1. What is Earnest Money?
Earnest money is an advance amount paid by the buyer to show serious intent to buy a property.
In simple words, it is a good-faith payment made before the final sale is completed.
In Indian real estate, people may also call it:
- EMD
- booking amount
- token amount in some cases
- advance amount
Simple understanding
Earnest money is:
- not the full payment
- not the final registration amount
- not the full down payment
It is only an early amount paid to confirm commitment.
2. How much earnest money is typically required?
There is no single fixed rule.
The amount depends on:
- property value
- city
- seller
- builder policy
- stage of the deal
- terms of the agreement
In practical terms
Earnest money may be:
- a small token amount in some deals
- a negotiated amount in resale deals
- a booking amount in builder-led deals
Important point
Do not assume the amount is standard.
Always check these in writing:
- amount being paid
- purpose of payment
- refund condition
- forfeiture condition
- next payment timeline
3. What happens to earnest money at closing?
If the deal is completed successfully, the earnest money is usually adjusted against the total property price.
Simple example
If the property price is ₹80 lakh and the buyer has already paid ₹2 lakh as earnest money, that ₹2 lakh is usually counted within the total amount payable.
In practical terms
At the final stage, earnest money may be:
- adjusted in the sale price
- shown in the agreement to sell
- reflected in the final payment schedule
Simple takeaway
Earnest money does not usually vanish.
It becomes part of the total payment if the deal goes through.
4. Conditions under which earnest money can be forfeited
Earnest money can be forfeited if the buyer backs out or breaks the agreed-upon terms.
But it is not automatic in every case.
It may be forfeited when:
- The buyer backs out without a valid reason
- The buyer fails to pay the balance on time
- The buyer breaches an important term of the agreement
- The agreement clearly allows forfeiture
It may not be fairly forfeited when:
- The seller is at fault
- The property papers are defective
- The terms are unclear
- The deal fails for reasons not caused by the buyer
- The forfeiture clause is unreasonable
Practical truth
Forfeiture depends on:
| Factor | Why it matters |
| Agreement terms | These decide the written rule |
| Who defaulted | Buyer or seller fault changes the situation |
| Reason for deal failure | Not every failed deal means forfeiture |
| Amount involved | Excessive forfeiture can become a dispute |
5. How to protect your earnest money
This is where most buyers get careless.
They pay first and think later.
That is a bad move.
Best ways to protect your earnest money
1. Put everything in writing
Do not rely on verbal promises.
The written document should mention:
- amount paid
- property details
- date of payment
- seller and buyer name
- refund terms
- forfeiture terms
- next step timeline
2. Check basic property papers first
At minimum, verify:
- ownership
- seller identity
- title flow
- basic approvals
- any visible dispute or issue
3. Do not pay a big amount too early
If the paperwork is incomplete, paying a high earnest amount is careless.
4. Take a proper receipt
The receipt should mention:
- date
- amount
- mode of payment
- property reference
- payer name
- receiver name
5. Add refund conditions clearly
The agreement should say what happens if:
- The loan is not approved
- Legal issues are found
- Seller documents are weak
- The seller fails to complete the deal
6. Use traceable payment modes
Avoid unclear cash-heavy arrangements.
Bank transfer, cheque, or other traceable payment methods give better proof.
6. Earnest Money vs Token Money
These two terms are often used loosely.
But they are not always the same in practice.
| Basis | Earnest Money | Token Money |
| Meaning | Good-faith deposit linked to the deal | Small advance showing initial interest |
| Stage | Usually more formal | Often earlier or more informal |
| Documentation | More likely to be tied to agreement terms | Sometimes paid casually without proper paperwork |
| Risk | Depends on contract terms | Higher if paid without written clarity |
Simple takeaway
- Every token payment is not safely protected
- Every earnest payment is not automatically refundable
The paperwork decides everything.
7. A simple example
Suppose a buyer agrees to purchase a flat for ₹60 lakh.
The buyer pays ₹1 lakh as earnest money.
Situation 1: Deal goes smoothly
The buyer signs the agreement, pays the balance, and completes the purchase.
In this case, the ₹1 lakh is usually adjusted in the total price.
Situation 2: Buyer backs out without a valid reason
If the agreement clearly says the earnest money can be forfeited in case of buyer default, the seller may keep that amount.
That is why the terms matter more than the label.
8. Common mistakes people make
1. Paying without checking papers
This is one of the biggest mistakes.
2. Treating earnest money like a casual booking amount
It can have real financial consequences.
3. Not defining refund conditions
That creates disputes later.
4. Paying a large amount for verbal commitment only
That is reckless.
5. Not reading the forfeiture clause properly
Many buyers notice the risk only after the deal breaks.
6. Mixing earnest money with down payment
These are different things.
9. FAQs
1. What is earnest money in real estate?
Earnest money is an advance amount paid by the buyer to show serious intent to buy a property.
2. Is earnest money refundable?
It depends on the agreement terms and on who caused the deal to fail.
3. What happens to earnest money when the deal is completed?
It is usually adjusted against the final purchase price.
4. Can earnest money be forfeited?
Yes, if the agreement allows it and the buyer defaults or breaches the agreed terms.
5. Is earnest money the same as token money?
Not always. In practice, they may overlap, but token money is often used more loosely.
6. How can I protect my earnest money?
Use written terms, verify documents early, avoid casual payment, and define refund and forfeiture conditions clearly.