GMADA New Land Pooling Policy 2026 (Updated): Complete Guide to New Benefits, Special LOIs, Oustee Policy Changes & Impact on Punjab Real Estate
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GMADA Land Pooling Policy 2026 (Updated): Complete Guide to New Benefits, Special LOIs, Oustee Policy Changes & Impact on Punjab Real Estate
▶ Watch: 60-Second Breakdown of the 2026 Policy Update
Manindar Verma explains what changed and what it means for your land, in under a minute.
This is not a rewrite of the government notification — it is a plain-English, practically-worked-out guide to what the 6 July 2026 amendment actually changes for landowners, farmers, investors, NRIs and buyers across Greater Mohali. Every figure below is checked against the Punjab Government’s notified policy and the reporting that first surfaced it, and every example is worked out acre-by-acre so you can see exactly where you stand.
1. What changed on 6 July 2026
2. Timeline: how the policy got here (2020–2026)
3. Land Pooling basics — plain-English definitions
4. Old Policy vs New Policy — comparison table
5. Residential entitlement — old vs new
6. Commercial entitlement — old vs new
7. Oustee Policy 2013 — what changed
8. Special LOIs — for landholdings under 1 acre
9. Stamp duty, Sahuliyat Certificate & tubewell priority
10. Worked examples: 1 acre, 2 acres, 2 kanal 4 marla, 5 acres
11. Impact on Aerotropolis, Eco City, IT City, PR7 & New Chandigarh
12. What farmers, investors, buyers & developers should know
13. How Punjab’s model compares — Haryana, DDA, GIFT City
14. Pros, cons, opportunities & risks
15. FAQs
1. What Changed on 6 July 2026 — The Real Headline
On 6 July 2026, the Punjab Government’s Department of Housing & Urban Development formally notified amendments to the Land Pooling Policy-2020 (originally notified 5 January 2021, previously revised on 25 July 2025 and again on 21 November 2025) — following Council of Ministers’ approval on 1 July 2026. Simultaneously, it amended the Oustee Policy-2013. Local journalists tracking Punjab’s land-acquisition beat have described this as “policy 3.0” — the third meaningful revision to land pooling terms inside twelve months.
In simple terms, five things changed at once:
- Bigger plots — residential entitlement raised from 1,600 to 1,630 sq yd per acre; commercial SCO entitlement raised from 200 to 210 sq yd per acre.
- Oustee quota for everyone — farmers who took cash compensation, not just those who pooled land, now also qualify for an Oustee residential plot at scheme price.
- Tradable Special LOIs — landowners with fractional holdings below one acre, previously left out of the entitlement grid entirely, now get proportionate Special LOIs that can be traded or clubbed together toward a full-size plot.
- Longer Sahuliyat Certificate — the stamp-duty facilitation window doubles from two years to four years, with tubewell electricity priority extended on the same four-year timeline.
- Fairer draw of lots — preferential-location plots that GMADA previously retained for itself are now included in the open draw, applicable to Aerotropolis Pockets A–D, Eco City-3, and the low/high-density townships.
2. Timeline: How the Policy Got Here (2020–2026)
| Date | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 5 Jan 2021 | Original Land Pooling Policy-2020 notified for Greater Mohali. |
| Jun 2025 | Statewide policy notified proposing compulsory pooling of 65,533 acres — triggered widespread farmer protests backed by multiple political parties. |
| 25 Jul 2025 | First 2025 amendment issued amid stakeholder objections. |
| Aug 2025 | Punjab & Haryana High Court granted an interim stay; the compulsory policy was fully withdrawn. |
| 21 Nov 2025 | Revised, optional policy notified — farmers could choose developed plots or statutory cash compensation, covering an 11,103-acre acquisition drive; mixed-use/industrial/institutional entitlement options also eased (Sectors 84 & 87 included). |
| 11 Apr 2026 | High-level government meeting with village sarpanches produces in-principle decision on bigger plots, Oustee quota for all, and village development commitments (first reported by The Tribune, 13 Apr). |
| 1 Jul 2026 | Punjab Cabinet formally approves the enhanced package. |
| 6 Jul 2026 | Formal notification issued — Land Pooling Policy amendment + Oustee Policy-2013 amendment, both effective immediately for the GMADA belt. |
Quick Answer: The 2026 update is not a standalone new scheme — it is the third revision of a policy that began in January 2021, went through a compulsory-pooling controversy and court stay in mid-2025, became optional in November 2025, and was substantially sweetened again in July 2026 after sustained farmer protest.
3. Land Pooling Basics — Plain-English Definitions
| Term | What it means |
|---|---|
| Land Acquisition | Government compulsorily takes your land and pays statutory cash compensation under the RFCTLARR Act, 2013. |
| Land Pooling | You voluntarily contribute (pool) your agricultural land to GMADA. In return, once the sector is developed, you get back a smaller area of fully developed, urban-value residential/commercial plots instead of, or in addition to, cash. |
| Cash Compensation | A one-time statutory payout calculated on the collector rate/market value of the land taken, paid instead of developed plots. |
| Developed Plot | The finished residential or commercial plot GMADA hands back to a land-pooling landowner once roads, sewerage, water and electricity are in place in that sector. |
| LOI (Letter of Intent) | The provisional allotment document GMADA issues confirming your entitlement under land pooling, before the final developed plot is physically demarcated and possession handed over. |
| Special LOI | A new 2026 instrument for landowners with holdings below one acre. Instead of no entitlement, they receive a proportionate LOI that can be sold or combined with other Special LOIs to eventually claim a full plot. |
| Sahuliyat Certificate | A facilitation certificate that gives a landowner stamp-duty exemption when they use their compensation to buy alternative land anywhere in Punjab, now valid for four years instead of two. |
| Preferential Location Charges (PLC) | The premium normally payable for a corner, park-facing, or wide-road plot. Under the 2026 amendment, PLC plots go into the open draw instead of being reserved separately by GMADA. |
| Oustee Policy | A separate, older (2013) policy that grants a small residential plot at scheme price to anyone whose land is acquired for public purposes — now extended to cover all landowners, whether they chose cash or pooling. |
4. Old Policy vs New Policy (July 2026 Amendment) — At a Glance
| Feature | Before 6 Jul 2026 | After 6 Jul 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Residential entitlement | 1,600 sq yd / acre | 1,630 sq yd / acre |
| Commercial (mixed-use) SCO entitlement | 200 sq yd / acre | 210 sq yd / acre |
| Commercial-category entitlement | 800 sq yd / acre | 840 sq yd / acre |
| Oustee quota eligibility | Mainly landowners who opted for land pooling | All landowners, including those who took cash compensation |
| Fractional holdings (below 1 acre) | Largely outside the entitlement grid | Covered via tradable/clubbable Special LOIs |
| Sahuliyat Certificate validity | 2 years | 4 years |
| Priority tubewell connection window | Shorter, tied to old certificate | 4 years, co-terminus with Sahuliyat Certificate |
| Preferential-location plots | Retained by GMADA outside the draw | Included in the open draw of lots for all landowners |
| Conveyance deed | Chargeable | Free of cost on developed plots |
5. Residential Benefits Comparison
| Land pooled (residential category) | Old entitlement | New entitlement (Jul 2026) | Increase |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 acre | 1,600 sq yd | 1,630 sq yd | +30 sq yd |
| 2 acres | 3,200 sq yd | 3,260 sq yd | +60 sq yd |
| 5 acres | 8,000 sq yd | 8,150 sq yd | +150 sq yd |
Quick Answer: The residential-only entitlement rose from 1,600 to 1,630 sq yd per acre under the July 2026 amendment — a modest per-acre increase, but on a multi-acre holding it adds a meaningfully larger developed plot at scheme value.
6. Commercial Benefits Comparison
| Category | Old entitlement / acre | New entitlement / acre |
|---|---|---|
| Mixed-use / general category — commercial SCO plot (alongside 1,000 sq yd residential) | 200 sq yd | 210 sq yd |
| Commercial category (exhibition, industrial, institutional land use) | 800 sq yd | 840 sq yd |
| Residential-only alternative under mixed-use land | 1,600 sq yd | 1,630 sq yd |
Under the November 2025 amendment, a landowner whose one acre is acquired for mixed-use, exhibition, industrial or institutional purposes can choose between a 1,000 sq yd residential + 200 sq yd (now 210 sq yd) commercial combination, or a larger residential-only plot in an adjoining sector. This choice structure continues under the July 2026 update, with the higher entitlement figures.
7. Oustee Policy 2013 — What Changed in 2026
| Land acquired | Oustee residential plot (at scheme price) |
|---|---|
| Up to 1 acre | 200 sq yd |
| Above 1 acre, up to 2.5 acres | 300 sq yd |
| Above 2.5 acres | 500 sq yd |
The single biggest change: before this amendment, Oustee quota plots mainly went to landowners who opted for land pooling. Now, a farmer who took straight cash compensation for land acquired for roads, utilities or any public purpose also qualifies for an Oustee plot at scheme price — on top of the cash already received. This closes a gap that had been a major grievance behind the “Pucca Morcha” protests at GMADA’s Sector 62 headquarters in Mohali.
Quick Answer: Oustee Policy plots are now available to every affected landowner regardless of whether they chose land pooling or cash compensation — tiered at 200/300/500 sq yd depending on how much land was acquired.
8. Special LOIs Explained — For Landholdings Below 1 Acre
Small and marginal farmers — those with fractional holdings such as 2 kanal 4 marla, or half an acre — previously fell outside the standard entitlement grid because GMADA’s plot sizes are calculated per full acre. The 2026 amendment fixes this with Special LOIs:
| Aspect | How it works |
|---|---|
| Who qualifies | Landowners whose pooled holding is less than 1 acre |
| What they receive | A Special LOI representing their proportionate share of the standard per-acre entitlement |
| Can it be sold? | Yes — Special LOIs are tradable in the secondary market, similar to how existing GMADA LOIs already trade in schemes like Aerotropolis |
| Can it be combined? | Yes — multiple Special LOIs (your own, or bought from other small holders) can be clubbed together to eventually claim one full-size developed plot |
| Why it matters | It converts what used to be a “too small to matter” holding into a genuinely liquid, transferable asset |
Quick Answer: A Special LOI is a proportionate, tradable entitlement certificate introduced in July 2026 for landowners with less than one acre pooled — it can be sold or combined with other Special LOIs to eventually secure a full developed plot.
9. Stamp Duty, Sahuliyat Certificate & Tubewell Priority
| Benefit | Old | New (Jul 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Sahuliyat Certificate validity | 2 years | 4 years |
| Stamp duty exemption basis | Collector rate of acquired land, on land purchased anywhere in Punjab within the certificate window | Same, but with double the time window to use it |
| Priority tubewell electricity connection | Shorter window | 4 years, aligned with the Sahuliyat Certificate; PSPCL directed to prioritise installation immediately on application |
| Conveyance deed on developed plots | Chargeable | Free of cost |
In practice, the Sahuliyat Certificate lets a landowner reinvest their compensation into alternative agricultural or residential land elsewhere in Punjab without paying stamp duty on that new purchase — calculated against the collector rate of the land GMADA acquired. Doubling the window to four years gives families far more time to identify the right replacement land instead of rushing a purchase.
10. Worked Examples — What Actually Happens to Your Land
Example 1: Farmer owns 1 Acre (residential category, opted for land pooling)
Under the new entitlement, this farmer receives a 1,630 sq yd developed residential plot once the sector is complete, plus a free conveyance deed. If the land was also under acquisition for a public-purpose component, an additional 200 sq yd Oustee plot at scheme price may apply on top, subject to conditions.
Example 2: Farmer owns 2 Acres (mixed-use category)
Choice between: (a) 2,000 sq yd residential + 420 sq yd commercial SCO (210 sq yd × 2), or (b) 3,260 sq yd residential-only plot in an adjoining sector. The right choice depends on whether the family wants rental/commercial income potential or a larger single residential holding.
Example 3: Farmer owns 2 Kanal 4 Marla (roughly 0.28 acre)
This falls below the 1-acre threshold, so instead of a standard plot, the farmer receives a Special LOI proportionate to roughly 0.28 acre of entitlement — tradable on its own, or combinable with LOIs from neighbouring small holders to eventually pool into one full-size plot.
Example 4: Farmer owns 5 Acres (residential category)
Entitlement: 5 × 1,630 = 8,150 sq yd of developed residential plots (typically allotted across multiple plot-sized parcels rather than one giant plot, per GMADA’s scheme rules), free conveyance deed, and — since more than 2.5 acres is involved — a 500 sq yd Oustee plot at scheme price if any portion falls under Oustee-eligible acquisition.
11. Impact on Aerotropolis, Eco City, IT City, PR7 & New Chandigarh
| Zone / Corridor | How the 2026 amendment affects it |
|---|---|
| Aerotropolis (Pockets A–D) | Preferential-location plots now enter the open draw; Oustee quota extends to cash-compensation landowners here too. This sits alongside the broader June 2026 breakthrough that lets GMADA take physical possession via the Reference Court route — see our Aerotropolis Mohali Update, June 2026. |
| Aerotropolis (Pockets E–J), Banur | Land is still in active acquisition; the enhanced entitlement and Oustee terms apply as these pockets move toward award and possession. |
| Eco City-3, New Chandigarh | Explicitly named in the notification as covered by the revised draw-of-lots rule for preferential plots. Read our full Eco City 3 New Chandigarh 2026 Guide for scheme status and pricing estimates. |
| IT City | Land pooling was one of the original allotment routes used to assemble the IT City belt; the revised commercial entitlement is relevant to any remaining institutional/industrial land-use conversions nearby. |
| PR7 corridor | Continued road-widening along PR7 and Airport Road increases the eventual resale value of any plot received under land pooling in adjoining sectors. |
| New Chandigarh / Mohali growth belt | Villages contributing land under land pooling are, per the April 2026 commitments, meant to see their own sewerage, water and road infrastructure integrated with GMADA’s systems within three years of acquisition — though this specific deadline is not yet written into the July 6 notification itself. |
| Sector 92 / 92 Alpha and future GMADA sectors | As GMADA opens new sectors, the same enhanced entitlement, Oustee and Special LOI framework will govern how landowners there are compensated — for sector-specific detail, see our dedicated coverage in the GMADA Mohali Complete Guide. |
12. What Each Reader Should Know
What Farmers Should Know
- You are no longer penalised for choosing cash — Oustee quota plots are now available either way.
- If your holding is below 1 acre, ask GMADA specifically about your Special LOI — it will not be automatically obvious from a standard plot allotment letter.
- The three-year development-completion commitment is administrative, not yet a notified legal deadline — factor that uncertainty into your decision between cash and pooling.
What Investors Should Know
- Tradable Special LOIs open up a new, smaller-ticket entry point into GMADA-linked land value, similar to how Aerotropolis LOIs already trade in the secondary market.
- Preferential-location plots entering the open draw means everyone — including outside buyers of resale LOIs — has a genuinely equal shot at a corner or park-facing plot rather than GMADA quietly retaining the best ones.
What Home Buyers Should Know
- If you’re buying a resale LOI or Special LOI from an original landowner, verify it is genuine, correctly transferred, and free of outstanding GMADA dues before paying any advance.
- Possession timelines for land-pooling-origin plots depend on sector-wide infrastructure completion, not just your individual paperwork — this can mean a multi-year wait in newly-notified pockets.
What Developers Should Know
- The higher per-acre commercial entitlement (840 sq yd for commercial-category land, 210 sq yd SCO for mixed-use) marginally increases the developable commercial footprint coming out of each pooled acre — relevant for anyone assembling land parcels through resale LOIs.
- Village-infrastructure integration commitments, once they carry firm legal deadlines, will materially affect construction-readiness timelines in adjoining GMADA sectors.
13. How Punjab’s Land Pooling Compares — Haryana, DDA, GIFT City & Global Models
| Model | Approach | How it compares to GMADA’s 2026 policy |
|---|---|---|
| Delhi Development Authority (DDA) Land Pooling Policy | Voluntary pooling with minimum sector-assembly thresholds (typically requiring aggregation across multiple landowners before a sector can be developed) | DDA’s policy has historically struggled with achieving the minimum contiguous land threshold; GMADA’s Special LOI mechanism is a more direct attempt to solve the “small holding left out” problem than DDA’s aggregation model. |
| Haryana (HSIIDC-style acquisition/compensation) | Leans more heavily on cash compensation and enhanced compensation awards for industrial-estate land, with less emphasis on land-pooling-for-developed-plots | Punjab’s model offers landowners a genuine “stay invested in the township” option that Haryana’s more compensation-centric approach doesn’t emphasise to the same degree. |
| GIFT City, Gujarat | Built primarily on outright government/SPV land acquisition and long-term leasing to a financial-services special economic zone, not landowner-return-of-developed-plots | Not directly comparable — GIFT City’s model is institutional-tenant-driven, whereas GMADA’s is landowner-return-driven. |
| International (Germany, Japan, South Korea — classic land readjustment) | Landowners contribute land to a pool, a portion is retained by the authority for infrastructure/public use, and the rest is returned as smaller, but far more valuable, serviced plots | GMADA’s core mechanism mirrors this globally-tested “land readjustment” logic; the 2026 amendment’s Oustee-for-all and Special LOI features are Punjab-specific refinements addressing local farmer grievances. |
Land pooling as an urban-planning tool has a long global history — it was first used in the Bombay Presidency under the Bombay Town Planning Act, 1915, and international models trace back to Germany and Holland in the 1890s. GMADA’s approach sits within that established tradition, though its repeated 2025–2026 revisions reflect implementation friction that older, more mature systems elsewhere have generally already worked through.
14. Pros, Cons, Opportunities & Risks
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Meaningfully higher plot entitlement than any earlier version of the policy | Development-completion deadline still not legally binding in this notification |
| Oustee quota now available to cash-compensation landowners too | Small-holding Special LOI mechanism is new and untested at scale |
| Small/fractional landowners finally have a genuine, tradable entitlement route | Sector-by-sector rollout means actual possession can still take years after notification |
| Free conveyance deed and longer Sahuliyat Certificate reduce landowner cost/hassle | Policy has changed three times in twelve months — future amendment risk cannot be ruled out |
| Opportunities | Risks |
|---|---|
| Entry point into GMADA-linked land value via tradable Special LOIs at a lower ticket size | Verifying the authenticity and clean transfer of a resale LOI/Special LOI requires real diligence |
| Open draw of preferential plots creates a fairer shot at premium corner/park-facing plots | Village-infrastructure and development-timeline commitments remain administrative, not statutory, for now |
15. Frequently Asked Questions
Is GMADA Land Pooling compulsory?
No. The current policy, as revised in November 2025 and carried forward in July 2026, is optional — landowners can choose between developed plots under land pooling or statutory cash compensation.
Can I sell my LOI?
Yes. GMADA LOIs — including the new Special LOIs for sub-1-acre holdings — are transferable in the secondary market, similar to how Aerotropolis LOIs already trade today.
Can a Special LOI be transferred or combined?
Yes, on both counts. A Special LOI can be sold to another buyer, and multiple Special LOIs can be clubbed together to eventually claim one full-size developed plot.
Can I choose cash instead of a developed plot?
Yes. Cash compensation remains an option under the policy, and as of the July 2026 amendment, choosing cash no longer excludes you from Oustee quota plot eligibility.
What happens if I own less than one acre?
You are covered by the new Special LOI mechanism — you receive a proportionate entitlement rather than being left outside the standard per-acre plot grid.
Can NRIs benefit from GMADA land pooling?
NRIs who hold agricultural land in the notified GMADA acquisition belt (typically through inheritance) are covered by the same policy terms as resident landowners. NRIs looking to invest in resale LOIs or developed plots afterward can do so under standard FEMA-compliant property purchase rules.
Can family members inherit an LOI?
Yes, an LOI is a property-linked entitlement and follows standard inheritance and succession rules, subject to GMADA’s mutation and transfer procedure.
Can I sell the allotted developed plot after possession?
Yes, once the developed plot is allotted, mutated, and any applicable dues are cleared, it can be sold like any other GMADA plot, subject to GMADA’s transfer procedure.
How is the commercial plot entitlement calculated?
Under the mixed-use/general category, it is 210 sq yd of commercial SCO plot per acre of land pooled (alongside 1,000 sq yd residential); under the pure commercial category, it is 840 sq yd per acre — both figures reflect the July 2026 increase from 200 and 800 sq yd respectively.
What is the Oustee Policy, and how is it different from land pooling?
The Oustee Policy-2013 is a separate provision that grants a small residential plot at scheme price to anyone whose land is taken for public purposes — it now applies to all affected landowners regardless of whether they chose land pooling or cash under the main policy.
What is a Sahuliyat Certificate, exactly?
It is a facilitation certificate that lets a landowner buy alternative land anywhere in Punjab without paying stamp duty on that purchase, calculated against the collector rate of the land GMADA acquired — now valid for four years instead of two.
Does the new policy apply to Aerotropolis Pockets A-D?
Yes — the July 2026 notification explicitly extends the revised draw-of-lots rule for preferential plots, and the broader entitlement and Oustee changes, to Aerotropolis Pockets A, B, C and D, Eco City-3, and the low/high-density townships.
Is there a fixed deadline for GMADA to actually develop the plots?
A three-year development-completion commitment was discussed at the government’s April 2026 meeting, but it is not written into the notified 6 July 2026 amendment text — meaning it currently remains an administrative assurance rather than a legally enforceable deadline.
What was the “Pucca Morcha” and why does it matter here?
It was a sustained, multi-week protest and hunger strike by affected landowners outside GMADA’s Sector 62 headquarters, driven by grievances over plot size, Sahuliyat Certificate duration, exclusion of cash-compensation farmers from Oustee quota, and GMADA retaining preferential plots. The July 2026 amendment directly addresses each of these specific demands.
Should I choose a developed plot or cash compensation?
It depends on your timeline, liquidity needs, and risk appetite. Land-pooling plots carry higher long-term value potential (officials cite combined developed-plot value estimates well above current post-notification land prices) but depend on GMADA’s actual development timeline, which has historically slipped. Cash gives immediate liquidity but forgoes future appreciation. A qualified local consultant can walk through your specific holding and goals before you decide.
A Word on Accuracy
Land-acquisition policy in Punjab has changed three times in the last twelve months, and individual case outcomes depend on your exact village, sector, and land-use category. Nothing in this guide is legal or investment advice — always verify your specific entitlement with GMADA directly, or with a professional who can read the current notification against your land records.
Royals Property Consultant helps landowners, farmers, investors and NRIs interpret GMADA’s land pooling and Oustee policy changes against their specific holding — no pressure, honest guidance only.
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Related Reads on Royals Property Consultant
- GMADA Mohali Complete Guide 2026
- Aerotropolis Mohali Update, June 2026
- Eco City 3 New Chandigarh 2026 — Investment Guide
- GMADA’s New Gharuan Development Plan 2026
- GMADA 2026 E-Auction — Full Results & Analysis
- Tricity Property Price Trends 2026
- NRI Property Investment in Chandigarh 2026
Official & News Sources Referenced
Greater Mohali Area Development Authority (GMADA), Government of Punjab — Land Pooling Scheme & Policies pages (gmada.gov.in) · The Tribune, Chandigarh — “Bigger plots for Mohali farmers under revised land pooling policy” (9 Jul 2026) · The Tribune — “Punjab’s land pooling policy 3.0: What changed, what it means and what remains” (9 Jul 2026) · The Tribune — “Punjab Cabinet clears 3rd version of land pooling policy with additional benefits” (2 Jul 2026) · The Tribune — “Bigger commercial, residential plots for farmers as Punjab yet again revises land pooling policy” (23 Jun 2026) · The Tribune — “Explainer: Why Punjab keeps rewriting its Land Pooling Policy” (24 Jun 2026) · The Tribune — “Punjab Govt eases land pooling policy, offers residential, commercial plots” (24 Nov 2025).
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