- admin-as
- No Comments
- May 4, 2026
Buying Property in Bahria Town Lahore —7 Things to Check Before You Sign Anything
Buying Property in Bahria Town Lahore —
7 Things to Check Before You Sign Anything
The stuff most buyers find out too late — developer track record, documents, payment plan traps, and how to spot a solid project
Most people spend more time researching a phone purchase than they do a property transaction. That's not a criticism — property buying in Pakistan is complicated, there's a lot of information coming from a lot of directions, and it's genuinely hard to know what actually matters versus what's just sales talk.
Bahria Town Lahore specifically attracts a huge range of buyers — first-timers, overseas Pakistanis, investors looking for rental yield, families wanting to move in. And because the market is active, it also attracts a range of sellers and developers, some of whom are excellent and some of whom are not.
So here are 7 specific things to check — properly, not just tick off — before you hand over any money on a property in Bahria Town Lahore. These apply whether you're buying a plot, an apartment, or a commercial unit. And at the end, we'll show how one current project, Riwaq Heights by Al Riwaq Developers, holds up against each one.
The 7 Checks — In Order of Importance
Visit the Site — Not the Sales Office
This is the most important one and the one most people skip. Before you do anything else, ask the developer or agent to take you to the actual plot or building. Not a showroom. Not a model unit somewhere else. The real thing.
If it's an apartment block, is the structure actually standing? Are workers on site? Can you walk the floors? If it's a plot, can you find it, stand on it, and see what's around it? A project that can't show you physical reality at the site is asking you to take their word for everything — and that's a risk you don't have to take.
Check the Developer's Physical Office and Team
Ask for the developer's office address. Then go there. A legitimate developer has a real, accessible office with real people in it. If you're being handled entirely through WhatsApp agents you've never met and an office that turns out to be a rented desk somewhere, that's information worth having before you book.
Better still — a developer based inside or right next to the society they're building in has a level of accountability that remote operators don't. When something goes wrong (and in construction, small things always do), you want someone you can walk into an office and speak to directly.
Understand Every Milestone in the Payment Plan
Payment plans in Pakistan follow a common structure but the details vary between developers and projects. Most have: a booking amount, a confirmation payment, one or more balloon payments at intervals, a possession payment, and then monthly installments. You need to understand all of them — not just the monthly number.
The one that catches people most often is the possession payment. It's typically 30% of the total price — a large lump sum that comes after the monthly installments have been running. On an PKR 8.7 million apartment, that's PKR 2.61 million due at once. Map your full cash flow before you book, not when the possession notice arrives.
Ask About Documents — and Verify Them
For property within Bahria Town, Bahria Town's own management provides a structure that gives buyers more protection than many private schemes. But you should still ask the developer for the relevant documentation — title documents, NOC status, any approvals related to the specific building or plot.
A legitimate developer will hand these over without hesitation. If you get vague answers, documents that don't quite add up, or resistance to basic questions about title, take that seriously. It doesn't necessarily mean fraud — but it means you need to dig further before committing.
Get the Possession Timeline in Writing
Verbal possession timelines from sales staff mean very little. "Should be ready in a year" is not a possession timeline. Ask specifically: what is the expected handover date? What happens if it's delayed? Get whatever you're told confirmed in writing in the booking agreement.
Delays happen in construction — that's normal. What's not acceptable is being given no information, no documentation, and no recourse when they do. The better developers are transparent about timelines and realistic about them. If a developer is vague or defensive when you ask about possession dates, that's a warning sign.
Look at the Actual Location — at Different Times of Day
This one matters especially for commercial units, but it applies to apartments too. Visit the location on a weekday morning. Come back on a Saturday afternoon. See who is actually there, what businesses are operating nearby, how much foot traffic the area gets, and whether the surrounding infrastructure — roads, parking, access — actually works.
A lot of buyers visit once during the sales pitch, see a well-presented office and a render on a screen, and that's their entire experience of the location before booking. That's not enough. The location is the single biggest determinant of your property's long-term value. Spend proper time there.
Front Unit vs Back Unit — Run the Numbers Before You Decide
Most apartment and commercial projects in Bahria Town offer units on different sides of the building at different prices. Front-facing units — those looking onto the main road or boulevard — cost more. Sometimes significantly more. The question to ask yourself is: why do I want the front unit?
If you're going to live in it and you value that view, the premium might be worth it. If you're buying to rent out, your tenant is comparing the monthly rent against other options in the market — not deciding based on which direction the windows face. In that case, the back unit at a lower total price might actually give you a better annual yield. Work it out with actual numbers.
Boulevard + Theme Park view
Best for: End-users who want the view
PKR 900K less · Same size · Same building
Best for: Rental investors focused on yield
Your Pre-Booking Checklist — Save This
Questions Buyers Ask Before Booking
Visit Riwaq Heights Before You Decide
Grey structure done · Finishing underway · Site visits open · 22 Iqbal Commercial, Sector E, Bahria Town
Apartments from PKR 8.7M · Shops from PKR 3.26M · Booking from 20% · 18-month plan
9AA Commercial, First Floor,
Sector D, Bahria Town Lahore
Mon–Thu & Sat: 11am–7pm
Friday: Closed
Al Riwaq Developers — Building Beyond Expectations · Bahria Town Lahore, Pakistan · alriwaqdevelopers.com

