Awaas+ 2.0 self-survey status — check PMAY-G survey 2026
Quick answer. To check your Awaas+ self-survey status, open the AwaasPlus app you registered on, or go to pmayg.nic.in → AwaasSoft → Report and search by your registration number. Your self-survey moves through four stages: submitted in the app → field-verified by the Panchayat or Block staff → ratified by the Gram Sabha → added to the Awaas+ Permanent Wait List. A submitted survey is not a sanction — it still has to clear verification. If your status is stuck at “pending verification” for weeks, you can file a grievance at the Block office or an RTI to the Block Development Officer asking where your file is.
Short on time? Jump straight to how to check your status or use the sample RTI at the bottom.
About this article — Expertise, Experience, Authoritativeness, Trust (E-E-A-T)
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Reviewed by | Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak, RTI Wiki editorial team |
| Expertise | Indian government rural welfare schemes, PMAY-G / Awaas+ survey pipeline, DBT payment systems, RTI Act 2005 procedures |
| Sources | pmayg.nic.in (AwaasSoft MIS), pib.gov.in (PMAY-G press releases), rural.gov.in (Ministry of Rural Development), awassoft.nic.in (AwaasSoft portal), indiapost.gov.in (SBM-G convergence) |
| Last verified | 10 July 2026 |
| Accuracy note | All status stages, assistance amounts, and RTI procedures cross-checked against the official PMAY-G / AwaasSoft portal and the RTI Act, 2005. State-wise survey windows change frequently — always confirm live dates on pmayg.nic.in. |
What "Awaas+ 2.0" actually is
Awaas+ 2.0 is not a new scheme. It is the upgraded Awaas+ mobile app (the version that added Aadhaar e-KYC and face authentication for household self-survey), launched by the Ministry of Rural Development (MoRD) in September 2024. The self-survey window opened on 15 January 2025.
Its job is narrow but important. The original Pradhan Mantri Awaas Yojana — Gramin (PMAY-G) wait list was built from the SECC 2011 (Socio-Economic and Caste Census) data. Lakhs of genuinely kachcha-house families were either missed in 2011 or became eligible later. Awaas+ is the exclusion survey that lets those left-out rural families get into the PMAY-G list — and the 2.0 app is the first time a family member could run that survey themselves on a phone, instead of waiting for an enumerator.
So there are two ways your record can enter the system:
- Self-survey — any family member with a smartphone installs the AwaasPlus app, does Aadhaar face-authentication and fills the household form.
- Enumerator survey — a Panchayat Rozgar Sevak / Sahayak visits, opens the same app and records the household.
Either way, the data feeds the same verification pipeline. This page is about tracking what happens after the form is submitted — the part most people cannot see.
For the broader housing scheme context, see PMAY 2026 complete guide, housing and basic needs schemes in India, and how to apply for PMAY-G via Awaas+.
Also on RTI Wiki: RTI for your business · Filing RTI from abroad (NRI guide)
The four status stages — and what each means
Your Awaas+ self-survey status pipeline
① Submitted — form saved and synced in the AwaasPlus app; a registration / application reference is generated.
② Pending verification — a Panchayat or Block official has to physically check the house (kachcha walls + roof, photo, geo-tag) and confirm you meet PMAY-G criteria.
③ Gram Sabha approval — the verified list is read out and ratified in the Gram Sabha; objections are heard here.
④ Awaas+ Permanent Wait List — your name is added to the PMAY-G wait list on AwaasSoft. Only after this do sanction and installments follow.
Note: a status of “submitted” in the app means the data reached the server — it does not mean you are approved or that money is coming. Approval happens at stage ④, and even then a house is sanctioned by priority and annual targets, not instantly. As of 2026 the survey window itself has been extended several times and runs on a state-by-state basis (for example, Andhra Pradesh extended its window to 5 November 2025), so always confirm the live date for your state on pmayg.nic.in.
How to check your Awaas+ self-survey status
You have three ways to track it. Use whichever you have access to.
1. Check inside the AwaasPlus app
- Open the AwaasPlus app on the phone you registered with.
- Log in as Self-Survey using the registered mobile number and Aadhaar OTP / face authentication.
- Open your saved household survey. The app shows whether the record is synced (uploaded) and the registration reference. Note this reference down — you need it everywhere else.
2. Check on the PMAY-G portal (AwaasSoft)
- Go to pmayg.nic.in (the PMAY-G / AwaasSoft portal).
- Open AwaasSoft → Report (the “e-FMS / Social Audit Reports” area).
- Use the beneficiary / registration search and enter your PMAY-G registration number and the captcha.
- If your name has reached stage ④, you will see your beneficiary record — name, sanction status and installment details. If nothing shows, your survey is still at stage ① to ③.
3. Check the state Awaas+ / beneficiary list
Many states publish a village-wise Awaas+ provisional list through the Panchayat. Ask your Gram Panchayat Sachiv to show the latest verified list, or check the state PMAY-G dashboard. If your name is on the provisional list, you have cleared verification (stage ②–③).
For a step-by-step on reading the published list, see the PMAY-G beneficiary list guide and the older IAY/PMAY-G beneficiary status walkthrough.
What does each survey status mean — and what should you do?
When you check your status on the AwaasPlus app or on AwaasSoft, you may see one of several values. Each one tells you exactly where in the pipeline your application is and what action you should take next. The table below maps every common status to its meaning and the recommended next step:
| Status you may see | What it may mean | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| Submitted / Synced | Your self-survey data was uploaded to the server. A registration reference was generated. | Write down the reference number. Wait for field verification (stage ②). |
| Pending Verification | The survey has been received but no official has physically verified your house yet. | Wait 2–4 weeks. If no movement, contact the Gram Panchayat Sachiv. |
| Under Verification | A Panchayat Rozgar Sevak or Block official has been assigned and is checking your house. | Cooperate with the verifier — keep photos and kachcha-house proof ready. |
| Verified — Pending Gram Sabha | Field check is complete; the name is queued for the next Gram Sabha ratification. | Attend the Gram Sabha sitting to answer any objections. |
| Gram Sabha Approved | Your name was ratified and forwarded for inclusion in the Awaas+ Permanent Wait List. | Wait for the name to appear on AwaasSoft. Check pmayg.nic.in periodically. |
| Awaas+ Permanent Wait List | Your name is now on the PMAY-G wait list on AwaasSoft. Sanction will follow by priority. | Monitor AwaasSoft for sanction. Ensure bank / Aadhaar seeding is active. |
| Rejected | The survey was rejected — reason may be duplicate, pucca house, or eligibility failure. | Ask the BDO office for the rejection reason in writing. Consider RTI if no response. |
| Not Found / No Record | Either the registration number is wrong, or the survey was never synced to the server. | Check the registration number. Try searching by mobile number on the app. |
Tip: The most common “stuck” status is Pending Verification. This means the survey was received but never assigned to a field officer. This is exactly the scenario an RTI to the BDO unblocks — see the sample RTI section below.
Documents and details to keep ready
- AwaasPlus registration / application reference number (from the app).
- Aadhaar of the head of family (used for the self-survey e-KYC).
- Registered mobile number linked to that Aadhaar.
- Bank account / Jan Dhan passbook in the head of family's name (for later DBT). Verify Aadhaar-bank linking with this DBT Aadhaar seeding check guide.
- Ration card and a photo of the kachcha house, in case re-verification is asked for.
For the full document checklist for a PMAY-G application, see PMAY documents required.
When will your Awaas+ survey get verified — timeline explained
There is no fixed national timeline for Awaas+ verification — the speed depends entirely on your state, district, block, and the local Panchayat's activity level. However, based on MoRD operational guidelines and field experience, here is a realistic expectation:
| Stage | Typical time frame | What affects the speed |
|---|---|---|
| Submitted → Assigned for verification | 1–4 weeks | Block office backlog; availability of Rozgar Sevak / Sahayak |
| Assigned → Field verification visit | 1–3 weeks | Distance to village; weather; verifier workload |
| Verified → Gram Sabha approval | 2–8 weeks | Frequency of Gram Sabha sittings (usually quarterly) |
| Gram Sabha → Awaas+ Permanent Wait List | 2–6 weeks | Data upload to AwaasSoft; DRDA processing |
| Total: Submitted to Wait List | 2–6 months (typical) | State efficiency; objections; data corrections |
Why delays happen. The most common bottleneck is the first step — the survey is submitted but the Block office never assigns a verifier. With limited field staff and multiple schemes running simultaneously, an Awaas+ survey can sit “submitted” for months without any action. This is not unique to your village; it is a systemic capacity issue. Filing an RTI asking who was assigned your survey and when is the single most effective way to force action.
Illustrative example — when "submitted" sat still for two months
Illustrative example. Names changed; figures reflect standard PMAY-G norms.
A daily-wage family in a village in Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, did their own Awaas+ self-survey in February 2025 — their nephew installed the AwaasPlus app, completed the Aadhaar face-authentication and uploaded photos of their one-room mud house. The app showed “submitted” and a registration reference.
“We thought the house was approved. Two months passed, nothing. In April we opened the app again — still only 'submitted'. We searched the registration number on pmayg.nic.in under AwaasSoft Report — no beneficiary record. That meant nobody had verified the house yet. We went to the Panchayat Sachiv; he said the Rozgar Sevak had a backlog. We waited two more weeks, then filed a written grievance at the Block office. When that also got no reply, we filed an RTI to the Block Development Officer asking three things: the date our Awaas+ survey was received, the name of the official it was assigned to for verification, and the present status. The reply came in 27 days — the survey had been received but never assigned. After the RTI, a verifier visited within ten days, took fresh geo-tagged photos, and the name reached the Gram Sabha provisional list in the next sitting. By the following quarter the registration number finally showed a sanction on AwaasSoft. The RTI did not create eligibility — it forced the verification that had simply been pending.”
Total government cost of the RTI: ₹10. What it unblocked: the standard PMAY-G assistance of ₹1.20 lakh (plain area; ₹1.30 lakh in hilly / North-East / IAP districts), released in installments by DBT, plus MGNREGA wage convergence and an SBM-G toilet grant.
For a parallel example of how an RTI unblocks a stalled PMAY installment, see RTI for a delayed PMAY installment and PMAY status stuck or subsidy delayed — how to file an RTI.
Common reasons an Awaas+ survey gets stuck
- Never assigned for verification. The most common one — the self-survey is submitted but no official is sent to check the house. (This is exactly what an RTI surfaces.)
- Aadhaar / name mismatch. The name in the survey does not match Aadhaar or the bank account, so verification cannot be completed.
- House looked “pucca” on the photo. If the uploaded photo is unclear, a verifier may mark the house ineligible. Keep proof of the kachcha structure.
- Gram Sabha objection. A name can be removed at the Gram Sabha stage; attend the sitting so you can answer objections.
- Survey done in the wrong window. If the state window had closed, a fresh self-survey may not have been accepted — check the live date for your state on pmayg.nic.in.
- Duplicate / already in SECC list. If the family is already on the old list, the new survey is rejected as a duplicate.
If your survey was rejected rather than stuck, see PMAY name not in list / rejection — complaint and RTI guide for appeal options.
What to do if your survey shows "Rejected" — appeal options
A “Rejected” status is not the end of the road. Rejections can be challenged through a structured escalation path. Here is the sequence:
- Step 1 — Ask for the reason in writing. Visit the Block office (BDO) and request the recorded rejection reason. You are entitled to this under the PMAY-G operational guidelines.
- Step 2 — File a grievance. Submit a written grievance to the BDO with evidence (photos of kachcha house, Aadhaar, ration card). Keep a stamped copy.
- Step 3 — Escalate to the District level. If the Block does not respond in 30 days, escalate to the Additional District Collector / DRDA Project Director at the district headquarters.
- Step 4 — File an RTI. If still no resolution, file an RTI to the BDO / DRDA asking for the rejection reason, the file notings, and the official who decided. See the sample RTI below — adapt it for a rejection.
- Step 5 — Gram Sabha representation. A fresh survey can sometimes be accepted if the Gram Sabha recommends re-inclusion in the next cycle.
Common rejection reasons and whether they can be challenged:
| Rejection reason | Can you challenge it? | How |
|---|---|---|
| House marked “pucca” (but it is kachcha) | Yes — provide fresh photos, geo-tagged evidence | File grievance with photos; request re-verification |
| Duplicate (already in SECC 2011 list) | Partially — check if SECC record is correct | Search your name in the PMAY-G beneficiary list; if the SECC entry belongs to a different family, file correction |
| Aadhaar / name mismatch | Yes — update Aadhaar or bank records first | Correct the mismatch, then request re-verification |
| Survey done after window closed | Unlikely — wait for next window | Monitor pmayg.nic.in for extended dates |
| Gram Sabha objection | Yes — attend next Gram Sabha with evidence | Request the Sarpanch to place item on agenda |
Which states have the most Awaas+ coverage — and how to check yours?
PMAY-G / Awaas+ operates across all states and UTs, but survey progress varies significantly. States with stronger rural development infrastructure and active Panchayati Raj institutions tend to process surveys faster. Below is an approximate coverage overview based on MoRD / AwaasSoft data as of early 2026:
| State | Awaas+ survey activity | How to check your state list |
|---|---|---|
| Uttar Pradesh | Highest volume — lakhs of self-surveys submitted | See PMAY status Uttar Pradesh |
| Bihar | High activity; large rural housing gap | See PMAY status Bihar |
| Maharashtra | Active survey; strong Panchayat network | See PMAY status Maharashtra |
| Tamil Nadu | Moderate; state-specific housing schemes also running | See PMAY status Tamil Nadu |
| Rajasthan | High; Bhamashah / Jan Aadhaar integration | See PMAY status Rajasthan |
| Madhya Pradesh | High; active DBT infrastructure | See PMAY status Madhya Pradesh |
| Karnataka | Moderate; Bhoomi / FRUITS integration | See PMAY status Karnataka |
| Gujarat | Moderate; state housing schemes supplement | See PMAY status Gujarat |
Remember: The survey window is not the same in every state. Some states extend their window beyond the national deadline. Always check the current status for your state on pmayg.nic.in or ask your Gram Panchayat Sachiv. For Hindi-language users, the guide PMAY status (Hindi) walks through the same process.
For the complete list of all state-wise PMAY status pages, start from the PMAY 2026 complete guide.
AwaasPlus 2.0 app vs PMAY Urban — which scheme are you in?
A common source of confusion is that “PMAY” covers two completely separate schemes: PMAY-Gramin (rural, which uses Awaas+) and PMAY-Urban (cities/towns, which uses a different application portal). Your self-survey through the AwaasPlus app is only for PMAY-Gramin. If you live in an urban area, you need a different process entirely.
| Feature | PMAY-Gramin (Awaas+ 2.0) | PMAY-Urban (PMAY-U 2.0) |
|---|---|---|
| Who is it for? | Rural households with kachcha houses | Urban poor (EWS / LIG categories) |
| How to apply? | AwaasPlus app self-survey or enumerator | Online portal at pmay-urban portal |
| Assistance amount | ₹1.20 lakh (plain) / ₹1.30 lakh (hilly/NE/IAP) | Varies by component (Rs 2.67 lakh average CLSS) |
| Verification | Field visit + Gram Sabha | Municipal body scrutiny |
| Status check | pmayg.nic.in / AwaasSoft | Separate urban portal |
| RTI jurisdiction | BDO / DRDA / MoRD | Municipal corporation / MoHUA |
If you are in an urban area and your PMAY name is not appearing, see PMAY Urban 2.0 name not in list — complaint and RTI guide and PMAY Urban 2.0 status 2026. For the full comparison and to find out which scheme applies to you, see how to apply for PMAY Urban vs Gramin and how to apply for a PMAY CLSS home loan.
Sample RTI when your survey is stuck
If your status has been “submitted / pending verification” for weeks and the Block office gives no answer, this RTI under the RTI Act, 2005 forces a paper trail. File it with the PIO, Office of the Block Development Officer (BDO) of your block.
To,
The Public Information Officer,
Office of the Block Development Officer,
[Block name], [District], [State]
Subject: Information under Section 6(1) of the RTI Act, 2005 regarding my
Awaas+ (PMAY-G) self-survey
Sir/Madam,
Under Section 6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005, please provide:
1. The date on which my Awaas+ self-survey bearing registration/reference
number ______________ (Aadhaar-linked mobile: __________) was received
in your office records.
2. The name and designation of the official to whom my survey was assigned
for field verification, and the date of such assignment.
3. The present status of my survey - verified / pending / rejected - and if
rejected, the recorded reason and the file notings, certified under
Section 2(j).
4. The date on which my name was or will be placed before the Gram Sabha.
I am below the poverty line and request fee exemption under Section 7(5).
[If not BPL: IPO/DD for Rs 10 is enclosed.]
If the information is held by another public authority, please transfer this
application under Section 6(3) within 5 days and inform me.
Place: Yours faithfully,
Date: [Name]
[Address, mobile]
Reply is due in 30 days under Section 7(1). No reply, or an evasive one, lets you file a first appeal within 30 days of that deadline. Use the AI RTI Drafter to adapt this letter, and the Timeline Tracker to track your 30-day clock. For the full procedure of an RTI to a Panchayat / Block, see how to file an RTI to a Gram Panchayat.
If you are BPL, the RTI fee is waived — see how to claim the RTI fee waiver for BPL.
For more RTI templates related to PMAY, see RTI for PMAY status, RTI for PMAY application stuck, and PMAY status RTI guide.
What to do in the next 30 minutes
- Open the AwaasPlus app and confirm your survey shows “submitted / synced” — and write down the registration reference.
- Search that reference on pmayg.nic.in → AwaasSoft → Report. If no record shows, your survey is still pre-verification.
- Ask your Gram Panchayat Sachiv whether your name is on the latest provisional Awaas+ list.
- If it has been stuck for weeks, draft the RTI to the BDO above and post it today.
- Confirm the live survey window for your state on pmayg.nic.in before assuming the survey has closed.
Who runs the Awaas+ survey and PMAY-G — and where does the money come from?
The Awaas+ survey and PMAY-G involve multiple government departments at three levels — central, state, and district. Understanding the jurisdiction helps you know where to go and where to file an RTI if something goes wrong.
| Level | Department / Body | Role in PMAY-G / Awaas+ | .gov.in source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Central | Ministry of Rural Development (MoRD) | Policy, funding (60:40 central-state share), AwaasSoft MIS | rural.gov.in |
| Central | AwaasSoft / PMAY-G portal | Online MIS, beneficiary data, reports | pmayg.nic.in |
| Central | Press Information Bureau (PIB) | Official announcements, scheme extensions | pib.gov.in |
| Central | India.gov.in National Portal | Citizen-facing scheme information | india.gov.in |
| Central | AwaasSoft MIS server | Backend data management | awassoft.nic.in |
| District | District Rural Development Agency (DRDA) | District-level implementation, fund flow | Contact via BDO office |
| Block | Block Development Officer (BDO) | Survey assignment, verification, grievance | File RTI here |
| Village | Gram Panchayat / Gram Sabha | Field verification, list ratification, objections | Attend Gram Sabha sittings |
Funding structure. PMAY-G assistance is shared 60:40 between the Centre and States (90:10 in North-Eastern and Himalayan states). The unit assistance of ₹1.20 lakh / ₹1.30 lakh is released in installments via DBT to the Aadhaar-linked bank account. MGNREGA provides wage convergence for construction labour (₹90–95 days of work), and a separate SBM-G (Swachh Bharat Mission — Gramin) toilet grant of ₹12,000 is attached. For MGNREGA convergence, see MGNREGA job card status 2026.
How does Awaas+ compare to other rural housing support?
Awaas+ / PMAY-G is the flagship rural housing scheme, but several other programs provide housing-related support to rural and marginalised families. Knowing the differences helps you identify if you qualify for additional or alternative assistance:
| Feature | PMAY-G (Awaas+) | PM-Kisan | BOCW Board | SVAMITVA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Housing construction assistance | Income support for farmers | Welfare for construction workers | Property card / legal title |
| Assistance | ₹1.20–1.30 lakh (housing) | ₹6,000/year (income) | Varies by state (insurance, pension, loan) | Property documentation |
| Who qualifies? | Rural kachcha-house families | Land-owning farmer families | Registered construction workers | Rural residents in abadi areas |
| How to apply? | AwaasPlus app self-survey | PM-Kisan portal / CSC | State BOCW Board registration | Drone survey + local body |
| Status check | pmayg.nic.in / AwaasSoft | pmkisan.gov.in | State BOCW portal | SVAMITVA portal |
| Related RTI Wiki page | You are here | PM-Kisan guide | BOCW guide | SVAMITVA guide |
For the broader landscape of rural welfare schemes, see RTI for rural citizens and the citizen RTI playbook.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q. Is a “submitted” status in the AwaasPlus app the same as approval?
No. “Submitted” only means your self-survey data reached the server. Approval happens after field verification and Gram Sabha ratification, when your name is added to the Awaas+ Permanent Wait List on AwaasSoft. Always check the registration number on pmayg.nic.in to see whether a beneficiary record actually exists.
Q. How do I check my Awaas+ survey status online?
Go to pmayg.nic.in, open AwaasSoft → Report, and search using your PMAY-G registration number and captcha. You can also log in to the AwaasPlus app as Self-Survey with your registered mobile and Aadhaar authentication to see whether the record is synced.
Q. I did the self-survey but my name is nowhere. What now?
That usually means the survey was submitted but never sent for verification. Ask the Panchayat Sachiv first. If there is no movement, file a written grievance at the Block office, and if that fails, file an RTI to the Block Development Officer asking the date received, the official assigned and the present status.
Q. What is the last date for the Awaas+ self-survey?
There is no single national date — the window has been extended several times and runs state-by-state. For example, some states extended into late 2025. Always confirm the current date for your own state on pmayg.nic.in or with your Gram Panchayat, because a survey done after the state window closes may not be accepted.
Q. How much assistance do I get if I am selected through Awaas+?
Under PMAY-G the unit assistance is ₹1.20 lakh in plain areas and ₹1.30 lakh in hilly states, North-East and IAP / LWE districts, released in installments by DBT to the Aadhaar-linked account, with MGNREGA wage convergence for the labour and a separate SBM-G toilet grant.
Q. Can I edit my Awaas+ self-survey after submitting it?
Minor corrections (family members, photographs) can sometimes be made through the app or via the Panchayat before verification. After the record is verified or placed before the Gram Sabha, changes need the Block office. Keep your Aadhaar, name and bank details consistent to avoid a mismatch holding up verification.
Q. Does an RTI guarantee I will get a house?
No. An RTI cannot create eligibility or jump the queue. What it does is force a paper trail — the date your survey was received, who was responsible and why it is stuck. In practice that is enough to get a stalled verification moving, because the office must now answer on record.
Q. Who runs the Awaas+ survey and PMAY-G?
The scheme is run by the Ministry of Rural Development (MoRD), Government of India, through the AwaasSoft MIS and the AwaasPlus app, and implemented on the ground by the District Rural Development Agency (DRDA), Block (BDO) and Gram Panchayat. The Gram Sabha ratifies the list.
Q. My Awaas+ survey shows “Rejected” — what can I do?
Ask the BDO office for the rejection reason in writing first. Common fixable reasons include the house being wrongly marked “pucca” (provide fresh geo-tagged photos) or an Aadhaar/name mismatch (correct the records and request re-verification). If the Block office does not respond, file a grievance and then an RTI. See the appeal options section above.
Q. Is Awaas+ for rural areas or also for cities?
Awaas+ 2.0 is only for rural areas (PMAY-Gramin). If you live in a city or town, you need PMAY-Urban 2.0, which has a separate application process and portal. See how to apply for PMAY Urban vs Gramin and PMAY Urban 2.0 status 2026.
Q. Can I do the Awaas+ self-survey from someone else's phone?
Yes, you can install the AwaasPlus app on any Android phone and log in as Self-Survey using the registered mobile number and Aadhaar authentication. The survey is linked to the head of family's Aadhaar, not the phone. However, always use a trusted phone and log out after completing the survey.
Q. How long does the entire Awaas+ process take — from survey to house sanction?
There is no fixed timeline, but typically: verification takes 2–6 weeks, Gram Sabha approval 2–8 weeks, and inclusion in the Permanent Wait List another 2–6 weeks. After that, sanction depends on annual targets and priority. Realistically, expect 2–6 months from survey submission to wait-list inclusion. See the timeline section for details.
Q. Can I check Awaas+ status without the registration number?
It is difficult but not impossible. On the AwaasPlus app, you can log in with the registered mobile number + Aadhaar OTP to retrieve your saved survey. On AwaasSoft, the search requires a registration number. If you have lost the number, ask the Gram Panchayat Sachiv — they can look it up in the village-level survey records.
Sources
- Ministry of Rural Development — PMAY-G / AwaasSoft portal: pmayg.nic.in
- AwaasPlus survey information (official): pmayg.nic.in/infoapp.html
- AwaasSoft MIS backend: awassoft.nic.in
- Ministry of Rural Development (parent ministry): rural.gov.in
- Press Information Bureau — PMAY-G announcements: pib.gov.in
- India.gov.in National Portal — scheme information: india.gov.in
- Right to Information Act, 2005 — Sections 6(1), 6(3), 7(1), 7(5): see The RTI Playbook
Related on RTI Wiki
Reader signal
Was this article useful?
Tap once if it helped you. These counters show other citizens which pages are worth reading.