Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Picture a 240-flat complex in Gurugram. The occupancy certificate came eighteen months ago. The association is registered. Yet the clubhouse and gym stay locked “pending amenity charges”, the builder's agency still controls both basements, and nobody has seen the fire NOC or the as-built drawings. The builder says handover will happen “when the last tower is done”.
The law says otherwise. Under Section 17 of the RERA Act, 2016, the promoter must transfer the undivided title in the common areas to the association of allottees, and hand over physical possession of the common areas. Section 17(2) adds a sharp deadline most buyers do not know: in the absence of any local law, the promoter must hand over the necessary documents and plans, including those of the common areas, to the association within thirty days of obtaining the occupancy certificate. Tower-wise OCs trigger tower-wise duties; the “last tower” excuse does not suspend them.
Section 2(n) of RERA defines common areas widely. For your demand letter, list them by name:
Two traps. First, builders sell or rent out pieces of the common areas, terraces, open parking, the clubhouse, as separate “amenities”. The Supreme Court held in Nahalchand Laloochand v. Panchali Co-operative Housing Society (2010) that stilt and open parking form part of the common areas under MOFA and cannot be sold as independent units, and RERA's definition points the same way. If parking has been sold off, see parking sold illegally by builder or RWA. Second, a “clubhouse membership fee” charged to access an amenity shown in the sanctioned plan is a sign the builder is treating a common area as his own asset; if the clubhouse was promised but never even built, that is a different dispute, covered in clubhouse promised but never completed.
Handover is not just keys. Ask, in one written demand, for physical possession plus the documents and plans:
| Item | Why your association needs it |
|---|---|
| Sanctioned and as-built drawings | Repairs, alterations, future approvals |
| Occupancy and completion certificates | Legal status, utilities, resale, insurance |
| Fire NOC, lift licences, electrical inspector approvals | Statutory renewals fall on the association after handover |
| STP, borewell, pollution and groundwater consents | Annual compliance and penalties otherwise land on members |
| Warranties and AMCs for lifts, pumps, DG sets, fire systems | Free repairs within warranty, continuity of service |
| Keys, access cards and control of common facilities | Actual physical possession of clubhouse, basements, terraces |
| List of utility connections, meters and security deposits | Deposits belong to the project, not the builder |
| Conveyance of undivided title in common areas | The ownership layer, see the conveyance guide below |
Physical handover should be recorded in a joint inspection memo signed by both sides, item by item. Anything pending goes into a snag list with dates.
The builder is private, so RTI does not reach his files. But the documents that prove what is “common” are public records:
A certified sanctioned plan obtained by RTI is often the single document that wins the RERA case, because it shows the locked gym was always part of the approved common amenities. File via RTI online or the state RTI portal; escalate non-replies with a first appeal.
No. The Section 17 duties run from the occupancy certificate, and the documents handover is due within thirty days of the OC where no local law says otherwise. Unsold flats make the builder a member for those units; they do not extend his control.
Only if that space was approved as a saleable area in the sanctioned plan, which is rare for basements. Pull the sanctioned plan by RTI and compare. Basements shown as parking or services are common areas.
The builder, under Section 11(4)(d) of RERA, and he must pay all outgoings until transfer under Section 11(4)(g). He may collect maintenance as agreed, but control must pass on handover, see maintenance transfer to the society.
Form the association first; Section 17 hands over to the association, not to individuals. The formation fight has its own guide: builder not forming the society.
Demand the agreement in writing, raise it squarely in the RERA complaint, and seek a direction for possession plus accounts of the income. Title questions may need a civil suit; take legal advice.
Money and accounts follow a parallel track with its own evidence trail, covered in corpus, accounts and maintenance records handover.
Download the common areas handover checklist (PDF).