
Comprehensive Guide to Jaipur Development Authority’s Master Plan The Jaipur Development Authority (JDA) plays a vital role in shaping the...
Many Indian property buyers confidently say:
“Agreement ho gaya hai, property meri ho gayi.”
That single misunderstanding has caused:
Ownership disputes
Loan rejections
Lost resale deals
Court cases lasting years
Registry and Agreement to Sell are NOT the same.
They serve completely different legal purposes — and confusing them can cost you the property itself.
This guide exists so that after reading it, you will never make that mistake.
A buyer in Jaipur pays ₹25 lakhs for a residential plot.
He signs an Agreement to Sell, pays most of the amount, and starts planning construction.
Six months later:
The seller sells the same plot to someone else
That buyer completes registry
Legally, the second buyer becomes the owner
The first buyer?
⚠️ Only has a right to sue, not a right to own.
This happens more often than people admit.
Simple Definition:
An Agreement to Sell is a promise between buyer and seller that a property will be sold in the future, under agreed terms.What it legally does:
Fixes price, timeline, and conditions
Records advance payment (token / earnest money)
Creates a right to future ownership — not ownership itself
What it does NOT do:
❌ Does not transfer ownership
❌ Does not change land records
❌ Does not make you the legal owner📌 Think of it as a commitment, not completion.
Simple Definition:
Registry is the legal act of transferring ownership from seller to buyer through a registered Sale Deed.
✅ Transfers ownership
✅ Updates government records
✅ Makes you the lawful owner
✅ Allows resale, loan, mutation, construction
Without registry, ownership does not move, no matter how much money you pay.
Many buyers assume payment = ownership.
Indian property law does not work that way.
You cannot sell the property legally
Banks will not approve loans
Builder disputes become nightmares
You carry maximum risk with minimum protection
📌 Ownership begins only after registry, not before.
| Aspect | Agreement to Sell | Registry (Sale Deed) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal Ownership | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Property Rights | Limited | Absolute |
| Can Resell? | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Bank Loan Eligibility | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Govt Records Updated | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Risk Level | ⚠️ High | 🟢 Low |
| Court Protection | Weak | Strong |
| Stamp Duty | Lower | Full Applicable |
📊 If clarity matters, registry wins — every time.
Understanding the sequence is crucial.
🔍 Title verification & due diligence
📝 Agreement to Sell (optional but common)
💰 Token / advance payment
📄 Final Sale Deed drafting
🏛️ Stamp duty & registration
✍️ Registry at Sub-Registrar Office
🏷️ Mutation & records update
📌 Skipping or delaying Step 5–6 is where most disasters begin.
No. Even a registered agreement does not transfer ownership.
Until registry happens, builder owns the property, not you.
Courts have repeatedly ruled:
⚠️ GPA ≠ Ownership
Watch out if:
Seller delays registry after full payment
Price is significantly below market
“Registry later” is promised verbally
Documents are photocopies only
Seller avoids bank-linked buyers
📌 Fraud thrives where registry is postponed.
Why educated buyers fall into this trap:
Urgency bias (“Deal chala jayega”)
Authority bias (“Broker ne bola hai”)
Overconfidence (“Court dekh lenge”)
🧠 Smart buyers think long-term:
“If this goes wrong, how do I exit safely?”
Registry is the only safe answer.
From an investor’s lens:
| Factor | Agreement Only | After Registry |
|---|---|---|
| Capital Safety | ❌ Weak | ✅ Strong |
| Appreciation Capture | ❌ Uncertain | ✅ Guaranteed |
| Liquidity | ❌ Poor | ✅ High |
| Exit Options | ❌ Risky | ✅ Flexible |
📈 Serious investors never treat agreement as ownership.
Understanding registry helps you also understand:
Mutation
Khata / Patta / Jamabandi
Freehold vs Leasehold
Agricultural to Residential Conversion
Bank-approved properties
Everything starts with registered ownership.
Yes, but only to enforce the promise, not ownership.
Yes. Agreement is optional; registry is mandatory.
Generally no — it’s adjusted, not refunded.
Sadly, yes. Registry decides final ownership.
Yes, but it is legally risky.
📌 Registry date, not agreement date.
Very rare, time-consuming, expensive.
Never. Payment and registry should align.
Before calling a property “mine”, ensure:
✅ Sale Deed is registered
✅ Stamp duty fully paid
✅ Name updated in records
✅ Physical possession aligned with registry
✅ No reliance on verbal promises
Understanding Registry vs Agreement to Sell is not academic knowledge — it’s ownership survival skill in Indian real estate.
Before making any payment or commitment, it’s wise to verify the exact legal stage of the property.
If you need clarity, document verification, or genuinely safe options, Roomvilla exists to guide — not push.
Real estate rewards those who understand law before emotion.

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