New Delhi, September 27 — For many Indian families, buying a home is the ultimate milestone — a symbol of security, stability, and lifelong aspiration. Yet for thousands across Kolkata, Bengaluru, and Mumbai, that dream has curdled into years of anxiety and financial strain. Unfinished apartments, stalled projects, and relentless pressure from banks to repay loans have left countless households trapped in a cycle of despair.
On Saturday, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) moved decisively in what has become one of India’s most bitter real estate sagas. The agency registered six criminal cases against builders and initiated searches at 12 locations. Investigations extend beyond developers, probing officials of financial institutions accused of colluding with builders through the controversial subvention scheme — a loan model that, according to the Supreme Court, ensnared homebuyers in a financial trap.
A Judicial Rebuke: Courts Condemn the Scheme
In April 2025, the Supreme Court described the subvention scheme as “a new method of fraud,” highlighting a collusion between builders and lenders that left homebuyers the most vulnerable link. The court had directed the CBI to conduct seven preliminary inquiries into such schemes. Saturday’s crackdown follows the completion of the seventh inquiry and reflects the court’s ongoing scrutiny of the sector.
FutureCrime Summit 2026: Registrations to Open Soon for India’s Biggest Cybercrime Conference
Builders in the Crosshairs
The CBI has named the following companies in its cases:
- Bengaluru: Ithaca Estate Pvt. Ltd., LGCL Urban Homes (India) LLP, Ozone Urbana Infra Developers
- Mumbai: Shashwati Realty Pvt. Ltd. (with a project in Bengaluru), Acme Realities Pvt. Ltd.
- Kolkata: MKHS Housing LLP
Investigators have indicated that the probe could widen to include unidentified officials of financial institutions who sanctioned loans without adequate project verification.
Heartbreak Behind the Bricks
For homebuyers, the promises of developers have long evaporated. Ramesh, a Delhi-based software engineer, booked a flat in Bengaluru in 2017 for ₹68 lakh. “The builder assured us delivery by 2021. Today, not a single brick has been laid. Yet every month, the bank deducts my EMI for a house that exists only on paper”, he said.
In Kolkata and Mumbai, retired couples who invested their life savings now face the same grim reality: half-built towers, loan obligations piling up, and dreams indefinitely deferred.
A Systemic Failure: Collusion and Regulatory Apathy
Former IPS officer and cybercrime expert Triveni Singh said the scandal represents more than a real estate swindle. “This is the product of collusion between financial institutions and regulatory apathy. Banks extended credit without verifying project progress, effectively mortgaging the future of homebuyers,” he said.
The case recalls past debacles like the Amrapali Group collapse, which stranded over 40,000 buyers in the National Capital Region, along with Unitech and Jaypee Infratech controversies — highlighting recurring vulnerabilities in India’s housing sector.
The Road Ahead: Justice or Continued Struggle?
For many, the CBI’s action provides a sliver of hope. Yet the path to justice is uncertain. Real estate disputes in India often drag on for years, and when developers declare bankruptcy, buyers are left with little more than half-built structures and mounting debt.
Still, with Supreme Court oversight and the CBI’s aggressive pursuit of cases, there is a growing perception that accountability in India’s real estate sector may finally be shifting — though only time will tell if long-suffering families will see homes or compensation
