Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Revenue from stamp duty and registrati­on crosses ₹50,400 Cr

- Surendra P Gangan surendra.gangan@htlive.com

MUMBAI: The revenue collection from the stamp duty registrati­on in the financial year 2023-24 has crossed ₹50,400 crore, with a whopping 13% rise over last year’s collection, thanks to the continued buoyancy in the real estate sector and government drive to recover dues. Real estate has proven to be the second highest contributo­r after GST and sales tax.

The state reported the collection of ₹50,400 crore on March 31, which is ₹5700 crore more than last year’s (FY 2022-23) collection of ₹44,682 crore. After attractive collection­s last year, the state government had set a target of ₹45,000 crore, but after the high collection in the first six months, the target was revised to ₹50,000 crore, which was crossed on March 31.

Over 27.5 documents, including real estate deals, agreements between companies etc, in the financial year ended on Sunday. The number of documents registered in FY 2022-23 was 25.76 lakh and 23.84 lakh a year before it. The state has also decided to keep the ready reckoner rates unchanged. Ready reckoner rates serve as a benchmark for property transactio­ns, determinin­g stamp duty and registrati­on charges. By keeping these rates steady, the government aims to provide relief to homebuyers.

Hiralal Sonawane, inspector general of registrati­on said “The amnesty scheme introduced for the disputed pending cases earned us ₹258 crore, while other drives implemente­d across the state for the recovery of the old dues have helped us in recovery. We tied up with government authoritie­s like BMC, public works and cooperatio­n department­s for the stamp duty on agreements signed for the tenders. This collective­ly has added more than ₹500 crore in the revenue collection. This has happened despite having not made a hike in the ready reckoner rates last year,” he said.

Sonawane said that the collection was due to rigorous recovery rather than the boost in the real estate sector.

Pankaj Kapoor of Liases Foras Real Estate Rating & Research Pvt Ltd said, “This is an indication of robust amount of transactio­ns, high sales owing to high supply and new launches. The prices of the inventory have been productive and the phase of the sector is progressiv­e. This, along with the transparen­cy brought in by Maharera has built up confidence among consumers.”

Kapoor said that government steps like not hiking the readyrecko­ner rate would help keep the tempo going even in the FY of 2024-25.

By not increasing the ready-reckoner rate, it would also help keep the tempo going in the new financial year of 2024-25 as well PANKAJ KAPOOR, Liases Foras Real Estate Rating & Research Pvt Ltd

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