AECO Knowledge Base

Construction FAQ

FAQs about house construction costs, timelines, contractors, and the building process in India.

10 Frequently Asked Questions

What is the construction cost per sq ft in India in 2026?
Construction costs in India in 2026 range from Rs 1,400 to Rs 4,500+ per sq ft depending on city, quality, and specifications. Basic construction (standard finishes, local materials) costs Rs 1,400-1,800 per sq ft in Tier-2/3 cities and Rs 1,800-2,200 in Tier-1 cities. Mid-range construction (vitrified tile flooring, branded fittings, modular kitchen, good-quality doors and windows) runs Rs 2,200-3,000 per sq ft. Premium construction (Italian marble, imported fittings, central AC, home automation, designer lighting) costs Rs 3,000-4,500+ per sq ft. These rates include structure, finishing, electrical, plumbing, and basic fixtures but exclude interior furniture, landscaping, and architect fees. Bengaluru and Hyderabad tend to be 10-15% cheaper than Mumbai and Delhi NCR for equivalent quality. Always get detailed BOQ-based quotations rather than per-sq-ft rates to avoid hidden extras.
How long does it take to build a house in India?
A typical G+2 residential building (3,000-4,000 sq ft) in India takes 10-14 months from foundation to handover. The breakdown is: building-plan approval (1-3 months), excavation and foundation (3-4 weeks), ground-floor structure (6-8 weeks), first and second floor structure (4-6 weeks each), brick work and plastering (6-8 weeks), electrical and plumbing rough-in (concurrent with masonry, 4-6 weeks), flooring and tiling (3-4 weeks), painting and finishing (3-4 weeks), and final fixtures and cleanup (2-3 weeks). Major factors causing delays in India include monsoon season (June-September slows work significantly), material shortages (especially during sand mining bans), festival periods, labour availability, and client-initiated design changes. Building during October to May is optimal in most Indian cities.
How do I choose a good contractor in India?
Selecting the right contractor is critical for Indian construction projects. Key criteria include: verified track record with at least 5 completed residential projects you can physically visit, proper GST registration and labour licence, willingness to sign a detailed contract with penalty clauses for delays, transparent BOQ (Bill of Quantities) with brand specifications for every material, references from recent clients (visit their completed sites), financial stability (a contractor who takes too many projects simultaneously may face cash-flow issues affecting your project), and a dedicated site supervisor. Red flags include: demand for large advance payments (standard is 10-15% mobilisation advance), reluctance to provide detailed written quotations, no GST billing, and verbal promises without documentation. AECORD-verified contractors undergo background checks and have rated portfolios from past clients.
What is a BOQ and why is it important?
A BOQ (Bill of Quantities) is an itemised list of every material, labour task, and specification required for your construction project. In India, a detailed BOQ is the single most important document for cost control and dispute prevention. It should list: quantities (e.g., 150 bags of OPC 53 grade UltraTech cement), unit rates (e.g., Rs 380 per bag), specifications (e.g., Kajaria 800x800mm glazed vitrified tiles, Stardust series), and total amounts for each item. A proper BOQ for a 2,000 sq ft house typically runs 150-200 line items across categories: earthwork, RCC, masonry, plastering, flooring, electrical, plumbing, painting, doors and windows, external development, and miscellaneous. Without a BOQ, contractors give vague per-sq-ft rates and charge extras for items the client assumed were included — the most common dispute in Indian construction.
What approvals are needed before starting construction in India?
Before starting construction in India, you need: Building plan approval from the local municipal authority (corporation, municipality, or panchayat) — submitted through online portals like BPAS (Karnataka), DPMS (Telangana), or EDCR (common in many states). Additional NOCs may include: airport authority clearance if within flight-path zones, environmental clearance for plots near water bodies or in eco-sensitive zones, NOC from fire department for buildings above 15m, tree-cutting permission if applicable, and water and sewage connection approval. For plots in layouts approved by development authorities (BDA, HMDA, DTCP), verify the layout approval is current. For agricultural land conversion, obtain NA (Non-Agricultural) order from the revenue department before applying for building permission. RERA registration is required if you are a builder developing a project above 500 sq m or 8 apartments.
Should I use RMC or site-mixed concrete?
Ready-Mix Concrete (RMC) is strongly recommended over site-mixed concrete for all structural work in India. RMC from certified plants (UltraTech, ACC, Lafarge, Nuvoco) uses computerised batching for precise water-cement ratio and mix design, resulting in consistent strength. Site-mixed concrete is prone to human error in proportioning, water addition, and mixing time. Cost-wise, RMC is Rs 4,500-7,500 per cubic metre (depending on grade and city), while site mixing appears cheaper at Rs 3,500-5,500 per cu m but wastes 15-20% more material. RMC advantages include: tested quality with cube test reports for every batch, faster pouring (a slab that takes 2 days with site mixing takes 4-6 hours with RMC), and less site storage. For small quantities under 2 cu m (minor repairs, compound walls), site mixing is acceptable. For all structural pours — foundation, columns, beams, and slabs — always use RMC.
What is the role of a site supervisor in Indian construction?
A site supervisor (or site engineer) is essential for quality construction in India, where most labour is semi-skilled. Their responsibilities include: daily monitoring of work quality and progress, verifying material deliveries against BOQ specifications (checking cement brand, steel grade, aggregate quality), ensuring structural drawings are followed correctly (rebar placement per bar bending schedule, column dimensions, beam depth), managing 15-30 labourers and subcontractors, maintaining the site diary (daily work record, material usage, labour count), coordinating concrete pours with RMC plant, and reporting progress to the architect and owner. A full-time site supervisor costs Rs 25,000-50,000 per month. Without one, common issues include: incorrect steel placement, excess water in concrete, wrong brick bond, and material pilferage. For owner-built homes where the architect visits only weekly, a competent site supervisor is the critical quality link.
How much cement, steel, and sand is needed for 1,000 sq ft construction?
For a standard G+1 residential building of 1,000 sq ft per floor (2,000 sq ft total), approximate material requirements are: Cement — 350-450 bags (50 kg each) of OPC 53 grade, costing Rs 1.3-1.8 lakh. Steel (TMT bars) — 3-4.5 tonnes of Fe500/Fe500D grade, costing Rs 1.5-2.5 lakh. River sand (or M-sand) — 40-50 cu m for masonry, plastering, and concrete, costing Rs 60,000-1.5 lakh depending on city and sand type. Coarse aggregate (20mm and 12mm) — 35-45 cu m, costing Rs 50,000-80,000. Bricks — 12,000-15,000 numbers for 230mm and 115mm walls, costing Rs 80,000-1.5 lakh. These are thumb-rule estimates — actual quantities depend on structural design, soil condition, number of floors, and specifications. A detailed BOQ from your engineer gives precise quantities. M-sand (manufactured sand) is increasingly replacing river sand in South Indian cities due to river-sand scarcity and consistent quality.
What is the payment schedule for a construction contractor in India?
A standard payment schedule for Indian residential construction is milestone-based: Mobilisation advance — 10% at contract signing (some contractors ask 15%, never pay more than 15% upfront). Foundation completion — 15% (after PCC, footings, and plinth beam). Ground floor slab — 15%. First floor slab — 15% (and similarly for additional floors). Brick work and plastering — 15%. Flooring and internal finishes — 10%. Final finishing and handover — 5% (retained for 30-60 days as defect liability period). Always tie payments to verified milestones with photo documentation. Keep 5-10% as retention money released only after a defect-free inspection. Never pay ahead of completed work — this is the most common mistake in Indian construction. Get each payment acknowledged in writing with a running account statement. For materials purchased directly by the owner, adjust the contractor's payments proportionally.
What insurance do I need during house construction?
Construction insurance in India is often overlooked but increasingly important. Key policies include: Contractor's All Risk (CAR) policy — covers damage to the structure during construction from fire, storm, flooding, theft, and third-party liability; premiums are typically 0.15-0.3% of construction cost (Rs 3,000-6,000 for a Rs 20 lakh project). Workmen's Compensation policy — legally required under the Workmen's Compensation Act, 1923, covering injury or death of construction workers; the contractor should carry this, but verify it. Builder's Risk policy — broader coverage including design errors and mechanical breakdown. For self-built homes, a CAR policy from insurers like New India Assurance, United India, or ICICI Lombard is recommended, costing Rs 5,000-15,000 for a typical residential project. After construction completion, convert to a standard home insurance policy covering the structure and contents against natural disasters, fire, and theft.

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