How to File a Possession-Delay Claim Under RERA Section 18 in Chhattisgarh (2026 Guide)
Chhattisgarh buyers facing possession delay can claim interest at SBI MCLR + 2% under Section 18 of the RERA Act, 2016. File at Chhattisgarh Real Estate Regulatory Authority for ₹1,000 per complaint. Statutory disposal target 60 days. Brickplot is independent — no builder commissions.
Section 18 — what it actually says
Section 18 of the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016 is the single most important provision for an allottee whose possession has been delayed. The structure is binary: if the promoter fails to complete or is unable to give possession by the date specified in the registered agreement for sale, the allottee may either (a) withdraw and demand full refund + interest at the prescribed rate, or (b) continue with the project and claim monthly interest until offer of possession.
The "prescribed rate" under RERA Rules of every state is SBI MCLR + 2 percentage points. The Supreme Court in Newtech Promoters & Developers Pvt Ltd v. State of UP (2021) held the Section 18 right is absolute and cannot be diluted by force-majeure clauses, "grace periods", or contractual waivers. Binding on every state RERA, including Chhattisgarh Real Estate Regulatory Authority.
Chhattisgarh-specific filing process at Chhattisgarh Real Estate Regulatory Authority
- Register on the portal. Visit https://rera.cgstate.gov.in/ ↗. KYC via Aadhaar + PAN; for NRIs, passport + OCI/PIO card.
- Open the complaint form. Direct link: https://rera.cgstate.gov.in/complaint ↗. Select "Complaint Against Promoter" and "Section 18 — possession delay".
- Pay filing fee. ₹1,000 per complaint.
- Upload document set (see next section).
- Specify your relief. Section 18(1)(a) (exit + refund + interest) or Section 18(1)(b) (continue + monthly interest).
- State-specific quirk. Chhattisgarh has a significant plotted-development market in Nava Raipur (Atal Nagar) and the Raipur metropolitan area. CG-RERA actively registers and enforces on plotted layouts, and has issued cease-and-desist notices on Nava Raipur plotted projects advertised without valid registration.
- Tribunal address: CG-RERA Office, Mantralaya Parisar, DKS Bhavan, Raipur 492001.
What to attach to your complaint
- Allotment letter showing unit number, area, agreed possession date.
- Sale agreement / Builder-Buyer Agreement (registered where stamp-duty rules require).
- Every payment receipt + matching bank statements showing the debit.
- Bank loan sanction + disbursement schedule if you took home-loan finance.
- Possession-promise communications — emails, SMS, WhatsApp, ads, presentation PDFs.
- RERA registration certificate downloaded from the CG-RERA portal — registered possession date is the legal benchmark.
- The latest QPR filed by the promoter on the portal.
- Calculation sheet showing principal paid, dates of each payment, interest at SBI MCLR + 2% claimed up to filing.
How interest is calculated
Worked example for Chhattisgarh: principal ₹50 lakh, original possession date 1 January 2024, complaint filed 1 July 2025 (18-month delay), SBI MCLR + 2% ~10.5%/yr → interest payable ~₹7.88 lakh, accruing monthly until offer of possession or refund.
Two practical notes. First, interest accrues from the original registered possession date, not from any "extended" date the developer claims unilaterally. Second, every state RERA — including Chhattisgarh Real Estate Regulatory Authority — has consistently rejected developer attempts to substitute the lower base rate or cap interest at the BBA-stipulated penalty.
Chhattisgarh RERA tribunal hearing process
CG-RERA conducts physical hearings in Raipur. Video-conference available. Sequence: (1) registry scrutinises within 7–14 days; (2) Chhattisgarh Real Estate Regulatory Authority issues notice to promoter, who must file reply within 21–30 days; (3) cause-list published; (4) matter heard across 2–4 hearings if developer raises factual disputes; (5) reserved judgment, then order. CG-RERA averages 5–9 months for routine complaints.
If aggrieved, appeal lies before Chhattisgarh Real Estate Appellate Tribunal (CGREAT), Raipur. within 60 days. The appellate tribunal can stay the order only on developer pre-depositing 30% of awarded amount — preventing frivolous appeals.
Notable Chhattisgarh judgments worth citing
CG-RERA issued Section-18 orders on several Raipur and Nava Raipur developers in 2021–2023 where possession delays ranged from 18 to 36 months, primarily on mid-segment apartment projects in the newly developed Atal Nagar planned city area.
A 2025 CG-RERA order against a Nava Raipur residential project found the developer had misrepresented the project's completion timeline in RERA quarterly filings while knowing the project had only 35% structural completion against a stated 70%. CG-RERA held QPR misrepresentation aggravates the Section 18 breach, awarded MCLR + 2% interest, and imposed an additional ₹2 lakh penalty under Section 61.
Beyond Chhattisgarh-specific orders, every Section 18 complainant should cite Newtech Promoters & Developers Pvt Ltd v. State of UP & Ors, 2021 SCC OnLine SC 1044. The 3-judge SC bench held: (i) RERA applies retrospectively; (ii) Section 18 confers an absolute right; (iii) generic force-majeure pleas (including Covid-stretches) cannot defeat Section 18; (iv) the state RERA has full jurisdiction. Binding on Chhattisgarh Real Estate Regulatory Authority.
Common mistakes that derail claims
- Missing payment receipts. Reconcile with bank statements at filing time and attach both.
- Weak possession evidence. Anchor to the registered agreement date, not the brochure.
- Wrong tribunal jurisdiction. Filing at the wrong bench or wrong state.
- Naming the wrong respondent. The respondent is the registered promoter on the RERA portal, not the holding company or brand.
- Missing limitation framing. File once you are 6 months past the registered date and developer has not offered possession.
Frequently asked questions
What is the filing fee at Chhattisgarh Real Estate Regulatory Authority?
₹1,000 per complaint. Paid online at filing time, receipt auto-attached to complaint record.
Can I file a Chhattisgarh RERA complaint fully online?
Chhattisgarh has a significant plotted-development market in Nava Raipur (Atal Nagar) and the Raipur metropolitan area. CG-RERA actively registers and enforces on plotted layouts, and has issued cease-and-desist notices on Nava Raipur plotted projects advertised without valid registration.
Can an NRI file from abroad?
Yes. NRIs can file directly via portal using e-signature where state allows, or through registered POA holder in India. Attach FEMA-compliant remittance receipts and FIRC for each payment.
Do I need a lawyer to file under Section 18 in Chhattisgarh?
No. RERA Section 31 allows complainant to appear in person. Many Chhattisgarh allottees DIY successfully in straightforward delay cases. Engage counsel if developer raises constitutional or limitation defences.
Can I file the complaint myself (DIY)?
Yes. The portal walks you through KYC, complaint upload, and fee payment. Document set is the same whether DIY or via counsel.
How long does Chhattisgarh Real Estate Regulatory Authority take?
CG-RERA averages 5–9 months for routine complaints
What happens after the order?
Developer has 45 days to comply or appeal. If unpaid after 45 days, apply for execution before the same authority and revenue-recovery enforcement. Chhattisgarh Real Estate Appellate Tribunal (CGREAT), Raipur. hears appeals.
What if I lose at CG-RERA or developer wins on appeal?
Appeal lies before Chhattisgarh Real Estate Appellate Tribunal (CGREAT), Raipur. within 60 days. From appellate, further appeal on substantial questions of law lies before the High Court within 60 days. Newtech v. State of UP (2021) protects allottees from technical force-majeure defences at every level.
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