L&T Thanidsandra

Subvention vs CLP: Choosing the Right Payment Plan for L&T Thanisandra

Two principal payment plan structures dominate the Indian premium residential market: Construction-Linked Plans (CLP) and subvention schemes. Both have legitimate use cases, both come with trade-offs, and the right choice depends on individual circumstances rather than universal preference. For prospective L&T Thanisandra buyers, understanding the practical math of each plan helps make an informed choice. Here is the comparison that clarifies which plan suits you.

Construction-Linked Plan (CLP): the standard option

Under CLP, payments are tied to defined construction milestones. You pay as the developer delivers — typically 10% at booking, 80% across structural and finishing milestones, and 10% at possession. The advantage of this structure is alignment between payment and progress: if construction slows, your payments slow correspondingly. Most home loans disburse in tranches matching CLP milestones.

CLP cash flow pattern

Under CLP, you typically pay rent (if currently renting) plus pre-EMI plus interest on disbursed loan during the construction period. This double-burden is the main consideration for buyers who don’t have other accommodation arrangements during the build.

Subvention scheme: cash flow optimisation

Under subvention, the developer services your home loan EMI during the construction period. Your EMI obligation begins only at possession. This eliminates the double-burden of paying rent plus EMI during construction. For buyers currently renting in a different city or paying significant rent, this is a meaningful cash flow advantage.

Subvention cash flow pattern

Where subvention’s trade-offs lie

The math: who comes out ahead

Consider two scenarios for a sample 3 BHK at L&T Thanisandra (illustrative):

Across the full holding period, subvention costs slightly more in absolute terms. But for buyers with current rental obligations, the construction-period cash savings can be substantial — meaningfully more valuable than the small price premium.

Decision framework

Down Payment Plan (DPP): the third option

A third less-common option involves substantial upfront payment (typically 90–95%) within the first few months, with the small balance at possession. The developer typically offers a 3–6% discount on the base price under DPP. This is suitable only for buyers with significant liquid funds available immediately, or for those funding from a property sale that’s being timed to coincide. For most buyers with home loan financing, DPP results in significant interest accrual through construction; the discount may or may not offset this.

Tax implications across plans

L&T Realty’s plan options

L&T Realty projects in Bangalore have historically offered both CLP and subvention options at major projects. Final payment plan terms for L&T Thanisandra will be confirmed at official launch. Pre-approved bank tie-ups for subvention are typically established with major nationalised and private banks. Down Payment Plans, if offered, typically come with attractive base price discounts.

Practical advice

Verdict

Both CLP and subvention are legitimate, useful payment plan structures with different optimal use cases. The right choice depends on individual cash flow, current accommodation, available liquidity, and tax circumstances. For most buyers without rental obligations, CLP is straightforward and economical. For buyers facing double-burden of rent plus EMI during construction, subvention’s cash flow optimisation often justifies the small cost premium. Either way, the choice is consequential — make it deliberately.

For broader payment plan context, see our blog L&T Thanisandra Payment Plans: CLP vs Subvention. For home loan eligibility, see Home Loan Eligibility for L&T Thanisandra. For project details, the Home page.

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