The property registration process across four Indian cities — Bangalore, Hyderabad, Lucknow, and Gurugram — follows the same fundamental sequence: title verification, document preparation, stamp duty payment, and deed execution at the sub-registrar office. But the costs, timelines, and digital readiness vary significantly. Karnataka charges the lowest base stamp duty at 5% plus 1% registration (with 2% surcharge above ₹45 lakh). Telangana follows at 7.5% total. Uttar Pradesh charges 7% for males and 6% for females plus 1% registration. Haryana has the highest effective rate at approximately 12% total including registration fees. Online portals exist in all four states but vary in functionality — Telangana's IGRS and Karnataka's Kaveri are the most advanced. Physical presence at the sub-registrar office remains mandatory in all four cities. Budget 4-6 weeks from decision to registered sale deed, with the actual registration appointment taking 1-2 hours.
Key Takeaways
- Karnataka has the lowest base stamp duty at 5% plus 1% registration with 2% surcharge above ₹45L
- Haryana has the highest effective registration cost at approximately 12% of property value
- Telangana and Karnataka have the most advanced online registration portals for pre-processing
- Physical presence at the sub-registrar office is still mandatory in all four cities
- Budget 4-6 weeks from decision to registered deed across all four jurisdictions
Inside the Sub-Registrar's Office: Four Cities, One Process
That scene at the Serilingampally SRO plays out in slight variations every day across sub-registrar offices in Bangalore's Jayanagar, Lucknow's Gomti Nagar, and Gurugram's Sector 44. The fundamental registration process is uniform under the Indian Registration Act of 1908, but state-level amendments, digital infrastructure, and local administrative efficiency create meaningful differences in cost and experience. See our guide on corner plots in north Bangalore.
For PrimePlot buyers investing ₹3 crore or more in premium corner plots, registration costs are not trivial. The difference between registering in Bangalore versus Gurugram for the same property value can exceed ₹14 lakh — money that could fund landscaping and boundary wall construction. Understanding these differences is not academic; it directly affects your total acquisition cost.
◆ Part of our City Guides Guide
Property Registration Process Four Cities India: Cost Comparison
Bangalore (Karnataka)
- Stamp duty: 5% of property value or guidance value, whichever is higher
- Registration fee: 1%
- Surcharge: 2% on stamp duty for properties above ₹45 lakh
- Total for ₹3 crore plot: approximately ₹21.9 lakh
- Portal: Kaveri Online (kaverionline.karnataka.gov.in)
- SRO: jurisdiction based on plot location — verify with the taluk office
Karnataka's Kaveri portal allows online slot booking, stamp duty e-payment, and document upload. The actual registration requires physical presence of buyer, seller, and two witnesses. Biometric verification (Aadhaar) is mandatory. Processing typically takes 45-90 minutes at the SRO.
Hyderabad (Telangana)
- Stamp duty: 6%
- Transfer duty: 0.5%
- Registration fee: 1% (capped at ₹2 lakh for properties above ₹2 crore)
- Total for ₹3 crore plot: approximately ₹21.5-22.5 lakh
- Portal: IGRS Telangana (registration.telangana.gov.in)
- SRO: Serilingampally for Gachibowli, Shamshabad for airport corridor
Telangana's IGRS portal is among India's most efficient. Document pre-verification can be done online, reducing SRO visit time. Despite Telangana marketing itself as the most digitized registration system in India, the reality is that the physical verification step still requires all parties to appear in person, and SRO wait times during peak months (March, September) can exceed three hours. Slot booking online is essential to avoid queue delays.
Lucknow (Uttar Pradesh)
- Stamp duty (male): 7%
- Stamp duty (female): 6%
- Registration fee: 1%
- Non-resident surcharge: 2% additional if buyer is not a UP resident
- Total for ₹3 crore plot (male): approximately ₹24 lakh
- Total for ₹3 crore plot (female): approximately ₹21 lakh
- Portal: IGRS UP (igrsup.gov.in)
- SRO: Gomti Nagar office for most premium plot corridors
UP offers a significant stamp duty advantage for female buyers — a ₹3 lakh saving on a ₹3 crore plot. The IGRS UP portal supports online slot booking and stamp duty calculation but requires in-person document submission. Circle rate compliance is strictly enforced; registrations below the notified circle rate will be rejected at the counter.
Gurugram (Haryana)
- Stamp duty (male): 7%
- Stamp duty (female): 5%
- Registration fee: approximately 5% (₹50 per ₹1,000)
- Total for ₹3 crore plot (male): approximately ₹36 lakh
- Total for ₹3 crore plot (female): approximately ₹30 lakh
- Portal: Haryana Jamabandi (jamabandi.nic.in)
- SRO: Sector 44 for Gurugram proper, Sohna tehsil for southern plots
Haryana's registration costs are the highest among the four cities, primarily due to the registration fee that effectively adds 5% on top of stamp duty. Female ownership provides a ₹6 lakh saving on a ₹3 crore plot — the largest gender-based differential among these four states.
Document Checklist Across All Four Cities
Core documents required everywhere:
- Sale deed drafted on stamp paper of appropriate denomination
- Aadhaar card and PAN card of buyer and seller
- Two passport-size photographs of all parties
- Encumbrance certificate (EC) for 13-30 years depending on state
- Original title documents showing seller's ownership
- Property tax paid receipts from the relevant municipal authority
- Two witnesses with Aadhaar and photographs
City-specific additional documents:
- Bangalore: Khata certificate (A-Khata for BBMP), Betterment charges receipt, conversion order (if agricultural)
- Hyderabad: Pahani/Adangal extract, NOC from Irrigation Department (if near water body), LP number copy
- Lucknow: LDA allotment letter and subsequent sale chain, circle rate certificate from tehsil
- Gurugram: CLU certificate, DTCP license copy, EDC/IDC payment receipts from developer
Timeline and Practical Tips
Realistic timeline from decision to registered deed:
- Week 1-2: Title verification and legal due diligence with a local advocate
- Week 2-3: EC procurement, document collection, sale deed drafting
- Week 3-4: Stamp duty payment, slot booking, document printing on stamp paper
- Week 4-6: Registration appointment at SRO, biometric verification, deed execution
Practical tips that apply across all four cities:
- Engage a local advocate who practices at the specific SRO — they know the registrar's documentation preferences
- Book morning slots (9-11 AM) to avoid afternoon crowds at the SRO
- Carry original documents plus two photocopies of everything
- Ensure all parties' Aadhaar is linked to their mobile number for OTP verification
- For NRI buyers, the Power of Attorney must be notarized at the Indian consulate and apostilled
NRI Registration: Special Considerations
NRIs investing in premium plots across these four cities face additional documentation requirements:
- Power of Attorney (POA): Must be executed at the Indian consulate or embassy, then apostilled. The POA holder attends the SRO in person on behalf of the NRI buyer.
- FEMA compliance: Payment must be made from an NRO/NRE account. Foreign currency payments are not accepted at the SRO.
- PAN requirement: NRI PAN is mandatory for all property registrations above ₹10 lakh. Apply through NSDL or UTIITSL if you do not have one.
- TDS: Seller must deduct TDS at 20% (plus surcharge) on capital gains for NRI sellers, or obtain a lower deduction certificate from the Income Tax department.
For PrimePlot's NRI buyers, we recommend engaging a CA alongside the advocate to handle TDS compliance and FEMA reporting. The cost of professional assistance — typically ₹50,000-1 lakh for a ₹3 crore transaction — is modest relative to the compliance risk of getting it wrong.
The sub-registrar's stamp makes its final impression on the sale deed, and as the buyer steps out of the SRO onto the sunlit pavement, the weight of the document bag in his hand carries more than paper — it carries the coordinates of a corner plot that is now irrevocably his.