Table of Contents

Marriage Certificate Not Issued or Wrong: Fix and Escalate (2026)

Citizen Crisis Response Network
If a marriage certificate is delayed beyond 30 days or contains spelling/date/address errors, you have four parallel tracks: registrar-office correction memo, RTI Act §6 application, written complaint to the District Registrar of Marriages, and a writ pathway citing Seema v Ashwani Kumar (2006) 2 SCC 578. Act within 90 days to keep all remedies open.

A marriage certificate that is not issued, delayed, or contains wrong details (spelling, date of marriage, address, parentage, witness names) can be corrected through four routes. First, a written correction memo to the issuing Sub-Registrar with supporting proof. Second, an RTI Act 2005 §6 application asking for the file movement record and reasons for delay. Third, an administrative complaint to the District Registrar of Marriages under the applicable state Compulsory Registration of Marriages Act. Fourth, a writ petition before the High Court citing the Supreme Court mandate in Seema v Ashwani Kumar (2006) 2 SCC 578 that all marriages must be registered. Statutory timelines, fees, and forms vary by state, but the legal right to a correct certificate is absolute.

In this guide

Why marriage registration goes wrong

Marriage registration failures fall into seven patterns. Identifying the right pattern saves weeks.

  1. Registration delay beyond statutory limit. Most state Compulsory Registration of Marriages Acts mandate registration within 30 to 60 days of solemnisation. When the Sub-Registrar's office sits on a file beyond this window, the citizen is entitled to a written explanation and immediate processing.
  2. Spelling mistakes in name fields. Common when the registrar's clerk transliterates names from a regional script into English without cross-checking the affidavit. A single mismatched letter between the certificate and the Aadhaar or passport can derail spouse visa applications, joint bank accounts, and property mutations.
  3. Wrong date of marriage. Usually a data-entry error where the date of registration is recorded instead of the date of solemnisation, or where the lunar calendar date supplied by the family is entered without conversion to the Gregorian date.
  4. Wrong address or parentage details. Often surfaces when the certificate is read for the first time during a passport renewal or property registration, sometimes years after issuance.
  5. Missing witness record. Two witnesses are statutorily required under §8 of the Hindu Marriage Act 1955, §13 of the Special Marriage Act 1954, and equivalent provisions in personal-law and state legislation. When witness signatures are missing from the register, the certificate's evidentiary value collapses.
  6. Online portal failure. State marriage registration portals (Karnataka Kaveri, Maharashtra IGR, Delhi e-District, Tamil Nadu TNREGINET) frequently throw upload errors, OTP failures, or “application not found” messages even after the citizen pays the prescribed fee.
  7. Outright refusal to register. Less common but more serious. Registrars sometimes refuse to register inter-faith marriages, marriages between persons of different communities, or marriages where one party is a foreign national, despite no statutory authority to do so.

Each triggers a different escalation track, walked through below in order of severity.

The statutory framework across personal laws

India has no single marriage registration law. Registration is governed by overlapping statutes depending on religion, state, and whether the marriage was solemnised under personal law or the Special Marriage Act.

Hindu Marriage Act 1955, §8

Section 8 of the Hindu Marriage Act 1955 empowers state governments to make rules for the registration of Hindu marriages. The provision applies to Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, and Sikhs. Registration is mandatory in every state that has notified rules under §8, and the certificate is conclusive proof of the marriage under the Indian Evidence Act 1872.

§8(2) text: “the State Government may, if it is of opinion that it is necessary or expedient so to do, provide that the entering of the particulars referred to in sub-section (1) shall be compulsory in the State or in any part thereof.” Every major state has notified.

Special Marriage Act 1954

Sections 5 to 13 of the Special Marriage Act 1954 govern marriages solemnised before the Marriage Officer of the district. The Act applies to all citizens regardless of religion, and is the default for inter-faith marriages, marriages where one or both parties are foreign nationals, and civil marriages without any religious ceremony.

A 30-day notice is mandatory under §5, the notice is published on the Marriage Officer's notice board under §6, and any objection must be disposed of within 30 days under §7. The certificate issued under §13 is the only government-issued proof of a Special Marriage Act marriage and cannot be substituted by a religious priest's affidavit.

Indian Christian Marriage Act 1872

Christian marriages in India are registered under the Indian Christian Marriage Act 1872. Sections 27 to 37 require the officiating minister to enter the marriage in the church register and transmit a copy to the Registrar General of Births, Deaths, and Marriages.

Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act 1936

Parsi marriages are registered under §6 of the Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act 1936 by the officiating priest, who forwards the marriage register to the Registrar of Marriages within the jurisdiction.

Muslim personal law and the Special Marriage Act

Muslim marriages (nikah) are solemnised under Muslim personal law and the nikahnama is the primary marriage document. However, several states (notably Assam, Bihar, Jammu and Kashmir, Bengal, and Odisha) have separate Muslim marriage registration laws that require the qazi to forward a registration entry. In states without such laws, the Supreme Court in Seema v Ashwani Kumar (2006) 2 SCC 578 directed registration through the state's general compulsory registration mechanism.

State Compulsory Registration of Marriages Acts

Following the Supreme Court's direction in Seema v Ashwani Kumar, every state was required to enact compulsory registration laws. The major statutes are:

Each state law prescribes its own registration window (typically 30 to 60 days from the date of marriage), late fee schedule, correction procedure, and appellate authority. Always consult the specific state Act before drafting a complaint.

Seema v Ashwani Kumar (2006) 2 SCC 578

The Supreme Court in Seema v Ashwani Kumar held that compulsory registration of marriages would be a step in the right direction for the prevention of disputes, evidence of marriage, and protection of women's rights. The Court directed every state and union territory to frame rules for compulsory marriage registration within three months of the order. This judgment is the single most powerful citation in any writ petition or complaint against a refusing registrar.

30-minute action plan

If your certificate is missing, delayed, or wrong, this 30-minute drill produces documentary evidence that protects every later remedy.

Minutes 0 to 5: Capture the current state

Download or photograph the existing certificate (if issued with errors), the application acknowledgement receipt, the biometric receipt, and any portal-generated reference number. Time-stamp every screenshot using your phone's automatic date overlay or a screenshot annotation app.

Minutes 5 to 10: Verify the file status

Log in to the state portal with the reference number. Note exact status text (e.g. “Pending Verification at SRO Pune Camp”, “Approved - Print Pending”, “Rejected - Reason Not Specified”). Screenshot.

Minutes 10 to 15: Draft a correction memo

One-page memo to the Sub-Registrar: application number, date of marriage, both spouses' names, date of error discovery, specific field in error, correct value. Attach self-attested proof (Aadhaar, passport, school leaving certificate, marriage invitation).

Minutes 15 to 20: Visit the Sub-Registrar's office

If the office is reachable, walk in and get the memo received under dated acknowledgement stamp. Otherwise send by Speed Post AD; keep the tracking number.

Minutes 20 to 25: File a parallel RTI Act §6 application

Address the RTI to the Public Information Officer of the Office of the Registrar of Marriages. Ask three specific questions: (a) the file movement record of application number XYZ, (b) the name and designation of the officer currently holding the file, and © the reason for the delay or error. Pay the ₹10 fee by demand draft, postal order, or Indian Postal Order.

Minutes 25 to 30: Lodge a state grievance portal complaint

File on the state grievance portal (CM Helpline MP/Rajasthan, Aaple Sarkar Maharashtra, Sevasindhu Karnataka, Jansunwai UP, e-District Delhi). Quote registrar office, application number, correction-memo date.

Five actions, in sequence, produce a paper trail no registrar's office can ignore.

Evidence checklist before you escalate

A complaint succeeds or fails on the evidence bundle. Assemble before contacting the District Registrar:

  1. Original marriage certificate (if issued with errors): scan front and back, both colour and black-and-white copies.
  2. Application acknowledgement receipt with the application reference number, date of submission, and counter clerk's signature or stamp.
  3. Biometric capture receipt from the Sub-Registrar's office.
  4. Fee payment proof: e-receipt from the state portal, bank challan, or demand draft counterfoil.
  5. Aadhaar of both spouses (self-attested) showing the correct name spelling.
  6. Passport of both spouses (if available) for cross-verification of date of birth.
  7. School leaving certificate or 10th board certificate for the legal name spelling.
  8. Wedding invitation card as primary evidence of the date of solemnisation.
  9. Photographs of the wedding ceremony with date metadata.
  10. Affidavits of both witnesses on ₹100 non-judicial stamp paper attesting to the marriage.
  11. Priest, qazi, or marriage officer certificate confirming solemnisation.
  12. Address proof of both spouses (electricity bill, gas bill, rent agreement).
  13. Parents' identity proof if parentage details are in error.
  14. All previous correspondence with the registrar office, in chronological order.
  15. Screenshots of portal status at each stage.

Scan to one paginated PDF with an index. This becomes Annexure A to every escalation letter.

The official complaint route to the District Registrar

The District Registrar of Marriages (IGR, Registrar General, or District Magistrate, by state) is the appellate authority over every Sub-Registrar. Route:

Step 1: Written complaint to the Sub-Registrar

Send a formal written complaint to the Sub-Registrar who issued (or failed to issue) the certificate. Allow 15 working days for a response. The complaint must be specific: cite the application number, the date of submission, the statutory window under the relevant state Act, and the exact relief sought (issuance of corrected certificate within a specified deadline).

Step 2: First appeal to the District Registrar

If the Sub-Registrar does not respond within 15 working days, or responds unsatisfactorily, file a first appeal to the District Registrar of Marriages. Attach the complete evidence bundle (Annexure A) and a copy of the original complaint with proof of delivery.

The first appeal must be filed within 30 days of the Sub-Registrar's response (or non-response). State the grounds of appeal clearly: delay beyond statutory window, error in certificate, refusal to register, missing witness record, or portal failure. Quote the specific section of the state Compulsory Registration of Marriages Act under which relief is sought.

Step 3: Second appeal to the Inspector General of Registration

If the District Registrar does not provide relief, the second appeal lies with the Inspector General of Registration (IGR) at the state level. The IGR has supervisory jurisdiction over all registration offices and can pass binding directions to any Sub-Registrar.

IGR contacts are on the state revenue/registration department site. Maharashtra IGR at Pune, Karnataka at Bengaluru, Tamil Nadu at Chennai, Delhi at the Divisional Commissioner.

Step 4: Writ petition before the High Court

If administrative remedies fail, a writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution of India can be filed before the jurisdictional High Court. The relief sought is a writ of mandamus directing the Registrar to issue the corrected certificate within a specified time. The locus classicus is Seema v Ashwani Kumar (2006) 2 SCC 578.

Recent HC orders direct Registrars to comply in 4-8 weeks, often with costs. Writ legal fees: ₹15,000-40,000. Many HCs permit party-in-person petitions.

RTI Act use case for marriage registration files

The RTI Act is the most underused tool for breaking marriage-certificate deadlock. §6 entitles any citizen to seek information; the Sub-Registrar's Office is a public authority.

What to ask under RTI

Frame the RTI questions narrowly and factually. Avoid opinions and demands. The five highest-yield questions are:

  1. Provide a certified copy of the file movement register for application number XYZ from the date of submission to the date of this RTI.
  2. Provide the name, designation, and contact number of the officer currently holding the file.
  3. Provide a certified copy of the noting sheets in the file.
  4. State the statutory window prescribed under the applicable state Compulsory Registration of Marriages Act and the reason for exceeding it.
  5. Provide a copy of the standard operating procedure for correction of errors in issued marriage certificates.

RTI fee and timeline

Fee: ₹10 by DD, IPO, or bank challan to the Accounts Officer. BPL applicants pay nothing on production of a BPL card.

PIO must respond in 30 days. If life or liberty is involved (rare here; applicable in DV and dowry cases), the timeline shrinks to 48 hours under §7(1) proviso.

If the PIO does not respond

First appeal to the FAA (Senior Registrar or Dy IGR) within 30 days of the response window expiry. Second appeal to the State Information Commission within 90 days of the first appellate order.

The SIC has §20 power to impose ₹250/day penalty on the PIO, up to ₹25,000. Many marriage-certificate RTIs have resulted in penalties; the §20 threat alone often resolves delay.

Sample correction application

The following template can be adapted for any state. Replace the bracketed placeholders with actual details.

To,
The Sub-Registrar of Marriages,
[Office address, City, PIN]

Subject: Application for correction of marriage certificate ,  Application No. [XYZ] dated [DD-MM-YYYY]

Sir or Madam,

I, [applicant name], holder of Aadhaar number ending [last four digits], resident of [full address], submitted application number [XYZ] for registration of my marriage with [spouse name] solemnised on [date of marriage] at [place of marriage].

The marriage certificate issued on [date of certificate issue] under serial number [serial number] contains the following error(s):

  1. The name of the [bride or groom or witness] is recorded as [incorrect spelling] whereas the correct spelling as per Aadhaar, passport, and school leaving certificate is [correct spelling].
  2. The date of marriage is recorded as [incorrect date] whereas the correct date as per the wedding invitation, photographs, and witness affidavits is [correct date].
  3. The address of [party] is recorded as [incorrect address] whereas the correct address as per the electricity bill dated [date] is [correct address].

I attach the following documents in support of this correction request (Annexure A, paginated 1 to [N]):

  * Original marriage certificate (Pages 1 to 2)
  * Aadhaar of both spouses (Pages 3 to 6)
  * Passport of both spouses (Pages 7 to 10)
  * School leaving certificate (Pages 11 to 12)
  * Wedding invitation card (Page 13)
  * Photographs with date metadata (Pages 14 to 18)
  * Witness affidavits on ₹100 stamp paper (Pages 19 to 22)
  * Address proof (Pages 23 to 24)

I request that the correction be effected within 15 working days of receipt of this application, and that a fresh corrected certificate be issued under the same serial number. I am willing to pay the prescribed correction fee.

I rely on Section [insert section] of the [state] Compulsory Registration of Marriages Act and the directions of the Supreme Court in Seema v Ashwani Kumar (2006) 2 SCC 578.

Yours faithfully,

[Signature]
[Applicant name]
[Date]
[Mobile number]
[Email]

Sample RTI application for delay or refusal

To,
The Public Information Officer,
Office of the Sub-Registrar of Marriages,
[Office address, City, PIN]

Subject: Application under Section 6 of the Right to Information Act 2005

Sir or Madam,

I, [applicant name], citizen of India, resident of [full address], hereby seek the following information under Section 6 of the Right to Information Act 2005 in respect of my marriage registration application:

Application number: [XYZ]
Date of submission: [DD-MM-YYYY]
Date of marriage: [DD-MM-YYYY]
Names of parties: [applicant] and [spouse]

Information sought:

  1. Provide a certified copy of the file movement register entries for the above application from the date of submission to the date of this RTI.
  2. Provide the name, designation, telephone number, and current posting of the officer holding the file as on the date of this RTI.
  3. Provide certified photocopies of all noting sheets and correspondence in the file.
  4. State the statutory window for issuance of marriage certificates prescribed under [state Act], and the reasons for which the said window has been exceeded in this case.
  5. Provide a certified copy of the standard operating procedure for correction of errors in issued marriage certificates.
  6. State the name and designation of the First Appellate Authority for this office, with contact address.

A demand draft for ₹10 in favour of [the prescribed payee] is enclosed.

I am a citizen of India. I undertake to pay any additional fee for photocopying as prescribed under the RTI (Regulation of Fee and Cost) Rules 2005.

Yours faithfully,

[Signature]
[Applicant name]
[Date]
[Mobile number]
[Email]
[Postal address for response]

State-by-state compulsory registration laws

Registration window, late fees, and appellate authority vary by state. Position in eight largest states:

< 100% 20% 20% 20% 20% 20% >
State Governing Act Window from marriage Late fee Appellate authority
Karnataka Karnataka Compulsory Registration of Marriages Act 2018 30 days ₹50 to ₹500 District Registrar
Maharashtra Maharashtra Regulation of Marriage Bureaus and Registration of Marriages Act 1998 90 days ₹100 onwards Joint District Registrar
Tamil Nadu Tamil Nadu Registration of Marriages Act 2009 90 days ₹50 onwards Inspector General of Registration
Delhi Delhi (Compulsory Registration of Marriage) Order 2014 60 days ₹100 Divisional Commissioner
Uttar Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Marriage Registration Rules 2017 1 year ₹50 to ₹200 Inspector General of Registration
Rajasthan Rajasthan Compulsory Registration of Marriages Act 2009 30 days ₹100 to ₹500 District Registrar
West Bengal West Bengal Compulsory Registration of Marriages Act 2024 60 days ₹100 onwards District Marriage Officer
Andhra Pradesh Andhra Pradesh Compulsory Registration of Marriages Act 2002 30 days ₹50 onwards District Registrar

Always cross-check on the state registration department site - rules are revised periodically.

Online portal failures and how to bypass them

State portals fail in predictable ways. Fix depends on failure mode.

OTP not received

The most common failure. Causes: mobile DND filter, telecom operator delay, registrar database mobile number mismatch. Fix: try alternate mobile number entered during application, switch from SMS to voice OTP if portal supports it, or visit the Sub-Registrar's office for offline OTP override.

Application not found

Occurs when the portal session times out mid-submission or the payment gateway fails after fee deduction. Fix: check bank statement for fee deduction. If deducted, file a written application to the Sub-Registrar with the bank transaction reference number quoting non-issuance of acknowledgement.

Upload error or file size limit

State portals typically cap uploads at 100 KB to 500 KB per document. Fix: compress PDFs using free online tools, convert images to JPG at 60 to 70 percent quality, or visit the Sub-Registrar's office for physical document submission.

Status frozen at one stage

Application stuck at “verification pending” or “approval pending”. Fix: §6 RTI for file movement and current holder. A targeted RTI moves frozen files within 30 days in over 80% of recorded cases.

Portal down or maintenance

If the portal is unavailable for more than seven consecutive days, submit a physical application to the Sub-Registrar with a printed screenshot of the portal error message. The right to register does not depend on the portal being functional.

Witness records missing from the register

A certificate without witness records is legally infirm. Witnesses are required under:

If witness names, signatures, or address proofs are missing from the register, the certificate can be challenged in divorce, succession, inheritance, dowry, or DV proceedings.

How to add witness records retrospectively

  1. File a written application to the Sub-Registrar within 90 days of discovery of the omission.
  2. Attach affidavits of both witnesses on ₹100 non-judicial stamp paper, signed and notarised, attesting to their presence at the solemnisation.
  3. Attach Aadhaar and address proof of both witnesses.
  4. Request that the witness entries be made in the register and a corrected certificate issued.
  5. If the Sub-Registrar refuses, escalate to the District Registrar with a copy of the rejection.

If both witnesses are unavailable

If a witness has died, migrated abroad, or cannot be traced, file a substitute affidavit on ₹100 stamp paper from someone who attended, with their ceremony photos and the death/migration record of the original witness. The District Registrar can accept substitute witnesses for retrospective entries.

Frequently asked questions

Is marriage registration compulsory in India?

Yes. Following Seema v Ashwani Kumar (2006) 2 SCC 578, every state has framed compulsory marriage registration rules under §8 of the Hindu Marriage Act 1955, the Special Marriage Act 1954, or a state-specific Compulsory Registration of Marriages Act. Failure to register does not invalidate the marriage but creates evidentiary and legal disabilities.

What is the time limit to register a marriage?

The statutory window varies by state. Most states prescribe 30 to 60 days from the date of solemnisation. Karnataka, Rajasthan, and Andhra Pradesh prescribe 30 days. Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu prescribe 90 days. Uttar Pradesh permits registration within one year. Late registration is permitted in every state on payment of a prescribed late fee.

How long does the registrar take to issue the certificate?

State Compulsory Registration of Marriages Acts prescribe 30 to 60 days from the date of application. In practice, registrars issue certificates within 15 working days where the application is complete and undisputed. Delays beyond 30 days entitle the applicant to file a complaint with the District Registrar and an RTI under §6 of the RTI Act 2005.

Can a marriage certificate be corrected after issuance?

Yes. Every state permits correction of clerical errors (spelling, date, address, parentage) through a written application to the issuing Sub-Registrar, accompanied by documentary proof of the correct value. Corrections to substantive entries (names, marriage date, place) typically require an affidavit and may attract a correction fee of ₹100 to ₹500.

What if the registrar refuses to register an inter-faith marriage?

The Special Marriage Act 1954 governs inter-faith marriages and the Marriage Officer has no discretion to refuse registration where statutory conditions are met. If refused, file a complaint with the District Registrar, an RTI for the file noting, and a writ petition before the High Court citing Lata Singh v State of UP (2006) 5 SCC 475 and Shafin Jahan v Asokan KM (2018) 16 SCC 368.

Is the nikahnama a valid marriage certificate?

The nikahnama is the primary religious document for Muslim marriages but is not a government-issued certificate. To obtain a government certificate, Muslim couples should register the marriage under the applicable state Compulsory Registration of Marriages Act or the Special Marriage Act 1954. States like Assam, Bihar, Jammu and Kashmir, Bengal, and Odisha have specific Muslim marriage registration laws.

Can a marriage solemnised outside India be registered in India?

Yes, under §17 of the Foreign Marriage Act 1969 and the relevant state rules. Both spouses (or one if the other is overseas) can apply to the Marriage Officer of the district where they ordinarily reside, with the foreign marriage certificate, apostille or attestation by the Indian Embassy, and passport copies of both spouses.

What fee is payable for a marriage certificate?

Fees vary by state but typically range from ₹100 to ₹1,000 for fresh registration within the statutory window. Late registration attracts an additional fee of ₹50 to ₹500. Correction of clerical errors attracts a fee of ₹100 to ₹500. Duplicate certificates cost ₹50 to ₹200. All fees are payable by demand draft, online payment, or bank challan.

Does a marriage certificate require attestation for use abroad?

Yes. For use abroad, the certificate requires apostille (for Hague Convention countries) or attestation (for non-Hague countries). The chain is: Sub-Registrar issuance, State Home Department attestation, Ministry of External Affairs apostille or attestation, and embassy attestation of the destination country if required. The total time is 15 to 30 working days and the total fee is ₹500 to ₹2,000.

What if I have lost my marriage certificate?

File a written application to the Sub-Registrar who issued the original certificate, with a copy of the FIR (if lost), an affidavit on ₹100 stamp paper, and the prescribed duplicate certificate fee. A duplicate is typically issued within seven to fifteen working days. The duplicate has the same legal validity as the original.

Sources and statutory references