When buying property in India, you'll encounter terms like sale deed, conveyance deed, and agreement to sell. While these documents all relate to property transfer, they serve different purposes and have distinct legal implications. Understanding these differences is crucial for property buyers, sellers, and financial institutions involved in property transactions.
This guide explains what each document means, when it's used, and how to avoid common mistakes that could jeopardize your property ownership.
What is a Sale Deed?
A Sale Deed (also called "deed of sale" or "transfer deed") is the primary legal document that transfers ownership of immovable property from seller to buyer. It's the final and most critical document in a property transaction.
Key Features of a Sale Deed
- Transfers ownership rights: Once executed and registered, the buyer becomes the legal owner
- Must be registered: Registration under the Registration Act, 1908 is mandatory
- Requires stamp duty payment: State-specific stamp duty must be paid before registration
What a Sale Deed Contains
A properly drafted sale deed includes:
- Names and addresses of seller (transferor) and buyer (transferee)
- Detailed property description (survey numbers, boundaries, built-up area)
- Sale consideration amount and payment details
- Confirmation that seller has clear title and right to sell
- List of encumbrances (if any)
- Seller's warranties and representations
- Possession handover clause
- Registration details and sub-registrar office information
Legal Validity: A sale deed is valid only when registered with the sub-registrar of assurances. An unregistered sale deed has no legal standing under Section 17 of the Registration Act, 1908.
What is a Conveyance Deed?
A Conveyance Deed is a specific type of sale deed used when property ownership is transferred from a builder/developer to individual flat owners in a housing society or apartment complex. It's the document that gives flat owners full ownership rights instead of just occupancy rights.
When is a Conveyance Deed Used?
Conveyance deeds are primarily used in these scenarios:
- Builder to society transfer: When a developer transfers common areas and land to a cooperative housing society or apartment owners' association
- Flat ownership transfer: When converting from occupancy certificate to full ownership for individual flats
- Deemed conveyance: When a builder refuses to execute conveyance, flat owners can apply for deemed conveyance under state laws
Key Features of a Conveyance Deed
- Transfers undivided share: Gives each flat owner proportionate undivided share in the land and common areas
- Includes common areas: Covers parking, gardens, lifts, corridors, and other shared facilities
- Registration mandatory: Must be registered like any other property deed
- Stamp duty applicable: Payable based on property value and state regulations
- : Usually executed after formation of cooperative society or residents' association
Conveyance vs Sale Deed for Apartments
While both are types of property transfer documents:
- Sale deed is used for direct sale of property from one party to another
- Conveyance deed specifically transfers property from builder to society/flat owners as a collective
In Maharashtra, for example, developers must execute conveyance within 4 months of society formation under the Maharashtra Ownership Flats Act (MOFA). If they don't, flat owners can apply for deemed conveyance.
What is an Agreement to Sell?
An Agreement to Sell is a preliminary contract where the seller promises to transfer property ownership to the buyer at a future date, after certain conditions are met. It does NOT transfer ownership by itself.
Key Features of Agreement to Sell
- Promise to transfer: Creates an obligation to transfer property in the future
- No immediate ownership: Buyer doesn't become owner just by signing this document
- Conditional: Usually subject to conditions like payment completion, loan approval, document verification
What an Agreement to Sell Contains
- Names and contact details of buyer and seller
- Property description and details
- Total sale price and payment schedule
- Advance amount paid (token money)
- Timeline for executing the final sale deed
- Conditions precedent (loan approval, document clearance, etc.)
- Penalty clauses for breach of contract
- Terms for refund if transaction doesn't complete
Legal Rights Under Agreement to Sell
- Seller retains ownership: Until the sale deed is executed, seller remains the legal owner
- Right to possession: Possession may or may not be given based on agreement terms
- Specific performance: If seller refuses to sell after receiving money, buyer can file a suit for specific performance under the Specific Relief Act, 1963
- Return of advance: If buyer backs out, seller may forfeit the advance money as per agreement terms
Important Note: An agreement to sell creates a contractual obligation, not a property right. The buyer cannot claim ownership or sell the property to a third party based solely on this document.
Sale Deed vs Conveyance Deed vs Agreement to Sell: Comparison Table
When Do You Need Each Document?
Understanding when to use each document prevents legal complications:
Use a Sale Deed When
- Buying or selling land, plots, or standalone buildings
- Purchasing property in a fully executed transaction
- Transferring property ownership between family members (gift deed is a type of sale deed)
- The property transaction is complete and all payments are made
- You want immediate and complete ownership transfer
Use a Conveyance Deed When
- You own a flat in a building and the builder hasn't transferred ownership
- Your housing society is applying for deemed conveyance
- Converting from occupancy rights to full ownership rights
- The builder is transferring common areas to the residents' association
- You need to establish undivided share in land under the building
Use an Agreement to Sell When
- Making a booking for under-construction property
- Property documents are being verified before final purchase
- Buyer needs time to arrange finance or home loan approval
- Certain conditions must be met before final sale (like obtaining NOCs)
- You want to secure the property while due diligence is ongoing
- Making a token payment to hold the property
Typical Transaction Flow: Agreement to Sell → Due diligence & loan processing → Full payment → Sale Deed execution and registration
Legal Validity and Registration Requirements
Registration Requirements
Sale Deed and Conveyance Deed:
- Must be registered within 4 months of execution (Section 17, Registration Act)
- Registration at sub-registrar office having jurisdiction over the property
- Both parties (or authorized representatives with valid POA) must appear
- Requires 2 witnesses for registration
- Stamp duty must be paid before registration (online or physical stamps)
- Registration fee is additional (usually 1% of property value, capped)
Agreement to Sell:
- Registration is optional but highly recommended
- For unregistered agreements, stamp duty must be paid if value exceeds Rs. 100
- Unregistered agreement is valid as a contract but has weaker legal standing
- Cannot be used as primary evidence of ownership or title
- Registration provides legal protection and admissibility in court
Stamp Duty Variations by State
Stamp duty rates vary significantly across Indian states:
Always check current rates with your state's registration department as these change periodically.
Penalties for Non-Registration
- Sale deeds/conveyance deeds: Cannot be admitted as evidence in court; property transfer legally invalid
- Penalty: Rs. 100-5,000 fine plus 10 times the stamp duty deficiency
- Delayed registration: Additional charges (10-25% extra stamp duty) after 4 months
- Title disputes: Unregistered deeds make property vulnerable to fraud and disputes
Common Mistakes with Property Deeds
1. Confusing Agreement to Sell with Ownership
Mistake: Believing that signing an agreement to sell makes you the legal owner.
Reality: You don't own the property until the sale deed is registered. The seller can still sell to someone else if the agreement isn't registered or possession isn't given.
Solution: Always execute and register the sale deed promptly after conditions are met. If there's delay, register the agreement to sell.
2. Not Verifying Title Before Signing
Mistake: Paying advance money based on agreement to sell without proper title verification.
Reality: If title is defective, you may lose your money even with an agreement.
Solution: Conduct complete due diligence before signing agreement to sell. Verify all property documents, check for encumbrances, and confirm seller's ownership.
3. Skipping Registration to Save Money
Mistake: Avoiding registration of sale deed or using an unregistered document to reduce stamp duty costs.
Reality: Unregistered deeds have no legal validity. You cannot claim ownership in court or obtain property mutations.
Solution: Always register sale/conveyance deeds. The stamp duty and registration fee are essential expenses, not optional.
4. Incomplete Property Description
Mistake: Sale deed or conveyance deed with vague property details (e.g., "flat in XYZ building" without survey numbers, floor plan).
Reality: Incomplete descriptions lead to boundary disputes and title uncertainty.
Solution: Ensure deed includes full legal description: survey numbers, plot numbers, built-up area, boundaries, and floor plans for apartments.
5. Not Getting Conveyance Deed for Flats
Mistake: Flat owners assuming the sale deed from builder is sufficient; ignoring the need for conveyance deed.
Reality: Without conveyance, you don't own share in common areas and land. Society cannot get property tax receipts or redevelop.
Solution: If builder hasn't executed conveyance within stipulated time, apply for deemed conveyance with your housing society.
6. Accepting POA-Based Sale Deeds
Mistake: Buying property where sale deed is executed by someone holding power of attorney (POA) from the original owner, without verifying POA authenticity.
Reality: POA can be revoked, forged, or limited in scope. Many property frauds involve fake POAs.
Solution: Always insist on original owner's presence during registration. If POA is necessary, verify it thoroughly with registrar records and ensure it's irrevocable and specific.
7. Ignoring Encumbrances in Deed
Mistake: Not checking if sale deed mentions existing mortgages, liens, or easements.
Reality: You inherit all encumbrances unless specifically cleared before sale deed execution.
Solution: Obtain encumbrance certificate before finalizing. Ensure sale deed states "free from all encumbrances" or lists cleared encumbrances with satisfaction deeds.
How to Verify the Authenticity of Property Deeds
Verifying document authenticity is critical to prevent fraud:
1. Check Registration Details
- Verify deed is registered with sub-registrar office
- Note document registration number, date, and book/volume details
- Cross-check with registrar office records (online or physical verification)
- Ensure registration was done in correct jurisdiction
2. Verify Seller's Title Chain
- Trace ownership history for at least 13-30 years
- Confirm unbroken chain of title from root document to current seller
- Check each previous sale deed, inheritance, gift deed, etc.
- Verify seller's name matches exactly with previous title documents
3. Obtain and Verify Encumbrance Certificate
- Get EC for past 13-30 years from sub-registrar office
- Confirm no mortgages, liens, or pending transactions
- Match property description in EC with sale deed
- Check for any adverse entries or red flags
4. Search for Pending Litigation
- Check eCourts portal for pending cases related to property
- Search for cases involving seller, property address, or survey numbers
- Look for civil suits, criminal cases, or revenue disputes
- Consider obtaining court search reports from lawyers
5. Verify Property Tax Receipts
- Obtain latest property tax receipt from municipal corporation
- Match property details with sale deed
- Confirm no outstanding dues or penalties
- Check if property is recorded in correct owner's name
6. Check Revenue Records
- Verify property details in revenue records (Pahani, 7/12 extract, ROR)
- Confirm land nature (residential/commercial/agricultural)
- Check for government acquisitions or disputed entries
- Match survey numbers with sale deed
7. Physical Inspection and Boundary Verification
- Conduct site visit and verify physical boundaries
- Check if possession matches deed description
- Look for encroachments or unauthorized constructions
- Confirm access to public roads
How LegiTract Verifies Property Deeds
LegiTract's AI-powered platform automates and accelerates the verification of sale deeds, conveyance deeds, and related property documents, providing comprehensive risk assessment in minutes instead of weeks.
What LegiTract Does
1. Title Chain Verification
- AI extracts and analyzes 13-30 year title chain from sale deeds and revenue records
- Identifies gaps, breaks, or inconsistencies in ownership history
- Flags suspicious transactions or irregular title transfers
- Validates seller's right to sell based on historical records
2. Document Authentication
- Verifies registration details with sub-registrar databases
- Confirms stamp duty payment and registration compliance
- Detects forged, tampered, or duplicate documents
- Cross-references with government property records
3. Encumbrance Analysis
- Fetches and analyzes encumbrance certificates automatically
- Identifies mortgages, liens, charges, or pending transactions
- Checks for satisfaction deeds and encumbrance clearances
- Highlights hidden or undisclosed encumbrances
4. Litigation Search
- Scans eCourts database for pending cases involving the property
- Searches for disputes, foreclosures, or possession battles
- Identifies lis pendens (notice of pending lawsuits) filed against property
- Provides court case summaries and risk assessment
5. Compliance Check
- Verifies property tax payment status
- Checks for municipal approvals, occupancy certificates, and building permissions
- Identifies illegal constructions or deviations from approved plans
- Flags non-compliance with local zoning laws
6. Risk Rating (LPS Score)
- Generates Legal Property Score from AAA (lowest risk) to C (highest risk)
- Provides dimensional ratings across Title Chain, Encumbrance, Litigation, Compliance, and Revenue Records
- Delivers actionable insights and risk mitigation recommendations
- Issues detailed PDF report suitable for lenders, lawyers, and property buyers
Why LegiTract for Deed Verification
Check your property's legal health — get your free LPS rating today.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can an Agreement to Sell be used instead of a Sale Deed?
No. An agreement to sell creates a contractual promise to transfer property in the future, but it does NOT transfer ownership. Only a registered sale deed transfers property ownership under the Transfer of Property Act. If you only have an agreement to sell, you cannot claim legal ownership, sell to third parties, or get property mutations in your name.
Is registration mandatory for Agreement to Sell?
Registration of an agreement to sell is not mandatory under the Registration Act, but it's highly recommended. An unregistered agreement is valid as a contract, but it cannot be used as primary evidence in court and provides weaker legal protection. For agreements involving substantial amounts (typically over Rs. 1 lakh), registration provides security and prevents the seller from selling to someone else.
What happens if a Sale Deed is not registered?
An unregistered sale deed has no legal validity under Section 17 of the Registration Act, 1908. It cannot be admitted as evidence in court, and the property transfer is legally void. The buyer cannot claim ownership, obtain property mutations, or secure the property against subsequent sales. Additionally, penalties and fines (10x stamp duty deficiency) apply for non-registration.
How is Conveyance Deed different from flat Sale Deed?
A flat sale deed transfers ownership of a specific flat from builder/seller to an individual buyer. A conveyance deed transfers ownership of the entire land and common areas (parking, lobby, lifts, garden) from the builder to the housing society or residents' association as a collective. Conveyance deed gives each flat owner a proportionate undivided share in the land, which is essential for society autonomy, redevelopment rights, and property tax management.
Can I get a home loan with only an Agreement to Sell?
Most banks and financial institutions will not disburse the full home loan amount based solely on an agreement to sell. Lenders typically require a registered sale deed showing you as the legal owner before releasing the loan. However, some lenders may approve the loan in principle or disburse part of the amount against an agreement to sell with builder, provided other conditions (builder's credibility, project approvals) are met. The final disbursement happens only after sale deed registration.
What is the difference between Sale Deed and Title Deed?
A sale deed is the document that transfers property ownership from seller to buyer upon registration. A title deed is a broader term referring to any document that proves ownership rights, including sale deeds, gift deeds, inheritance documents, partition deeds, and conveyance deeds. Title deed encompasses all documents establishing your legal right to the property. In common usage, the latest registered sale deed in your name serves as your primary title deed.