CHENNAI: With the new market-based guideline values for property registration set to come into effect from January, builders and buyers in the state are rushing to seal deals before the charges go up. The number of property deals has seen a sharp rise ever since the plan to revise guideline values was announced. In November alone, the state government earned Rs 715 crore from stamp duty and registration charges.
"There is panic in the minds of buyers and builders, as stamp duty and registration charges will go up once the new guideline values come into effect. A huge number of transactions take place daily these days, especially in Chennai and Coimbatore," a senior government official said.
In all, the government realized Rs 3,965 crore till November in the current fiscal from property registrations, 23.17% higher than the corresponding period last year. The November earning is the highest for a month in the last 20 years. In 2010-11, the government's revenue from stamp duty and registration charges was Rs 5,020 crore, and this fiscal it's expected to go up to Rs 6,500 crore.
Guideline value is the minimum value of a land fixed by the government, based on which stamp duty and registration charges are calculated. The charges add up to 9% of the property value. The draft of new guideline values is expected to be published on December 15, and the final values will be announced in January. The values were last revised in 2007.
While Chennai, expectedly, recorded the maximum number of property transactions -- 3.45 lakh deals in the last eight months -- Coimbatore was close behind with 3.18 lakh deals. The reason can attributed to the fact that Coimbatore has become a preferred destination for tier-two investments in the state with many business houses setting up facilities in the city, thereby giving a push to the real estate market.
Members of the Confederation of Real Estate Developers Association of India (CREDAI), a body of organized real estate developers, have taken exception to the new guideline values proposed by the government saying they do not reflect the market reality.
If the guidelines values of properties on Oppanakara Veethi, Cross Cut Road, DB Road and Trichy Road in Coimbatore have seen a three-fold rise in the revision, properties on Dr Radhakrishnan Salai, Boat Club Road, Poes Garden, Gopalapuram IInd Street and Montieth Road in Egmore in Chennai have been valued eight to ten times higher, they say.
CREDAI president T Chitti Babu said they were not against revision, but "a multifold increase was not acceptable." "There is a need for a study to understand the market prices. Otherwise, it will lead to malpractices and actual transactions will not come into revenue records. The officials have also found justification in our demands," he said. A crucial meeting convened by chief secretary Debendranath Sarangi on tax revenue on December 19 will throw some light on the final guideline values.
Tamil Nadu is among a very few states that do not revise guideline values periodically. Hence, major discrepancies exist between guideline values and market prices of properties.
Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/chennai/Property-deals-peak-ahead-of-guideline-value-revision/articleshow/11054212.cms
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