Property Due Diligence for Maharashtra: Complete State Guide
Property due diligence in Maharashtra involves navigating one of India's most complex real estate regulatory environments. From Mumbai's high-stakes property market to Pune's rapidly expanding tech corridors, Maharashtra's property transactions require thorough verification across multiple government portals, compliance frameworks, and land record systems.
This comprehensive guide walks you through the complete property due diligence process for Maharashtra, covering state-specific documents, government portals, common legal issues, and how to protect yourself when buying property in this diverse state.
Understanding Maharashtra's Property Regulatory Framework
Maharashtra operates under a sophisticated property legal framework that includes:
Key Legislation:
- Maharashtra Ownership of Flats Act (MOFA), 1963
- Maharashtra Slum Areas (Improvement, Clearance and Redevelopment) Act, 1971
- Maharashtra Regional and Town Planning Act (MRTP), 1966
- The Registration Act, 1908 (state amendments)
- Transfer of Property Act, 1882
- Maharashtra Stamp Act, 1958
The state is also one of the most active implementers of the RERA Act, with MahaRERA being considered India's most progressive real estate regulator.
Maharashtra's property ecosystem is unique because it blends colonial-era CTS (City Survey) records in Mumbai, revenue village records in rural areas, and modern digital land records systems across the state.
Essential Government Portals for Maharashtra Property Verification
1. IGR Maharashtra (Inspector General of Registration)
Website: igrmaharashtra.gov.in
The IGR Maharashtra portal is your primary source for:
- Property registration status
- Encumbrance certificates (EC)
- Index II search (ownership verification)
- Registered document copies
- Stamp duty calculation
Key Features:
- Online EC application (₹100 for 30 years)
- Document registration slot booking
- Market value calculator for stamp duty
- Registration office locator
2. MahaBhulekh (7/12 Extracts & Property Cards)
Website: mahabhulekh.maharashtra.gov.in
Maharashtra's land record portal provides:
- 7/12 Extracts (Satbara Utara): Shows land ownership, cultivation details, crop information
- 8A Extracts: Property record registers
- Property Cards: Urban property ownership records
These are critical for verifying ownership in rural and semi-urban areas. For urban properties within municipal limits, you'll need municipal property records instead.
3. MahaRERA
Website: maharera.mahaonline.gov.in
India's most active RERA portal where you must verify:
- Builder/developer registration
- Project registration status
- Completion certificates
- Quarterly progress reports
- Buyer complaints and orders
All projects over 500 sq.m or 8 apartments must be RERA-registered. Buying from an unregistered project is illegal and leaves you unprotected.
4. Municipal Corporation Portals
Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC):
- Website: portal.mcgm.gov.in
- Property tax records
- Building permissions and IOD/CC/OC
- Property assessment details
- Illegal construction notices
Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC):
- Website: pmc.gov.in
- Similar services for Pune properties
Other major cities (Nagpur, Thane, Nashik, Aurangabad) have their own municipal portals for property tax and approval records.
5. Maharashtra e-Courts
Website: ecourts.gov.in/ecourts_home/
Essential for checking pending court cases on property across District Courts and Maharashtra High Court. Property disputes, partition suits, injunction orders, and mortgage enforcement cases must be verified.
Step-by-Step Property Due Diligence Process for Maharashtra
Step 1: Verify Title Chain and Ownership
Begin with title chain verification to establish clear ownership history.
For Urban Properties (Mumbai/Pune/Municipal Areas):
- Obtain Index II extract from IGR Maharashtra (past 30 years minimum)
- Request Property Card from municipal corporation
- Verify property tax receipts (current + past 5 years)
- Check building permissions, IOD, CC, and OC
For Rural/Revenue Land:
- Download 7/12 Extract from MahaBhulekh
- Obtain 8A Extract
- Check land conversion status (Agricultural to Non-Agricultural)
- Verify Ferfar (mutation) records
Understanding title chain verification — 13-year vs 30-year periods is critical. Maharashtra lawyers typically recommend 30-year searches for high-value properties.
Step 2: Encumbrance Certificate Search
Apply for an Encumbrance Certificate through IGR Maharashtra portal covering the past 30 years. This reveals:
- Mortgages, loans, hypothecations
- Sale deeds and previous transactions
- Gift deeds, will registrations
- Court orders and attachments
Learn more about encumbrance certificates and how to read them in our detailed guide.
Step 3: Litigation and Court Case Search
Maharashtra has extremely high property litigation rates, especially in Mumbai. Search for pending cases:
District Courts:
- Use e-Courts portal
- Search by property address, survey number, CTS number
- Look for partition suits, specific performance cases, injunction orders
High Court:
- Maharashtra High Court (Mumbai and Nagpur benches)
- Search appellate matters related to property
Step 4: RERA and Compliance Verification
For under-construction properties:
- Verify builder's MahaRERA registration
- Check project registration number
- Download project details and completion timeline
- Review quarterly progress reports
- Check for buyer complaints or regulatory actions
MahaRERA has been proactive in penalizing non-compliant developers. Verify this thoroughly.
Step 5: Physical and Revenue Records Verification
Urban Properties:
- Building plan approval from municipal corporation
- Commencement Certificate
- Occupation Certificate (OC) or Completion Certificate (CC)
- No-Objection Certificates (Fire, Environmental, etc.)
Agricultural/NA Land:
- Land conversion orders (NA permission)
- Layout approval
- ZTDP (Zoning and Town Development Plan) compliance
Read our guide on OC vs CC certificates to understand the difference.
Step 6: Tax and Financial Verification
Verify all dues are clear:
- Property tax (municipal corporation)
- Water charges
- Electricity bills
- Society maintenance (if applicable)
- Stamp duty and registration fees paid
Maharashtra-Specific Documents Required for Due Diligence
Essential Documents Checklist
Title Documents:
- Sale deed / Conveyance deed
- Previous chain of sale deeds (30 years)
- Gift deed / Will / Settlement deed (if applicable)
- Development agreement (for redevelopment properties)
Revenue Records:
- 7/12 Extract + 8A (for non-urban land)
- Property Card (urban areas)
- Mutation/Ferfar records
Statutory Approvals:
- Sanctioned building plan
- Commencement Certificate
- Occupation Certificate / Completion Certificate
- IOD (Intimation of Disapproval) — if construction predates 1967
- MahaRERA registration certificate
Financial & Tax Documents:
- Property tax receipts (5 years)
- Stamp duty payment receipts
- Encumbrance Certificate (30 years)
Society/Builder Documents (for flats):
- Society registration certificate
- Share certificate
- No Objection Certificate from society
- MOFA compliance documents
Other Verification:
- Power of Attorney (if seller is represented) — learn about GPA vs SPA
- Legal heir certificate (if property inherited)
- Court orders (if property involved in litigation)
Understanding the difference between sale deed vs conveyance deed vs agreement to sell is crucial when reviewing title documents.
Stamp Duty and Registration Fees in Maharashtra
Maharashtra charges stamp duty based on property location and buyer gender:
Stamp Duty Rates (as of 2026)
Mumbai Metropolitan Region (MMR):
- Male buyers: 6% of property value
- Female buyers: 5% of property value
- Joint ownership (male + female): 5% of property value
Pune and Other Urban Areas:
- Male buyers: 6%
- Female buyers: 5%
Rural Areas:
- Generally 5-6% depending on district
Registration Fees: 1% of property value (capped at ₹30,000)
Additional Charges:
- Metro cess: 1% (in MMR)
- Local body tax: Variable by municipal corporation
Use the IGR Maharashtra stamp duty calculator for accurate estimates based on Ready Reckoner rates.
Common Property Issues Specific to Maharashtra
1. SRA (Slum Rehabilitation Authority) Properties
Mumbai's SRA schemes offer free or subsidized housing to slum dwellers. These properties come with restrictions:
- Lock-in period: 10 years from possession (sale prohibited)
- Resale restrictions: Even after lock-in, resale requires SRA approval
- Loan challenges: Many banks don't finance SRA properties during lock-in
Due Diligence for SRA:
- Verify allotment letter from SRA
- Check lock-in period completion
- Confirm no encumbrances from developer's loans
2. Old CTS and Survey Number Confusion
Mumbai properties often have complex title histories with:
- CTS numbers (City Survey) — colonial-era survey system
- Revenue Survey numbers — used before urban expansion
- Merger of CTS numbers — multiple old CTS plots consolidated
Risk: Property boundaries may not match modern maps. Always cross-verify with latest municipal records.
3. Mumbai Redevelopment Properties
Redevelopment under Mumbai's DCR 33(7), 33(9), and 33(10) creates unique issues:
- Prior notice vs possession: Did all previous owners consent?
- Developer's financial health: Will construction complete?
- TDR (Transferable Development Rights): Verify TDR loading is legitimate
- Corpus fund: Has developer paid required corpus to society?
4. Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) Issues
Properties within 500m of high-tide line face CRZ restrictions:
- CRZ-I: No construction (ecologically sensitive areas)
- CRZ-II: Developed areas with regulated construction
- CRZ-III: Rural coastal areas with strict restrictions
Mumbai, Raigad, Ratnagiri, and Sindhudurg properties require CRZ clearance verification.
5. PMAY (Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana) Flats
Maharashtra has extensive PMAY affordable housing. These properties have:
- 5-year lock-in period: No sale before 5 years
- Subsidy recovery: If sold within lock-in, subsidy must be returned
- Income criteria: Buyer must meet eligibility (if lock-in applies)
6. Agricultural Land Purchase Restrictions
Maharashtra restricts agricultural land purchase:
- Buyers must be farmers: NA conversion required for non-agricultural use
- Holding limits: Maximum land holding varies by district
- Revenue transfer limits: Restrictions on transfer to non-agriculturists
See our detailed guide on land conversion from agricultural to non-agricultural for the NA permission process.
7. Deemed Conveyance Issues
Buildings constructed before 2007 often lack conveyance deeds from builders. Maharashtra enacted deemed conveyance provisions, but:
- Court cases: Builders challenging deemed conveyance
- Title clarity: Until final order, title may be unclear
- Bank financing: Some banks hesitate to finance flats under deemed conveyance litigation
How LegiTract Simplifies Property Due Diligence in Maharashtra
Maharashtra's complex property ecosystem makes manual due diligence time-consuming and error-prone. LegiTract streamlines the entire process with AI-powered automation:
Automated Multi-Portal Search
LegiTract connects to Maharashtra's key government portals:
- IGR Maharashtra: Automated EC and Index II extraction
- MahaBhulekh: 7/12 and 8A records fetching
- MahaRERA: Project and builder verification
- e-Courts: Comprehensive litigation search across District Courts and High Court
- Municipal Corporations: Property tax and approval verification for BMC, PMC, and other cities
Maharashtra-Specific Risk Detection
Our AI identifies state-specific red flags:
- SRA property lock-in violations
- CRZ compliance issues
- Deemed conveyance litigation
- Redevelopment project risks
- Agricultural land conversion gaps
Comprehensive LPS Rating
LegiTract provides an LPS (Legal Property Score) rating from AAA to C across five dimensions:
- Title Chain Clarity: Ownership verification across 13-30 years
- Encumbrance Status: Mortgages, loans, liens detected
- Litigation Risk: Pending court cases flagged
- Compliance: RERA, building permissions, OC/CC status
- Revenue Records: 7/12, property tax, mutation verification
Faster Than Manual Verification
What takes lawyers 2-4 weeks, LegiTract delivers in minutes:
- Instant portal access and data extraction
- Automated document analysis
- AI-powered red flag detection
- Downloadable detailed reports
Maharashtra Expert Review
Every Maharashtra property report is reviewed by local legal experts familiar with:
- Mumbai's unique CTS system
- SRA and redevelopment complexities
- District-specific revenue record formats
- MahaRERA compliance nuances
Check your property's legal health — get your free LPS rating today.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cost of property due diligence in Maharashtra?
Traditional legal opinion from lawyers costs ₹15,000-₹50,000 for residential properties and can exceed ₹1 lakh for commercial properties in Mumbai. This includes title search, EC verification, and litigation checks. Government portal charges are minimal (EC: ₹100, 7/12: ₹15, property card: ₹10-₹20). LegiTract offers automated due diligence with your first property rating completely free, and subsequent detailed reports starting at a fraction of traditional costs. Learn more about legal opinion costs and formats.
How long does property due diligence take in Maharashtra?
Manual due diligence takes 2-4 weeks depending on property complexity and location. Mumbai properties with old CTS records or redevelopment issues can take longer. Government portal response times vary — ECs take 3-5 days, 7/12 extracts are instant online, municipal records may require physical visits. Court case searches can take weeks if done manually. LegiTract reduces this to minutes by automating portal access and document analysis, though expert review adds 24-48 hours for detailed reports.
Is 7/12 extract mandatory for property purchase in Maharashtra?
7/12 extract is mandatory only for properties in revenue villages (rural and semi-urban areas under Revenue Department jurisdiction). Urban properties within municipal corporation limits (Mumbai, Pune, Nagpur, etc.) don't have 7/12 records — instead you need Property Cards from the municipal corporation. However, many Pune properties still have 7/12 extracts for surrounding villages now merged into PMC limits. Always check both systems for comprehensive verification. Read our guide on revenue records in India for more details.
What are the most common property fraud risks in Maharashtra?
Common risks include: (1) Duplicate sale deeds — property sold to multiple buyers using forged documents, (2) SRA property fraud — selling restricted properties within lock-in period, (3) Power of Attorney fraud — sellers using invalid or forged POAs, (4) Redevelopment scams — collecting money without proper approvals, (5) Agricultural land fraud — selling without NA conversion, (6) Encumbered properties — selling mortgaged/charged properties without disclosure. See our detailed guide on to protect yourself.
Do I need a lawyer if I use LegiTract for Maharashtra property verification?
LegiTract provides comprehensive due diligence and risk assessment, but doesn't replace legal advice for complex situations. You should consult a lawyer if: (1) The LPS report flags serious title defects or litigation, (2) You're buying high-value commercial property, (3) Property involves complicated inheritance, trust, or partnership structures, (4) You need negotiation support or dispute resolution, (5) You want representation during registration. LegiTract works best as a first-line verification tool — use it to identify issues early, then engage lawyers only when needed. Many users verify properties first with LegiTract, then hire lawyers only for clean properties, saving significant costs.
Can NRIs use LegiTract for Maharashtra property verification?
Yes, LegiTract is designed for NRI property buyers who can't physically visit Maharashtra for due diligence. Our platform provides complete remote verification across all Maharashtra government portals. NRIs face additional risks — distance makes physical verification difficult, sellers exploit information asymmetry, and you can't easily track property litigation. LegiTract solves this by providing instant access to title records, encumbrance certificates, court cases, RERA status, and compliance documents from anywhere in the world. Your first property rating is free, and detailed reports are available within 24-48 hours with expert review.