Navaghar

Introduction:

Home buying in India is full of traps—and it starts with simple terms like carpet area, built-up Area, and super built-up Area, Which Are Used to explain prices. But the space you actually get can be very different from what you’re paying for.

If you don’t understand these terms, you might end up overpaying.

This guide breaks everything down with easy examples, formulas, tables, and FAQs. In just a few minutes, you’ll clearly understand the difference between carpet area, built-up Area, and super built-up Area—so you can make a smarter buying decision.

Carpet Area: The Space You Actually Live In

Carpet area is the actual usable space inside your home, measured wall-to-wall. It represents the actual livable area where you can place furniture, walk, and use it daily.

Under RERA, carpet area is the official basis for pricing properties, giving buyers clear, transparent information about the actual space they’re getting.

What the Carpet Area Includes

Carpet area covers every space within the internal walls of your home. If you can use the floor area privately, it is generally part of the carpet area.

Included in Carpet Area:

Bedrooms

Usable floor space inside all bedrooms, including areas beside built-in wardrobes.

Living Room / Drawing Room

Central family space counted fully as carpet area.

Kitchen

Cooking and preparation space, including the floor area under platforms.

Bathrooms & Toilets

Usable internal space inside the washrooms.

Internal Staircase (for Duplex Units)

Only the Staircase inside the flat is included—not the standard staircases shared by the building.

In short:

If it is inside the walls and usable as living space, it is included in the carpet area.

What the Carpet Area Excludes

Anything outside the internal walls is not included in the carpet area. This is where many buyers get confused.

Excluded from Carpet Area:

External Walls

The structural outer walls of the unit.

Balcony / Sit-Out Areas

These are chargeable separately but never counted as carpet area.

Terrace (Private or Common)

Considered additional area; not part of usable indoor space.

Common Areas (Shared Spaces), such as:

  • Lifts & lift lobby
  • Common corridors or passages
  • Clubhouse or gym
  • Parking spaces
  • Society office or security room

These are included only in the super built-up area calculation, not in the carpet area.

Carpet Area Formula

Developers use a simple formula to determine carpet area:

Carpet Area = Usable Floor Area Inside the Apartment (excluding balcony, terrace, external walls, and common areas)

It includes only the private usable area.

Why Carpet Area Matters (Practical Buyer Benefits)

Understanding carpet area helps homebuyers make smarter decisions:

RERA Mandate = True Transparency

Builders are now legally required to quote the price based on carpet area only, eliminating misleading size claims.

Shows the Real Livable Space

Carpet area gives a clear idea of how much space you can actually use—not inflated numbers with common areas included.

Fair Comparison Between Projects

Two 2BHKs may have similar super built-up areas but very different carpet areas. Carpet area helps compare wisely.

Protects Buyers from “Size Inflation”

Built-up and super built-up areas often make properties look larger in ads.

Carpet area reveals the truth.

Built-Up Area: The "Looks Bigger on Paper" Version

What Is Carpet Area?

Carpet area is the actual usable space inside your home, measured wall-to-wall, the area where you can place furniture and freely move around. It shows the true livable space you get. Under RERA (2016), carpet area is the official and only legal basis for property pricing, ensuring full transparency for homebuyers.

What the Carpet Area Includes

Carpet area covers every space inside your home that is directly usable:

Bedrooms

All sleeping areas, including attached wardrobes, are built within walls.

Living Room / Drawing Room

The central space is used for family time, seating, and entertainment.

Kitchen

Entire cooking area, including the floor space occupied by platforms.

Bathrooms & Toilets

Usable floor space inside the washrooms.

Internal Staircase (for duplexes/maisonettes)

Only the space of stairs within the unit—not shared staircases.

In short, if you can walk on it inside the walls of your flat, it is generally part of the carpet area.

What the Carpet Area Excludes

Carpet area excludes anything outside the internal walls or not directly usable as private space:

External Walls

The thickness of the outer structural walls is excluded.

Balcony / Sit-Out Areas

Even though usable, they are not counted in the carpet area.

Terrace (Private or Common)

Considered an extra/chargeable area, not carpet area.

Common Areas

Shared spaces in the building or society, such as:

  • Lift and lift lobby
  • Common corridors
  • Staircases
  • Parking areas
  • Clubhouse
  • Gym, garden, pool

These areas are included only in super built-up calculations, not in carpet area.

Carpet Area Formula

The simplest way to calculate carpet area is:

Carpet Area = Net usable floor area inside the apartment (excluding balcony, walls & common areas)

It includes ONLY the floor space that directly belongs to your unit.

Why Carpet Area Matters (Buyer Advantages)

Transparent Pricing (RERA Mandate)

Developers must quote property prices based solely on carpet area to prevent inflated claims.

Clearly Shows Usable Space

Carpet area tells you exactly how much space you can live in, not just how much you pay for.

Accurate Comparison Between Projects

Two homes with the same “2BHK” label may offer very different carpet areas. Using the carpet area helps you compare fairly.

Protects Buyers from Misleading Marketing

Built-up and super built-up areas often exaggerate the size of apartments. Carpet area keeps everything honest.

Super Built-Up Area: The Marketing Number That Inflates Size

What Is Super Built-Up Area?

Super built-up area is the total area you pay for. It includes the built-up area—carpet area + walls + balcony—plus your proportionate share of common spaces like lobbies, lifts, corridors, and amenities.

Developers highlight this number in brochures because it looks larger, but it often creates confusion since you can’t personally use most of this extra space. While carpet area reflects your actual home, the super built-up area reflects the entire space you’re financially contributing to.

What the Super Built-Up Area Includes

Super built-up Area combines:

  1. Built-Up Area
    • Carpet area
    • Internal & external wall thickness
    • Balcony, utility area, dry balcony
  2. Proportionate Share of Common Spaces, such as:
    • Lift & lift lobby
    • Staircase (shared)
    • Entrance lobby & corridors
    • Clubhouse area (distributed proportionately)
    • Swimming pool area (shared among all units)
    • Gym & indoor sports area
    • Security room, society office
    • Community hall/banquet hall
    • Landscaped areas connected to the building footprint

Essentially, all spaces accessible to residents and maintained by the society are included in your saleable Area.

What the Super Built-Up Area Excludes

Super built-up Area does not include:

  • Open public roads
  • Children’s park located outside the building footprint
  • Garden area not part of the main building
  • Compound walls
  • Reserved open parking (may be charged separately)
  • Municipal spaces
  • Commercial areas (if residential-only building)

Understanding the “Loading” Concept

Super built-up Area is calculated using loading—a percentage added to the carpet area or built-up Area to account for common areas.

For example:

If loading = 40%

Then,

Super Built-Up Area = Carpet Area × (1 + 40%)

Loading depends on:

  • Project size
  • Number of amenities
  • Luxury level
  • Builder’s calculation method
  • Number of units sharing common areas

Typical loading ranges:

  • Affordable projects: 20–30%
  • Mid-segment: 30–40%
  • Premium: 40–50%
  • Luxury high-amenity: 50–60%

Formula for Super Built-Up Area

Developers use either of these formulas:

Method 1 (Carpet-Based):

Super Built-Up Area = Carpet Area + Loading%

Method 2 (Built-Up-Based):

Super Built-Up Area = Built-Up Area + Proportionate Common Areas

Since loading varies by project, the same carpet area can result in vastly different super built-up areas.

Why Understanding Super Built-Up Area Matters

  • You pay for this Area (even if you don’t use it directly).
  • Two flats with identical carpet areas may have extremely different super built-up areas depending on loading.
  • It affects the per-square-foot price, making a property look cheaper or more expensive depending on the calculation method.
  • Helps you detect hidden inflation in project brochures.
  • Allows for fair comparison between developers who use different loading percentages.

Example to Understand Super Built-Up Area Clearly

Let’s assume:

  • Carpet area = 800 sq ft
  • Built-up Area = 940 sq ft
  • Loading = 40%

Then:

Super Built-Up Area = 800 × 1.40 = 1120 sq ft

OR

Super Built-Up Area = Built-Up (940) + proportionate common area (180) = 1120 sq ft

Side-by-Side Comparison

Feature Carpet Area Built-Up Area Super Built-Up Area
Definition Usable area inside walls Carpet + walls + balcony Built-up + share of common areas
RERA Regulated? ✔ Yes ✖ No ✖ No
Inflation Level None Moderate High
Buyer Advantage Highest Medium Low
Used For Pricing? ✔ Yes (Required) Informal Developer’s choice
Typical % Difference Base +10–20% +25–60%

Real Example Comparison

Let’s assume:
  • Carpet area = 800 sq ft
  • Wall + balcony = 140 sq ft
  • Common area loading = 40%
Area Type Calculation Final Area
Carpet Area Base 800 sq ft
Built-Up Area 800 + 140 940 sq ft
Super Built-Up Area 940 + 40% loading 1316 sq ft
You pay for 1316 sq ft, but actually live in 800 sq ft.

Builder Loading Tricks to Watch Out For

Common “loading” tricks developers use:

  • Inflating the common area allocation
  • Adding a terrace area as 100% chargeable
  • Adding parking to a super built-up
  • Charging extra for a club or gym
  • Charging loading above 50% in luxury projects

How to protect yourself:

  • Always ask for the carpet area as per RERA
  • Request a floor plan with measurements
  • Don’t compare properties based on super built-up Area

How Much Area Should You Actually Pay For? (Guidance for Buyers)

For budget-conscious buyers:

Choose projects with low loading (25–35%).

For high-end projects:

Expect higher loading (40–60%), but ensure amenities justify it.

For families needing more space:

Focus on the carpet area only.

If two projects both claim “2BHK” but one offers 680 sq ft carpet and another 850 sq ft carpet—choose the latter, regardless of super built-up Area.

Property Type vs Area Percentage

Property Type Typical Loading Notes
Affordable Housing 20–30% Best transparency
Mid-Segment Apartments 30–40% Standard market range
Luxury Apartments 40–60% Extra amenities; verify value
Township Projects 35–55% Includes clubhouse, parks, sports areas

FAQs

Carpet area is the usable Area inside your home; built-up Area includes walls + balcony, and super built-up Area includes your share of common areas.

RERA mandates that all property pricing must be based on carpet area only.

No. The balcony is included in the built-up Area, not the carpet area.

Because it includes a proportionate share of lobbies, lifts, staircases, clubhouse, and other amenities.

Check the loading percentage. Anything above 45% should be questioned.

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