently suffers from serious congestion. Better connectivity directly benefits Airport Road properties and the broader Zirakpur market by improving access to Chandigarh, Panchkula, and Mohali. Infrastructure projects of this scale typically support property value appreciation in adjacent areas, though timing and magnitude vary.
Is there risk in investing in GMADA projects?
Yes — every investment carries risk. For GMADA specifically: Pocket A of Aerotropolis has an active court case causing delays; Eco City-3 launch could slip to 2027; Eco City-4 allotments are years away; acquisition timelines can extend due to legal challenges or farmer protests; and secondary market LOI prices can be significantly above GMADA allotment rates, compressing the margin if you buy at the top. Invest with a clear timeline, verified documents, and professional guidance.
Should I buy a GMADA plot or a private apartment in Mohali / Zirakpur?
These serve different needs. A GMADA plot offers government-backed land ownership, long-term appreciation in a planned township, and the ability to build your own home — but possession timelines are uncertain and possession of new schemes can take years. A private apartment in Mohali or Zirakpur offers faster possession, rental income potential, and builder amenities, but requires careful RERA verification of the developer. Your choice should depend on your timeline, budget, and whether you need immediate occupancy or are investing for the long term.
What happened to Punjab’s Land Pooling Policy 2025?
The Land Pooling Policy 2025, under which farmers would receive developed plots instead of cash, triggered widespread farmer protests across affected villages in the New Chandigarh and Greater Mohali area. The Punjab and Haryana High Court also issued an interim stay. The Punjab government subsequently scrapped this policy and reverted to the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013 — the standard national framework — for Eco City-3, Aerotropolis extension, and Eco City-4.
What is the IT City Mohali and how does it affect property demand?
IT City is a 1,700-acre planned IT and technology zone in Sector 66A, Mohali, developed by GMADA. It hosts technology companies, business parks, and institutional facilities. IT City is one of the primary employment drivers in the Greater Mohali region, creating consistent residential demand from IT professionals and their families. Properties within commuting distance of IT City — including Zirakpur Airport Road, Mohali Sectors 66–90, and parts of New Chandigarh — benefit from this employment base.

Final Verdict — What June 2026 Means for You

🏆 Manindar Verma’s June 2026 Verdict

June 2026 is not a month with a single headline announcement — it is a month where multiple pieces of a very large puzzle clicked into place simultaneously. Eco City-4 has been formally notified, signalling GMADA’s continued confidence in New Chandigarh’s expansion. The village development commitment addresses the single biggest source of acquisition friction. The Aerotropolis continues to progress. And Eco City-3 is moving toward what should be an allotment announcement before year’s end.

For investors, the message from June 2026 is one of increasing government conviction — not just in plans, but in the commitments needed to execute those plans smoothly. A government that promises village development in three years and backs that promise with a formal notification is a government that understands what has historically slowed these projects down.

That does not mean risks have disappeared. Court cases, timelines, and market pricing all remain variables. But the direction of travel is clear, and for buyers with a medium to long-term horizon, the Greater Mohali story remains one of the strongest planned-township investment cases in North India.

Bookmark this page — it will be updated every month with the latest GMADA developments, official notifications, and on-ground market insights. And if you want to act on what you have read here, reach out to us directly.

📚 Explore More — Related Articles from Royals Property Consultant

Ready to Invest in GMADA Properties?

Need expert guidance for buying, selling, or investing in property across Mohali, Zirakpur, Chandigarh, Panchkula, and New Chandigarh? Contact Royals Property Consultant for professional assistance and market insights.

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

Manindar Verma has 15+ years of experience in Tricity real estate, having helped 500+ families and NRI investors navigate property purchases in Mohali, Zirakpur, Chandigarh, Panchkula, and New Chandigarh. He specialises in GMADA properties, NRI investment structuring, and luxury residential real estate. Royals Property Consultant is a RERA-registered firm known for zero buyer brokerage and independent, honest property advice. Contact: +91 98787 59508.

GMADA News, GMADA Latest News 2026, GMADA Mohali, GMADA Aerotropolis, GMADA Eco City 4, GMADA New Chandigarh, GMADA Land Acquisition, GMADA Plot Scheme, New Chandigarh Investment, Aerotropolis Mohali, Eco City Mohali, Mohali Real Estate 2026, GMADA Notifications June 2026, PR7 Road Mohali, GMADA Village Development