Verify a Property Before You Pay Any Token Advance
No: verify the title first, then pay the token advance, not the other way around. A token or booking advance in an Indian property deal is, in almost every case, treated as non-refundable once paid, regardless of what you discover about the property afterward. If you pay first and find a title problem (an unresolved lien, a pending case, a missing approval), you're negotiating from a position of already having lost money, not from a position of leverage.
This is the single most common sequencing mistake in Indian property transactions: buyers verify the deal's commercial terms carefully (price, payment schedule, possession date) and treat the legal check as something to do "after," once they're already committed emotionally and financially. Flip that order.
Why the Token Advance Is the Riskiest Money You'll Pay
A token advance (typically 1% to 10% of the property value) is meant to signal serious intent and take the property off the market while you complete due diligence. In practice, most token/booking agreements are drafted (or verbally agreed) as non-refundable if the buyer backs out, even for reasons the buyer considers legitimate, like discovering a title issue after the fact. Courts have upheld forfeiture clauses in many such disputes. The agreement rarely protects you the way you assume it will. Read it as if it doesn't, and verify accordingly, before you sign or pay.
Brokers and sellers often push urgency at exactly this stage ("another buyer is interested," "the rate is only valid this week") precisely because urgency is what gets buyers to skip verification. Genuine sellers with clean titles have no reason to rush you past a 15-minute check.
What to Verify Before You Pay a Single Rupee
1. Title ownership and chain. Confirm the seller is the sole, current legal owner, and that the chain of ownership going back at least 30 years has no undocumented gaps, unresolved inheritances, or invalid Power of Attorney transactions.
2. Encumbrance status. Pull a fresh Encumbrance Certificate. A clean EC means no registered mortgage, lien, or charge against the property that could surface as a claim later.
3. Litigation history. Search court records (district and high court) for any pending or past litigation naming the property or the seller. A property under an active lis pendens can be sold, but you'd be buying it subject to the case's outcome; see our detailed guide on lis pendens and pending lawsuits on property.
4. Regulatory approvals. For apartments, confirm RERA registration, approved building plan, and occupancy certificate. For plots, confirm land-use classification and any conversion approvals.
5. Outstanding dues. Property tax arrears and unpaid society maintenance attach to the property, not the person who owed them. You inherit them on transfer if they're not cleared first.
6. Document completeness. Confirm the seller can produce originals (not certified copies, not "we'll get it later") of the sale deed, tax receipts, and approvals before you commit money.
None of this takes weeks. A structured search across government portals and court records (the kind an automated title-rating tool runs) surfaces all six in a single report, typically in under 15 minutes.
Token Advance vs. Earnest Money vs. Sale Agreement Deposit
Buyers often use these terms interchangeably, but they carry different legal weight, and confusing them is how disputes start:
| Term | What it signals | Typical enforceability |
|---|---|---|
| Token advance | Informal intent to buy, holds the property briefly | Weakest (often no written terms at all) |
| Earnest money | Serious commitment, usually with a written receipt | Moderate (depends entirely on the receipt's wording) |
| Sale agreement deposit | Formal contractual deposit under a signed agreement to sell | Strongest (governed by the agreement's specific clauses) |
The informality of a token advance is exactly what makes it risky: there's often no document spelling out what happens if either side backs out, which means any dispute falls back on general contract principles and, frequently, years of litigation over a relatively small sum. Insist on a written receipt or short booking form even for a "token," stating the amount, the property, the conditions for refund, and a timeline for the full agreement to follow.
What Recourse Do You Have If You've Already Paid?
If you've paid a token advance and then discover a title problem, your options narrow quickly. You can attempt direct negotiation with the seller for a refund: this works only if they're acting in good faith and the problem is undeniable. Failing that, you can pursue the matter in a consumer forum or civil court if you have a written agreement with a refund condition; without one, you're relying on general remedies under the Indian Contract Act, which are slower and less certain. Either path costs more in time and legal fees than the 15 minutes a verification would have taken beforehand. This is why sequencing (verify, then pay) matters more than any clause you could add to the agreement afterward.
Is a Token Advance Ever Refundable?
Only if the sale agreement or booking form explicitly says so, in writing, with clear conditions: for example, "refundable if title verification reveals an encumbrance within 7 days." Verbal assurances ("don't worry, we'll return it if there's a problem") are not enforceable the same way a written clause is, and disputes over verbal promises are exactly the kind of case that ends up in years of litigation over a comparatively small sum. If a seller resists putting a refund condition in writing, treat that resistance itself as information.
The Right Sequence, in Practice
- Shortlist and collect basics. Get the seller's sale deed copy, tax receipts, and approvals before you go further. A seller unwilling to share these at this stage is itself a signal.
- Verify independently, before any payment. Run a title check before signing a booking form or handing over cash, not after the seller starts pressing for a decision.
- Review the rating and full report. Anything below an AA rating deserves a closer look from a property lawyer before you proceed, not necessarily a walk-away. Some issues are fixable, but you need to know what you're fixing.
- Negotiate the token advance and its refund terms in writing. Only once verification is done should the token amount and refund conditions get finalized, and always in writing, not on trust.
- Pay, sign, and proceed to the sale agreement. With the title already verified, the rest of the transaction (sale agreement, registration, possession) moves faster because there's nothing left to discover.
Buyers who follow this sequence rarely lose token money to a title problem, because the problem surfaces before the payment, not after. The 15 minutes a verification takes is trivial against the weeks (or years) a forfeited advance and a legal dispute can cost.
How LegiScore Helps
The LegiScore Property Score (LPS) rates a property AAA to C across five pillars: Title Integrity, Encumbrance & Financial, Litigation, Regulatory Compliance, and Document Completeness & Integrity, using 70+ government-portal searches and 100+ court searches across India, delivered in under 15 minutes. Run the check before you commit to a token advance, not after. Browse verified listings on the LegiScore Marketplace, or go straight to search active, rated listings to find properties that already carry this rating, and see our companion guide on buying property online safely with a verified rating for the full buying-side playbook. The property buyers' resource hub has more on sequencing your due diligence correctly from the first shortlist call.
Check any property's legal health in under 15 minutes. Get a LegiScore title search report before you commit. Start here before you pay any token or booking advance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I pay a token advance before or after verifying a property's title?
Before you pay, never after. Verify title, encumbrance, and litigation status first; token advances are typically non-refundable once paid, so any problem discovered afterward leaves you negotiating from a losing position.
Is a token advance on property refundable in India?
Generally no, unless the booking agreement explicitly includes a written refund clause with clear conditions. Verbal promises to refund are difficult to enforce and frequently disputed.
What should I check before paying an advance on a property?
At minimum: title ownership and chain, Encumbrance Certificate, court litigation history, RERA/regulatory approvals, outstanding property tax or society dues, and whether the seller can produce original documents.
How long does it take to verify a property before paying a token advance?
A manual check via a lawyer coordinating across government offices and courts can take weeks. An automated search like LegiScore's, across 70+ portals and 100+ courts, returns a rated report in under 15 minutes.
Why do sellers push urgency around the token advance stage?
Urgency ("another buyer is interested," "rate valid this week only") pressures buyers to skip verification. A seller with a genuinely clean title has no reason to rush you past a 15-minute check.
What happens if I discover a title problem after paying the token advance?
You can attempt to negotiate a refund or a corrective clause, but you're doing so after already losing your negotiating leverage, and possibly the advance itself, if the agreement's forfeiture clause is enforceable. Verifying before payment avoids this position entirely.