But when you go to the Sub-Registrar’s office to sign the deed, the government doesn't care about your negotiation. The government opens the Jantri. If the Jantri says that land is worth , you must pay stamp duty on 80 lakhs—even if you bought it for 1 crore, or even if you got it for 60 lakhs.
Every time a piece of land changes hands in Ahmedabad, Surat, or a dusty village square in Kutch, an invisible referee steps in. It doesn’t care about the beautiful bungalow you built or the factory you plan to set up. It only cares about a number printed in a little yellow booklet called the . gujarat government jantri rates
Next time you drive past a dusty plot of land in Gujarat, don’t just see dirt. See the Jantri rate. It is the government’s silent partner in every single deal, and it has the final say on how much your dream really costs. Disclaimer: Jantri rates vary by zone, use (residential/commercial/industrial), and road width. Always check the official "iORA" (Online Revenue Account) portal of the Gujarat Government for current rates before any transaction. But when you go to the Sub-Registrar’s office
In Gujarat, there are two prices for everything: the price you pay, and the price the government thinks you paid. Every time a piece of land changes hands
This gap created the infamous and “Black Money” ecosystem. Buyers paid the low Jantri value via cheque (white money) and the rest in suitcases full of cash (black money). The 2017 Earthquake (The Revision) In 2017, the Gujarat government did something shocking. It woke up. After nearly a decade, it revised the Jantri rates.
For decades, the Jantri was a joke. It was a colonial-era relic that was updated so slowly (once every 10–15 years) that it bore no resemblance to reality. In prime areas of Ahmedabad, the Jantri might say a plot is worth ₹5,000 per square meter, while the market was screaming ₹50,000.