RERA Rules for Developers in India : Legal Framework vs Ground Reality in Tamil Nadu

RERA creates accountability—but only informed buyers can convert it into real protection.

5 Min Read
Official TNRERA notice outlining key RERA compliance rules for developers displayed on a government office board.

RERA Rules for Developers

The Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016 was introduced to bring discipline, transparency, and accountability into real estate. On paper, it is one of the most structured regulatory frameworks in India.

But in practice, especially under Tamil Nadu Real Estate Regulatory Authority, the real story lies in how these rules are interpreted, implemented, and sometimes strategically navigated by developers.


Mandatory Project Registration

What the Law Says

Any project exceeding 500 sq.m or more than 8 units must be registered before advertising or selling.
Each project gets a unique RERA number, and all project details must be disclosed.

Practical Application

Developers often divide projects into phases or blocks.

  • Each phase is registered separately
  • Unit count appears smaller
  • Compliance burden reduces

This allows developers to technically comply while limiting full regulatory visibility.


70% Escrow Rule

What the Law Says

70% of buyer funds must be deposited into a dedicated RERA account.

  • Funds can only be used for land and construction
  • Withdrawals must match construction progress
  • Certified by engineer, architect, and CA

Practical Application

Tamil Nadu has strengthened this with a three-account system to prevent fund diversion.

However, developers may:

  • Inflate construction costs
  • Accelerate withdrawal eligibility

This creates a situation where compliance exists on paper, but financial discipline can still be manipulated.


Project Disclosure and Transparency

What the Law Says

Developers must disclose:

  • Layout plans and approvals
  • Land title details
  • Project timelines
  • Contractor information
  • Quarterly progress updates

Practical Application

While disclosures are uploaded, they are often:

  • Generic
  • Not easily verifiable
  • Delayed in updates

This limits the effectiveness of transparency unless buyers actively verify documents.


Land Title Disclosure

What the Law Says

Developers must provide clear and marketable title details of the land.

Practical Application

This is one of the biggest gaps in the system.

  • Partial document chains are shown
  • Legal heir issues or disputes may be hidden
  • Unregistered settlements are not always visible

RERA ensures disclosure, but it does not guarantee title validity.


Advance Payment Restriction

What the Law Says

Developers cannot collect more than 10% of the property cost without a registered agreement.

Practical Application

Developers use alternative structures such as:

  • Expression of Interest (EOI)
  • Token booking amounts
  • Application fees

These are positioned outside the legal definition of “advance,” allowing early fund collection.


Project Timelines and Delays

What the Law Says

Projects must be completed within the declared timeline.
If delayed:

  • Buyers are entitled to interest
  • Or full refund with interest

Practical Application

Developers frequently justify delays using:

  • Force majeure clauses
  • Approval delays
  • External dependencies

Buyers often need to pursue legal action to enforce compensation.


Carpet Area Standardization

What the Law Says

Properties must be sold based on carpet area, ensuring clarity in usable space.

Practical Application

Marketing still highlights:

  • Super built-up area
  • Saleable area

This creates a perception gap between what is marketed and what is legally defined.


Defect Liability Period

What the Law Says

Developers must fix structural defects and workmanship issues within 5 years of possession at no cost.

Practical Application

Developers may:

  • Delay responses
  • Reclassify defects as maintenance issues

Escalation to RERA is often required for enforcement.


Enforcement and Penalties

What the Law Says

  • Non-registration → up to 10% of project cost as penalty
  • Continued violation → imprisonment possible
  • Fund misuse → heavy financial penalties

Practical Application

Enforcement in Tamil Nadu is improving with:

  • Digital complaint systems
  • Increased financial scrutiny
  • Higher penalties

However, execution delays still exist, giving developers time to respond strategically.


The Core Reality: Law vs System Behavior

RERA has fundamentally changed how developers operate:

Before RERA:

  • Cash-driven operations
  • Flexible timelines
  • Limited accountability

After RERA:

  • Structured financial flows
  • Documentation-heavy processes
  • Increased legal exposure

But developers have adapted.
They no longer bypass the system directly—they work within it, strategically.


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