Government Approves Major Stamp Duty Relief for Cluster Redevelopment; Rehab Tenants to Save Lakhs Per Flat


The Maharashtra Government has issued an important clarification that will significantly reduce stamp duty on rehab flats in cluster redevelopment projects. The decision finally aligns stamp duty valuation rules with the Development Control Rules (DCPR 2034)—which prescribe larger rehab entitlements—and eliminates a long-standing mismatch that caused artificially inflated stamp duty for thousands of cluster households.

This new instruction will immediately benefit upcoming cluster schemes across Mumbai’s island city and suburbs.


🔹 What Was the Issue Earlier?

Old Stamp Duty Rule Never Recognized Larger Cluster Rehab Area

Earlier, stamp duty valuation for rehab tenants was done using Guideline 2.1(a) & 2.1(b) of the Annual Ready Reckoner (ARR).
These guidelines assume:

  • Minimum rehab area: 37.665 sq m (405 sq ft carpet)
  • Stamp duty valuation: Based on 112 times monthly rent + construction rate for additional area

This rule works for normal redevelopment, but it does NOT match cluster redevelopment rules under DCPR 2034, where:

  • Rehab minimum is 35 sq m,
  • Plus additional cluster benefit (10% to 35%),
  • Plus fungible 35%.

So a tenant who occupied tiny rooms (say 120 sq ft) in the old building would legally get 52–62 sq m carpet in cluster redevelopment.

➤ But stamp duty was calculated as if he was getting only 37.665 sq m, not 52 or 62 sq m.

This artificially increased the chargeable portion → increasing stamp duty by ₹30,000 to ₹50,000 per flat, sometimes more.


🔹 What Has Changed Now?

Government Aligns Stamp Duty Valuation With Actual Cluster Rehab Area

The State Government has now clarified:

  • Guideline 2.1(a) & 2.1(b) must be revised for cluster only
  • Rehab area for stamp duty must equal:
    • 35 sq m minimum
      • Cluster additional area (10–35%)
      • Fungible 35%

So instead of stamping 37.665 sq m, the stamp duty system will now recognize the actual rehab entitlement, which is often 52–62 sq m.

This reduces the portion of “chargeable construction area” → massive stamp duty savings.


🔹 Explaining the Stamp Duty Formula Simply

Stamp Duty for Rehab Flats Uses a Fixed Nominal Rent — Not Actual Rent

Government uses a notional rent of ₹100 per month for all rehab tenants.

The formula in Guideline 2.1(a) is:

Stamp Duty Value = 112 × Monthly Rent

Monthly Rent = ₹100 → 112 × 100 = ₹11,200

This ₹11,200 represents the value of the “base rehab entitlement.”

After this, the remaining area (beyond rehab entitlement) is valued at:

(Remaining Carpet Area) × (Construction Rate per sq m)

Then stamp duty = 7% of that value.


🔹 How People Save Money Now

Cluster Rehab Entitlement Is Bigger → Chargeable Area Becomes Smaller

Under the old rule:

  • Rehab entitlement = 37.665 sq m
  • Chargeable portion was large → Stamp duty high

Under the new rule:

  • Rehab entitlement = 52 sq m (example)
  • Chargeable portion shrinks → Stamp duty drops drastically
  • Government examples show savings of ₹31,553 per flat (1 acre cluster)
  • And savings of ₹52,390 per flat (5 hectare cluster)

These are government-calculated savings.


🔹 Why This Matters for Mumbai

Biggest Stamp Duty Relief Since Cluster Policy Began

Cluster projects in Mumbai typically involve:

  • 300 to 2,000 tenants
  • Very small existing rooms (70–150 sq ft)
  • High construction costs
  • Huge stamp duty burden

This decision will:

  • Reduce upfront cost for tenants
  • Improve viability for developers
  • Speed up cluster redevelopment approvals
  • Incentivize more slum & cess building redevelopment
  • Potentially revive stuck projects

In a city where 70%+ buildings are over 40–60 years old, this is a critical reform.

Also Read: Relief for homebuyers as Maha Govt maintains status quo on ready reckoner rates for FY24


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