Builder Delays Maintenance Transfer: A Worked Takeover, Step by Step
Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Take a real-shaped example. A Bengaluru project, 180 flats averaging 1,200 sq ft, so 2,16,000 sq ft in all. At possession in 2024 the builder collected 24 months of advance maintenance at Rs 3 per sq ft per month: Rs 86,400 per flat, roughly Rs 1.56 crore in total. The owners registered their association under the Karnataka Societies Registration Act in month 14 and asked to take over. The builder stalled for four more months, then offered a “handover” with a single sheet showing a nil balance.
The association refused to sign and instead demanded a reconciliation. The arithmetic looked like this: 18 months of collections held, Rs 1.56 crore received in advance, plus actuals billed to late possessions. Audited expense statements showed average running costs of Rs 5.9 lakh per month, about Rs 1.06 crore over 18 months. That left roughly Rs 50 lakh of unspent advance plus bank interest that had to move to the association's account, along with six months of advance still unexpired for most flats. The “nil balance” sheet had quietly absorbed the surplus into unexplained “admin charges”. A written demand for the bank statements settled the question in the association's favour.
The lesson: maintenance transfer is an accounting event, not a key ceremony. Never accept a closing figure you cannot recompute from collections minus audited expenses.
What the law expects from the builder
- Under Section 11(4)(d) of the RERA Act, 2016, the promoter must provide and maintain essential services, on reasonable charges, until maintenance is taken over by the association of allottees.
- Under Section 11(4)(g), the promoter pays all outgoings, including municipal taxes, water and electricity charges, until he transfers physical possession. Amounts he collected from allottees for outgoings but did not pay remain his liability, with interest.
- Advance maintenance collected from buyers is purpose-tied money. On takeover, the usual position is that the unspent balance and unexpired advance transfer to the association, supported by audited accounts.
So the builder cannot keep running maintenance indefinitely against the association's wishes, and he cannot exit while keeping the surplus.
The takeover sequence
- Fix a takeover date in writing. The association resolves to take over maintenance from a named date, typically the start of a month, and notifies the builder by email and registered post with 30 days notice.
- Demand the reconciliation pack: flat-wise collection register, audited income and expenditure for the builder-run period, bank statements of the maintenance account, list of defaulting flats with amounts, and the unexpired advance position per flat.
- Map the transferables: staff list with wage records and EPF/ESI registrations where applicable, vendor and AMC contracts (lifts, DG sets, STP, fire systems, housekeeping, security), utility connections and meters with security deposits, common-area keys and access systems.
- Joint verification. Walk the property and the books together. Record meter readings and diesel stock on the takeover date. Sign an item-wise handover memo; put disputed figures in a disagreement annexure rather than holding up the takeover.
- Switch the money flows. Open the association's bank account early, tell all owners in writing to pay maintenance only to the association from the takeover date, and ask the builder to stop billing from that date.
- Post-takeover claims. Pursue the unspent balance, interest and unpaid outgoings as a money claim: first a demand, then RERA for a registered project, or the consumer or civil route otherwise.
If the builder simply refuses to let go
Some builders keep billing through their facility agency because maintenance is profitable and control delays other handovers. Then:
- File a complaint with your state RERA authority (K-RERA in the example) citing Section 11(4)(d): the association has taken over or is ready to, and the promoter is obstructing. Ask for a direction to hand over maintenance, accounts and the surplus, with penalty.
- Where RERA does not apply, the association can move the consumer commission for deficiency in service, or the registrar under the state act where the dispute is with a society organ.
- Keep paying nothing to two parallel billers. Owners should pay the association once it lawfully takes over; document that instruction, because the builder's agency may threaten service cuts. Disconnection threats over disputed control are worth recording and raising in the complaint, and if essential supply is actually cut, see electricity connection problems at possession.
Where RTI helps
The builder's books are private, but takeover disputes touch public records:
- BESCOM or your DISCOM, and the water board: in whose name the common-area connections stand, arrears on those meters, and security deposits. Builders sometimes leave lakhs of unpaid common-meter bills behind; an RTI reply showing arrears on the takeover date is strong evidence for your money claim.
- Municipal corporation (BBMP in the example): property tax payment status for unsold flats and common areas during the builder-run period, which Section 11(4)(g) keeps on the builder.
- Registrar of Societies and the state RERA: your association's filed records, and the promoter's project filings.
Use RTI online or the state RTI portal, and a first appeal for silence.
FAQs
The builder says he will transfer maintenance only after selling the last flats. Valid?
No. The trigger is the association's readiness to take over, not his sales. For unsold flats the builder pays maintenance to the association like any other member.
Some owners never paid the builder's maintenance bills. Do we inherit those arrears?
Get the flat-wise defaulter list in the handover pack. Arrears for the builder-run period are generally the builder's to recover unless assigned to the association in writing; do not let an unverified arrears figure inflate the closing settlement either way.
Must we absorb the builder's housekeeping and security staff?
No legal compulsion in most cases; the staff usually belong to the builder's agency. Decide on merit, but verify EPF and ESI compliance before taking anyone on the association's rolls.
The builder claims maintenance ran at a deficit and the association owes him money.
Possible but provable only with audited statements and bank records. Demand them, recompute, and treat unsupported deficit claims as a negotiating tactic. RERA complaints have a way of shrinking such deficits.
What happens to the corpus during maintenance takeover?
The corpus or IFMS is a separate reserve and follows its own handover with interest. That dispute has its own guide: corpus and accounts handover.
Can individual owners refuse to pay anyone until the dispute settles?
Risky. Services still cost money and non-payment hurts the association's case. Pay the lawful biller, in most takeovers the association from the notified date, and keep receipts.
Related guides
Download the maintenance takeover checklist (PDF).
Builder delays maintenance and transfer: How to complain and get compensation?
When a builder delays maintenance and transfer of a residential project — complete guide for homebuyers:
- Step 1: The problem. (a) after possession (the builder gives possession — but does not complete the remaining work — like the clubhouse, the swimming pool, the internal roads, the street lights, the street trees), (b) maintenance (the builder continues to maintain the project — and charges a high maintenance fee — but does not provide proper services — like security, housekeeping, lift maintenance, garden maintenance), © transfer (the builder does not transfer the project to the RWA — the Resident Welfare Association — and continues to control the project — and collect maintenance fees — indefinitely), (d) the issue: the homebuyer is stuck — with an incomplete project — poor maintenance — and no transfer to the RWA — and the builder continues to charge.
- Step 2: Legal rights of the homebuyer. (a) RERA (the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016): (i) the builder must complete the project as per the sanctioned plan — and the amenities promised — within the timeline — as per the agreement, (ii) the builder must transfer the project to the RWA — within the timeline — as per the agreement (typically 5 years — or as per the state RERA rules), (iii) the builder must provide proper maintenance — until the transfer to the RWA, (iv) the homebuyer can file a complaint with RERA (for: (a) incomplete amenities, (b) poor maintenance, © non-transfer to the RWA), (b) the Constitution: the right to life (Article 21) includes the right to a safe and habitable environment — and the builder's failure to maintain — violates the right, © the Consumer Protection Act, 2019: the homebuyer is a consumer — and the builder's failure to provide proper maintenance — is a deficiency of service — and the homebuyer can file a consumer complaint.
- Step 3: How to file a complaint with RERA. (a) file a complaint with the state RERA authority (e.g., MahaRERA for Maharashtra — UPRERA for UP — TS RERA for Telangana — etc. — on the RERA website — or by post), (b) the complaint should include: (i) the project details (the RERA registration number — the project name — the builder name), (ii) the issue (the incomplete amenities — the poor maintenance — the non-transfer to the RWA — with photos and evidence), (iii) the agreement (the sale agreement — and the maintenance agreement — and the promised amenities), (iv) the relief sought (completion of amenities — proper maintenance — transfer to the RWA — and compensation), © the RERA authority will hear the complaint (and can: (i) order the builder to complete the amenities — within a specified timeline, (ii) order the builder to provide proper maintenance, (iii) order the builder to transfer the project to the RWA, (iv) order the builder to pay compensation — to the homebuyers), (d) the RERA's order is binding on the builder (and can be enforced — through the RERA's enforcement mechanism — or through the court).
- Step 4: File RTI. File RTI with the state RERA authority (or the Urban Development Department) asking for: (a) the project status (for [project name] — RERA number [number] — the completion status — the amenities — and the pending work), (b) the maintenance complaints (filed against [builder name] — for [project name] — from [date] to [date] — and the action taken), © the RWA transfer status (for [project name] — whether the builder has transferred the project to the RWA — and the date — and the reasons for non-transfer), (d) the builder's compliance (whether the builder is complying with the RERA order — and the maintenance standards — and the amenities — and the action taken for non-compliance), (e) the occupancy certificate (for [project name] — whether the OC is issued — and the conditions — and the compliance).
- Step 5: Form or strengthen the RWA. (a) the RWA is the key (the RWA can take over the maintenance — and the project — from the builder — and can enforce the builder's obligations), (b) register the RWA (under the state's Cooperative Societies Act — or the Societies Registration Act — or the state's Apartment Ownership Act — as applicable), © the RWA can: (i) demand the transfer (from the builder — under the agreement — and under RERA), (ii) file a complaint with RERA (for non-transfer — and for poor maintenance), (iii) take over the maintenance (if the builder does not maintain — the RWA can take over — and collect the maintenance fee — and provide the services), (iv) file a consumer complaint (for deficiency of service — and claim compensation — for the builder's failure to maintain and transfer), (d) the RWA should have a lawyer (to draft the legal notices — and the complaints — and to represent the RWA — in RERA — and in the consumer court).
- Step 6: Consumer complaint. (a) file a consumer complaint (in the Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission — District, State, or National — depending on the claim amount), (b) the complaint should include: (i) the deficiency (the builder's failure to complete the amenities — and to maintain — and to transfer to the RWA), (ii) the evidence (the sale agreement — the maintenance agreement — the photos — the correspondence — the RERA order — if any), (iii) the relief (completion of amenities — proper maintenance — transfer to the RWA — and compensation — for the mental agony — and the financial loss), © the Commission can: (i) order the builder to complete the amenities, (ii) order the builder to provide proper maintenance, (iii) order the builder to transfer the project to the RWA, (iv) order the builder to pay compensation (Rs 50,000 to Rs 5,00,000 — or more — depending on the loss), (d) Example: A builder in Noida did not complete the clubhouse — and did not transfer the project to the RWA — for 7 years — the RWA filed a complaint with UPRERA — RERA ordered the builder to complete the clubhouse — and to transfer the project to the RWA — within 6 months — and to pay Rs 5,000 per flat per month — as compensation — for the delay — the builder complied — and the RWA took over the maintenance.
- Step 7: Practical tips. (a) document everything (take photos of the incomplete amenities — and the poor maintenance — and keep all correspondence — emails, letters, notices — as evidence), (b) form the RWA early (do not wait for the builder to transfer — form the RWA — and start collecting the maintenance fee — and providing the services — to demonstrate that the RWA is capable), © file RTI early (to get the project status — and the RERA compliance — before the builder destroys the evidence), (d) file a joint complaint (with all the homebuyers — through the RWA — for a stronger case — and lower cost per homebuyer), (e) cite RERA (the RERA Act — and the state RERA rules — and the RERA orders — to strengthen the case), (f) cite the Consumer Protection Act (for deficiency of service — and the compensation).
See Builder Delays Maintenance and Find PIO.
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