The security deposit fight is one of the most predictable events in Indian renting. Tenants who are prepared for it get their money back quickly. Tenants who are not spend months in frustrated negotiations. Getting the deposit back fast requires actions that begin on the day you move in — not on the day you…
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To rent a two-bedroom flat in Bengaluru at ?30,000 per month under the old convention, you needed ?3,00,000 upfront as a security deposit. Three lakh rupees. Before furniture. Before the first month’s rent. Before the broker’s fee. For most working people — even those earning well above average urban salaries — this is a significant…
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Most writing about renting in India tells tenants what to do — read the agreement, document the flat, know your rights. Less is written about why these instructions are necessary in the first place. The reason is structural: the Indian rental market is built around the landlord’s interests. The supply-demand imbalance in metro cities gives…
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Parking in urban Indian apartment buildings is scarce, contested, and frequently mismanaged. Someone parks in your allocated spot. The society decides to charge extra for parking that was included in your purchase. A tenant finds out the parking they were promised is not in the agreement. These are some of the most common and most…
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Most tenants in India are unaware of their rights. They overpay deposits, accept arbitrary rent hikes, avoid complaining about broken things, and leave without questioning unfair deductions. Landlords sometimes rely on this. Understanding your rights changes the balance. This is a plain-language guide to what Indian tenants are legally entitled to. The Right to a…
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Most rental mistakes happen before you move in. Not after. They happen at the signing stage, when everything seems fine and you are eager to get the keys. Use this checklist every time. Even if you trust the landlord. Even if you are in a hurry. 1. Verify the Landlord’s Identity Ask for government-issued photo…
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Bengaluru has seen a sharp rise in landlord–tenant tensions in recent years. Rising property values, rapid rental market changes, and a large migrant tenant population have created a volatile mix. Some of these disputes make news — verbal altercations, physical confrontations, and illegal evictions. But most play out quietly, in flats and compounds across the…




