How to Get IGBC or GRIHA Certification in India: A Simple Guide

Green building certifications like IGBC and GRIHA are becoming increasingly important for residential, commercial, and industrial projects across India. These certifications validate sustainability claims, improve asset value, and help optimize building performance.

However, many developers, architects, and homeowners find the certification process confusing or assume it is complex and expensive. In reality, when approached correctly, certification can be straightforward and highly beneficial.

This guide explains how to approach IGBC or GRIHA certification, practical steps involved, common pitfalls, misconceptions, and how the Build Green Design team supports projects through the process

Understanding IGBC and GRIHA

IGBC (Indian Green Building Council) and GRIHA (Green Rating for Integrated Habitat Assessment) are India’s most widely recognized green building certification systems.

Both evaluate projects based on:

  • Energy efficiency
  • Water conservation
  • Sustainable site planning
  • Material selection
  • Indoor environmental quality
  • Waste management
  • Renewable energy integration

These certifications apply to:

  • Individual homes
  • Commercial offices
  • Industrial facilities
  • Institutional buildings
  • Townships
  • Existing buildings

Both are voluntary but increasingly valued by developers, investors, and occupants.

Step-by-Step Process to Get IGBC or GRIHA Certification

1. Select the Right Rating System

The first step is identifying the appropriate rating system based on project type. Each certification body offers multiple variants tailored to different building typologies.

Choosing the wrong rating system can lead to unnecessary effort and lost opportunities for credits.

2. Register the Project Early

Registration should ideally happen during the concept design stage. Early registration allows sustainability strategies to be integrated efficiently without major redesigns.

Late registration is one of the most common reasons projects struggle to achieve desired certification levels.

3. Set a Target Certification Level

Projects typically aim for levels such as:

  • Certified
  • Silver
  • Gold
  • Platinum

Setting a realistic target early helps guide design decisions, budget allocation, and documentation planning.

4. Integrate Sustainability into Design

Most certification credits are achieved during design, not construction. Key strategies include:

  • Climate-responsive orientation
  • Efficient building envelope
  • Shading and daylight optimization
  • Water efficiency planning
  • Renewable energy readiness
  • Sustainable material selection

Passive strategies often deliver maximum credits with minimal cost impact.

5. Prepare Documentation

Certification requires structured documentation such as:

  • Architectural drawings
  • Energy calculations or simulations
  • Plumbing and water efficiency details
  • Material specifications
  • Vendor declarations
  • Equipment data sheets
  • Purchase invoices

Documentation is evidence-based and must match actual implementation.

6. Preliminary Review

After submission, the certification body reviews documentation and shares comments. The project team responds with clarifications or additional documents.

This iterative process helps refine compliance and maximize achievable credits.

7. Final Submission and Certification

Once construction is complete and all documentation is finalized, the project is submitted for final review. Certification is awarded based on implemented measures and verified documentation.

Some projects may also pursue pre-certification during design for marketing purposes.

Common Pitfalls in IGBC / GRIHA Certification

Late Sustainability Integration

Projects that consider certification after design freeze lose easy credits.

Overestimating Achievable Points

Teams sometimes assume credits without verifying technical requirements.

Poor Documentation Management

Missing vendor declarations and invoices often delay certification.

Design-Execution Mismatch

Changes during construction may invalidate planned credits.

Ignoring Mandatory Requirements

Some prerequisites are compulsory and cannot be skipped.

Practical Example

Project Without Early Planning

  • Registers late
  • No shading strategy
  • No water reuse planning
  • Limited documentation
    Result: struggles to achieve basic certification

Project With Early Integration

  • Registers at concept stage
  • Plans solar readiness
  • Integrates daylighting
  • Tracks documentation
    Result: achieves higher certification with minimal cost increase

Common Misconceptions About IGBC & GRIHA Certification

Certification Makes Projects Expensive

Most credits come from passive design strategies that add little or no cost when planned early.

Certification Is Only for Large Projects

Both systems offer rating frameworks for small homes, offices, and institutional buildings.

Certification Is Only Documentation

While documentation is required, the process drives measurable performance improvements.

Only Platinum Certification Is Valuable

Even Certified, Silver, or Gold ratings deliver meaningful sustainability outcomes.

Certification Guarantees Performance Automatically

Actual performance depends on proper implementation and commissioning.

When Certification May Not Be the Best Fit

While sustainable design is always beneficial, formal certification may not be necessary in certain situations.

Small Residential Projects with Limited Budget

Adopting green strategies without certification may be more cost-effective.

Projects With Tight Timelines

Certification requires structured documentation and review timelines.

Minor Renovations

Limited scope projects may not achieve meaningful certification benefits.

Projects Focused Solely on Lowest Initial Cost

Certification may not align with short-term cost objectives.

Remote Locations with Limited Vendor Support

Documentation from suppliers may be difficult to obtain.

How Build Green Design Helps Simplify Certification

At Build Green Design, we provide end-to-end certification support, ensuring clients achieve meaningful sustainability outcomes — not just paperwork compliance.

Our Support Includes

✔ Rating system selection (IGBC vs GRIHA)
✔ Certification level strategy
✔ Credit feasibility assessment
✔ Climate-responsive design integration
✔ Energy and daylight simulation support
✔ Material and system selection guidance
✔ Documentation management
✔ Coordination with certification bodies
✔ Construction-stage compliance checks
✔ Final submission support

How We Help Avoid Common Certification Errors

Avoid Overdesigning for Credits
We prioritize high-impact, cost-effective strategies.

Avoid Documentation Delays
We structure documentation tracking from project start.

Avoid Late Design Changes
We integrate sustainability during early planning.

Avoid Certification Without Performance
We focus on real energy and water savings.

Avoid Unnecessary Costs
We advise whether certification is beneficial for your project.

The Right Approach to Certification

The most effective approach is:

  1. Decide early
  2. Set realistic certification goals
  3. Focus on passive design first
  4. Track credits systematically
  5. Maintain documentation discipline
  6. Monitor during construction

In Summary

IGBC and GRIHA certifications provide a structured roadmap for designing efficient, sustainable, and future-ready buildings. When approached early and strategically, certification becomes straightforward and cost-effective.

Whether you choose to pursue certification or simply adopt green design principles, the key is integrating sustainability into design from the beginning.