1. What is Carpet Area?
Carpet area is the net usable floor area inside the apartment.
In simple words, it is the actual area you can use inside the home. Under RERA, carpet area means the net usable floor area of an apartment, excluding the area covered by external walls, service shafts, exclusive balcony or verandah area, and exclusive open terrace area, but including the area covered by internal partition walls.
Simple understanding
Carpet area usually includes:
- bedrooms
- living room
- kitchen
- bathrooms
- internal passages
- area under internal partition walls
Carpet area usually does not include:
- external walls
- balcony or verandah area
- open terrace
- common areas
- lift lobby
- staircase
- club or shared amenities
Why is it called carpet area?
Because it roughly refers to the area where you can actually “lay a carpet” inside the usable part of the home.
2. How is Carpet Area calculated?
Carpet area is calculated by measuring the net usable internal area of the apartment.
Simple formula
Carpet Area = Net usable internal floor area of the apartment
In practical terms
It includes:
- room area
- kitchen area
- bathroom area
- internal passage area
- internal wall partition area
It excludes:
- thickness of external walls
- service shafts
- balconies
- verandahs
- open terrace
Simple example
Suppose a flat has:
- bedroom area = 120 sq. ft.
- living room = 140 sq. ft.
- kitchen = 60 sq. ft.
- bathrooms = 40 sq. ft.
- internal passage and internal partitions = 40 sq. ft.
Then the carpet area may be:
120 + 140 + 60 + 40 + 40 = 400 sq. ft.
Practical point
Do not assume the full advertised apartment size is the carpet area.
That is where many buyers get confused.
3. Difference between Carpet Area, Built-up Area, and Super Built-up Area
These three terms are related, but they are not the same.
| Basis | Carpet Area | Built-up Area | Super Built-up Area |
| Meaning | Net usable area inside the apartment | Carpet area plus wall thickness and some attached areas | Built-up area plus proportionate share of common areas |
| Includes balcony | No | Usually yes | Yes |
| Includes external wall thickness | No | Yes | Yes |
| Includes common area share | No | No | Yes |
| Most useful for the actual living space | Yes | Less accurate than the carpet area | Least accurate for the actual usable space |
Simple difference
- Carpet area = actual usable inside area
- Built-up area = carpet area + walls + attached areas
- Super built-up area = built-up area + share of common areas
Practical understanding
If a builder advertises a larger number, it is often not the carpet area.
That is why buyers should always ask which area term is being used.
4. Importance of Carpet Area in Property Valuation
Carpet area matters because it gives the clearest picture of the actual usable size of the home.
A property may look large on paper, but if the carpet area is much smaller, the buyer is getting less practical usable space than expected.
Carpet area matters because:
1. It helps in a fair comparison
Two flats with the same super built-up area may have very different carpet areas.
2. It improves price understanding
The buyer can better judge the real value per usable square foot.
3. It reduces misleading size claims
This is one of the biggest reasons carpet area matters in India.
4. It helps in better decision-making
A buyer can understand whether the actual living space matches the budget.
Simple takeaway
If you want to know what space you are truly getting, carpet area matters the most.
5. Regulations affecting Carpet Area calculations
Carpet area became much more important after RERA because builders are expected to use a standard definition.
That matters because earlier, many buyers were sold property based on confusing size terms.
Key regulatory impact
- RERA gives a standard legal meaning to carpet area
- builders and promoters are expected to use this definition in project disclosures
- buyers can compare projects more clearly when the same definition is followed
Project disclosures under RERA rules also require the number, type, and carpet area of apartments for sale to be stated, along with separate mention of exclusive balcony or verandah areas and exclusive open terrace areas where applicable.
Practical meaning for buyers
This helps buyers:
- compare projects more fairly
- understand a real usable area
- avoid confusion caused by inflated sale language
6. A simple example
Suppose a builder says a flat is 1,500 sq. ft.
That sounds large.
But then the actual breakup is:
- carpet area = 1,050 sq. ft.
- built-up area = 1,250 sq. ft.
- super built-up area = 1,500 sq. ft.
Now the buyer understands that the actual usable inside area is 1,050 sq. ft., not 1,500 sq. ft.
That is why carpet area is so important.
7. Common mistakes people make
1. Thinking carpet area and super built-up area are the same
They are not.
2. Buying based only on brochure size
Brochure numbers often highlight bigger area figures.
3. Not asking for area breakup
This creates confusion later.
4. Ignoring RERA-defined carpet area
That is the most useful standard for comparison.
5. Judging price only on total advertised size
The real value should be checked against usable area too.
8. FAQs
1. What is carpet area in real estate?
Carpet area is the net usable floor area inside the apartment.
2. Does carpet area include balcony?
No. Under RERA, exclusive balcony or verandah area is excluded from carpet area.
3. Is carpet area the same as built-up area?
No. Built-up area is larger because it usually includes wall thickness and some attached areas.
4. Why is carpet area important?
It tells you the actual usable living space inside the property.
5. Is carpet area legally defined in India?
Yes. RERA gives a standard definition of carpet area.
6. Which area is most useful for a buyer?
Carpet area is usually the most useful for understanding real usable space.