Circle Rate vs Market Value in India: One Concept, Five State Names Explained
Circle rate is the government-notified minimum value at which a property can be registered, set per square foot or square metre for every locality, and it decides how much stamp duty you pay. You cannot register a sale below it, even when your actual purchase price is lower. The "circle rate vs market value India" question confuses buyers because the circle rate is a floor set by the state, while market value is what the property actually trades for. The two rarely match.
This single concept wears a different name in almost every state. A buyer in Chennai calls it guideline value, one in Pune calls it ready reckoner rate, one in Ahmedabad calls it jantri. They are describing the same legal object: the minimum value used to compute stamp duty under the Indian Stamp Act, 1899, and to flag undervaluation under income tax law.
What is a circle rate, in one sentence?
A circle rate is the per-unit minimum value the state Registration Department assigns to land and buildings in a defined area, used as the benchmark for stamp duty and registration charges. Stamp duty is charged on whichever is higher: the circle rate value or your declared sale price. If you buy a flat for ₹40 lakh but the circle-rate value works out to ₹50 lakh, you pay stamp duty on ₹50 lakh. The state does not care that you paid less. The floor holds.
Land is a state subject under the Constitution, so each state runs its own valuation system, its own portal, and its own revision cycle. That is why the name changes when you cross a border. The mechanics do not.
The state name map: same thing, different word
This paragraph is the one most people search for, so here it is plainly. The government-notified minimum property value is called circle rate in Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, and Punjab. Haryana calls the same figure the collector rate. Maharashtra calls it the ready reckoner rate (also "annual statement of rates" or ASR). Tamil Nadu calls it guideline value, and Karnataka calls it guidance value, where stamp duty is charged on the higher of guidance value or sale price. Andhra Pradesh and Telangana call it market value or unit rate, published by their respective IGRS departments. Gujarat calls it jantri rate. Rajasthan calls it the DLC rate, short for District Level Committee rate. All seven labels point to the same legal benchmark: the minimum value at which the sub-registrar will register your deed and compute stamp duty. Learn one concept, ignore the vocabulary.
Here is the same map as a lookup table.
| State / UT | Local term | Notifying authority | Where to check |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delhi | Circle rate | Revenue Department / Divisional Commissioner | DORIS (doris.delhigovt.nic.in) |
| Uttar Pradesh | Circle rate | District Magistrate / Stamp & Registration | IGRSUP (igrsup.gov.in) |
| Haryana | Collector rate | Deputy Commissioner (district) | revenueharyana.gov.in / district sites |
| Maharashtra | Ready reckoner rate (ASR) | Inspector General of Registration (IGR) | igrmaharashtra.gov.in |
| Tamil Nadu | Guideline value | Registration Department | TNREGINET (tnreginet.gov.in) |
| Karnataka | Guidance value | Department of Stamps & Registration | Kaveri (kaveri.karnataka.gov.in) |
| Andhra Pradesh | Market value / unit rate | Registration & Stamps Dept (IGRS AP) | registration.ap.gov.in |
| Telangana | Market value / unit rate | Registration & Stamps Dept (IGRS TS) | registration.telangana.gov.in |
| Gujarat | Jantri rate | Revenue Department / Superintendent of Stamps | revenuedepartment.gujarat.gov.in |
| Rajasthan | DLC rate | District Level Committee | epanjiyan.rajasthan.gov.in |
Who sets these rates, and how often?
The notifying authority is almost always the state Registration or Revenue Department, often through a district-level valuation committee. In Maharashtra it is the Inspector General of Registration. In Rajasthan a District Level Committee fixes the DLC rate, which is literally what the acronym stands for. In Haryana the Deputy Commissioner approves collector rates district by district.
Revision frequency varies. Most states revise annually, usually around the start of the financial year in April. Some let rates sit far longer. Gujarat revised its jantri rates in February 2023 after more than a decade of inaction, and the new rates roughly doubled across Ahmedabad and other cities overnight. That gap is the source of most circle-rate-versus-market-value mismatch: when the state stops revising, the official rate drifts away from reality in both directions.
Why the same number controls four different taxes
The circle rate is not just a stamp-duty input. The same figure shows up in four places, and a buyer who ignores three of them gets surprised at tax time.
1. Stamp duty floor. Under the Indian Stamp Act, 1899, and state stamp legislation, stamp duty is computed on the higher of circle-rate value or declared consideration. This is the floor everyone knows. Register below the rate and the sub-registrar simply recomputes duty on the official value.
2. Buyer's income tax under Section 56(2)(x). This is the one buyers miss. If you purchase immovable property for less than its stamp duty value, and the gap exceeds ₹50,000, the difference is taxed in your hands as "income from other sources" under Section 56(2)(x) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. There is a safe-harbour band: no tax is added if the sale price is within 10% of the stamp duty value. Buy a ₹1 crore (circle-rate) flat for ₹85 lakh and the ₹15 lakh gap, being more than 10%, becomes taxable income for you. The bargain is not a bargain.
3. Seller's income tax under Section 50C. The mirror provision applies to the seller. Under Section 50C of the Income Tax Act, 1961, if you sell land or a building for less than the stamp duty value, the stamp duty value is deemed your full sale consideration for computing capital gains. You are taxed on gains you never actually received in cash. The same 10% tolerance band applies. For builders selling stock-in-trade, the parallel provision is Section 43CA, which works the same way with the same 10% tolerance.
4. Bank loan-to-value. Banks size your home loan against the lower of sale price, bank valuation, and circle-rate value, then apply their LTV cap (usually 75–90%). If the circle rate sits above your sale price, the bank may still lend against the higher figure in some cases, but more often the valuer's independent estimate governs. Where the circle rate exceeds market value in a slow micro-market, buyers end up paying stamp duty on an inflated official figure while the bank lends against the lower real value. You fund the gap from your own pocket.
Can I buy property below circle rate?
Yes, you can buy and register below the circle rate, but you pay for the privilege twice. The sub-registrar will still charge stamp duty on the full circle-rate value, not your lower price. Separately, if the shortfall exceeds 10%, Section 56(2)(x) taxes the buyer on the gap and Section 50C taxes the seller. So a below-rate purchase can mean stamp duty on money you did not spend, plus income tax on a notional gain, on both sides of the table. The transaction is legal. It is just expensive in ways the headline price hides.
The only clean below-rate registration is one where the gap stays inside the 10% tolerance. At a 9% discount to circle rate, the deed registers, no income-tax addition is made, and stamp duty is computed on the official value. Cross 10% and the tax machinery switches on.
When circle rates lag, and when they exceed, market value
Two failure modes show up across India, and both hurt.
When rates lag market value, the official figure understates reality. This was the historical norm and the reason the system was built: undervalued registration let buyers and sellers route the difference through unaccounted cash. States revise rates upward precisely to close this gap and pull transactions into the formal record.
When rates exceed market value, the buyer overpays tax. This happens in over-built micro-markets and after aggressive revisions. Parts of Noida and Greater Noida have at times carried circle rates above achievable resale prices in specific sectors, so a buyer purchasing at the genuine market price still pays stamp duty on the higher official value, and risks a Section 56(2)(x) addition on a gap they did not create. Interior and rural pockets show the opposite: rates set years ago that sit far below current demand. The lesson is the same either way. Check the official rate before you sign, because it, not your negotiated price, sets your tax bill.
How to look up the circle rate for any property
Every state publishes rates online, usually free, usually behind a district-taluk-village-survey-number drill-down. The portals from the table above are the authoritative sources:
- Delhi: DORIS, select your colony category (A to H)
- Uttar Pradesh: IGRSUP, drill District → Tehsil → Area
- Maharashtra: IGR Maharashtra, open "Annual Statement of Rates"
- Tamil Nadu: TNREGINET, click "Guideline Value"
- Karnataka: Kaveri portal, choose "Guidance Value"
- Andhra Pradesh / Telangana: respective IGRS unit-rate pages
- Gujarat: Garvi/Revenue Department jantri lookup
- Rajasthan: e-Panjiyan DLC rate search
The rate alone is not the whole story. You multiply the per-square-foot rate by the built-up or saleable area, then adjust for floor, age, lift, and amenities per each state's formula. The portal gives the base number; the registering authority applies the multipliers.
How circle rates feed property title verification
A property's official rate is one data point in a much larger due-diligence picture. Before you commit, the rate tells you your real stamp-duty and tax exposure, but it tells you nothing about whether the seller actually owns clean title, whether the land is litigated, or whether an encumbrance sits on it. Those are separate searches across separate government systems.
This is where pulling the official rate as part of a single verification pass matters. LegiScore's title verification reads the state-notified rate alongside the encumbrance certificate, revenue records, and ownership chain, then folds the valuation into a 29-section legal opinion in under 15 minutes. Instead of checking the jantri on one portal, the encumbrance on another, and the survey record on a third, the official rate arrives already cross-referenced against the title chain. A buyer sees the stamp-duty floor and the tax exposure in the same document that flags whether the title is safe to buy at all.
We have watched buyers treat a low circle rate as a green light and walk straight into a disputed-title purchase. The rate was real. The ownership was not. Reading the rate inside the title opinion, rather than in isolation, is what keeps a tax-smart purchase from becoming a legal disaster.
Frequently asked questions
Is circle rate the same as market value? No. Circle rate is the government-set minimum value for stamp duty and registration. Market value is what the property actually sells for. They can differ in either direction, and stamp duty is always charged on whichever is higher.
Does circle rate change every year? In most states, yes, usually revised around April. But some states revise far less often. Gujarat went over ten years before its 2023 jantri revision, which then roughly doubled rates statewide.
Why does my state call it guideline value and not circle rate? Because land is a state subject and each state names its own system. Guideline value (Tamil Nadu), guidance value (Karnataka), ready reckoner rate (Maharashtra), jantri (Gujarat), DLC rate (Rajasthan), collector rate (Haryana) and circle rate (Delhi, UP) are all the same legal benchmark.
Will I be taxed for buying below circle rate? If the sale price is below the stamp duty value by more than 10%, and the gap exceeds ₹50,000, the buyer is taxed on the difference under Section 56(2)(x) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. Stay within the 10% tolerance and no addition is made.
What is the safe-harbour limit for property valuation? The tolerance band is 10%, raised from 5% by the Finance Act, 2020, and it applies uniformly to Sections 43CA, 50C, and 56(2)(x). If the gap between sale price and stamp duty value is within 10%, none of these provisions is triggered.