E - PAPER

CURRENT MONTH

LAST MONTH

VIEW ALL
  • HOME
  • NEWS ROOM
  • COVER STORY
  • INTERVIEWS
  • DRAWING BOARD
  • PROJECT WATCH
  • SPOTLIGHT
  • BUILDING BLOCKS
  • BRAND SYNC
  • VIDEOS
  • HAPPENINGS
  • E-MAGAZINE
  • EVENTS
search
  1. Home
  2. Interviews

How to Get Best Return from Real Estate Investment

Aman Gupta, Director, RPS Group gives tips on the mistakes to be avoided while making investment in real estate.

BY Realty Plus
Published - Wednesday, 09 Mar, 2022
How to Get Best Return from Real Estate Investment

Buying real estate for the purpose of investment, earning hefty long term profit is the key incentive. However, buying property without considering a few important factors like calculating full cost may hurt your actual return expectations, or worse make loss.

To ensure that you do not make losses while selling property or even end up being saddled with an illiquid investment, here are a few key mistakes to avoid while investing in the real estate:

  1. Credit Score

Applying for property loans invites lenders to investigate your credit history. If there is a problem in your credit history, your application may get rejected or you might be offered loans at a higher rate.

If your credit score is 750 or more, the best loan rates are offered by the lenders. If your CIBIL score is more than 700, you can get a home loan of Rs 2 crores at about 6.7 percent interest, which of course can shoot up to 7.5 per cent if your CIBIL score is less than 600. You will save about Rs 24 lakhs if your credit score is a top notch play.

  1. Full cost of real estate

The real cost of a property should be calculated before you buy any property. One should ensure GST, registration, stamp duty, brokerage, furnishing, cost of borrowing etc. This can push your costing 25-35 percent higher. There are additional costs that may vary from one place to another and the location of the project.

For an under construction property, the buyer needs to pay GST at 5 percent, 5 to7 percent for registration and stamp duty depending upon the state norms. If you are buying a house worth Rs 1 crore, assume the furniture cost to be around Rs 7 lakhs, i.e. 7 percent of your price. So the actual cost of Rs 1 crore turns out to Rs 1.25-1.3 crore in real terms for the buyer.

Apart from this, lenders are willing to fund 75 percent of high value loans or upto 90 percent low value loans. So if you believe that your Rs 10-20 lakhs are enough, then do not fall prey to it. The additional burden of Rs 30-50 is to be borne from your end.

  1. Skimping on Research

Before buying a new smartphone, when we often compare various models and choose the one that fits our requirements. The same goes for real estate, which demands a more rigorous due diligence ranging from the construction, design, location, disaster zone, reason for selling, facilities nearby, growth opportunities, commuting problems and more.

The buyer must know the objective of purchase. They must look if they are looking for a home to live or a place to rent for. Also, if you are willing to resale it, how long are you planning to hold it? Also, you must understand that real estate needs regular maintenance and renovations, which need additional capital from your pockets. Clarity on these pointers can ease your job.

  1. Impulsive buying

A buyer should not jump the gun if they like a property, which has its own consequences. Before selection, consider the factors of costs, paperwork along with your return expectation from the property. Do not overlook the same details by blindly trusting anyone, which can lead you to troubles. Timing is key to everything in life and a real estate deal is no different.

Impulsive buying can happen if one has insufficient resistance to sales pitches or the buyer is wooed by the freebies which have least to do with the property. For any unethical dealer, high commission is the key incentive to sell an inappropriate property.

  1. Comparison of return with other investments

Purely as an investment, it is much easier to put your money in the far cheaper financial instruments such as mutual funds, small savings or equity. The cost and barrier in such financial investing is almost negligible. The service charge, annual account cost, brokerage and expense ratio is too low in such asset classes. Also, these investments are highly liquid.

On the other hand, real estate investments require you to pay property tax, maintenance cost and renovation. Along with it, real estate investment is highly illiquid and the prices are not usually fixed for the same or similar asset. However, real estate is a social status symbol and even the most preferred investment class in the country.

The bottom line

If investing in real estate was so easy, everybody would be snapping their fingers. Fortunately, many of the struggles investors endure can be avoided with due diligence and proper planning before a contract is signed.

RELATED STORY VIEW MORE

Designing Workspaces for Gen Z
Samruddhi Mahamarg: Catalyst for Economic Transformation
Thane’s Sustainable Transformation

TOP STORY VIEW MORE

Samruddhi Mahamarg: Catalyst for Economic Transformation

As per Aayush Madhusudan Agrawal, Founder & Director Inspira Realty, the 701 km six-lane expressway is not just a road, but an economic corridor.

04 July, 2025

Malabar Gold & Diamonds Opens its Largest Manufacturing Site In Hyderabad

04 July, 2025

Navi Mumbai Major Milestone: Raheja Universal Rs 1,726 Cr Sales of Solaris Project

04 July, 2025

NEWS LETTER

Subscribe for our news letter


E - PAPER


  • CURRENT MONTH

  • LAST MONTH

Subscribe To Realty+ online




Get connected with us on social networks!
ABOUT REALTY+

Started in 2004, Realty+, an exchange4media group publication is one of the most respected real estate magazines in India with offices in Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru.

Useful links

HOME

NEWS ROOM

COVER STORY

INTERVIEWS

DRAWING BOARD

PROJECT WATCH

SPOTLIGHT

BUILDING BLOCKS

BRAND SYNC

VIDEOS

HAPPENINGS

E-MAGAZINE

EVENTS

OTHER LINKS

TERMS AND CONDITIONS

PRIVACY-POLICY

COOKIE-POLICY

GDPR-COMPLIANCE

SITE MAP

REFUND POLICY

Contact

Mediasset Holdings 3'rd Floor, D-40, Sector-2, Noida (Uttar Pradesh), Pincode - 201301

tripti@exchange4media.com
realtyplus@exchange4media.com

+91 98200 10226


Copyright © 2024 Mediasset Holdings.
Rental Mobil bandung,Sewa Mobil Bandung, Rental bandung, Sewa Mobil, Jual Mesin Antrian, Harga Mesin Antrian, Mesin Antrian Murah, Jual KIOSK,Mesin Antri, Berita Terkini, Info Bray,Info Tempat Wisata,Portal Berita,Jasa Website