Maharashtra — Mumbai & MMR
MahaRERA issued notices to 8,212 projects for missing QPRs on 5 May 2026 — the largest single compliance sweep since RERA commenced.
120+ tracked projects · MahaRERA portal ↗
Browse Mumbai & MMR projects →Brickplot tracks RERA Quarterly Progress Reports (QPRs) for 200+ projects across Maharashtra and Karnataka. Updated from official RERA portals — no builder input, no sponsored content.
A RERA Quarterly Progress Report (QPR) is a mandatory filing that every registered builder must submit to the state RERA authority at least once every three months. Introduced under Section 11(1) of the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act 2016, the QPR is the primary mechanism through which buyers can monitor whether an under-construction project is on track.
Each QPR must disclose: the current stage of construction (expressed as a percentage complete), the number of units sold versus total registered units, funds received from allottees, funds utilised to date, and whether the committed possession date remains achievable. QPRs are publicly accessible on state RERA portals at no cost.
When a builder misses QPR filing — or files a QPR showing no change in completion percentage across consecutive quarters — it is a material warning sign of construction stalling or financial distress. Brickplot flags both missed filings and stalled-progress QPRs in its project tracking.
QPR completion percentages only tell a meaningful story when compared against the remaining timeline to possession. Use this framework to assess your project:
High Delay Risk
Below 30% complete with less than 6 months to possession
Moderate Risk
Below 60% complete with less than 9 months to possession
Low Risk
Above 75% complete with 6+ months to possession, all QPRs filed
Stalled Signal
Same completion % across two consecutive quarters — zero on-site activity
Note: QPR completion data is self-declared by the builder. MahaRERA and K-RERA do not independently audit the figures unless a complaint triggers an inspection. Treat QPR numbers as directional — supplement with a physical site visit.
MahaRERA issued notices to 8,212 projects for missing QPRs on 5 May 2026 — the largest single compliance sweep since RERA commenced.
120+ tracked projects · MahaRERA portal ↗
Browse Mumbai & MMR projects →Karnataka RERA requires QPR filing every quarter. Brickplot surfaces the last-filed QPR date and completion % for tracked Bangalore projects.
80+ tracked projects · K-RERA portal ↗
Browse Bangalore projects →An overdue QPR means the builder has missed the statutory quarterly deadline to report construction progress. MahaRERA flagged 8,212 such projects in May 2026 — the largest single enforcement sweep since RERA commenced. K-RERA conducts similar periodic sweeps.
If your project appears on an overdue QPR list, your statutory options are clear: you can file a complaint, demand a revised possession date in writing, or — if the project is already behind schedule — evaluate your Section 18 withdrawal rights.
Section 18 Possession Delay Claim Guide →A RERA Quarterly Progress Report (QPR) is a mandatory filing that every registered builder must submit to the state RERA authority at least once every quarter. It discloses the current stage of construction (percentage complete), number of units sold, funds received from buyers, funds utilised, and any changes to the committed possession date. QPRs are available to the public on state RERA portals and are the most reliable official source of construction progress information available to buyers.
Visit your state RERA portal — mahare.maharashtra.gov.in for Maharashtra, rera.karnataka.gov.in for Karnataka. Search for your project by registration number or name. Click the 'Quarterly Reports' tab. Count how many quarters have elapsed since registration and compare with the number of QPRs actually filed. Each filed QPR will show the builder's declared completion percentage. Brickplot also tracks QPR data for 200+ projects — search your project at brickplot.com/properties.
If a builder misses QPR filing, the state RERA authority can issue a compliance notice. If the builder does not comply, RERA can impose a penalty of up to 5% of the registered project cost and restrict the builder from registering new projects. For buyers, missing QPRs are a red flag: projects with two or more consecutive missed QPRs have a significantly higher probability of missing their committed possession date.
Yes. Any allottee can file a complaint with the state RERA authority under Section 31 of the RERA Act if the builder has failed to file required QPRs. In Maharashtra, the filing fee is Rs 5,000. In Karnataka, it is Rs 1,000. If the project has also missed its possession date, you have an additional right under Section 18 to either withdraw with a full refund plus interest, or continue and receive interest on all payments made.