- Regulatory awareness is now a basic owner responsibility — informal or deviant construction carries growing risk.
- Sewage Treatment Plant (STP) requirements have been reported for residential and commercial plots at and above a 5-katha threshold.
- A new RAJUK ordinance has been discussed publicly with materially higher penalties for master-plan violations.
- DAP 2022-2035 changes how FAR, height and density operate across many areas, with both opportunities and constraints.
- ECPS now routes building plan approvals digitally — paper submissions are no longer the norm.
- Mutation (Namjari) remains essential after any sale, gift or inheritance, and is typically required for mortgages.
- Bonus FAR may be available for certified green buildings, plot unification and Transit-Oriented Development, subject to authority confirmation.
Why Regulatory Awareness Matters in Dhaka Property
Dhaka's planning and building regime has been undergoing visible modernisation — new ordinances, digital approval systems, updated detailed area plans and tighter environmental requirements. Owners and prospective buyers who do not track these changes risk acquiring or holding non-compliant structures.
Important
This article is general educational guidance. It is not legal advice and not a substitute for qualified legal, engineering, planning or tax professionals.
RAJUK Draft Ordinance and Enforcement Direction
A new RAJUK ordinance has been discussed publicly to replace the older Town Improvement Act framework. Reporting has highlighted materially higher penalties for master-plan violations, daily continuing fines and possible imprisonment for serious deviations. The clear direction is towards stronger enforcement against informal or deviant construction.
DAP 2022-2035: FAR, Height and Zoning
DAP 2022-2035 amendments have been reported to raise Floor Area Ratio (FAR) and population density across many RAJUK areas, while tightening protections in flood-flow zones and revising agricultural-land provisions. The net effect is more buildable area in many zones — combined with stricter environmental treatment of sensitive ones.
STP Requirements and Environmental Compliance
Sewage Treatment Plant (STP) requirements have been reported for residential and commercial plots at and above 5-katha thresholds, with designs typically required to be submitted via the digital approval system. Owners should budget STP installation as part of project feasibility from the outset, rather than as an afterthought.
ECPS Digital Approval Process
Since 2024, RAJUK building plan approvals have been routed through the Electronic Construction Permitting System (ECPS). Engaging RAJUK-enlisted professionals and submitting designs digitally is now the standard approach. Paper-based, ad-hoc workflows are increasingly out of step with the system.
Mutation and Land Record Requirements
Mutation (Namjari) is the legal step that updates government records after sale, gift or inheritance. Failure to mutate leaves ownership records ambiguous and can block mortgage approval. Land record digitisation is gradually reducing some friction, but the legal requirement to mutate remains.
Building Approval, Occupancy and Documentation Watch-Outs
| Item | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Approved plan vs as-built | Deviations can trigger penalties and block resale or mortgage. |
| Occupancy / completion certification | Some buyers and banks require it; ad-hoc occupancy creates risk. |
| STP / parking / setbacks | Common deviation points; verify physically, not just on drawings. |
| Mutation in current owner's name | Required for clean transfer and most institutional financing. |
Practical Checklist for Owners and Buyers
- Confirm RAJUK / authority approved plan matches the built structure.
- Verify STP and environmental requirements for plots at or above the relevant size threshold.
- Check mutation is in the current owner's name.
- Confirm all dues — land tax, holding tax, association dues — are clear.
- Engage RAJUK-enlisted professionals for any new design or alteration submitted via ECPS.
- Document everything — keep copies of submissions, approvals and correspondence.
When to Involve Qualified Professionals
Bring in qualified legal, engineering, planning or tax professionals before signing JV agreements, submitting new plans, beginning construction or completing a transfer. The cost of professional advice is typically a small fraction of the cost of regularising non-compliant structures later.
How Next Location Can Support Coordination
Next Location can help coordinate documentation collection, liaise with appointed professionals and structure compliance workflows. Formal legal, engineering and regulatory opinions are provided by the qualified professionals involved, not by Next Location.
What This Means for Clients
Owners of existing buildings
Audit your approved plan against the built structure now — regularising before enforcement is far cheaper than after.
Buyers of older apartments
Verify mutation, approved plan and dues before paying token. Inherited non-compliance is a real and growing risk.
Landowners considering JV
Model the new ordinance's penalties and any proposed tax changes into JV economics, and use qualified legal counsel for the agreement.
Disclaimer: This article is general guidance only and does not replace legal, tax, engineering, planning or regulatory advice. Clients should consult qualified professionals before making decisions.
Disclaimer: Approvals, fees and procedures may change. Outcomes depend on the relevant authority's review and on the qualified professionals involved.
Source note: This guide references publicly available Bangladesh land-service information, planning-related resources, and general market reporting (Ministry of Land, land.gov.bd, ldtax.gov.bd, RAJUK public resources, Banglapedia, REHAB directory, The Daily Star, The Business Standard, Dhaka Tribune, Prothom Alo, Reuters, AP). Requirements, fees and procedures may change. Clients should verify with official authorities and qualified professionals before making decisions.
Last verified: June 2026