Buying a home is not just a transaction. For most families in Tricity Punjab — in Mohali, Chandigarh, or Panchkula — it is the result of years of savings, sacrifices, and hope.
And yet, for a long time, buyers in Punjab had very little protection. Builders could delay projects, change plans, and disappear without accountability. Buyers were left holding worthless papers and broken promises.
That changed when RERA came in.
If you are planning to buy a property anywhere in Punjab in 2026, understanding RERA is not optional. It is essential.
RERA stands for Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016. It is a central government law that all states had to implement. Punjab established its RERA authority — RERA Punjab — in August 2017.
Think of RERA as the referee in the real estate game. Before RERA, all the power was with the builder. Now, the rules are clear, the game is fair, and you — the buyer — have legal protection.
The official website is rera.punjab.gov.in.
Here are the key protections RERA gives you as a homebuyer:
1. You Pay Only for Carpet Area
Before RERA, builders charged for "super built-up area" which included walls, lobbies, and common spaces. You ended up paying for parts of the building you would never use.
Under RERA Punjab, you pay only for carpet area — the actual usable floor space inside your home. This alone can save lakhs of rupees.
2. You Pay Only 10% in Advance
RERA Punjab mandates that builders cannot demand more than 10% of the property price as an advance before a registered sale agreement is signed.
This prevents the old practice where builders would collect 30–40% before any paperwork was in place.
3. The Builder Must Stick to the Plan
Once a project is registered with RERA, the builder cannot change the layout, number of floors, or amenities without your written consent and regulatory approval.
If they do, you can file a complaint and claim a refund with interest.
4. The Builder Must Give You a Delivery Date
Every RERA-registered project has a legally binding possession date. If the builder delays beyond that date, they must pay you interest on every rupee you have paid.
Under current RERA Punjab rules, that interest is SBI's highest MCLR rate plus 2% — which worked out to approximately 10.85% per annum in recent cases. On ₹50 lakh, that is over ₹5 lakh per year of delay. Real money.
5. You Can File a Complaint Online
If things go wrong, you do not need to hire a lawyer and fight in court for years. You can file a complaint directly on rera.punjab.gov.in and get a hearing through the RERA tribunal — which is faster, cheaper, and specifically built for property disputes.
This takes 2 minutes. Do this before paying anything.
Step 1: Go to rera.punjab.gov.in
Step 2: Click on "Projects" or "Search Projects"
Step 3: Enter the project name or builder name
Step 4: Check the registration number, delivery date, and project details
Step 5: Cross-check what the builder told you vs what is registered
If the project is not in the RERA database — do not buy it. No exceptions.
Not every small construction is required to register. The rules state:
Projects with a plot size exceeding 500 square meters, OR
Projects with 8 or more apartments must be registered with RERA Punjab before any marketing or sales.
If a builder is selling flats or plots in a project that meets these criteria but is not RERA-registered, they are breaking the law. You can report this to RERA Punjab.
The results are visible:
Punjab was among the first states in North India to adopt RERA actively.
Multiple builders have been fined and penalised for non-compliance. In one landmark case, a Chandigarh builder was fined ₹1.5 crore — the highest-ever penalty by RERA Punjab at that time.
Buyers have been able to claim refunds for delayed projects through RERA tribunal orders.
Banks and home loan lenders now require RERA registration before sanctioning loans on new projects. This makes RERA compliance a financial necessity for developers, not just a legal one.
Here is a detail many buyers miss: Panchkula falls under Haryana, not Punjab. So projects in Panchkula are regulated by HRERA Panchkula (Haryana Real Estate Regulatory Authority), not RERA Punjab.
No matter how good the brochure looks or how persuasive the sales team is, walk away if:
If a builder violates your rights, here is the process:
When you book a home in Mohali or Panchkula, you are not buying bricks. You are buying the idea of a future — your children's school nearby, your parents visiting, your family finally together under one roof.
RERA exists to protect that dream. It is the law saying: your money matters, your trust matters, your future matters.
Use it. Know it. And never buy a property that does not respect it.
Yes. Under RERA Punjab, if the builder delays possession beyond the registered date, you can either claim interest at MCLR + 2% for every month of delay, or demand a full refund with interest if you choose to exit.
Yes, for all projects above 500 sq. meters or with 8 or more units, RERA registration is mandatory. Never buy in an unregistered project.
RERA registration certificate, approved building plan, layout approvals from GMADA or relevant authority, registered sale agreement, and a No-Objection Certificate (NOC) from the bank if the land is mortgaged.