The Housing Department figured prominently on both counts.
A CAG report tabled on the last day of the winter session of the Maharashtra legislature on December 14 stated that non-submission of UCs under the Bombay Financial Rules, 1959, carries the risk that amounts reflected in the Finance Accounts may not have reached the intended beneficiaries.
As of March 31, 2025, UCs worth ₹1,77,319.84 crore relating to 52,876 cases were outstanding. During 2024-25, the government cleared UCs amounting to ₹1,37,222.25 crore, about 40,047 cases, the report said.
Among the major defaulters, the Urban Development Department led with pending UCs of ₹11,040 crore, followed by the Planning Department (₹5,805 crore), Water Resources Department (₹3,602 crore), Housing Development Department (₹2,839 crore) and Social Justice and Special Assistance Department (₹2,640 crore).
The audit also flagged a rush of expenditure in March 2025, in contravention of the Bombay Financial Rules, which advise against bunching of spending at the end of the financial year. It said 18 departments incurred expenditure exceeding ₹100 crore in March alone, accounting for more than 25% of their total annual spending.
The Housing Department recorded the sharpest year-end surge, with 90% of its total expenditure incurred in March, followed by the Environment and Climate Change Department (77%), Planning Department (65%), Minorities Development Department (53%) and Tourism and Cultural Affairs Department (50%), the CAG said.










