20 Questions to Ask Before Buying Property in India
Before you pay a rupee toward any property, ask these 20 questions across five areas: title ownership, encumbrance and dues, regulatory approvals, possession, and documentation. Most buyers ask two or three of these, the ones about price and possession date, and skip the ones that actually cause disputes years later: title chain, litigation, and unpaid dues attached to the property, not the seller.
Below is the full list, grouped by what each question actually protects you from, plus why it matters. Run through it property by property; the answers determine whether you're buying a clean asset or a slow-moving problem.
Treat this as a working checklist, not a one-time conversation. Ask these questions before you shortlist a property seriously, ask them again once you have the documents in hand, and verify the answers independently before you sign anything or transfer any money, a seller's confident "yes" is not the same as a document that proves it.
Title and Ownership
1. Is the seller the sole, current, legal owner? Check the sale deed and the latest mutation/khata entry match the seller's name exactly. A mismatch, inherited property not yet mutated, or a co-owner not listed as a seller, can freeze your purchase mid-registration.
2. Is there a clear, unbroken chain of title going back at least 30 years? Every prior sale, gift, or inheritance in the chain needs to be documented and legally valid. A single broken link, an undocumented gift deed, an unresolved partition, can make the entire chain defective, no matter how clean the current transaction looks.
3. Are all co-owners and legal heirs part of the sale? Inherited property especially: if one sibling sells without the others' consent or knowledge, you could face a future claim from an heir who was never party to the sale.
4. Is there an active or historical Power of Attorney (PoA) in the chain? PoA-based sales carry extra risk, verify the PoA was validly executed, registered, and not revoked, and that the person selling under it actually had the authority claimed.
5. Does the property have a General Power of Attorney (GPA) sale in its history instead of a registered sale deed? GPA "sales" don't transfer title in most Indian states post the Supreme Court's 2011 ruling in Suraj Lamp. If a GPA transaction sits anywhere in the chain, the title may never have legally passed.
Encumbrance, Loans, and Dues
6. Is the property free of any existing mortgage or loan? Pull a fresh Encumbrance Certificate (EC) for the last 13-30 years. An EC showing a loan entry with no closure/release means the property may still be technically pledged to a bank.
7. Are there any liens, court attachments, or government dues registered against the property? Liens don't always show up in casual conversation with the seller, they show up in an EC search and government-portal records.
8. Are property taxes fully paid, with no arrears? Unpaid municipal tax attaches to the property, not the person, you inherit the arrears if they're not cleared before registration.
9. Are society maintenance charges and any co-operative housing society dues clear? Ask for a No Dues Certificate from the society before transfer, this also confirms the seller is the recognized member on record.
10. Is there a pending home loan, and has the bank issued a No Objection Certificate (NOC) for sale? If the seller is still repaying a loan against the property, get the bank's release/NOC in writing before you pay any significant amount.
Litigation and Legal Disputes
11. Is there any ongoing litigation involving the property? Search the relevant district and high courts, property disputes (partition, injunction, specific performance) can sit quietly in a court registry for years without the seller mentioning them.
12. Has a lis pendens (pending litigation notice) ever been registered against the property? A registered lis pendens means anyone buying the property buys it subject to the outcome of that case, read our detailed guide on lis pendens and pending lawsuits on property before proceeding.
13. Has the property, or the seller, ever been involved in an NPA or SARFAESI action? If a previous owner defaulted on a loan secured against this property, it may have gone through bank recovery proceedings, see our guide on NPA and property seizure under home loans for what to check.
14. Is the seller currently facing any insolvency or bankruptcy proceedings? Insolvency proceedings can freeze a seller's ability to transfer assets, including this one, even mid-negotiation.
Regulatory Approvals and Compliance
15. Is the project RERA-registered, and is the registration still active? For apartments and under-construction projects, check the state RERA website directly, don't rely on the builder's word or a sales brochure.
16. Is the building plan approved, and does the built structure match the sanctioned plan? Unauthorized additional floors or deviations from the sanctioned plan are common in India, and can trigger demolition or regularization costs after you've already paid.
17. Is there a valid Occupancy Certificate (OC) or Completion Certificate (CC)? Without an OC, utility connections, resale, and even loan disbursement can get complicated, this is one of the most commonly missing documents in resale transactions.
18. Is the land use/zoning classification appropriate for the intended use? Agricultural land converted for residential use without proper conversion approval creates title problems that surface later, usually when you try to sell or mortgage it.
Possession and Closing
19. Is the possession offered physical, not just symbolic or documentary? Especially relevant for bank auction or distressed-sale properties, confirm who's actually occupying the property today and whether any tenancy or occupation claim exists.
20. Are all original documents being handed over at registration, with nothing retained "for safekeeping" by the seller or broker? Incomplete document handover is a quiet red flag, insist on originals, not certified copies, at the point of registration.
Why Asking Isn't Enough, Verify Independently
Sellers rarely lie outright, but they routinely don't know their own property's full history, a lien from a previous owner, a case they were never formally served notice for, an unapproved floor added by a previous occupant. Asking these 20 questions gets you the seller's honest answer. Verifying independently gets you the actual answer. That's the gap a structured title check closes.
This matters most in exactly the deals that feel safest, a familiar broker, a relative's referral, a listing that looks polished. Comfort is not verification. The properties that end up in litigation years later almost always looked completely fine at the point of purchase; the problem was buried in a court record or a government portal, not in anything the seller said.
How LegiScore Helps
The LegiScore Property Score (LPS) answers all 20 of these questions in one report, scored AAA to C across five pillars, Title Integrity (300 points), Encumbrance & Financial (250), Litigation (200), Regulatory Compliance (150), and Document Completeness & Integrity (100), pulling from 70+ government portals and 100+ courts across India in under 15 minutes. Browse the LegiScore Marketplace for listings that already carry this rating, or run a search across verified listings directly. For the full document-by-document walkthrough, see our property due diligence checklist, and learn to spot a genuine listing from a fake one before you even start asking questions.
Check any property's legal health in under 15 minutes, get your LegiScore title search report before you go further than a phone call with the seller.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the most important questions to ask before buying a property in India?
The five that matter most: is the seller the sole legal owner with a clear 30-year title chain, is the property free of loans/liens, is there any pending litigation, are property taxes and society dues clear, and is the project RERA-registered with a valid occupancy certificate.
How do I check if a property has any pending court cases?
You'd need to search the relevant district court, high court, and any specialized tribunal records for the property and seller's name, a process that a service like LegiScore automates across 100+ courts in one report.
What documents should I ask the seller for before buying a flat?
The sale/title deed, a fresh Encumbrance Certificate (13-30 years), latest property tax and society-dues receipts, the RERA registration number, approved building plan, and occupancy certificate.
Is it enough to trust what the seller tells me about the property?
No. Sellers often don't know their own property's full history, a lien from a prior owner, an unresolved case, or an unapproved construction can exist without the current seller being aware of it. Independent verification catches what conversation misses.
What is the biggest red flag when buying property in India?
A broken or undocumented title chain, a GPA-based "sale," an heir who wasn't party to the transaction, or a gap in ownership records, because it can undermine your ownership regardless of how clean the current paperwork looks.
How long does it take to verify a property's legal status before buying?
With a manual approach, weeks, coordinating a lawyer across multiple courts and government offices. LegiScore's automated search across 70+ portals and 100+ courts returns a rated report in under 15 minutes.