Unregulated Real Estate in Kashmir Fuels Urban Chaos
The unregulated expansion of real estate in Jammu and Kashmir has triggered an alarming wave of unplanned urbanisation, price manipulation, and legal disputes. The absence of effective regulations has enabled developers and investors to exploit loopholes, pushing property prices beyond the reach of ordinary buyers while deteriorating infrastructure and sustainability. Srinagar, a prime example, faces unchecked commercial and residential expansion with little regard for civic planning, leading to congested roads, inadequate drainage, and loss of open spaces. Unlike major metropolitan cities where strict zoning laws dictate urban growth, Kashmir remains vulnerable to real estate speculation, worsening affordability and public trust in the system. The lack of standardised laws has further empowered land mafias to hoard agricultural land, converting it into unauthorised residential clusters that lack basic amenities, putting immense pressure on the region’s limited resources.
Adding to this crisis, rampant violations of building norms have created severe safety hazards. Unauthorised high-rises, illegal land conversions, and encroachments on government and forest lands have become commonplace, undermining the legal framework meant to protect homeowners. While other Indian states benefit from the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act (RERA), its ineffective implementation in Kashmir has left homebuyers defenceless against delays, substandard construction, and hidden costs. Many projects remain unfinished or abandoned, leaving families in financial distress with little legal recourse. This lack of oversight has also encouraged corruption, as unscrupulous developers, officials, and land sharks manipulate the system for personal gain, exacerbating public mistrust in real estate dealings.
From a sustainability perspective, the rapid and unregulated conversion of agricultural land into residential colonies is leading to irreversible environmental damage. Thousands of kanals of fertile land lie hoarded by speculators waiting for price hikes, reducing food security and worsening the ecological imbalance. Inadequate infrastructure planning has already resulted in severe water shortages, erratic power supply, and mounting waste management challenges, making these unplanned settlements even more unsustainable. Experts argue that urgent intervention is required to prevent unchecked urban sprawl, ensure responsible land use, and preserve Kashmir’s fragile ecological balance. Without proactive planning, the current trajectory could lead to severe environmental degradation and long-term socio-economic instability.
The way forward necessitates immediate and stringent reforms to restore order to the sector. Implementing RERA with full legal backing, digitising land records to eliminate fraud, and introducing strict urban planning guidelines can significantly curb the ongoing chaos. Enforcing consumer protection laws will safeguard buyers from fraudulent transactions and ensure developers are held accountable for project delays and poor-quality construction. Additionally, imposing restrictions on agricultural land conversion without prior approvals can deter speculative hoarding and protect the region’s agrarian economy. Most importantly, tackling corruption at the root level by dismantling illegal land networks and improving transparency in real estate transactions is crucial to restoring public confidence. If these steps are not taken urgently, the real estate sector in Kashmir will continue to be a breeding ground for exploitation, leaving common citizens to bear the brunt of an increasingly unaffordable and unsustainable housing market.