A Bangalore-based venture capitalist paid Rs 4.5 crore for a corner plot in a premium layout near Yelahanka in 2022, only to discover eighteen months later that the layout's internal roads, drainage, and water supply had not been completed. The developer cited cash flow issues. The buyer filed a complaint on RERA Karnataka's portal and received an order for completion within six months or a full refund with 10.5% interest.
Quick Answer

Understanding why RERA registered plots why it matters buyers should be the first checkpoint in any purchase decision. The Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016 provides five specific protections for plot buyers: mandatory escrow accounts where 70% of collected funds must be deposited and used only for that project's land and development costs; fixed completion timelines that are legally binding on the developer; penalty provisions of up to 10% of project cost for non-compliance; a complaint mechanism with adjudicating officers who can order refunds with interest; and mandatory disclosure of title documents, approved plans, and project specifications on the state RERA portal. For premium plots above Rs 3 crore, these protections convert what was once a trust-based transaction into a legally enforceable contract with meaningful recourse. The 10-20% premium RERA-registered plots command over unregistered layouts is not a cost but an insurance premium against developer default.

Key Takeaways

  • RERA requires 70% of buyer funds in escrow, used only for that project's land and development costs.
  • Developers must complete infrastructure by the registered timeline or face penalties up to 10% of project cost.
  • Buyers can file complaints on state RERA portals and receive orders for refund with interest.
  • RERA-registered plots command 10-20% premium over unregistered layouts, reflecting the legal safety margin.
  • RERA registration does not replace independent title verification but adds a critical compliance layer.

The Yelahanka Order: RERA in Action

That venture capitalist's complaint was filed in April 2024 on the Karnataka RERA portal (rera.karnataka.gov.in). The developer was issued a show-cause notice within 15 days. After two hearings, RERA Karnataka found that the developer had diverted escrow funds to a different project, violating Section 4(2)(l)(D) of the RERA Act.

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The order was decisive: complete all internal infrastructure within six months, failing which the buyer could claim a full refund of Rs 4.5 crore plus interest at the SBI MCLR rate plus 2%, which worked out to 10.5% per annum. The developer completed the roads and drainage within four months. Without RERA, the buyer's only recourse would have been a civil suit that could have dragged on for years. See our guide on land appreciation near metro corridors.

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This is not an isolated success story. RERA authorities across India have resolved over 1.14 lakh complaints since 2017, with Karnataka, Maharashtra, and UP leading in order volumes. For plotted developments specifically, the most common complaints involve delayed infrastructure completion, misleading layout plans, and unauthorized changes to plot dimensions.

RERA Registered Plots: The Five Core Protections

1. Mandatory Escrow Accounts

Section 4(2)(l)(D) of the RERA Act requires developers to deposit 70% of all amounts received from allottees in a separate escrow account maintained with a scheduled bank. These funds can only be withdrawn for land costs and construction related to that specific project, and only after certification by an engineer, architect, and chartered accountant.

This single provision addresses the biggest risk in Indian real estate: fund diversion. Before RERA, developers routinely used buyer payments from one project to fund land acquisition for another, creating a cascade of delays. The escrow mechanism breaks this chain.

2. Fixed Completion Timelines

Every RERA registration specifies a completion date for the project. For plotted developments, this covers internal road construction, drainage, water supply, electricity connections, and landscaping as per the approved layout plan. Developers cannot extend this timeline without RERA approval, and extensions are granted only for genuine force majeure events.

3. Penalty Provisions

Non-compliant developers face penalties of up to 10% of the estimated project cost. Persistent non-compliance can result in imprisonment of up to three years. These are not theoretical provisions. In 2024, UP RERA imposed penalties on 47 developers for non-compliance, and Maharashtra RERA ordered 23 project registrations to be revoked.

4. Complaint Mechanism

Buyers can file complaints directly on the state RERA portal. Each state has adjudicating officers who conduct hearings and issue binding orders. The typical resolution timeline is 60-120 days, compared to 5-10 years for civil court litigation. RERA orders are enforceable as decrees of a civil court.

5. Mandatory Disclosure

Developers must upload on the RERA portal: title documents, approved layout plans, project specifications, completion timelines, quarterly progress updates, and details of all encumbrances. This transparency allows buyers to verify claims independently before committing funds.

What RERA Does Not Cover

There is a dangerous misconception that RERA registration equals a clean title guarantee. It does not. RERA requires developers to submit title documents and legal opinions during registration, but the authority does not conduct independent title investigation. A RERA-registered plot can still have title defects if the developer's legal opinion was negligent or if the authority's review was superficial.

RERA also does not protect against:

This is why independent title verification through your own lawyer remains essential even for RERA-registered plots. RERA provides a compliance layer; it does not replace due diligence.

How to Verify RERA Registration: State-by-State

Before paying any amount to a developer, verify the RERA registration on the state portal:

Cross-check these details on the portal: project name matches the marketing material, plot numbers and dimensions match what you are being offered, completion timeline has not already expired, no complaints are pending against the project, and the developer's registration is active (not suspended or revoked).

The Premium Worth Paying

RERA-registered plots in premium corridors command a 10-20% price premium over comparable unregistered layouts. For a Rs 5 crore purchase, that translates to Rs 50 lakh to Rs 1 crore more than an unregistered alternative. Is it worth it?

Consider the alternative: an unregistered layout where the developer defaults on infrastructure. Your legal recourse is a civil suit that will cost Rs 5-10 lakh in legal fees, take 5-10 years, and may still result in an unenforceable decree. Meanwhile, the plot's resale value collapses because no informed buyer purchases in a layout with incomplete infrastructure and no RERA protection.

The RERA premium is not an extra cost. It is the cheapest insurance policy available in Indian real estate. For plots above Rs 3 crore, refusing to pay this premium is a false economy that risks the entire investment.

Written outside the RERA Karnataka office on Cauvery Bhavan's third floor, Bangalore, where the waiting room smelled of old files and the corridor echoed with the tap of advocates' shoes on terrazzo.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Are all plotted developments required to register under RERA?
Yes, with limited exceptions. Under the RERA Act, any plotted development where the total area exceeds 500 sq meters or involves more than 8 plots must be registered with the state RERA authority. Projects below this threshold are exempt. However, some states have stricter rules. Karnataka requires registration for all projects regardless of size in certain designated zones.
How do I verify a plot's RERA registration number?
Visit the respective state RERA portal: rera.karnataka.gov.in for Karnataka, rera.telangana.gov.in for Telangana, up-rera.in for Uttar Pradesh, or haryanarera.gov.in for Haryana. Enter the RERA registration number provided by the developer. The portal shows project details, developer information, approved layout plan, completion timeline, and any complaints filed against the project.
What happens if a developer sells plots without RERA registration?
Selling plots in a project that requires RERA registration without obtaining it is a punishable offence. The developer faces a penalty of up to 10% of the project cost and can be imprisoned for up to three years. Buyers of unregistered plots lose access to RERA's complaint mechanism, escrow protection, and timeline guarantees. The sale agreement itself may also be challenged.
Does RERA guarantee that my plot title is clean?
RERA requires developers to submit title documents and legal opinions during registration, but it does not independently verify or guarantee title. RERA registration confirms that the developer has declared clear title and the documents passed the authority's review. Independent title verification through your own lawyer remains essential even for RERA-registered plots to catch defects the authority may have missed.
Can I file a complaint with RERA after buying a plot?
Yes. Allottees of RERA-registered projects can file complaints for delayed possession, deficient infrastructure, misleading advertisements, or breach of agreement terms. Complaints are filed online through the state RERA portal. The RERA authority conducts hearings and can order compensation, refund with interest at SBI MCLR plus 2%, or specific performance. Resolution typically takes 60-120 days.