HomeNewsBusinessReal EstateCentre drafts blueprint for systemic reforms to rescue stressed housing projects: Report

Centre drafts blueprint for systemic reforms to rescue stressed housing projects: Report

Over half of these stalled homes-about 2.4 lakh-are located in the National Capital Region

November 10, 2025 / 10:31 IST
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Real estate, real estate news, Ministry of Corporate Affairs, realty news
The upcoming panel will also explore structural reforms such as strengthening NCLT's judicial capacity, setting up dedicated insolvency benches for real estate cases, enabling project-wise resolution, and ensuring early registration of projects with local authorities to safeguard homebuyers' interests

The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) is preparing to set up a government committee to propose policy reforms aimed at accelerating the completion of stalled real estate projects, reviving insolvent developers, and improving debt resolution efficiency, The Mint reported. The ministry has begun discussions with other ministries and regulators to create a blueprint of "commercially viable systemic reforms" focused on addressing distress across the real estate sector.

Two people familiar with the development told The Mint that the panel will include representatives from multiple ministries and regulatory agencies. Its objective is to restore public trust in the housing market, where more than Rs 4 trillion in investments were stuck as of July 2023, covering around 4.12 lakh stressed housing units, according to an expert committee led by former G20 Sherpa Amitabh Kant. Over half of these stalled homes-about 2.4 lakh-are located in the National Capital Region.

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The proposed committee will be separate from the one recently formed by the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) to explore project-wise insolvency resolutions instead of the existing company-level approach, The Mint noted in an earlier report on November 3.

Members of the new committee will include officials from the ministries of law and housing and urban affairs, think tank National Institute of Urban Affairs, IBBI, and the Department of Financial Services. One person cited by The Mint said the panel's formalities are underway, with an initial inter-ministerial meeting held last week to discuss sectoral distress. The committee is expected to be finalized shortly and deliver its recommendations within six months.