The industrial estate is where you want to set up. Now the corporation wants a project report before they’ll allot it to you—and it has to show that you’re serious, that the investment is real, and that the business you’re planning actually needs that land. Sharda Associates prepares land allotment project reports starting at ₹2,999
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What Is a Land Allotment Project Report?
When you apply to a state industrial development corporation — MPIDCL (Madhya Pradesh), MIDC (Maharashtra), RIICO (Rajasthan), GIDC (Gujarat), APIIC (Andhra Pradesh), SIPCOT (Tamil Nadu), or their equivalents — for an industrial plot, the application almost always requires a project report showing what you plan to do with the land.
This isn’t the same as a bank loan project report — though it often feeds into one later. The land allotment project report’s primary audience is the state industrial body’s evaluation committee, which is asking a slightly different set of questions than a bank’s credit team:
- What kind of manufacturing or service activity is planned?
- What is the proposed investment in plant, machinery, and civil construction?
- How many people will be employed directly?
- Is the scale of the proposed business proportionate to the land area being applied for?
- Is the promoter credible — do they have the financial capacity to actually develop the land they’re applying for?
A well-structured land allotment project report answers these questions in a way that makes your application stand out in a system where multiple applicants are often competing for the same plot — or where the committee needs to be confident that the allotted land will actually be used productively rather than held and resold.
What Makes a Land Allotment Report Different from a Bank Loan Report
Both are called “project reports,” but they’re optimized for different audiences with different priorities.
A bank cares most about cash flow, DSCR, and whether the loan gets repaid. The bank wants numbers — projections, margin, repayment schedule.
An industrial development corporation cares about productive land use, employment generation, and whether the business is real. The committee reviewing your application is often more interested in “will this plot actually be developed?” than “is the business profitable?” — because their job is to build industrial clusters, not to evaluate credit risk.
This means the land allotment report needs to lead with:
Investment commitment: Total proposed investment in land, building construction, and plant and machinery — presented as a clear commitment, not a vague range. The committee wants to see that the investment is proportionate to the land being requested.
Employment generation: How many direct employees will the proposed business create? This is often the most prominent evaluation criterion for industrial development bodies — their mandate includes job creation, and a business that will create 50 jobs gets more consideration than one that will create 5, all else being equal.
Business justification for the location: Why this industrial estate, why this size of plot, what in the planned business specifically requires industrial land use (as opposed to commercial space or agricultural land)?
Promoter background: Educational qualification, prior business experience, and — critically — financial capacity (bank statements, existing assets) that demonstrates the promoter can actually fund the investment they’re claiming in the report.
Get Project Report For All Types Of Business
(Local and Specialized Authorities)
We provide customized project reports tailored for every business type, ensuring easy loan approvals and strategic growth.

Greater Mohali Area Development Authority (GMADA)

Greater Noida Industrial Development Authority (GNIDA)

Indore District Administration
MPIDCL Specifically — For MP-Based Applicants
For Madhya Pradesh industrial plot applications through MPIDCL (Madhya Pradesh Industrial Development Corporation Limited), a few specific things are worth knowing:
MPIDCL manages industrial plots across MP’s industrial estates — Mandideep (near Bhopal), Pithampur (near Indore), Malanpur (near Gwalior), Dewas, Jabalpur industrial areas, and others. Plot allotment applications go through MPIDCL’s online and offline application process, with a project report required as part of the application package.
MP’s industrial policy also provides capital subsidy, stamp duty exemption, and electricity duty exemption for eligible manufacturing investments — a project report that is designed for the MPIDCL allotment application can simultaneously position the business for these state scheme benefits, since the same investment details that the allotment committee evaluates are also what the scheme benefit applications need.
Sharda Associates is Bhopal-based — which means we have direct working knowledge of MPIDCL processes, the specific documentation preferences of MP’s industrial estate offices, and the state policy benefits that can be layered on top of the allotment application. This is not something a generalist report preparer in another city can replicate.
Get Project Report For All Types Of Business
(State Government Agencies)
We provide customized project reports tailored for every business type, ensuring easy loan approvals and strategic growth.

Rajasthan State Industrial Development and Investment Corporation (RIICO)

Tamil Nadu Small Industries Development Corporation (TANSIDCO)

Gujarat Industrial Development Corporation (GIDC)

Andhra Pradesh Industrial Infrastructure Corporation (APIIC)

Assam Industrial Development Corporation (AIDC)

Telangana State Industrial Infrastructure Corporation (TSIIC)

Tripura Industrial Development Corporation (TIDC)

Madhya Pradesh Industrial Development Corporation (CSIDC)

Uttar Pradesh Industrial Development Authority (UPIDA)

Delhi Development Authority (DDA)
Why Choose Sharda Associates
1. Bhopal-Based — Direct MPIDCL Process Knowledge We are not a Delhi or Mumbai firm guessing at MP’s processes. Sharda Associates is based in Bhopal — which means direct, working knowledge of MPIDCL estate offices at Mandideep, Pithampur, Malanpur, Dewas, and Jabalpur, the specific documentation preferences of each estate’s evaluation committee, and the MP state policy benefits (capital subsidy, stamp duty exemption, electricity duty exemption) that can be applied for alongside your land allotment application. This is a genuine local advantage that out-of-state preparers cannot replicate.
2. Land Allotment vs Bank Loan Report — We Know the Difference Many report preparers produce the same document for both purposes. A land allotment report has a different primary audience (industrial development corporation evaluation committee) with different priorities — investment commitment, employment generation, productive land use — than a bank credit officer. We structure the report for the right audience, which is why applications submitted with our reports get evaluated on their actual merit rather than triggering basic document queries.
3. Investment and Employment Numbers Correctly Proportioned to Plot Size Requesting a 2,000 sq meter plot with a project report showing ₹5 lakh investment and 3 employees is a mismatch the committee will notice immediately. We calibrate investment commitment and employment numbers to the land area requested — making the application internally consistent and credible.
4. Promoter Financial Capacity Section Correctly Included Industrial allotment committees routinely want evidence that the promoter can actually fund the investment they’re claiming — bank statements, existing assets, or a bank sanction-in-principle. We document this correctly in the promoter profile section, which is often the section that differentiates strong applications from weak ones.
5. 45,500+ Project Reports — Including Industrial Land Allotment Cases Land allotment project reports sit at the intersection of scheme documentation and business planning — a specific skill set built through repetition across many applications. We know what works in these committees and what triggers unnecessary back-and-forth.
6. Starting at ₹2,999 · 24–48 Hours · Revisions Included if Committee Asks Most industrial bodies come back with clarification requests — revised investment figures, different employment projections, additional documents. We handle these as part of the engagement, not as extra billing. Call +91 89899 77769.
Frequently Asked Questions
A project report for land allotment is a detailed document that explains your business plan, financials, and feasibility to help government authorities or industrial bodies approve land allotment.
A project report ensures transparency, proving the viability of your business idea, expected employment generation, and financial returns before the authority approves land allotment.
- It covers business objectives, project cost, machinery details, raw material needs, manpower, financial projections, and expected returns for land allotment approval.
Project reports are usually prepared by financial consultants, CA firms, or professionals like Sharda Associates, who specialize in project reports for loans and land allotments.
You can get it prepared from experts like Sharda Associates, who provide customized and bankable project reports for land allotment and loan approvals.