Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
You own one plot, but the land or revenue records now show it twice. A second khata, a second record of rights, or a second mutation entry has appeared in the same survey number, sometimes in a stranger's name, sometimes in yours with wrong details. Here is how to get the duplicate cancelled and the genuine record kept.
A typical case from Tumakuru in Karnataka: Ramesh holds a registered sale deed and a khata for survey number 142/3. When he applies for a fresh khata extract before selling, the revenue office shows two RTC (record of rights, tenancy and crops) entries for the same survey number. One matches his deed. The other carries a slightly different extent and a different owner name. A duplicate record like this can freeze your sale, block a loan, and even let a third party try to deal with “their” version of your land. The fix is documentary, and the registrar or tahsildar can resolve most cases without a court.
A duplicate property record is not the same as a wrong entry on a single record. Here two separate records exist for what should be one. The real question is which one flows from a valid registered transaction and which one was created in error or by a parallel claim.
To, The Tahsildar / Sub-Registrar / Revenue Record Officer [Office name and taluk/district] Date: [DD/MM/YYYY] Subject: Cancellation of duplicate record for Survey/Plot No. [number], [village/area], retaining the genuine record - request for correction Sir/Madam, I own the property at Survey/Plot No. [number], [village/area], under registered sale deed [document number] dated [date]. Two separate records now exist for this single property: Record A (genuine): [khata/RTC/record number], owner [name], extent [area]. Record B (duplicate): [khata/RTC/record number], owner [name], extent [area]. Record A matches my registered sale deed and the Encumbrance Certificate for the period [from] to [to]. Record B does not flow from any registered deed in my chain of title. I request you to verify both records against the registered records and the EC, cancel the duplicate Record B, and retain the genuine Record A. Please inform me in writing of the action taken and the reason the duplicate was created. Documents enclosed: both records, EC, registered sale deed, prior deeds, identity proof. Yours faithfully, [Name, address, mobile, email]
| Step | Use when | Where |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Two records visible | Cancellation petition to the tahsildar or record-keeping office, with the EC |
| 2 | Office sits on it | District Registrar, Inspector General of Registration, or the Deputy Commissioner/Collector |
| 3 | Status and cause needed | RTI to the PIO of the revenue or registration department for the deed and file notes |
| 4 | Forged deed behind the duplicate | Police complaint, and a civil suit for declaration of title and cancellation of the deed |
The revenue department, the sub-registrar, and the municipal or panchayat record office are public authorities, so RTI works well here. Registration and land records are state subjects, so file through your state RTI portal or by post to the office PIO, not the central portal. Ask for a certified copy of the deed or order that created the duplicate record, the index or register page where it sits, the file notings on your cancellation petition, and the rule under which the second record was opened. A certified copy that shows the duplicate rests on no valid deed is your strongest proof for cancellation. RTI gets you records and a dated answer; it cannot itself decide title if there is a genuine rival claim.
It is a second land or revenue record, such as a second khata, RTC or property register entry, for a single property that should have only one record. It usually arises from a clerical mistake during digitisation or mutation, or from a parallel or forged claim on the same survey number.
Match each record to your registered sale deed and to the Encumbrance Certificate for the survey number. The record that flows from the registered chain of deeds is the genuine one. The record with no supporting registered deed is the duplicate to be cancelled.
For revenue land, the tahsildar or revenue record office, with escalation to the Deputy Commissioner or Collector. For an urban plot, the municipal or panchayat record office. The sub-registrar and District Registrar handle the registration side. Apply to the office that holds the record you want cancelled.
Some state land-records and registration portals let you raise a correction or grievance request and track it with a token, but cancellation of a duplicate record is verified and ordered by the office, not done by you online. Check your state portal for the correction option and keep the acknowledgement.
Get a certified copy of that deed by RTI. If it is forged, file a police complaint, and consult a property lawyer about a civil suit for declaration of title and cancellation of the deed. The record cancellation and the criminal and civil routes can run together.
Yes. A buyer or lender who sees two records for one property will usually stall until the duplicate is cancelled and the record is clean. Get the cancellation done and pull a fresh clean record before you transact.
Download the duplicate property record correction checklist (PDF).