Comprehending RERA and its purpose
Passed in 2016, RERA was enacted into law to address the longstanding issue of homebuyers such as delay in projects, misadvertisement, and absence of transparency on the developers' part. The Act seeks to regulate the real estate sector, ensuring transparent business, timely delivery, and instilling confidence of buyers. A different RERA authority exists for every union territory and state of India to regulate real estate business and settle disputes.
Forced registration of projects
One of the key RERA provisions is that developers must register all residential and commercial projects of a certain size or more under the respective state RERA authority prior to sale or marketing. Registration requires full disclosures like the plan layout, title position of land, approvals, financial status, and completion date. It helps only legitimate projects to be marketed and the threat of spurious or stuck developments is eliminated.
On-time project completion and proper use of money
Earlier, homebuyers had to suffer from uncertain project delays and diversion of funds. The Act confirms that developers deposit a minimum of 70 percent of the project amount collected from consumers in an escrow account apart from their company account money. Funds are allowed only to settle construction and land expenses of the target project so that funds are not diverted into other projects. The developers will be required to adhere to given timetables, and violating this will result in fines or compensation suits against the developers by the purchasers.
Transparency and access to information
RERA has also increased transparency in real estate information for buyers. Every state's RERA website has detailed project and promoter information, project and promoter status of progress, approvals, and contact details. The buyer is able to verify if a project is authentic, verify the status, and if there are any complaints or offenses made prior to investment. This transparency enables the buyer with making the correct choices.
Buyer's rights and grievance redressal
In RERA, the homebuyers have some legal redressal. In case of default by the developer in giving possession, or in offering quality construction, or in making false promises, the consumers can go to the RERA authority for redressal. The Act even provides for compensation for delays and cancellation of a project on extraordinary grounds. Appellate tribunals and consumer courts also give strength to the grievance redressal system.
Impact on the real estate market
RERA has brought greater discipline into the property business, restored customers' faith, and strengthened developer credibility. RERA has also compelled builders towards healthy competition to attain compliance and timely delivery. For buyers of homes, RERA has made buying property safer, transparent, and far less risk-prone than before.
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