Gen-Z Lyrics brings you Paap Lagega Lyrics, performed by Nakash Aziz. The concept for this Translation track originated with Sanjeev Chaturvedi, who went on to craft it into a impactful masterpiece. The song came to life through Arvind Mishra, the producer behind it.
Paap Lagega Lyrics
teri jhoothi baaton pe bhi kiya tha believe
saccha tera aashiq hoon na kariyo tu cheat
dil mera jo toda to rab nahi maaf karega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega aa aa
sacche aashiq ka tujhko shraap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega aa aa
o baby paap lagega shraap lagega
dil mera neembu saani chhod ke na ja
o mar jaunga main aise chhod ke na ja
dil mera neembu saani chhod ke na ja
o mar jaunga main aise chhod ke na ja
o dil mera jo toda to rab nahi maaf karega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega aa aa
sacche aashiq ka tujhko shraap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega aa aa
yo baby do it right now
paap lagega aa aa
yo baby do it right now
paap lagega aa aa
yo baby do it right now
paap lagega aa aa
yo baby do it right now
aise teekha-teekha mujhe bol ke na ja
dil mein tu gam mere khol ke na ja
aise teekha-teekha mujhe bol ke na ja
dil mein tu gam mere khol ke na ja
dil mera jo toda to god nhi maaf karega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega aa aa
sacche aashiq ka tujhko shraap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega
paap lagega aa aa
written by: Sanjeev Chaturvedi
“Paap Lagega” Song Meaning Explained
The Big Picture
The song title “Paap Lagega”… right from the title, it’s not just a song, it’s a whole mood, a warning shot. The phrase means “it will be a sin,” but it’s way heavier than that, you know? It frames this entire story as something almost… theological, but in a really personal, gut-wrenching way. It’s not about a simple breakup. It’s about a love so devoted, so starkly honest, that to betray it would be an act against the very order of things. Like, the singer isn’t just a jilted lover; he’s positioning himself as a “saccha aashiq,” a true believer in this love, and he’s saying that to cheat on that faith, to break this heart, isn’t just morally wrong—it’s a sin that even God is gonna notice. That sets the vibe for everything: intense, desperate, and weirdly righteous. It’s love as a sacred contract, and the title is the bold, looming consequence if you breach it.
Most Impactful Lines
Man, the lines that just gut me every single time. The opener: “teri jhoothi baaton pe bhi kiya tha believe”. “I even believed your false words.” That “even” is everything. It’s this admission of willful blindness, of choosing faith over evidence because that’s what love makes you do. It’s so vulnerably human. And then he follows it with “saccha tera aashiq hoon na kariyo tu cheat”—”I am your true lover, don’t you cheat.” It’s a plea, but it’s also a statement of fact, like he’s reminding her of the value of what she has. But the real sucker punch is the next one: “dil mera jo toda to rab nahi maaf karega.” “If you break my heart, even God will not forgive.” That line are about elevating personal pain to a divine crime. It’s not just “you’ll regret it”; it’s “the universe will hold you accountable.” It sticks in your head because it’s so final, so absolute, it turns heartbreak into a kind of prophecy.
Decoding The Chorus
So the chorus, we all just chant “paap lagega” along with it, but if you slow it down… okay, it starts with that phrase repeated, what, seven times? It’s like a chant, a hypnotic warning bell. Each repetition isn’t just for rhythm; it’s drilling the gravity of the idea into you. Sin, sin, sin. It’s building this wall of consequence. Then it twists with “sacche aashiq ka tujhko shraap lagega.” That’s the key. “Upon you will be the curse of a true lover.” See, “paap” is the act itself—the sin you commit. But “shraap” is the active backlash, the curse that lands on you as a result. So the chorus is saying: your betrayal will be a sinful act, and the direct punishment will be a curse born from the very sincerity you wronged. It’s a cause and effect laid bare. The shift from sin to curse… it turns the victim into a source of power, in a way. The wronged lover isn’t just crying; he’s invoking a cosmic justice.
Most Relatable Part
Honestly, the part that feels the most real, the most brutally tangible to me, is that verse where he says “dil mera neembu saani chhod ke na ja”. “Don’t leave my heart like a squeezed lemon.” I mean, come on. That imagery is so stark and perfect. We’ve all been there, right? Feeling completely drained, used up, emptied of every drop of feeling or hope by someone. It’s not just sadness; it’s exhaustion, the depletion that comes from giving too much to someone who just takes. And when he begs, “o mar jaunga main aise chhod ke na ja,” “I will die if you leave me like this,” it’s that raw, unfiltered desperation that hits different. It’s the fear of being discarded when you’re at your most vulnerable, when you have nothing left. That’s the relatable heart of the song for me—that terror of being left as a hollow shell, and the pathetic, human plea to not be abandoned in that state.
Conclusion & Overall Message
So what are we left with after all that… I think the song’s final note is this powerful, resigned conviction. It’s not really about revenge, you know? It’s about stating a universal law: that true love carries a weight, and to trivialize it is to invite a karmic blowback. The takeaway is that heartbreak, when it comes from betraying genuine faith, feels like more than just pain—it feels like a violation of something sacred. The singer starts with a plea, but by the end, with those “yo baby do it right now” lines, it’s almost like a challenge. He’s laid out the terms. The message is that love, in its truest form, is a force with its own justice system. And maybe we’ve all felt, in our deepest hurts, that what was done to us wasn’t just unfair… it was, in the quiet of our souls, a sin. This song gives that feeling a rhythm, a warning, and a voice that just… echoes.
Paap Lagega Song Video
Paap Lagega Song Credits
| Song | Paap Lagega |
| Artist(s) | Nakash Aziz feat. Aham Sharma & Khushi Dubey |
| Album | Paap Lagega |
| Writer(s) | Sanjeev Chaturvedi |
| Producer(s) | Arvind Mishra |

