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How to verify a RERA number in 30 seconds

Legal · RERA

How to verify a RERA number in 30 seconds

The exact steps to confirm a project’s RERA registration on any state portal — plus three red flags that mean you should walk away, no matter how pretty the brochure is.

By Brickplot EditorialApr 22, 20265 min read

What RERA is, in one minute

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Key takeawayRERA is a central law enforced by state-level regulators. A project that is not registered on the relevant state portal cannot legally be sold or advertised — and if it is, you have almost no recourse when things go wrong.

The Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016 — RERA for short — was the Indian government’s answer to a decade of buyer horror stories. Builders collected crores in advance, missed possession dates by years, changed floor plans without telling anyone, and disappeared when payments came due. RERA made all of that illegal in one sweep: any residential project over 500 square metres or eight units must register with the state regulator, post its approvals online, and file quarterly progress updates.

For buyers, the law means one powerful thing. Before you pay a builder even a token amount, you can go to a public website, type in a registration number, and see exactly what the project has filed: its approved plan, its sanctioned area, its declared possession date, the names of the promoters, the bank escrow account where your money is supposed to go, and every quarterly update since launch. If the data on the portal does not match what the sales agent is telling you, you have evidence — not an argument.

Each state runs its own portal. Karnataka has rera.karnataka.gov.in; Maharashtra has MahaRERA; Haryana has HRERA Gurugram and HRERA Panchkula; Telangana has TSRERA. The URLs differ and the UIs are all slightly different, but the verification flow is broadly the same everywhere.

Finding the right state portal

The first trap most buyers fall into is assuming RERA is one website. It isn’t. A project in Gurugram is registered with Haryana; a project in Pune is registered with Maharashtra; a project in Hyderabad is registered with Telangana. You need to find the correct regulator for the state the project is located in, not your home state or the builder’s head office state.

The quickest way is to Google “[state name] RERA” and look for the .gov.in result. Be careful: several builders and third-party portals have registered domains that look official but are not. If the URL does not end in .gov.in or .nic.in, close it. The genuine portals will always have a “Registered Projects” or “Search Projects” section prominently on the homepage.

If the portal you are searching on does not end in .gov.in, you are not on a RERA website — you are on someone’s marketing page.— Brickplot research team

Portals worth bookmarking

  • Karnataka: rera.karnataka.gov.in — covers all Bangalore, Mysore, Mangalore projects
  • Maharashtra: maharera.mahaonline.gov.in — covers Mumbai, Pune, Nagpur, Nashik
  • Haryana: haryanarera.gov.in — covers Gurugram (HRERA Gurugram) and Panchkula (HRERA Panchkula)
  • Telangana: rera.telangana.gov.in — covers Hyderabad, Warangal
  • Tamil Nadu: rera.tn.gov.in — covers Chennai, Coimbatore

The 30-second verification walkthrough

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Key takeawayA real RERA number always has a structured format: state code, authority code, project type, sequence number, registration date. Anything that looks like “RERA/KA/2024/001” is almost certainly fake.

Every state portal has a search bar labelled something like “Search Registered Projects” or “Project Details”. Paste the registration number the builder gave you. Within one click you should see a project page with at least six things: the registered name of the project, the legal name of the promoter entity, the sanctioned plot area, the approved number of units, the declared date of completion, and the list of approvals (sanctioned plan, commencement certificate, environmental clearance if applicable).

Step 1 · Open the state’s official RERA portal and click “Search Registered Projects”
The Karnataka RERA search page looks different from Maharashtra’s, but every portal has a public project search.
Step 2 · Paste the exact RERA number the builder provided (e.g., PRM/KA/RERA/1251/446/PR/220124/000123)
Do not rely on a partial number. The full string encodes the authority, zone, year, and sequence — if any part is missing, the search will fail.
Step 3 · Open the project detail page and scroll to “Approvals” and “Quarterly Updates”
This is where the truth lives. Compare the declared possession date, sanctioned units, and approvals with the sales brochure. Mismatches are not negotiable — they are grounds to walk.
Step 4 · Check “Complaints Filed” — any project with > 3 active complaints is a serious warning
Every state portal publishes complaint counts and adjudication orders. Read them. A builder with ten delay complaints is telling you exactly what your experience will be.

The whole exercise, once you have the registration number in front of you, takes under a minute. The 30-second claim is literal: paste, search, scan. If the project does not come up, or the details on the portal differ from what the sales team told you, stop the conversation right there.

Three red flags that mean “don’t book”

Not every issue on a RERA page is a deal-breaker. A minor quarterly delay during monsoon is normal. A single complaint in a 600-unit project is noise. But three specific patterns should make you walk away regardless of how attractive the pricing is.

1

RERA status “Expired” or “Not Renewed”

A project whose registration has lapsed cannot legally sell units. If the builder is still marketing it, they are breaking the law — and your sale agreement will not be enforceable under RERA.

2

Declared possession date already passed

If the project’s own RERA filing says it was due for completion a year ago and the portal still shows < 80% progress, the builder is in default. Your money will be stuck for years.

3

Promoter entity differs from the builder brand

A “Prestige Group” project registered under an unrelated shell company is a classic asset-shield move. If the legal promoter is not the brand you’re paying for, you have no claim on the brand’s balance sheet when things go wrong.

RERA verification is not a formality. It is the single highest-leverage thing a buyer can do before writing a cheque — and it costs nothing but the time it takes to drink a cup of coffee.— Brickplot Editorial

Frequently asked questions

Can I trust a project that says “RERA registration pending”?

No. RERA law prohibits marketing or accepting advances before the registration is issued. “Pending” is shorthand for “illegally selling.” If you must engage with such a project, pay nothing until the registration number appears on the state portal — not the builder’s website, the state portal.

What if the declared possession date on the RERA portal is later than what the sales team quoted me?

The portal date is the legally binding one. Any verbal promise of an earlier handover has no enforceability. Ask for the revised date in writing on builder letterhead, and verify it matches the next quarterly update on the portal.

Does verifying RERA protect me from every problem?

It protects you from the biggest ones — unregistered projects, fake approvals, promoter fraud — but not from construction quality issues, neighbourhood changes, or price corrections. RERA is necessary, not sufficient. Always pair RERA verification with a physical site visit and an independent legal check of the title documents.

Last updated Apr 22, 2026. This guide is for information only and is not legal advice. Always verify current RERA rules with a qualified advocate in your state.
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