BMC’s e-TDR platform aims to boost transparency, but challenges remain

16 April,2026 08:25 AM IST |  Mumbai  |  Vinod Kumar Menon

The BMC`s newly launched electronic Transferable Development Rights (e-TDR) platform, live from April 15, has been welcomed as a progressive step in digitising urban planning transactions — but real estate and legal experts caution that its success hinges on strong implementation, data integrity, and legal safeguards

Experts have called for a secure, centralised digital registry with unique identification for each TDR unit, ensuring traceability and authenticity at every stage. Representation Pic


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Real estate experts have raised concerns over the effectiveness of the newly introduced electronic Transferable Development Rights (e-TDR) system implemented by the BMC from April 15, stating that its success will depend entirely on robust implementation and regulatory safeguards.

While the digital platform has significantly reduced paperwork and enabled online transactions, including integration with banking and record-keeping systems, experts caution that it may still fall short in ensuring complete transparency in its current form and say the system remains vulnerable to risks such as incorrect data entries and off-platform transactions, undermining the objective of digitisation.

Experts stated that while the e-TDR system marks a progressive step towards the digitisation of urban planning transactions, its success will ultimately depend on legal robustness, technological integrity, and administrative discipline. They said the goal must be to transition from a discretionary regime to a transparent, rule-based governance structure, ensuring that the "Rule of Law" prevails over the "Rule of Men."

Personal experience with land acquisition

Advocate Godfrey Pimenta shared that he himself faced land acquisition for the Marol Naka Metro station and road widening project, giving him firsthand insight into the hardships of affected landowners.

Support for new system
He welcomed the e-TDR initiative, calling it a "welcome and progressive reform" to improve compensation processes for acquired private land.

Issues with earlier process
He pointed out that the previous system was "complex and cumbersome," requiring multiple compliances and causing delays, uncertainty, and hardship for landowners.

Benefits of digital integration
He noted that the e-TDR platform brings multiple departments onto a single digital system, improving coordination and enabling faster, more efficient processing of TDR entitlements.

Caution on implementation
Pimenta, warned that while the system has strong potential, poor execution could make it "another ‘white elephant," stressing the need for proper oversight and data integrity.

What is TDR?

Granted to landowners when land is acquired for public projects by the govt, TDRs compensate owners with tradable development rights instead of cash which can be used or sold in market, but the system has long been criticised for opacity.

Issues with the earlier TDR framework

>> Lack of uniform valuation
>> Discretionary approvals
>> Informal brokerage practices
>> Fragmented documentation systems
>> These issues often led to disputes, pricing distortions, and unequal access to development rights.

Expert Speak

Shreeprasad Parab, Advocate and expert director
Maharashtra State Cooperative Housing Federation, termed the introduction of the e-TDR platform a major reform in urban planning mechanisms, replacing a historically opaque system. "Transparency is not merely administrative reform but a legal necessity," he said.

Solutions proposed by the federation

Government-backed digital registry

Parab recommends a fully secure, centralised digital registry with unique identification for each TDR unit, ensuring traceability and authenticity at every stage. This should include secure audit trails, mandatory disclosure norms, and real-time transaction verification

Inclusion of affected zones

For land parcels impacted by restrictions such as funnel zones, coastal regulation zone limits, and reserved planning areas. He proposes a compensatory TDR allocation mechanism to ensure fair treatment of landowners whose development potential is restricted in public interest. This approach, he states, aligns with the principle that public welfare is the supreme law, while balancing it with private property rights.

Government-backed digital registry

Parab recommends a fully secure, centralised digital registry with unique identification for each TDR unit, ensuring traceability and authenticity at every stage. This should include secure audit trails, mandatory disclosure norms, and real-time transaction verification

Legal strengthening and enforcement mechanism

To make the system effective and enforceable, he recommends:
>> Statutory recognition of digital TDR certificates
>> Mandatory registration of all transactions on the e-platform
>> Strict penalties for off-platform dealings
>> Regular audits and compliance checks
>> Public dashboards for transparency
>> Strong grievance redressal systems

Single-window clearance system

To ensure efficiency, Parab stresses the need for a fully integrated single-window system for approvals. He suggests end-to-end digital processing, seamless inter-department coordination, and time-bound approvals (ideally within 30 minutes for standard transactions). He warns that delays in approval processes undermine substantive rights.

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