Hyderabad Real Estate in Turmoil: 200-Meter Buffer Zones Trigger Panic Under New LRS Rules

Hyderabad's real estate market faces chaos as new 200-meter buffer zones near water bodies under LRS spark panic among plot owners. Learn how stricter scrutiny and delayed NOCs impact the sector.

Hyderabad Real Estate faces intensified turmoil as Telangana’s New LRS Rules enforce 200-Meter Buffer Zones around urban water bodies under the Land Regularization Scheme (LRS). The revised regulations have expanded restricted areas sevenfold—from 30-50 meters to 200 meters—plunging thousands of plot owners into crisis and exacerbating the sector’s stagnation.

What’s New LRS Rules with 200-Meter Buffer Zones?

Also Read: Telangana’s Call Center for LRS: Everything You Need to Know Before March 31

Why Are Plot Owners Panicking?

The sudden rule change has blindsided landowners. Earlier, NOCs issued by state departments were sufficient for transactions. However, after the Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority (HMDA) demolished illegal structures near Katwa Cheruvu and other water bodies, the government tightened norms.

Also Read: Telangana Government Clarifies Rules for Layout Regularisation Scheme (LRS)

GO 168 vs. New Rules: A Stark Contrast

Existing regulations under GO 168 (2012) defined buffer zones as:

The new 200-meter rule—a 566% increase—has shattered these benchmarks, leaving investors questioning its feasibility.

Real Estate Sector Braces for Impact

Hyderabad’s property market, already strained by sluggish demand, faces deeper setbacks:

What’s Next for Plot Owners?

While officials assure regularization for plots outside FTL and buffer zones after scrutiny, stakeholders demand transparency. Industry experts warn that without policy revisions, Hyderabad’s real estate could face:


The Telangana government’s revised LRS guidelines have plunged Hyderabad’s real estate into uncertainty. With buffer zones now spanning a quarter-kilometer and NOC hurdles multiplying, plot owners and agents brace for tougher times. As the Congress-led administration races to boost revenue, the human and economic costs of these measures remain under scrutiny. For now, the sector’s recovery hinges on policy clarity and stakeholder dialogue.

| Reported by Munsif

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