About Assetly

Built for people managing India property from far away.

Indian property ownership still runs on scattered documents, phone calls, and memory. We are building something simpler: a way for Indian expats to keep their records straight, spot title trouble early, and get property work done without flying back.

Founders

The founders building Assetly

Hemanth Sai Chandan

Co-founder

Hemanth Sai Chandan

Hemanth is the real-estate brain of Assetly. He has spent years in the messy reality of Indian property: chasing papers at sub-registrar offices, untangling old titles, sorting out boundary fights, and pushing things forward with families and lawyers on the ground. He runs customer and partner work, and keeps the product honest about how property actually moves here.

Pradeep Vanga

Co-founder

Pradeep Vanga

Pradeep studied at IIT Kharagpur and has spent the last decade building products at startups and big companies. He is an open-data nerd at heart and maintains India’s largest open legal dataset on the side. At Assetly he runs both engineering and product: document handling, the public-record intelligence that catches title risks early, and everything that makes the platform usable from another timezone.

Why we started

Property ownership should not depend on a locker full of paper.

Sale deeds sit in bank lockers. Encumbrance certificates come from sub-registrar offices. Tax receipts live in drawers, in old emails, in WhatsApp threads with cousins. When a boundary dispute pops up, or someone needs to inherit a property, or a key document goes missing, owners end up piecing together decades of records from a dozen different places.

Assetly pulls those records and workflows into one place. We help owners keep documents in order, check title health, watch for compliance risks, and run the on-ground work that cannot be done from abroad: document retrieval, encumbrance checks, mutation follow-ups, legal review, and local verification.

We are starting with the problems Indian expats feel most sharply: the distance, the uncertainty, and the sinking feeling of finding out too late that something important was missing.