Understanding RERA: How It Protects Property Buyers in AP and Telangana
One in five properties in India has hidden legal risks. Before the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act of 2016, buyers had no standardized legal recourse when builders delayed projects, diverted funds, or changed specifications without consent. RERA changed that equation permanently.
Based on verifying thousands of properties across Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, we have seen firsthand how RERA compliance -- or the lack of it -- directly impacts a buyer's legal standing. Yet many buyers in AP and TS still purchase property without ever checking whether a project is RERA registered.
This guide explains every protection RERA offers you as a property buyer, how to verify projects on the official AP and Telangana RERA portals, how to file complaints when builders violate their commitments, and the common mistakes that weaken your legal position even under RERA.
What Is RERA and Why Was It Introduced?
The Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016 is a central legislation enacted by the Indian Parliament to regulate the real estate sector and protect the interests of property buyers. RERA establishes a regulatory authority in each state responsible for overseeing real estate transactions, mandating project registration, enforcing financial discipline on developers, and providing a fast-track dispute resolution mechanism. Before RERA, India's real estate sector operated with minimal regulation -- buyers who faced project delays or fraud had no option beyond prolonged civil litigation that could stretch over years. RERA replaced that uncertainty with a structured framework that holds developers accountable and gives buyers enforceable rights within defined timelines.
The scale of its impact is significant. RERA authorities across Indian states have collectively disposed of over 1,25,000 consumer complaints (Outlook Money, 2025), demonstrating that when buyers approach the regulator, they receive time-bound relief rather than indefinite court proceedings.
The Three Pillars of RERA
RERA operates on three foundational principles that work together to protect property buyers:
Mandatory project registration. Every real estate project (with certain size exemptions) must be registered with the state RERA authority before the developer can advertise, market, or sell any unit. Registration requires full disclosure of land status, layout plans, construction timelines, and government approvals.
Financial discipline. Developers must deposit 70% of funds collected from buyers into a dedicated escrow account. These funds can only be withdrawn in proportion to construction progress, preventing the common pre-RERA practice of diverting buyer funds to other projects.
Dispute resolution. Each state RERA authority serves as a dedicated tribunal for buyer complaints, with a mandated resolution timeline of 60 days -- a significant improvement over the years-long wait in civil courts.
What Are the Key Protections for Property Buyers Under RERA?
RERA grants property buyers in India a set of specific, enforceable rights that apply uniformly across Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, and all other states. These protections cover financial safeguards, quality guarantees, timeline enforcement, and compensation mechanisms. Under the RERA Act 2016, buyers are entitled to escrow protection on their funds, strict limits on advance payments, a five-year defect warranty on structural issues, and full compensation including interest if builders delay possession. These rights are backed by penalties of up to 10% of the project cost or imprisonment of up to three years for non-compliant developers, making RERA one of the strongest consumer protection frameworks in Indian real estate.
Escrow Account Protection (Section 4)
Under Section 4 of the RERA Act, developers must deposit 70% of all amounts received from buyers into a separate escrow account maintained with a scheduled bank. This money can only be used for land acquisition costs and construction expenses related to the specific registered project. Withdrawals require certification by an engineer, architect, and a chartered accountant confirming that the funds correspond to actual construction progress. This provision directly prevents the pre-RERA problem of developers collecting money for one project and diverting it to fund another.
Advance Payment Limits
RERA caps the advance payment a developer can demand at 10% of the total property price before executing a written agreement for sale. Before RERA, developers routinely demanded 20-30% or more as booking amounts, leaving buyers with significant financial exposure even before any legal documentation was signed.
Defect Warranty (Section 14)
Section 14(3) of the RERA Act provides a five-year defect liability period starting from the date of possession. If any structural defect or quality issue is brought to the builder's attention within this period, the builder is legally obligated to rectify the defect within 30 days at no additional cost to the buyer. This covers structural failures, workmanship defects, and material quality issues.
Compensation for Delays (Section 18)
Section 18 is the most powerful buyer protection provision in RERA. If a builder fails to deliver possession by the committed date, the buyer has two options under this section:
- Full refund with interest: Withdraw from the project and claim a complete refund of all amounts paid, plus interest calculated at the State Bank of India's marginal cost of lending rate plus 2%.
- Compensation for delay: Continue with the project and receive monthly interest payments from the builder for the entire duration of the delay.
Non-compliance with Section 18 orders carries a penalty of up to 10% of the estimated project cost, imprisonment for up to three years, or both (RERA Act 2016, Section 63).
| Aspect | Before RERA | After RERA |
|---|---|---|
| Fund usage | No restriction on developer | 70% locked in escrow account |
| Advance payment | 20-30% common | Maximum 10% before agreement |
| Defect liability | No mandated period | 5 years, rectification within 30 days |
| Delay compensation | Civil court (years) | RERA authority (60 days) + interest |
| Project information | Opaque, verbal promises | Mandatory online disclosure |
| Complaint resolution | 5-10 years in courts | 60-day mandated timeline |
How Do You Check RERA Registration in AP and Telangana?
Verifying whether a real estate project is RERA registered is one of the most critical steps in property due diligence in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. Both states maintain official RERA portals where buyers can search for registered projects, view developer details, check construction status, and download registration certificates. For Andhra Pradesh, visit the AP RERA portal at rera.ap.gov.in and navigate to the Registered Projects section. Enter the project name or RERA registration number to access the project's legal status, approved layout plans, construction timelines, and developer compliance history. AP currently has over 4,000 registered projects across Visakhapatnam, Vijayawada, and Tirupati. For Telangana, visit the TG RERA portal at rera.telangana.gov.in and use the Search Registered Projects option to look up any project by name or promoter.
Checking Projects on the AP RERA Portal
- Visit the official AP RERA website at rera.ap.gov.in
- Navigate to the "Registered" tab and select "Projects"
- Enter the project name, district, or RERA registration number
- Review the project details: registration status, approved plans, construction timeline, and developer information
- Download the registration certificate for your records
With over 4,000 registered projects, the AP RERA portal is a comprehensive database. If a project you are considering does not appear in this database, treat it as a serious red flag.
Checking Projects on the Telangana RERA Portal
- Visit the TG RERA portal at rera.telangana.gov.in
- Click "Search Registered Projects and Agents" on the homepage
- Enter the project name, promoter name, or district
- Review the project status: completed, under construction, or delayed
- Access uploaded documents including layout approvals, sanction certificates, and the registration certificate
The Telangana portal also displays the names of real estate agents associated with each project, allowing you to verify agent registration alongside checking court cases on your property and other due diligence steps.
How Do You File a RERA Complaint in AP and Telangana?
If a builder violates RERA provisions -- delayed possession, unauthorized changes to project plans, or failure to meet quality standards -- buyers can file formal complaints through the respective state RERA portals.
Filing Complaints in Andhra Pradesh
File complaints online through the AP RERA portal at rera.ap.gov.in. The complaint fee is Rs.1,000. Required documents include a copy of your sale agreement or allotment letter, payment receipts and bank statements showing all payments made, written correspondence with the developer regarding the issue, and photographs or reports documenting any defects.
The AP RERA authority is mandated to dispose of complaints within 60 days. If you are unsatisfied with the authority's decision, you can appeal to the Appellate Tribunal within 60 days of the order.
Filing Complaints in Telangana
Telangana follows a similar online complaint mechanism through rera.telangana.gov.in. Register on the portal, navigate to the complaints section, and submit your documentation. The online system is more time-efficient and creates an automatic paper trail compared to traditional legal channels.
A critical tip from legal experts: file RERA complaints early. Many buyers wait years before approaching the regulator, hoping for informal resolution. By the time they file, they may have weakened their position by accepting partial deliverables or signing supplementary agreements that modify original timelines.
5 Common Mistakes Buyers Make Regarding RERA
In our verification of properties across AP and Telangana, we frequently encounter buyers who skipped RERA checks or made decisions that undermined their legal protections. These are the five most common mistakes:
1. Not verifying RERA registration before booking. The most fundamental error. Buyers get attracted by model apartments and marketing brochures without ever checking the RERA portal. An unregistered project offers zero RERA protections.
2. Accepting unilateral clauses in sale agreements. Many developers insert clauses giving themselves authority to cancel allotments, alter specifications, or extend timelines without consent. Once signed, these clauses can limit your ability to claim under RERA. Always have sale agreements reviewed by a legal professional before signing.
3. Making cash or under-the-table payments. Payments made outside official channels leave no statutory trail. If you need to claim a refund or compensation under RERA, only officially documented transactions are recognized. This is particularly relevant in AP and TS where cash transactions in real estate remain common.
4. Defaulting on your own payment timelines. RERA protections work both ways. If you miss agreed payment installments, the developer's obligation to meet their timelines is proportionally affected. Courts have ruled that buyers who default on payments cannot claim full delay compensation. Use the home buyer checklist to stay organized.
5. Waiting too long to file complaints. RERA is designed for early intervention. Buyers who wait years hoping for informal resolution often find their claims harder to enforce. File complaints as soon as violations become apparent.
How Technology Strengthens RERA Verification
Manually checking RERA portals requires navigating government websites, understanding which fields to verify, and interpreting registration certificates -- a process that takes significant time and assumes technical familiarity with regulatory portals.
In our analysis of property documents across AP and Telangana, RERA non-registration is among the most frequently discovered compliance issues during automated verification. Many buyers who complete manual checks on individual portals miss the larger picture: RERA registration is just one of the multiple government verifications needed for comprehensive property title verification.
AI-powered property verification platforms like LegiScore search 15+ government portals simultaneously -- including RERA, encumbrance certificates, court records, property tax, and land revenue records -- completing in under 15 minutes what would take days of manual effort. RERA verification is one of the 29 sections in a comprehensive title scrutiny report, ensuring it is never checked in isolation but always in the context of the property's complete legal profile.
For buyers in AP and TS, this means a single verification process covers RERA compliance alongside Telangana property due diligence checks, providing a holistic view rather than piecemeal portal visits.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is RERA registration mandatory for all real estate projects in AP and Telangana?
RERA registration is mandatory for all real estate projects where the land area exceeds 500 square meters or the number of apartments exceeds eight units. Projects below these thresholds are exempt from mandatory registration. However, both AP and Telangana actively enforce registration requirements, and banks typically sanction home loans only for RERA-registered projects.
What happens if a builder is not registered under RERA?
Selling or advertising an unregistered project is a punishable offence under RERA. The developer faces a penalty of up to 10% of the estimated project cost. Additionally, buyers of unregistered projects have limited recourse under RERA provisions, which is why verifying registration before making any payment is critical.
Can NRIs file RERA complaints for properties in AP or Telangana?
Yes. NRIs can file RERA complaints online through the respective state portals without being physically present in India. The online complaint mechanism accepts digital documentation, making it accessible for NRI property buyers who cannot visit AP or TS in person. This is especially important given that 73% of NRIs depend on family members for property management in India (LegiScore data).
How long does it take to resolve a RERA complaint?
RERA mandates that complaints should be resolved within 60 days from the date of filing. In practice, timelines may vary based on case complexity and the authority's caseload. However, this is significantly faster than the 5-10 years typical of civil court proceedings, and the online filing system ensures faster initial processing.
Conclusion
RERA provides strong legal protections for property buyers in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana -- from escrow safeguards and defect warranties to compensation for delays and fast-track dispute resolution. But these protections only work if you use them proactively: verify RERA registration before paying, read agreements carefully, keep all payments documented, and file complaints early if violations occur.
RERA verification is one essential check, but it is not the only one. A comprehensive property due diligence process covers court case searches, encumbrance certificates, land records, property tax, and ownership chain analysis. Verify your property's RERA status along with 28 other legal checks -- get your property rated with LegiScore.
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