Power of Attorney for Property in India: Types, Rules & Risks
Last verified: June 2026. Property, NRI and FEMA rules vary by state and change over time — confirm current rules with the relevant authority or a qualified professional before acting. General information, not legal or financial advice.
A Power of Attorney (PoA) lets someone act on your behalf in a property transaction — invaluable for NRIs who can’t be present. But PoAs are widely misunderstood, and using them wrongly can cost you the property.
What a PoA is
A PoA authorises another person (the “attorney”) to act for you (the “principal”) — to sign, register, manage or let a property when you are away.
General vs Special PoA
- Special PoA: narrow powers for a specific task (e.g. registering one sale). Safer for one-off transactions.
- General PoA (GPA): broad powers over the property. Convenient but riskier — give it only to someone you fully trust.
Executing a PoA from abroad
An NRI executing a PoA overseas generally must sign before and have it attested by the Indian Embassy/Consulate (or apostilled), then send it to India and have it stamped/adjudicated (stamp duty paid) and registered where required. Skipping steps can make it invalid.
The big caveat: a GPA is not a sale deed
Per the Supreme Court, a sale through a “GPA transaction” does not by itself transfer title. Property is legally transferred only by a registered sale deed. Never “buy” on a GPA alone — insist on a registered conveyance. A PoA executes documents; it does not replace the sale deed.
Good practice
- Prefer a Special PoA limited to the transaction.
- Choose a trustworthy attorney; you can revoke a PoA in writing.
- Register the PoA where the law requires for immovable property.
FAQs
Can I buy property via a PoA from abroad?
Yes — a PoA holder can complete formalities, but the property must still transfer via a registered sale deed.
Is a GPA enough to transfer property?
No. A GPA does not transfer title; only a registered sale deed does.
How does an NRI execute a PoA?
Sign before the Indian consulate (or apostille) abroad, then stamp/adjudicate and register it in India as required.
Can a PoA be cancelled?
Yes, the principal can revoke it in writing.