Selling a property is fundamentally different from buying one. As a seller, you’re competing with hundreds of similar listings, dealing with price-conscious buyers, and racing against time—especially if you’ve already committed to purchasing another property. A poorly executed resale strategy can cost you ₹5-15 lakh in lost value and months of holding costs.
According to MagicBricks data, the average property in Delhi NCR takes 4-7 months to sell from listing to final registry. However, properties with strategic pricing, proper presentation, and effective marketing sell within 60-90 days, often fetching 5-8% higher prices than comparable listings.
This comprehensive guide covers everything you need to sell your property successfully—from pre-listing preparation and accurate pricing to negotiation tactics, legal documentation, and closing strategies. Whether you’re selling a 2BHK in Noida or a 4BHK in Gurgaon, these proven strategies will help you achieve a faster sale at maximum value.
Pre-Sale Preparation: Setting the Foundation
Property Condition Assessment (2-3 Months Before Listing)
The first impression determines whether buyers schedule a second viewing or move to the next listing. Your property competes not against its past condition but against other available properties in current market-ready state.
Critical Repairs (Mandatory):
Water Damage and Seepage:
- Check all walls for dampness, especially external walls and bathrooms
- Repair all leaking taps, pipes, and bathroom fittings
- Fix terrace/balcony waterproofing to prevent ceiling stains
- Cost: ₹15,000-60,000 depending on severity
- ROI: Essential—visible seepage reduces offers by 10-15%
Electrical Issues:
- Replace broken switches and sockets
- Fix non-functional lights and fans
- Ensure all electrical points working
- Update old-style switches to modular (if budget allows)
- Cost: ₹5,000-20,000
- ROI: Prevents buyer anxiety about hidden electrical problems
Door and Window Functionality:
- Repair stuck doors and windows
- Replace broken locks and handles
- Fix warped wooden doors
- Ensure smooth operation of all windows
- Cost: ₹3,000-15,000
- ROI: Signals overall property maintenance quality
Painting and Finishing:
- Fresh coat of neutral paint throughout (white, off-white, light beige)
- Touch up all wall damages, nail holes, cracks
- Paint all doors and window frames
- Polish or paint main door
- Cost: ₹25,000-80,000 for 2-3BHK (₹12-18 per sq ft)
- ROI: 200-300%—single highest-impact improvement
Example: ₹50,000 spent on painting a tired-looking 1,200 sq ft apartment can increase perceived value by ₹1.5-2 lakh and reduce time to sell by 30-45 days.
Bathroom and Kitchen Upgrades:
- Deep clean tiles and grout (or re-grout if very stained)
- Replace broken tiles
- Fix leaking faucets and showers
- Replace damaged/stained sink and WC seats
- Kitchen: Replace broken cabinet handles, deep clean chimney
- Cost: ₹10,000-40,000
- ROI: Critical areas buyers focus on—poor condition here kills deals
Flooring:
- Polish marble/granite floors
- Replace cracked tiles (at minimum in main areas)
- Deep clean vitrified tiles
- Repair damaged wooden flooring
- Cost: ₹8,000-35,000
- ROI: Clean, shining floors create premium perception
Strategic Upgrades (Optional but High-Impact)
Modular Kitchen Refurbishment: If your kitchen is 7+ years old and looks dated:
- Minimum: Deep clean, replace handles, fix shutters
- Moderate: Resurface shutters with new laminate (₹40,000-80,000)
- Maximum: New modular kitchen (₹1.2-2.5 lakh)
ROI Analysis: New kitchen in ₹70-90 lakh property range can add ₹1.5-2.5 lakh perceived value. Consider if existing kitchen is major deterrent.
False Ceiling Repair:
- Fix sagging or stained false ceiling
- Repaint ceiling in white
- Replace yellowed POP with fresh paint
- Cost: ₹8,000-25,000
- ROI: Prevents buyers from factoring major renovation costs in their offers
Lighting Upgrade:
- Replace old tube lights with modern LED panels
- Add warm lighting in living areas
- Ensure bright task lighting in kitchen and bathrooms
- Cost: ₹5,000-15,000
- ROI: Well-lit homes photograph better and feel more spacious
Deep Cleaning and Decluttering
Professional Deep Cleaning: Hire professional cleaning service 1-2 days before photography/viewings:
- Deep clean all bathrooms (tiles, fixtures, grout)
- Kitchen degreasing and appliance cleaning
- Window glass cleaning (inside and outside)
- Balcony/terrace cleaning
- Dust all fans, lights, AC vents
- Cost: ₹3,000-8,000 for 2-3BHK
- ROI: Essential for good photography and viewings
Decluttering Strategy: Remove 40-50% of visible items to make spaces appear larger:
- Clear kitchen countertops (store appliances in cabinets)
- Remove excess furniture (rent storage if needed for 2-3 months)
- Clear personal photographs and items
- Organize closets (buyers will open them)
- Remove items from balconies
- Minimize bathroom counter items
Before-After Impact: Decluttered 1,000 sq ft apartment photographs and shows as 1,200+ sq ft equivalent. Buyers subconsciously perceive better value.
Documentation Organization
Prepare complete documentation set before listing:
- Original registered sale deed
- Latest property tax receipts (3 years)
- Society NOC (No Objection Certificate)
- Maintenance payment receipts (last 12 months)
- Share certificate (for cooperative societies)
- Completion/Occupancy Certificate
- Approved building plan
- Encumbrance Certificate (last 15 years)
- Identity proofs (Aadhaar, PAN)
- Latest electricity and water bills
Time Investment: 1-2 weeks to collect all documents from society, municipal corporation, and sub-registrar.
Benefit: Ready documentation signals seriousness and enables quick closure once buyer identified.
Pricing Strategy: The Make-or-Break Decision
Market Research and Competitive Analysis
Step 1: Identify Comparable Properties Search online portals (99acres, MagicBricks, Housing.com) for:
- Same locality/sector/society
- Same configuration (2BHK, 3BHK)
- Similar size (±150 sq ft)
- Similar age and condition
- Currently listed for sale
Create Comparison Matrix: List 8-10 comparable properties with:
- Listed price and price per sq ft
- Carpet area vs super built-up area
- Floor number (ground, middle, top)
- Facing (north, south, east, west)
- Condition (renovated, average, needs work)
- Parking included (covered/open)
- Days on market (how long listed)
Step 2: Actual Transaction Analysis Listed prices are aspirational. Actual sales happen 5-12% lower.
Check actual registered sale prices:
- Delhi: https://dlrc.delhi.gov.in/ (public records)
- Noida/Greater Noida: https://igrsup.gov.in/
- Gurgaon/Faridabad: https://haryanaregistration.gov.in/
Filter by your society/locality for past 6-12 months. This reveals true market prices.
Example: Society X, Sector 78 Noida, 3BHK apartments:
- Listings: ₹85-92 lakh (average ₹88.5 lakh)
- Actual registrations: ₹78-86 lakh (average ₹82 lakh)
- Gap: 7.9% lower than listings
Your Pricing Baseline: Recent actual transactions, not current listings.
Pricing Psychology
The 10% Rule: Properties priced within 5-7% of market value sell in 60-90 days. Properties priced 10-15% above market sit for 6-12 months and eventually sell at or below market value after price reductions.
Why Overpricing Fails:
- First 30-45 days are critical (maximum buyer traffic)
- Overpriced properties get fewer viewings
- After 60+ days, listing becomes “stale”
- Buyers wonder “what’s wrong with this property?”
- Eventually price reduced, but momentum lost
- Final sale price often lower than if priced correctly initially
Strategic Pricing Tiers:
Premium Pricing (+5-8% above market): When to use:
- Exceptional condition (recently renovated)
- Prime location within society (park-facing, corner, top floor with terrace)
- Urgent seller market (limited inventory)
- Unique features (larger balcony, extra room, premium flooring)
Market Pricing (±2% of market average): Standard approach:
- Good condition, well-maintained
- Average location within society
- Normal market conditions
- Aim for sale in 60-90 days
Aggressive Pricing (-5-8% below market): When needed:
- Urgent sale required (job transfer, emigration)
- Property needs some repairs/renovation
- Slower market conditions
- Want to trigger bidding competition
- Aim for sale in 30-45 days
Pricing Example:
Property: 3BHK, 1,400 sq ft, Sector 78 Noida Market Rate (actual sales): ₹82 lakh (₹5,857 per sq ft)
Scenario A – Premium Pricing: Listed at ₹88 lakh (₹6,286 per sq ft, +7.3%) Condition: Fully renovated 6 months ago, modular kitchen, new bathrooms Expected: Sells in 90-120 days at ₹84-86 lakh
Scenario B – Market Pricing: Listed at ₹83.5 lakh (₹5,964 per sq ft, +1.8%) Condition: Well-maintained, good condition Expected: Sells in 60-90 days at ₹81-82 lakh
Scenario C – Aggressive Pricing: Listed at ₹78 lakh (₹5,571 per sq ft, -4.9%) Condition: Standard, or urgent sale needed Expected: Multiple offers in 30-45 days, final price ₹79-81 lakh
Price Positioning Tactics
Psychological Price Points:
- ₹84.9 lakh appears significantly cheaper than ₹85 lakh
- ₹1.49 crore more attractive than ₹1.5 crore
- Round numbers (₹80 lakh, ₹1 crore) feel negotiable
- Odd numbers (₹83.5 lakh) signal calculation/firmness
Leave Negotiation Room: Most buyers expect 2-5% negotiation. Factor this in:
- Want ₹80 lakh final price → List at ₹83-84 lakh
- Gives room for buyer to “win” negotiation
- Reach your target through structured concessions
Floor Pricing (Non-Negotiable Minimum): Calculate before listing:
- Outstanding home loan to be cleared
- Brokerage (1-2% of sale price)
- Capital gains tax (if applicable)
- Moving and miscellaneous costs
- Desired profit/equity realization
This is your absolute minimum. Don’t budge below this regardless of pressure.
Marketing and Exposure Strategy
Professional Photography
Investment: ₹3,000-8,000 for professional real estate photography Return: Properties with professional photos receive 60-80% more inquiries and sell 30-40% faster
Photography Guidelines:
- Shoot during daytime with maximum natural light
- All lights turned on for bright, welcoming feel
- Wide-angle lens to show space accurately
- Decluttered, staged rooms
- 15-25 high-quality photos covering all areas
- Highlight best features (view, balcony, modular kitchen)
Photos to Include:
- Living room from multiple angles
- Kitchen (full view and close-ups of modular fittings)
- All bedrooms
- Bathrooms (clean and well-lit)
- Balconies/terraces
- Building exterior and entrance
- Amenities (pool, gym, park if attractive)
- Parking space
Avoid:
- Dark, grainy photos
- Photos showing clutter or personal items
- Extreme wide-angle distortion
- Misleading angles
- Outdated photos (showing old condition)
Online Listing Optimization
Platform Selection: List on all major portals for maximum reach:
- 99acres.com (highest traffic for NCR)
- MagicBricks.com (extensive reach)
- Housing.com (good user interface)
- NoBroker.com (direct buyer connections)
- CommonFloor.com (society-specific listings)
Cost: ₹5,000-15,000 for 3-month premium listings across platforms, or engage broker who handles this.
Listing Description Template:
Headline: [Configuration] [Feature] in [Society Name] [Sector] | [Key Selling Point] Example: “Spacious 3BHK with Modular Kitchen in ATS Pristine, Sector 150 | Park Facing | Ready to Move”
Description Structure:
- Opening (2-3 lines): Key highlights and immediate appeal
- Property Details: Configuration, size, floor, facing, parking
- Condition: Renovated/well-maintained/ready-to-move
- Amenities: Society facilities (pool, gym, club, parks)
- Location Benefits: Metro proximity, schools, hospitals, malls
- Value Proposition: Why buyers should choose this property
- Call-to-Action: Contact details, viewing availability
Example: “Beautifully maintained 3BHK apartment in premium ATS Pristine society, Sector 150 Noida. This 1,650 sq ft east-facing unit on 8th floor offers stunning park views and abundant natural light.
Features include fully-equipped modular kitchen, spacious bedrooms with wardrobes, premium vitrified flooring, and 2 covered parking spaces. The property is freshly painted and ready for immediate possession.
ATS Pristine offers world-class amenities: swimming pool, fully-equipped gym, tennis and badminton courts, children’s play area, and 24/7 security. Located just 800 meters from Noida-Greater Noida Expressway metro station with easy access to IT parks, international schools, and hospitals.
Priced at ₹84.9 lakh for quick sale. Serious buyers only. Available for viewing on weekends. Contact [Name] at [Number].”
Keywords to Include:
- Ready to move / Immediate possession
- Well-maintained / Renovated
- Prime location
- Metro connectivity
- Park facing / Good view
- Premium society / Gated community
- Reputed builder name
- Specific amenities buyers search for
Traditional Marketing Channels
Society Notice Boards:
- Create simple A4 flyer with key details and photo
- Display on society notice boards (free)
- Residents often have friends/relatives looking in same society
Word of Mouth:
- Inform society residents formally
- Tell security guards, maintenance staff
- Spread word in local markets and community
- 15-20% sales happen through direct referrals
Broker Network:
- Engage 2-3 active local brokers
- Offer standard 1-2% commission
- Brokers bring serious, pre-qualified buyers
- Worth the commission for faster, hassle-free sale
Signage:
- “For Sale” board on balcony (if society permits)
- Include contact number only
- Drives inquiries from people actively looking in area
Viewing and Showing Strategy
Scheduling Viewings
Best Times:
- Weekends: Saturday-Sunday, 10 AM-5 PM (maximum availability)
- Weekday evenings: 5-7 PM (working professionals)
- Avoid mornings (homes look better with natural light)
Batch Scheduling:
- Group viewings on specific days (Saturday morning, Sunday afternoon)
- Avoid daily interruptions
- Creates urgency when buyers see competition
Pre-Screening: Ask basic questions before scheduling:
- Budget range (ensures serious, qualified buyers)
- Loan pre-approval status
- Reason for purchase (own use/investment)
- Viewing other properties in area
- Timeline for purchase
Saves time showing property to unqualified or casual viewers.
Home Staging for Viewings
24 Hours Before Viewing:
- Deep clean entire apartment
- Remove clutter and excess furniture
- Fresh flowers in living room
- Ensure all lights working and turned on
- Open curtains for natural light
- Light pleasant room freshener (not strong)
- Ensure all ACs, fans functioning
- Temperature comfortable (cool in summer, warm in winter)
Day of Viewing:
- All lights on (even during daytime)
- Fresh coffee brewing (welcoming aroma) or subtle air freshener
- Soft background music (optional, light instrumental)
- Open all curtains and windows (weather permitting)
- Ensure bathrooms spotlessly clean
- Hide all personal items
- Remove family photos
Presentation Techniques:
- Highlight each room’s best features naturally
- Point out recent improvements/renovations
- Share society amenities and benefits
- Mention nearby facilities (metro, schools, markets)
- Be honest about any issues (builds trust)
- Have property documents ready for serious buyers to review
Let the Property Speak:
- Don’t over-talk or hard-sell
- Allow buyers to explore at their pace
- Answer questions honestly and completely
- Show confidence without desperation
Handling Multiple Buyers
When You Have Competitive Interest:
Strategy 1: Honest Competition Inform interested buyers that multiple parties are viewing:
- “We have 2-3 serious buyers currently evaluating”
- Sets expectation of quick decision needed
- Often triggers higher offers
Strategy 2: Deadline Approach
- “We’re accepting offers until [specific date]”
- Allows all serious buyers to submit best offers
- Review all offers and choose best (not always highest price)
Strategy 3: Best and Final After initial negotiations with 2-3 buyers:
- Request “best and final offer” by specific date
- Consider price, earnest money, closing timeline
- Select buyer offering best overall terms
What to Evaluate:
- Offer price (obviously)
- Earnest money amount (higher = more serious)
- Loan pre-approval status (reduces fall-through risk)
- Proposed timeline (quick closure valuable)
- Contingencies (fewer = better)
- Buyer’s profile and seriousness
Negotiation Tactics and Deal Closure
Understanding Buyer Psychology
Buyer Concerns (Address Proactively):
Price Justification: Buyers always ask “why so expensive?” Have ready answers:
- “Recent sales in this society at ₹X-Y lakh”
- “Property fully renovated 6 months ago (₹X investment)”
- “Prime location—park facing, 8th floor with no obstructions”
- “Immediate possession, no waiting”
Hidden Issues: Buyers fear undisclosed problems. Volunteer information:
- “Slight seepage in one bathroom which I fixed last month (have bill)”
- “Society has ongoing renovation of facade (completing in 2 months)” Honesty builds trust and prevents deal collapse during due diligence.
Comparison with Other Listings: Buyers say “similar flat available ₹5 lakh cheaper.” Response:
- Ask details (likely inferior location, condition, or floor)
- Highlight your property’s advantages
- If genuine, consider modest price adjustment
- Don’t panic—every property is unique
Negotiation Framework
Initial Offer (Typically 5-10% Below Listed Price):
Listed Price: ₹84 lakh Buyer’s First Offer: ₹77 lakh (-8.3%)
Your Responses:
Option 1 – Firm Counter: “Thank you for your offer. The property is priced based on recent market transactions at ₹81-85 lakh. Given the excellent condition and immediate possession, I can consider ₹82.5 lakh as my best price.”
Option 2 – Incremental Negotiation: “I appreciate your interest. Your offer is lower than I expected given the property value. I can reduce to ₹82 lakh if we can close within 30 days. What’s your timeline?”
Option 3 – Meet Halfway: “The gap is significant. If you can come up to ₹80 lakh, I can meet you at ₹81.5 lakh. This is very reasonable given comparable properties.”
Negotiation Tactics
Tactic 1: Anchor on Comparables Always reference actual market data:
- “Flat 405 in same wing sold for ₹83 lakh last month”
- “Three 3BHKs in this society registered between ₹80-85 lakh recently”
- Makes your price defensible, not arbitrary
Tactic 2: Concession Trading Link concessions to buyer commitments:
- “I can consider ₹81 lakh if you pay ₹5 lakh earnest money immediately”
- “₹80.5 lakh works if we register within 20 days”
- “At ₹82 lakh, I include modular kitchen furniture worth ₹2 lakh”
Tactic 3: Walk-Away Threshold Know your minimum (floor price):
- Calculate exact amount needed (loan clearance + costs + minimum profit)
- Politely refuse offers below this
- Better to wait than sell below need
Example: Outstanding loan: ₹35 lakh Brokerage: ₹1.5 lakh (1.5% of ₹100 lakh) Moving costs: ₹50,000 LTCG tax (estimated): ₹3 lakh Desired minimum profit: ₹20 lakh Total Floor Price: ₹60 lakh net proceeds needed
If property valued at ₹84 lakh:
- Minimum acceptable offer: ₹79 lakh (after negotiation down from ₹84 lakh)
- Below ₹79 lakh → Walk away
Tactic 4: Create Urgency
- “I have another viewer scheduled this weekend who seemed very interested”
- “We need to finalize by [date] as I’m relocating to [city]”
- “At this price, the property won’t last beyond this month”
Urgency (when genuine) motivates buyers to act.
Earnest Money and Agreement
Once Price Agreed:
Earnest Money Deposit: Request 2-5% of sale price as earnest money (token amount):
- ₹80 lakh property → ₹2-4 lakh earnest money
- Paid via cheque/online transfer (never cash)
- Receipt issued immediately
Purpose:
- Demonstrates buyer’s seriousness
- Compensates you if buyer backs out
- Covers your costs of taking property off market
Earnest Money Agreement: Execute simple agreement stating:
- Property details and agreed price
- Earnest money amount paid
- Timeline for sale deed execution (30-60 days typically)
- Forfeiture clause (if buyer backs out, you keep earnest money)
- Refund clause (if seller backs out, return double earnest money)
Sale Agreement Execution: Within 7-15 days of earnest money:
- Execute formal sale agreement on stamp paper
- Detail all terms: price, possession date, included items
- Payment schedule (balance payment timeline)
- Penalty clauses for delays by either party
- Both parties sign with witnesses
Typical Payment Structure:
- Earnest money: 5-10% at agreement
- During documentation: 10-15% after verification
- At registration: 75-85% balance (usually via bank transfer on registration day)
Legal and Documentation Process
Seller’s Document Checklist
Prepare these before serious buyer emerges:
Ownership Proofs:
- Original registered sale deed (when you purchased)
- Previous sale deeds (complete chain for 15-30 years)
- Mutation certificate (property in your name in municipal records)
Financial Clearances:
- Property tax receipts (latest + past 3 years)
- Society maintenance receipts (past 12 months minimum)
- No-dues certificate from society
- Electricity and water bills (last 3 months, showing no dues)
Property Documents:
- Approved building plan
- Completion certificate
- Occupancy certificate
- Encumbrance certificate (15-30 years, dated within 30 days)
- Share certificate (cooperative societies)
Identity Documents:
- Seller’s Aadhaar card, PAN card
- Address proof
- Passport-size photographs
- If joint ownership: All co-owners’ documents
Due Diligence Period
Buyer will conduct verification (15-30 days):
- Lawyer examines title documents
- Bank valuation (if buyer taking loan)
- Physical verification of property
- Society clearance check
Your Cooperation:
- Provide all documents promptly
- Allow bank valuer access to property
- Respond to buyer’s lawyer queries
- Maintain transparency
Common Issues and Resolutions:
Issue 1: Outstanding Dues Society shows ₹45,000 maintenance dues. Resolution: Clear dues immediately or adjust from sale price.
Issue 2: Name Mismatch Sale deed has “Rajesh Kumar” but Aadhaar shows “Rajesh Kumar Sharma.” Resolution: Execute affidavit stating both names refer to same person.
Issue 3: Encumbrance Shows Mortgage Property mortgaged to bank for home loan. Resolution: Provide loan closure statement showing outstanding amount. Buyer’s payment will clear this on registration day (common practice).
Registration Process
Pre-Registration (3-7 Days Before):
- Buyer pays stamp duty and registration charges online
- Book appointment slot at sub-registrar office
- Both parties confirm attendance
Stamp Duty Payment (Buyer’s Responsibility): Calculated on property sale value or circle rate (whichever higher):
- Delhi: 6% (men), 4% (women) + 1% registration
- UP (Noida): 6% + 1% registration = 7%
- Haryana (Gurgaon): 6-7% based on gender
Registration Day:
- Both seller and buyer present with witnesses (2 each)
- Bring all original documents and identity proofs
- Sale deed presented to sub-registrar
- Biometric verification
- Signatures of all parties in registrar’s presence
- Payment of balance consideration (typically via online transfer before or during registration)
- Registered sale deed issued (7-15 days post-registration)
Possession Handover: After registration (same day or within 7 days):
- Hand over keys and physical possession
- Execute possession letter/handover note
- Transfer society membership
- Provide utility connection transfer documents
- Share society and building operational details
Tax Implications for Sellers
Capital Gains Tax
Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG): Property sold within 24 months of purchase:
- Gain = Sale Price – (Purchase Price + Improvements + Selling Costs)
- Taxed at your income tax slab rate (up to 30%)
Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG): Property sold after 24+ months:
- Gain = Sale Price – Indexed Cost – Selling Costs
- Tax Rate: 20% on indexed gains
- Indexation benefit reduces taxable gain significantly
Indexation Benefit Example:
Purchase (2018): ₹50 lakh Sale (2026): ₹85 lakh Improvements (2020-2023): ₹5 lakh Brokerage (2026): ₹1.5 lakh
Cost Inflation Index: 2018: 280 2026: 363
Indexed Purchase Cost = ₹50 lakh × (363/280) = ₹64.82 lakh Indexed Improvement = ₹5 lakh × (363/348) = ₹5.22 lakh (using improvement year CII) Total Indexed Cost = ₹64.82 + ₹5.22 = ₹70.04 lakh
Taxable LTCG: Sale Price: ₹85 lakh Less: Indexed Cost: ₹70.04 lakh Less: Selling Costs: ₹1.5 lakh Taxable Gain: ₹13.46 lakh
Tax = ₹13.46 lakh × 20% = ₹2.69 lakh
Without indexation: Tax would be on ₹28.5 lakh gain = ₹5.7 lakh Savings from indexation: ₹3.01 lakh
Tax Saving Strategies
Section 54: Reinvestment in Residential Property Save LTCG tax by:
- Purchasing another residential property within 2 years (before or after sale)
- Or constructing residential property within 3 years
- Investment amount = Sale proceeds or LTCG (whichever lower)
Example: LTCG: ₹13.46 lakh Reinvest ₹13.46 lakh (or more) in new property purchase within 2 years. Tax Payable: ₹0
Section 54EC: Investment in Specified Bonds Invest LTCG (up to ₹50 lakh) in:
- NHAI (National Highway Authority of India) bonds
- REC (Rural Electrification Corporation) bonds
- Within 6 months of sale
- Lock-in: 5 years
- Interest: ~5-5.5% annually
TDS on Property Sale: Buyer must deduct TDS:
- 1% of sale consideration if above ₹50 lakh
- Deposit with Income Tax department
- You receive credit in your tax return
- File ITR to claim refund if tax already paid
Example: Sale Price: ₹85 lakh TDS: 1% = ₹85,000
Buyer pays you ₹84.15 lakh and deposits ₹85,000 as TDS. You claim this credit when filing return.
Common Seller Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Overpricing in a Hurry
Scenario: Need to sell urgently (job transfer) but list at aspirational price hoping for quick luck.
Reality: Overpriced properties sit for months. Eventually sell below market after multiple reductions and stale listing.
Solution: If urgent, price 3-5% below market for quick sale at fair value rather than waiting months at inflated price.
Mistake 2: Hiding Property Defects
Scenario: Don’t disclose seepage, society disputes, or structural issues to avoid scaring buyers.
Reality: Buyers discover during due diligence. Deal collapses. You’ve wasted 30-60 days and lost other potential buyers.
Solution: Disclose all known issues upfront. Price accordingly or fix issues before listing. Honesty builds trust and prevents deal failures.
Mistake 3: Emotional Attachment Pricing
Scenario: “I spent ₹12 lakh on renovation, so I must get that back on top of market price.”
Reality: Market doesn’t care about your costs. Buyers compare your property to current alternatives, not your past investments.
Solution: Price based on current market reality, not past expenses or emotional value.
Mistake 4: Poor Photography and Presentation
Scenario: Upload dark, cluttered photos taken on phone. Skip cleaning and decluttering for viewings.
Reality: 75% of buyers eliminate properties based on photos alone. Cluttered homes photograph smaller and unappealing.
Solution: Invest ₹5,000-8,000 in professional photos and ₹30,000-60,000 in basic refresh (paint, cleaning). These add ₹1-2 lakh in realized value.
Mistake 5: Refusing Reasonable Negotiation
Scenario: Listed at ₹85 lakh based on market value ₹82 lakh. Buyer offers ₹80 lakh. Refuse to budge from ₹85 lakh.
Reality: Property sits unsold for 6 months. Eventually sell at ₹79 lakh to desperate buyer after price reductions.
Solution: Price realistically initially.