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Super Built-Up Area

by Sirf Broker
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What Is Super Built-Up Area?

Super built-up area, also called saleable area, is the total area on which a builder charges the buyer. It includes the flat’s built-up area plus the buyer’s proportional share of all common spaces in the building — lifts, staircases, lobbies, corridors, clubhouse, gym, and other amenities.

In India, most builders price their flats on super built-up area, which is why a “1,200 sq ft flat” often delivers only 800–850 sq ft of actual usable space. Understanding this gap is essential before signing any agreement.

Simple understanding: Super built-up area = what you pay for. Carpet area = what you actually live in.


Super Built-Up Area Formula and Calculation

Formula:

Super Built-Up Area = Built-Up Area + Proportional Share of Common Areas

Loading factor (also called loading percentage) is the extra percentage added over the built-up area to arrive at the super built-up area:

Loading Factor = (Super Built-Up Area − Carpet Area) ÷ Carpet Area × 100

Key benchmarks:

  • Super built-up area is typically 25–35% more than the carpet area
  • Loading factors typically range between 20–30% depending on project amenities
  • Higher amenities (pool, clubhouse, large lobbies) = higher loading factor

Example:
Flat carpet area = 900 sq ft. Walls + balcony = 150 sq ft. Built-up area = 1,050 sq ft. Common area share = 200 sq ft. Super built-up area = 1,250 sq ft. Builder charges ₹8,000/sq ft on 1,250 sq ft = ₹1 crore. But you only live in 900 sq ft.


What Is Included in the Super Built-Up Area?

Included:

  • Carpet area (all usable rooms inside the flat)
  • Wall thickness and balconies (built-up area components)
  • Proportional share of lifts and lift lobbies
  • Staircases and fire escape areas
  • Common corridors and passages
  • Clubhouse, gym, swimming pool (proportional share)
  • Electrical rooms, security cabins, pump rooms

Not included:

  • Open parking areas (charged separately)
  • External open spaces and gardens

Area Types Compared

Area TypeWhat It IncludesSize Relation
Carpet AreaUsable floor space inside walls onlySmallest — what you live in
Built-Up AreaCarpet area + walls + balcony/terrace10–25% more than the carpet area
Super Built-Up AreaBuilt-up area + proportional common areas25–35% more than the carpet area

Simple rule: Carpet ➜ Built-Up ➜ Super Built-Up. Each step adds more area — and more cost.


Super Built-Up Area and RERA

Under RERA 2016, builders are legally mandated to sell and disclose property only on the basis of carpet area. Pricing on super built-up area is not prohibited, but the carpet area equivalent must be clearly disclosed. Always ask for the RERA carpet area certificate and compare cost per sq ft on carpet area — not super built-up area — for true value assessment.


How to Calculate True Cost Per Sq Ft

Builders advertise ₹6,000/sq ft on super built-up area. Always convert:

True Cost = (Price per sq ft on SBA × Super Built-Up Area) ÷ Carpet Area

If SBA = 1,250 sq ft at ₹6,000 = ₹75 lakh total. Carpet area = 900 sq ft.
True cost per sq ft = ₹75,00,000 ÷ 900 = ₹8,333/sq ft — not ₹6,000.


Tips for Buyers

  1. Always demand carpet area in writing — RERA mandates this disclosure
  2. Calculate price on carpet area — Reveals true cost per sq ft
  3. Compare loading factors across projects — Lower loading = better value
  4. Verify what amenities are shared — More amenities mean higher loading
  5. Check SBA in the sale agreement — Builder must disclose both SBA and carpet area
  6. Ask for a floor plan with measurements — Verify the stated carpet area physically

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Comparing flats on super built-up area — Two flats at 1,200 sq ft SBA can have very different carpet areas
  • Trusting verbal loading factor claims — Always verify in writing
  • Ignoring amenities you won’t use — Pool and gym add to loading, but not everyone benefits
  • Not checking RERA carpet area certificate — Builders inflate SBA without accountability
  • Paying for parking in SBA — Parking must be charged separately per the Supreme Court ruling
  • Skipping independent measurement — Get carpet area measured before possession

FAQs

What is a super built-up area in real estate?
Super built-up area is the total saleable area, including your flat’s built-up area plus your proportional share of all common spaces like lifts, lobbies, staircases, and amenities — it is the area builders use for pricing.

What is the difference between the super built-up area and carpet area?
Carpet area is the actual usable floor space inside your flat. Super built-up area adds wall thickness, balconies, and your share of all common building areas — making it 25–35% larger than carpet area.

What is a loading factor in real estate?
The loading factor is the percentage added over the carpet area to arrive at the super built-up area. A 30% loading factor means you pay for 30% more area than you actually live in. Lower loading factor means better value for money.

Does RERA allow builders to sell on super built-up area?
RERA mandates that the carpet area must be clearly disclosed in all agreements. While builders may still price based on super built-up area, they cannot hide the carpet area equivalent from buyers.

How do I calculate the true cost per sq ft of a flat?
Divide the total flat price by the carpet area — not the super built-up area. This gives the true cost per sq ft and enables fair comparison across different projects.

Is a super built-up area the same as the saleable area?
Yes. Super built-up area and saleable area are the same thing — both refer to the total area on which the builder calculates the property price, including common area proportions.


Practical Takeaway: Super built-up area is the builder’s number. Carpet area is your number. Always evaluate, compare, and negotiate on carpet area — it is the only area you actually live in and own.