Since 1986

ACCOMMODATION
TIMES

India's oldest knowledge based newspaper on Real Estate

ACCOMMODATION TIMES INSTITUTE
OF REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT
Offering Management Courses
$ Diploma in Real Estate Management
$ Diploma in Real Estate Finance
$ Diploma in Real Estate Marketing :Click or Call :  91-22-26173827

ISO Certification in Real Estate
4th Oct 07
 At University of Mumbai Kalina

CHENNAI.....Good investment opportunities in all the segment of the city. Commercial rentals is on fast trek. Residential segment also having very good demand from rural areas. Outskirts of the city is now more costly then CBD residential areas.   AHMEDABAD..... ..... Huge NRI funds were recently invested in residential segment of the city. Commercial too is feeling the heat. Residential rates are marginally up by 20% since last quarter. The trend is likely to continue.   BANGALORE...... ...IT and ITES are again in the buying spree. Residential complexes are getting good demand. NRIs investments are up again. Service apartment concept is catching up in the city. Commercial lease rentals are rising.   PUNE.... ... Pune is poised as IT centre by the developers. In fact many leading IT brands are in the city. It has enhanced the residential rates. Outskirts like Viman Nagar, Pimpari and Chinchwad also now having great demand. Good time ahead.   DELHI .... ...The market is slow for residential units. Noida and Gurgaon also have touched historic level. New zones are in the competition. Faridabad and Merut along with Rohtak are busy catering for demand in Delhi and NCR    MUMBAI.. ..... ..Realty Fund and investors of large real estate holdings are still maintaining the price level. Developing zones are feeling heat. Small pocket developers are also panic in the market. Residential prices stagnated as of now.

Home

Property Rates

Projects

Research

News

Indian Cities

Archives



No tax on rental income

By Staff Reporter

Draft National Housing Policy has strongly suggested that there shall not be any tax on rental income from house property in the country. The policy has also suggested that the house tax must be uniform across that country. With the intention of rationalizing the housing scenario in the country, government of India has tabled that draft National Housing Policy.

National Housing and Habitat Policy, 1998, was formulated to provide the shelter besides rationalization of Stamp Duty and strongly recommending to repeal the ULC Act. Now, the new Draft National Housing Policy has been promulgated to restore the loosing interest in housing and making affordable. The policy also has suggested that those residential properties are in use for commercial purposes shall be charged extra tax.

These tax incentives are offered to open the close doors in urban accommodation for renting. The policy has recommended that that all the state Rent Control Act must abolished.

According to the statistic of 2001 census, another 130 crore people will migrate to urban areas in next decade as employment in the agriculture sector is loosing its trend. Hence the government is planning to open the rental accommodation for the new migrants to the urban centre by way of providing the incentives to the rental income.

The draft policy also states that 15.8 million dwellings across the country remain unoccupied / locked up, thanks to the prohibitive Rent Control Act and property taxes.

As part of its attempt to free up housing, the Government intend to discourage aging couples from occupying big houses. It will encourage older people to shift to smaller houses which provide them security and just enough space to suit their needs.

Even then 3.5 per cent additional land would be needed to accommodate the swelling population. Of the additional land to be developed for new housing projects, 20-25 per cent housing stock has to be earmarked for economically backward city/ household service providers.

The draft National Housing Policy has been formulated after due delegations and research on housing status in the country.