Buyers should also be wary of initially low maintenance charges, which tend to rise after handover.
Affordability check
Homebuyers should treat maintenance costs as a necessary component of their regular home expenses. Homeowners can determine their actual monthly expenses by adding their monthly maintenance costs, which include GST, to their home loan EMI payments.
Capitalising this expense using total maintenance projections for the holding period and subsequent present-value discounting enables them to understand the additional costs required for property acquisition. The assessment of affordability depends on sustainable cash flows, which extend beyond loan eligibility requirements,” says Kathuria.
If maintenance is treated as a quasi-capital cost, buyers should add it to their monthly outgo and test affordability on total cash flow, not just loan eligibility.
“This ensures the purchase remains sustainable over time. In some cases, initial maintenance projections may be understated. Buyers should benchmark against similar developments, account for GST, and build in a buffer for future escalation to avoid underestimating expenses,” says Pratyush Pandey, founder, AARE Consulting, real estate advisory platform.
Lifetime cost comparison
“A like-for-like comparison requires looking at the lifetime cost, not just the purchase price. Buyers should calculate the total maintenance outgo for each property over a defined period (e.g., 10 years), including escalation and GST, and add this to the acquisition cost,” says Kathuria.
The comparison becomes more precise as future expenses are discounted to their present value. The property with higher initial price but reduced maintenance expenses becomes more cost-effective than the cheaper unit, which requires higher ongoing costs.
“The right comparison is lifetime cost, not just purchase price. Evaluating maintenance on a per sq. ft. basis and projecting it over 5–10 years often reveals that a slightly higher-priced home with lower running costs can be more cost-efficient in the long run,” says Pandey.
Anagh Pal is a personal finance expert who writes on real estate, tax, insurance, mutual funds and other topics.