Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Do these five things before anything else:
This guide covers only formation of the society or association. Once the body is registered, the next fight is title transfer, covered in builder delayed the conveyance deed.
Section 11(4)(e) of the RERA Act, 2016 makes the promoter responsible for enabling the formation of an association, society, co-operative society or federation of allottees. Where no local law fixes a period, this must be done within three months of the majority of allottees having booked their units. The duty exists for every RERA-registered project, and MahaRERA and other state authorities have passed orders directing builders to form the association and pay penalties for default.
State laws add their own timelines:
The single most useful fact in this dispute: in most states, buyers do not have to wait for the builder. The usual process is:
Expect the registrar's office to ask for the occupancy certificate or completion certificate. If the builder withholds it, say so in the application and obtain the record from the municipal authority instead, see how to get the OC copy.
If the project is RERA registered, file a complaint citing Section 11(4)(e):
The RERA route and the registrar route are not alternatives. Run both: registrar for actual registration, RERA for a binding direction and penalty pressure on the builder.
Do not wait for “100 percent possession” or “project completion”. Builders use this line to delay formation for years, because once the society exists it can demand accounts, common areas and conveyance. The legal trigger is majority booking, not full occupation. Every month without a society is a month the builder controls your maintenance money without member oversight, see corpus and accounts handover.
The builder is private and outside RTI, but two public offices hold useful records:
To the Public Information Officer, Office of the District Deputy Registrar of Co-operative Societies, [District] Subject: Information on society registration for [Project name, address] Please provide: 1. Whether any application for registration of a co-operative housing society / association for the above project has been received from the promoter [builder name]; if yes, the date and current status. 2. Certified copy of the application and list of enclosures, if filed. 3. Date-wise file movement and reasons recorded for any pendency. 4. The prescribed procedure and forms for flat purchasers to apply for registration where the promoter has failed to do so.
File via RTI online or your state RTI portal. A vague RTI gets rejected; keep each question tied to a record, see why RTI gets rejected.
It varies by state and vehicle. Maharashtra cooperative societies commonly need a minimum of ten members covering at least 51 percent of flats for the non-cooperation route. Check the model bye-laws and your registrar's office for the exact threshold.
No. For unsold flats the builder ordinarily joins as a member holding those units and pays their outgoings. Unsold inventory is not a ground to refuse formation.
A builder-controlled body does not discharge the Section 11(4)(e) duty in spirit. Buyers can still press for a genuine association with elected members, through the registrar and RERA.
RERA applies to registered projects. For older buildings, the state cooperative or apartment law route through the registrar remains fully available, and in Maharashtra MOFA still applies.
Registration fees are small, usually a few hundred to a few thousand rupees plus share capital per member under cooperative law. The real cost is coordination time, which is why a provisional committee matters.
Three things, in writing: handover of common areas and documents, transfer of the corpus and maintenance accounts, and execution of the conveyance deed.