Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

The protective umbrella of RERA will transform realty

REGULATION The 14 spokes of RERA have helped realty become a systematic sector

- Anuj Puri letters@hindustant­imes.com ■ The author is Chairman – ANAROCK Property Consultant­s

The Indian real estate industry, particular­ly the residentia­l sector, was in the past correctly characteri­zed as being unregulate­d and unorganize­d with unreasonab­le project delays and poor quality of constructi­on being definitive aspects.

The arrival of the Real Estate Regulatory Act (RERA) in March 2016 brought in a paradigm shift in the sector and metamorpho­sed it into a more mature, systematic and regulated one. RERA came into force on May 1, 2017, and is meant to be a home buyer friendly regime which will address their grievances and promote transparen­cy, efficiency, financial discipline and accountabi­lity in the sector.

Indeed, buying a home is not only the most cherished dream for many Indians but also one of the biggest long-term financial commitment in the buyers’ lifetime. Considerin­g this, there are 14 important guidelines incorporat­ed in the RERA umbrella to prevent unscrupulo­us players from raining on consumers’ home-buying plans:

1. Enforcing timely delivery of projects

In case of project delays, buyers have the right to - (i) Seek withdrawal of booking (the developer is liable to refund the entire amount along with interest) (ii) Go ahead with the project (with the condition that developer will pay interest for every month of delay until the property is ready for possession). The maximum time for refunding the buyer’s investment is within 45 days of it becoming due.

2. Facility to check RERA registrati­on number

All builders have to mandatoril­y register their projects under RERA with the respective state regulatory authority and obtain a registrati­on number for every project. Without RERA registrati­on, developers are not allowed to sell the project. The project details, constructi­on progress, commenceme­nt/occupation and other certificat­es, sales details, etc. must be updated on the singlepoin­t informatio­n window i.e. RERA portal, at regular intervals.

3. Financial safety via an escrow account

Homebuyers’ investment­s can be considered safe, as RERA obliges developers to deposit at least 70% of the buyers’ money received for a particular project into an escrow account. This prevents the developers from ‘rolling’ these funds into other projects. The rolling of funds was a major reason for project delays in the past.

4. Ability to verify the builder’s track record

Buyers can now opt for properties only from reputed developers who are complying with RERA norms and have a good track record and financial stability, which can be verified by buyers.

5. Transparen­cy in advertisem­ent and marketing collateral­s

Developers can now promote a project only after registerin­g it with RERA. The unique RERA registrati­on number has to be published with every advertisem­ent/brochure, or in any kind of project promotion at all.

6. Clarity on carpet area

The hitherto convention­al practice of developers charging homebuyers on the basis of the super built-up area no longer works. Under RERA, the quoted price has to be mandatoril­y based on the carpet area of the property. What you see is what you get (and buy).

7. Strict norms on building changes

Around 2/3rd of the buyers’ consent in a particular project is necessary in case the developer intends to modify the building or layout plans/specificat­ions/liabilitie­s in the project.

8. Facility to check payment plans

Homebuyers can do due diligence before opting for a particular payment plan, a variety of which developers now offer - including flexi-payment, down-payment, possession-linked and constructi­onlinked plans.

9. Booking amount cannot exceed 10%

Developers can only take 10% of the total property cost as a booking amount while the sale agreement is drafted at later stages. RERA prohibits developers to accept more than this. If guilty of charging more than 10%, the developer potentiall­y invites a penalty of imprisonme­nt of up to 3 years.

10. Brokers must be registered under RERA, too

As service providers to real estate consumers, property brokers are also liable for all deliverabl­es committed by the developers they represent. Hence, they must register themselves with their respective state Regulatory Authoritie­s.

11. At long last, a reliable redressal mechanism

RERA provides a strong redressal mechanism to consumers by imposing a penalty on developers/brokers for any breach of obligation. Homebuyers can file complaints against developers/ brokers which will mandatoril­y be resolved in a span of 60 days from the date of the complaint.

12. Structural defects must be addressed

In case of issues within the building or apartment, such as inefficien­t plumbing, visible cracks, etc. in the initial five years after possession, developers are liable to rectify the defect in less than 30 days or else give compensati­on to the buyer.

13. Availabili­ty of land title documents

These vitally important documents were, more often than not, inaccessib­le to buyers before RERA. Now, they can scrutinize documents related to a project’s land title ownership on the RERA website.

14. Goodbye to soft/prelaunche­s

RERA has put a complete halt to soft launches, pre-launches and any other interpreta­tions of selling something which doesn’t exist as yet. As a result, speculator­s have now been pushed out and the market has turned extremely buyer-friendly.

While many states are still in the process of notifying their RERA rules, there has been continuous fretting about the dilution of the rules recently notified by many states. There are multiple changes made by different states in the RERA proposed initially by Central Government. Dilution in ongoing projects’ definition­s has left a huge number of projects out of the RERA ambit and is understand­ably a major concern for existing buyers. To keep the spirit of RERA alive, the Government should try to keep RERA rules aligned and effective across all the states, while balancing the interests of both buyers and developers.

RERA HAS PUT A COMPLETE HALT TO SOFT LAUNCHES, PRELAUNCHE­S AND ANY OTHER INTERPRETA­TIONS OF SELLING SOMETHING WHICH DOESN’T EXIST AS YET.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? The arrival of the Real Estate Regulatory Act (RERA) in March 2016 brought in a paradigm shift in the sector and metamorpho­sed it into a more mature, systematic and regulated one
MINT/FILE The arrival of the Real Estate Regulatory Act (RERA) in March 2016 brought in a paradigm shift in the sector and metamorpho­sed it into a more mature, systematic and regulated one

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