Indian property due diligence platform (self-described as ‘India’s first PLPM SaaS’). Provides on-demand title verification, encumbrance checks, and approval verification for residential real estate. Primary customers appear to be banks and housing finance companies (e.g., Altum Credo) needing pre-disbursement title opinions on mortgage applications. Also serves individual property buyers. Operates as a managed service model — PropertyChek’s own legal consultants perform title research and produce standardized due diligence reports with legal opinions, reportedly within 24 hours. Incubated by Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas (Prarambh ‘ready to scale’ cohort, 2021). Founded 2016, headquartered in Pune, India. Competes with Zippserv, NoBroker Legal Services, LegalDev, LegalDocs, and eStartIndia in the Indian property verification space. Competitive differentiation unclear — multiple services offer similar on-demand title verification. Alternative to maintaining in-house panel of advocates for title verification across multiple Indian states.
Company Info
- Founded: 2016
- Team size: 11-50 employees
- HQ: India
- Sector: Real Estate
What We Haven’t Verified
This page was assembled from publicly available information. Feature claims and workflow mappings are based on what the vendor and third-party listings publish — not hands-on testing or practitioner feedback.
Workflows
Based on practitioner evidence, PropertyChek is used in these workflows:
What practitioners struggle with
Real frustrations from legal professionals — the problems PropertyChek addresses (or should address). Sourced from practitioner reviews, Reddit threads, and case studies.
Legal research costs $400-600/hour in associate time and takes hours of manual digging — searching Westlaw/Lexis, reading irrelevant results, synthesizing case law. Clients increasingly refuse to pay for research hours on invoices. AI can compress a 4-hour research memo into 20 minutes, but most firms have no approved tool
Buying property in India means trusting a local advocate's word that the title is clean — there's no standardized way to verify 30 years of registration records, check for encumbrances, or confirm government approvals, so buyers and banks discover forged documents or pending litigation after the money changes hands
Where it fits in your workflow
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