Kurali Master Plan 78 Villages Gmada

Kurali Master Plan 78 Villages Gmada Zoning 2026

Kurali Master Plan 78 Villages Gmada Zoning 2026 : Complete Guide

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Kurali Master Plan 78 Villages Gmada

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Kurali Master Plan 2026: GMADA Brings 78 Villages Under New Zoning

📅 Updated July 2026 · ⏱ 9 min read

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Quick Answer: The GMADA Kurali Master Plan is a new planning process started by the Greater Mohali Area Development Authority (GMADA) to formally bring Kurali city and 78 surrounding villages — until now left out as rural/agricultural land — under a regulated master plan covering roughly 57,000 hectares. GMADA has invited public objections and suggestions under Section 63(1) of the Punjab Regional and Town Planning and Development Act, 1995, within 30 days of the draft notification.

What Is the GMADA Kurali Master Plan?

The GMADA Kurali Master Plan refers to the ongoing process by the Greater Mohali Area Development Authority (GMADA) to bring the town of Kurali, along with 78 neighbouring villages, under a formal, notified master plan for the first time. Until this draft was issued, Kurali sat outside GMADA’s planning net even though nearby Kharar, Mohali, Zirakpur, Banur, and Derabassi were all notified back in 2009.

GMADA Kurali master plan proposed land use zone map showing Kurali local planning area boundary
Proposed Local Planning Area boundary for Kurali, positioned between the Mullanpur and Kharar planning zones. Source: GMADA draft notification.

In practical terms, this means Kurali is moving from being an unregulated, largely agricultural belt to a zone where residential, commercial, industrial, and public-facility land use will be officially defined. For anyone tracking Tricity real estate, the GMADA Kurali Master Plan is the single biggest planning trigger this region has seen in years — because formal zoning is usually the first domino that leads to road widening, CLU approvals, and eventually organised residential launches.

Why Was Kurali Left Out of the GMADA Master Plan Until Now?

GMADA was constituted in 2006 under Section 29(1) of the Punjab Regional and Town Planning and Development Act, 1995, for the development of Mohali, Banur, Zirakpur, Derabassi, Kharar, Mullanpur, Fatehgarh Sahib, Mandi Gobindgarh, and Roopnagar. In 2009, GMADA formally notified Mohali (SAS Nagar), Banur, Zirakpur, Derabassi, and Kharar under its master plan. Kurali, despite sitting right next to Kharar on NH-21, was not part of that 2009 notification and continued to be treated as a rural, largely agricultural zone.

Officials cite rising development pressure in Kharar as the trigger for this change. As Kharar’s land bank gets consumed by residential and commercial growth, planners want adjoining Kurali brought into a regulated framework before unplanned, unauthorised construction takes over — the same pattern already seen (and penalised) in parts of Kharar and Siswan.

In one line: Kurali is being added to the GMADA Kurali Master Plan not because it is booming yet, but precisely to control how it booms — before informal construction gets ahead of formal zoning.

What Does the Kurali Master Plan Cover?

Based on the draft notification and official reporting, here is what is confirmed about the scope of the GMADA Kurali Master Plan:

ParameterDetail
Villages covered78 villages around Kurali (specific village-wise list not yet published in public sources as of this update)
Approximate area~57,000 hectares
Governing lawPunjab Regional and Town Planning and Development Act, 1995 (Section 66 for planning agency declaration, Section 63(1) for public objections)
Land use zones proposedResidential, Commercial, Industrial, and Public/Institutional facilities
Nagar Council statusKurali Nagar Council area included alongside the 78 villages
Planning agencyGMADA, with a consultant engaged to prepare the land use plan

Note: We have deliberately not listed individual village names or exact zone-wise hectare splits, since GMADA has not published a granular village-by-village breakdown publicly yet. We will update this table the moment that data is officially released — no guesswork here.

Step 1: Planning Agency Declaration (Section 57)

GMADA has been declared the planning agency for Kurali and its 78 adjoining villages under Section 57 of the Act, giving it authority to prepare and notify the land use plan. This is the same authority structure GMADA has used for other zones under its jurisdiction — see our complete GMADA Mohali guide for how sector-wise planning has worked elsewhere in the region, and our breakdown of the GMADA Gharuan development plan — a very similar village-inclusion process happening on the other side of Kharar.

Step 2: Consultant-Prepared Draft Plan

A consultant engaged by GMADA has prepared a draft land use plan covering the proposed residential, commercial, industrial, and institutional zones across the Kurali planning area.

Step 3: Public Objections (Section 63(1))

The draft has been opened up for public objections and suggestions for a period of 30 days from the date of notification, as required under Section 63(1) of the Act. Landowners, residents, and stakeholders in the 78 villages can formally submit their objections within this window.

Important for landowners: If your agricultural land falls inside one of the 78 villages, this is the window to check whether it has been proposed as residential, commercial, industrial, or has been left agricultural. Objections filed after the deadline are typically not considered — timing matters here.

How Will This Affect Property Prices in Kurali?

Formal notification under the GMADA Kurali Master Plan is widely expected to push land values upward in the affected villages, for a few concrete reasons:

1. Legal Clarity Attracts Capital

Once land use is officially zoned, buyers get clarity on what can legally be built where — this alone tends to draw serious investors who previously avoided unzoned agricultural belts.

2. Residential-Zoned Land Becomes CLU-Eligible

Villages designated residential under the new plan open the door to Change of Land Use (CLU) applications, which is typically the first legal step toward converting agricultural plots into approved colonies.

3. Kharar’s Overflow Effect

Since this plan exists specifically to absorb Kharar’s development pressure, Kurali is positioned as the next logical corridor for spillover demand — similar to how New Chandigarh absorbed Mohali’s overflow a decade ago. If you’re weighing Kurali against other ₹35-60L corridors right now, our guide on where to invest ₹50 lakh in Tricity in 2026 breaks down the comparable options.

You can track the official notification and objection status directly on GMADA’s own portal: GMADA Approved Master Plans.

Caution: A draft notification is not an approved master plan. Objections can still change zone boundaries before final notification. Do not buy any Kurali-area plot purely on the promise of “upcoming residential zone” status without verifying the final, approved land use plan first.

For a full corridor-by-corridor investment comparison of Kurali against Kharar, New Chandigarh, and Zirakpur, see our detailed analysis: Is Kurali the Next New Chandigarh? Full 2026 Comparison.

Expert View
Manindar Verma, Royals Property Consultant (RERA: PBRERA-CHD04-REA0390): “I’ve watched this exact pattern play out in Kharar and New Chandigarh — a master plan notification is the starting gun, not the finish line. The smart move right now is not to rush and buy the first plot someone calls ‘Kurali master plan land.’ Wait for the final notified zones, verify CLU status village by village, and only then negotiate. Buyers who jump in during the objection window often end up holding agricultural land that never gets converted.”

Pros & Cons of the GMADA Kurali Master Plan for Buyers

ProsCons / Risks
Legal clarity on land use for the first time in Kurali’s historyDraft stage — zones can still shift after objections
Potential for CLU-based residential developmentVillage-wise zone list not yet public — easy for dealers to mislead buyers
Early-mover advantage before formal notification pricing kicks inAgricultural land in non-residential zones may see no benefit at all
Reduces unauthorised construction risk long-termInfrastructure (roads, sewerage) typically lags zoning by several years

Thinking of Buying Land in the Kurali Master Plan Area?

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the GMADA Kurali Master Plan?

The GMADA Kurali Master Plan is a new planning process bringing Kurali town and 78 surrounding villages under formal, notified land use zoning for the first time, covering roughly 57,000 hectares.

Which villages are included in the Kurali Master Plan?

78 villages around Kurali are being included. GMADA has not yet published the individual village names publicly; we will update this article as soon as the official list is released.

How can I object to the draft Kurali Master Plan?

Objections and suggestions can be submitted to GMADA under Section 63(1) of the Punjab Regional and Town Planning and Development Act, 1995, within 30 days of the draft notification date.

Will land prices in Kurali increase after this master plan?

Land in villages zoned residential or commercial is likely to see price appreciation once formally notified, though agricultural-zoned land may see limited or no immediate impact.

Is it safe to buy land in Kurali right now?

The plan is currently at draft stage. It’s safer to verify the final notified zone status and CLU eligibility of a specific plot before buying, rather than relying on “master plan area” claims from local dealers.

How is the Kurali Master Plan different from the Kharar Master Plan?

The Kharar Local Planning Area Master Plan (till 2031) is a separate, already-approved document covering Kharar town. The Kurali Master Plan is a new, distinct process for Kurali and its 78 villages, triggered partly by overflow demand from Kharar.

Sources: Punjab Regional and Town Planning and Development Act, 1995 · GMADA draft notification (June 2026) · Punjabi Tribune report, 27 June 2026 · This article is for general information only and does not constitute investment or legal advice. Verify final notified zoning directly with GMADA before making any purchase decision.

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