Habulus Tranquil is an under-construction apartment project by Habulus Builders & Developers Pvt Ltd. in Electronic City Phase 1, Bengaluru. The local project record aligns on 5 acres, 4 towers, 496 homes, and a family-oriented inventory mix built around 2 BHK and 3 BHK layouts. The useful point for buyers is that the project is not presented as a speculative compact launch. It is positioned as a practical community for end-use households who value space, approvals, and locality relevance.
Habulus Tranquil FAQ
Project answers on approvals, pricing, construction, location, amenities, and the document checks buyers usually need before moving from enquiry to serious booking discussions.
Answers that help move a Habulus Tranquil enquiry from curiosity to document-led evaluation.
This FAQ is intentionally more detailed than a normal marketing page because the project is under construction and the difference between a good enquiry and a vague enquiry usually comes down to what the buyer already understands. These answers focus on approvals, plans, timing, cost mechanics, location, and verification steps.
The project is located off Maragondanahalli Road in NeoTown, Electronic City Phase 1, Bengaluru 560105. Treamis World School is one of the clearest nearby landmarks for buyers planning a visit. From a purchase point of view, the address matters because it sits inside an established south Bengaluru employment corridor rather than on a disconnected suburban edge. Buyers should still test the exact route they will use during real commute hours.
The project is being sold under Habulus Builders & Developers Pvt Ltd., also referred to publicly as Habulus Group. Public references also connect BSR Developers to the land-owner side of the ecosystem. For buyers, that means the project should be judged through document clarity, execution track record, and current construction transparency rather than through brand name alone. Asking for sanctioned documents and current construction updates is the right discipline here.
Habulus Tranquil is presented in the local project record as BDA A-Khata approved and RERA registered. The published RERA number is PRM/KA/RERA/1251/310/PR/020126/008378. That is a meaningful positive because approval comfort matters deeply in this market. Buyers should still download or request the latest project registration record and ensure that the currently marketed inventory and timeline match the live registration details.
The current local record highlights three main family configurations: a 2 BHK at 1,292 sq ft, a 3 BHK with 2 toilets at 1,694 sq ft, and a 3 BHK with 3 toilets at 1,781 sq ft. Some older public discussions also mention a broader area range, so the safest practice is to ask for the latest tower-wise inventory sheet and the exact plan for the currently available unit. Buyers should avoid assuming that every brochure variant remains open in current stock.
Pricing should be read as a full charge stack, not a single headline. The base rate is currently listed at ₹7,499 per sq ft, but parking, clubhouse charge, other charges per sq ft, GST, floor rise, corpus, maintenance, and legal or khata transfer can materially raise the final outflow. A serious buyer should ask for an all-inclusive cost for the exact unit, not only a base rate or a launch banner. That one step prevents most pricing confusion.
The project communication currently includes two important timing references: a builder target around June 2028 and a RERA possession date of December 2031. Buyers should treat the earlier date as the developer’s stated execution goal and the later date as the formal legal backstop. The right financing and life planning decision should remain comfortable even if the project delivers slower than the optimistic case. This is standard caution on under-construction purchases, not a special red flag unique to this project.
Habulus Tranquil is marketed with Mivan construction technology. In practical terms, buyers usually interpret that as a sign of standardized shuttering quality, faster repetitive construction cycles, and cleaner slab-and-wall execution compared with some traditional methods. That does not automatically prove finish quality, so buyers should still ask about wall behavior, interior finish standards, and actual construction progress. But it is a meaningful technical talking point in the project’s favor.
The strongest planning claims are the 5-acre land parcel, 4 towers, 75 percent open space, and a 25,000 sq ft clubhouse. The amenity list is broad and includes children’s, senior, wellness, sports, and infrastructure elements such as CCTV, EV charging, solar fencing, and STP. That gives the project a more complete community feel than a thinner brochure list would. Buyers should still verify which of these features are part of early handover and how they sit inside the live construction sequence.
The project looks stronger for end use than for short-horizon speculation. Families working in the Electronic City corridor are likely to appreciate the location, approval positioning, straightforward inventory mix, and family-oriented amenity package. Investors may still find it relevant because of the employment catchment, but the investment case depends heavily on execution confidence, delivery discipline, and rental or resale demand at the time of possession. For most buyers, the end-use case is easier to defend.
A useful site visit should cover more than just the sample flat or sales office. Buyers should test the route at realistic hours, observe the immediate surrounding development pattern, understand tower placement, ask for the current construction status of the clubhouse and open spaces, and confirm whether the specific stack being discussed matches the published plan and cost sheet. The visit should reduce uncertainty rather than simply reinforce marketing comfort.
Before paying a booking amount, buyers should request the latest cost sheet, the exact floor plan for the chosen stack, the current construction update, the current RERA registration printout, and written clarification on the payment schedule. If there are optional upgrade packages or premium charges, those should be documented too. The buyer who collects those documents early is usually in a much stronger position than the buyer who books on brochure trust alone.
Use verified references to check the project context before taking the next step.
The best FAQ is one that leads to better verification. The official project page is useful for the current brand presentation, the Habulus Group site helps with developer context, the BSR Developers site adds ecosystem visibility, and the project map helps plan a real visit. Buyers should use these references to ask sharper questions, not to replace the current cost sheet or official documents issued for the specific unit under discussion.
The right outcome of a strong FAQ is a better document request, not just fewer doubts.
Habulus Tranquil is an under-construction purchase, which means even accurate FAQ answers should lead to one more verification step. A buyer who reads about approvals should ask for the current registration material. A buyer who reads about pricing should ask for the exact unit-wise commercial. A buyer who reads about layout should ask for the current stack-specific drawing. This page is intentionally dense because it is meant to make that next step easier.
That is also why the FAQ does not try to smooth over every ambiguity. Where public facts differ slightly, the safer move is to request the latest official project material and compare it with the local references already used on this site. In a market full of short, repetitive property FAQs, being explicit about that process is a strength.
Thin FAQs often hide the most important part of a project decision: what still needs verification.
That is why this Habulus Tranquil FAQ is intentionally longer than a typical microsite FAQ. The goal is not only to answer basic questions. It is to help buyers understand which questions lead directly to better documents, sharper site visits, and better shortlisting decisions. On under-construction projects, that extra context is often more valuable than another short yes-or-no answer.
A buyer who leaves this page with a clearer checklist is in a stronger position than a buyer who leaves with only comfort. That is the standard this FAQ is trying to meet.
The page should leave buyers with a clearer next action than they had before.
If that happens, the FAQ has done its job. Habulus Tranquil benefits from a more practical question set because the project is strong enough to deserve deeper diligence rather than superficial reassurance.
Need answers tied to your preferred configuration, budget, or site-visit plan?
Use the enquiry page to request documents, clarify cost structure, or schedule the next conversation with the project desk.