After the resounding success of Phase I and II, Al-Ghani Developers proudly present Al-Ghani Garden Phase III – a new chapter in modern community living, now launched at a prime location in Lahore. With a reputation for quality development and on-time delivery, Al-Ghani Developers have once again raised the bar by introducing a well-planned, secure, and affordable housing scheme for families and investors alike.
Al-Ghani Garden Phase III enjoys one of the most strategic and easily accessible locations in Lahore. The society is situated:.

This location provides unmatched connectivity to the rest of Lahore, making it ideal for those working in central business districts, DHA, or commuting frequently via the airport or motorway.
The project is fully approved by LDA and other relevant land authorities, ensuring that your investment is secure and free from legal complications. The launch has already received overwhelming interest, with over 50% of the plots booked during the pre-launch phase—an indication of strong market trust in the Al-Ghani brand.
Al-Ghani Garden Phase III is offering fully developed residential plots in the following sizes:.
Whether you’re a small family looking for your first home or an investor searching for long-term capital gains, there’s a plot size to suit every need and budget.
Residents of Al-Ghani Garden Phase III will enjoy all the modern conveniences required for a quality lifestyle, including:.
Plots are available on a first-come, first-served basis, and booking is already underway. Don’t miss your chance to own a plot in one of Lahore’s most promising housing schemes.
Researching this project?
Our research desk can confirm current status, pricing and availability — no commissions.
WhatsApp the research desk — +971 52 804 3509More from the project's own documentation
Additional details Al-Ghani Garden Phase 3 has published or circulated through its marketing and documentation, preserved here for reference (verify currency with the office):
- Just 2 minutes from Quaid-e-Azam Interchange on Lahore Ring Road.
- Only 5 minutes’ drive from Allama Iqbal International Airport.
- Gated community with 24/7 security and CCTV surveillance.
- Underground electricity, gas, and water connections.
- Parks, jogging tracks, and green walkways.
Reading the Lahore corridor context
Pricing power in Lahore follows infrastructure events: a Ring Road interchange opening, a corridor's first delivered branded society, an LDA enforcement wave that washes weak schemes out. Buyers comparing options should benchmark per-Marla rates against the corridor's anchor societies rather than city averages — a fair price near a delivered anchor is a different proposition from the same price in an unproven belt. And in every corridor, the spread between approved and unverified schemes is the market's honest pricing of file risk; capturing that discount is only a bargain if you've done the verification the market is pricing in.
What the transaction looks like in practice
Every transaction in Al-Ghani Garden Phase 3 should run on the same rails: token → verification → bayana → transfer. The token holds the plot; the verification at the society office confirms the file is genuine, the dues ledger is clear and no hold exists; the bayana agreement locks price and timeline in writing with earnest money; and the transfer appointment closes it — dues challans paid, transfer fee deposited, identities verified, and the letter issued in your name before you hand over the balance.
Overseas buyers add one layer: a special power of attorney, attested by the Pakistani consulate, naming a trusted local representative for the office appearances. Have it drafted around the specific society's transfer requirements — offices differ on wording — and confirm by phone what documents the transfer branch wants before the appointment is booked.
What you'll actually pay — beyond the headline
The headline price is rarely the final number in Al-Ghani Garden Phase 3 or any Pakistani society. Budget for the stack that sits on top: development charges (often levied per Marla, sometimes payable in slabs as works progress), possession charges when you take physical handover, utility connection costs for electricity, gas and water meters, the society's transfer fee on purchase, and the tax layer — advance income tax on the transaction under the FBR's withholding regime (rates differ for filers and non-filers and change with federal budgets) plus provincial stamp duty where applicable.
The discipline that saves money is simple: a single written sheet from the society office listing every current charge and the seller's paid-up status against each. If the office can't or won't produce it, that is information too.
Papers that make or break the deal
- Complete payment receipts — the original challans for the seller's payments, especially on installment files.
- Transfer fee challan and the society's transfer form set, signed at the office.
- Installment ledger (for files) — every paid challan, and the schedule of what remains.
- The new letter in your name, issued at the transfer appointment — do not leave the office without it or a dated acknowledgment.
- All payment challans for the file's history.
- For built property: approved building plan and completion documentation where the society issues them.
If any single paper is "coming next week," the balance payment should be coming next week too.
Is this the right fit?
Consider Al-Ghani Garden Phase 3 if you're buying for use or building a position you can hold: the entry economics and corridor logic favour time in the market. Skip it if you'd be stretching to the last rupee with no buffer for the charges stack, or if a forced sale within months is plausible — emerging-corridor liquidity punishes forced sellers hardest.
More buyer questions
How long does a plot transfer usually take?
Once the file is verified and dues are clear, the transfer itself is typically completed in a single office appointment, with the new letter issued the same day or within a few working days depending on the society's process. The real timeline driver is preparation: dues clearance, document attestation, and — for overseas parties — power-of-attorney processing through the consulate.
What's the difference between a file and a possession plot?
A file is a right to a plot — often before development or balloting assigns a physical location — while a possession plot is demarcated ground you can fence and build on. Files trade cheaper and move faster, but carry development-timeline risk and ongoing installment obligations; possession plots cost more and carry less uncertainty. Price the difference consciously rather than treating the two as the same asset.
Should I buy on installments or pay cash?
Cash purchases in Pakistani societies typically price 15–30% below the equivalent installment total — the developer charges for financing risk. Installments make sense when the entry barrier matters more than the total, or when you'd deploy the retained capital at better returns elsewhere. Compare the installment premium against what your capital earns; that spread is the real cost of the plan.
Can overseas Pakistanis buy here remotely?
Yes — the standard route is a special power of attorney attested by the Pakistani mission in your country of residence, authorising a trusted local representative to complete verification and transfer formalities. Confirm the society office's specific POA wording requirements before drafting, and route all payments through banking channels in your own name for a clean money trail.
Is token money refundable if I walk away?
By market custom a token is refundable if the seller's file fails verification, and forfeit if the buyer simply changes their mind — but custom is not enforcement. Put the refund conditions in writing on the token receipt itself: what failure triggers a refund, and by when it must be returned.
How do I check if a society is genuinely approved?
Go to the authority, not the marketing: every development authority maintains records (and increasingly public lists) of approved schemes and phases. Request the current status letter for the specific phase you're buying into — approvals are granted per phase, can carry conditions, and can lapse. A scheme-level claim in a brochure is the start of the question, not the answer.
Buyer takeaways
- Cross-check approval status with the relevant development authority before any token payment.
- Walk the site if possible — on-ground progress beats renders.
- Ask our research desk for the current verified status before acting on launch news.