Guide · Process
DDJAY plots in Haryana: what the policy actually says
What is DDJAY, in one honest paragraph?
Haryana's affordable plotted-housing policy of 2016: a licence lane that lets developers carve smaller plots at higher density than conventional colonies, aimed at Low and Medium Potential towns — Palwal among them. For buyers it means lawful small plots with a policy trail; for the state it means plotted supply inside the planning system instead of around it. It is a genuinely useful category — which is why its name gets borrowed by colonies that never held its licence.
Which parameters should a buyer actually verify?
Two of these do daily work. The 150-square-metre cap is definitional — a "DDJAY plot" of 200 square metres is a category error wearing a brochure. And the licence itself is checkable: DTCP publishes licence details, and Palwal's DDJAY colonies appear in the department's public records; ask for the licence number and verify it, or assume its absence is the answer.
DDJAY parameters (from the policy)
- Max plot size
- 150 sq m
- FAR
- 2.00
- Licence area
- Min 5 acres (no upper cap since Jul 2020)
- Saleable area
- 65% of licenced area
- Commercial component
- Max 4% of licenced area
- Palwal applicability
- Yes — Medium Potential town
Last verified: 17 Jul 2026
What changed recently that buyers should know?
Three dated facts. The 15-acre ceiling on licences went in July 2020 — larger DDJAY colonies are lawful now, so "too big to be DDJAY" is outdated scepticism. The policy was discontinued for the Gurugram-Manesar and Faridabad-Ballabhgarh plan areas in April 2023 — which concentrates the lane in districts like this one. And the stilt-plus-four-floors direction of July 2024 sits under a High Court interim stay as of April 2026 — so a seller pricing a DDJAY plot on "S+4 income" is pricing litigation, not law; the position can change, and this page's date is its warranty.
The definitional cap. Bigger is not DDJAY, whatever the hoarding says — and the licence number settles everything else.
How does DDJAY compare with the unauthorised-colony bargain?
On sticker price, the unauthorised colony wins every time — that is its entire argument. On everything after the sticker, the licensed plot answers: a DDJAY parcel carries approvals a bank will lend against, registers at its full paper without the winks, and builds within a framework that will not meet a demolition notice. The unauthorised discount, priced honestly, is a bundle of gambles — on regularisation that may never come, on resale to a buyer braver than you, on infrastructure nobody is obligated to provide. The policy's own arithmetic also explains why licensed plots cost what they cost: a developer who can sell only 65% of licensed area, with 4% commercial, is recovering land the buyer never sees. That is not margin, it is the price of the framework — and the framework is what you are actually buying.
Which parameters are policy-locked — and which are in motion?
The locked frame, from the policy documents themselves: plots up to 150 square metres, floor-area ratio of 2.00, a licence footprint of at least five acres (the earlier 15-acre ceiling was deleted from the policy in July 2020), saleable area capped at 65% of the licensed area, and a small commercial component of 4%. Palwal falls in the policy's medium-potential zone, which governs the fee-and-rate schedule a licensee pays. Those numbers are the skeleton every genuine DDJAY colony shares, and a project whose brochure arithmetic cannot live inside them is telling you something.
In motion, and flagged as such: the stilt-plus-four-floors question. Haryana's permission for S+4 construction on these plots has been through policy reversal and litigation, and as we write it stands stayed by the Punjab & Haryana High Court under an order of April 2026 — so a seller pricing a plot on four saleable floors is pricing a court outcome, not a policy. Verify the current position on the day you price, from the department, in writing; this is the most volatile single number in the district's plot market.
The DDJAY buyer's checklist
- Licence number produced and verified against DTCP records.
- Plot inside the sanctioned layout, within 150 sq m.
- Developer obligations status — internal works, the colony's compliance trail.
- Chain of title on the underlying land, verified like any purchase.
- Construction plans read against today's rules — including the S+4 stay.
Sources
- DDJAY-APHP 2016 policy + amendments (14.07.2020 cap deletion; 20.04.2023 discontinuance; 27.10.2023 sector caps) — DTCP tcpharyana.gov.in policy PDFs, fetched 17 Jul 2026
- S+4 direction (2 Jul 2024) and P&H HC interim stay (2 Apr 2026) — DTCP public notices / Stilt-4 portal, fetched 17 Jul 2026
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