Produced by: Manoj Kumar
For just ₹3,100, you can own an acre of the Moon—on paper. That’s less than a pizza party but good enough for a shiny certificate and a story that lands.
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Indian buyers are flocking to lunar land registries. Why? For under ₹25,000, you can snag a 10-acre “estate” with a celestial view—no builder delays guaranteed.
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Buy in bulk, and the Moon gets cheaper. At ₹2,447 per acre for 10 acres, it’s the most affordable real estate scam you’ll ever willingly sign up for.
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You get coordinates, a deed, even a lunar map. What you don’t get? Legal ownership. Thanks to a 1967 treaty, space is everyone’s—and no one’s.
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Every buyer gets a digital or printed certificate. Some frame it. Others post it. None can build on it. It’s real estate’s version of NFTs—with more craters.
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The Outer Space Treaty bans private land ownership on celestial bodies. That lunar acre you bought? Legally, it’s just space tourism for your ego.
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Celebs and influencers flaunt their Moon plots on social media, fueling a niche trend where owning land you’ll never visit somehow feels aspirational.
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Lunar plots are the new quirky gift—romantic, futuristic, and totally unenforceable. Great for anniversaries. Terrible for asset portfolios.
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Thousands of Indians have “bought” Moon land since 2020, dreaming of cosmic claims—while knowing full well it’s legally void but emotionally priceless.
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