If your name is missing or wrong on Maharashtra's Saat Baara Utara (7/12 extract), or if your ferfar mutation is stuck in the Talathi's office after a property sale or inheritance, this guide walks you through every step — from the online Mahabhulekh portal and Digital Satbara to the Talathi, Circle Officer and RTI route when the system stalls.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
Quick answer
A 7/12 extract (Saat Baara Utara) is Maharashtra's core agricultural land record maintained by the Talathi. A ferfar is the mutation entry that updates ownership when land is sold, inherited, gifted, or partitioned. To get an error corrected or a ferfar completed: (1) visit your Talathi with a written application and supporting documents; (2) track the ferfar status online at bhulekh.mahabhumi.gov.in; (3) if stuck, escalate to the Circle Officer, then the Tahsildar; (4) file an RTI application to the PIO of the Taluka Inspector of Land Records to create a paper trail and force a response.
This guide is for residents of Maharashtra who have any of the following problems with their agricultural land records:
Important note on scope: The 7/12 extract and ferfar process described here applies to agricultural and rural land across Maharashtra. Urban property records (Property Cards maintained by City Survey offices) follow a slightly different process. For urban properties in Mumbai or other cities, the aaplesarkar.mahaonline.gov.in portal has a separate Property Card service. This guide focuses on the 7/12 and ferfar system used across Maharashtra's talukas.
The principles are the same whether you are in Pune, Nashik, Aurangabad, Nagpur, Kolhapur, or any other district — the offices and portal are consistent statewide.
Do the groundwork from your phone or laptop before you step into any office.
Prepare your complete application package.
Use the day to review the Aapli Chawadi notices and prepare for follow-up.
| Document | When needed | Where to get it |
|---|---|---|
| Current 7/12 extract (unsigned copy) | All cases | bhulekh.mahabhumi.gov.in — free download |
| Digitally signed 7/12 extract | Bank loans, court submissions | digitalsatbara.mahabhumi.gov.in — paid service |
| 8A extract (khata of all survey numbers in your name) | All cases | bhulekh.mahabhumi.gov.in — free download |
| Registered sale deed | Mutation after sale / purchase | Sub-Registrar Office or igrmaharashtra.gov.in |
| Death certificate | Inheritance / succession mutation | Gram Panchayat / Municipal Corporation |
| Succession certificate or legal heir certificate | Inheritance mutation (if disputed or multiple heirs) | Civil court or competent revenue authority |
| Will (registered or unregistered, as available) | Inheritance mutation if a will exists | Your family records; registration records if registered |
| Family tree affidavit (notarised) | Inheritance mutation — to identify all legal heirs | Notary public |
| Aadhaar card of applicant | All cases — identity verification | Your own copy |
| PAN card (if available) | High-value transactions | Your own copy |
| Property tax receipts (latest) | All cases — corroborates possession | Gram Panchayat or Municipal Office |
| Court decree / partition deed | Mutation after court order or partition | Relevant court or registration office |
| Acknowledgment receipt of earlier application | Follow-up and escalation | Already with you from initial submission |
| Mutation / ferfar number (from portal or receipt) | Status tracking and RTI | Talathi office receipt or portal status page |
Go to bhulekh.mahabhumi.gov.in and retrieve your 7/12 extract using your district, taluka, village, and survey or gat number. Print or save it. Circle exactly what is wrong: the name in Column 2 (ownership column), the area, the land type, or a pending mutation entry. Being precise about the error will speed up the Talathi's work.
These are two different requests:
In both cases, the application goes first to the Talathi. The difference is in what documents you carry.
Maharashtra has linked its property registration system with the land records department. After a sale deed is registered at a Sub-Registrar Office, a mutation request should be triggered automatically through the Department of Registration and Stamps (igrmaharashtra.gov.in). Check the mutation dashboard at igrmaharashtra.gov.in to see whether a ferfar has been initiated for your document registration number. If it has been initiated but is still pending at the Talathi, go to Step 4. If it has not been initiated at all, visit your Sub-Registrar Office and ask why the registration was not forwarded for mutation.
Visit the Talathi office for your village or revenue circle. Talathi offices typically function on working days during the morning. Submit:
Ask for a dated acknowledgment receipt. Do not leave without one — this receipt is your proof of application and will be essential for follow-up and RTI.
You can also apply through the Aaplesarkar portal for some mutation categories, which generates an online application reference number.
After your application is accepted:
Track the progress using your mutation number at digitalsatbara.mahabhumi.gov.in/pc_status.
Once the ferfar is certified and the 7/12 is updated, download the free unsigned extract from bhulekh.mahabhumi.gov.in to confirm your name appears correctly. For bank loans, court submissions, or any legal purpose requiring official certification, purchase the digitally signed 7/12 from digitalsatbara.mahabhumi.gov.in. The current fee and payment method are displayed on that portal before you transact.
If weeks have passed beyond the expected processing time with no update, file an RTI application to the Public Information Officer, Taluka Inspector of Land Records or the Tahsildar's office. Ask specifically for the status of your ferfar application, copies of any order passed, and reasons for any delay. See the RTI section below for a detailed template.
| Step | Authority | What to do | Typical timeframe to act |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Talathi (Village Revenue Officer) | Submit written application with all documents. Obtain dated receipt. Track ferfar status online. | First point of contact; standard processing takes a few weeks |
| 2 | Circle Officer (Circle Inspector of Land Records) | If Talathi has not acted, visit the Circle Officer's office with your application receipt. File a written representation. | After Talathi inaction; Circle Officer certifies or cancels the entry |
| 3 | Tahsildar (Chief Revenue Officer, Taluka level) | Submit a written complaint about Talathi / Circle Officer inaction. Can direct subordinates to process pending mutations. | After Circle Officer is unresponsive |
| 4 | RTI to PIO, Taluka Inspector of Land Records / Tahsildar Office | File RTI under the RTI Act, 2005, asking for status of mutation application, copies of entries, and reasons for delay. Use rtionline.maharashtra.gov.in or submit in person. | Can be filed at any stage; 30-day response window |
| 5 | Sub-Divisional Officer (SDO) | File a formal appeal or complaint against the Tahsildar's inaction. SDO supervises all revenue officers in the sub-division. | After Tahsildar is unresponsive |
| 6 | District Collector | Lodge a complaint with the District Collector's office (Zilla Parishad). Use the online grievance portal of the district's official website. | After SDO is unresponsive |
| 7 | RTI First Appeal to First Appellate Authority | If PIO did not respond to RTI within 30 days or gave an unsatisfactory reply, file a first appeal to the First Appellate Authority (usually the Tahsildar or District Inspector of Land Records). | Within 90 days of PIO non-response or unsatisfactory reply |
| 8 | Maharashtra State Information Commission | If first appeal is also unsatisfactory, file a second appeal before the Maharashtra SIC at rtionline.maharashtra.gov.in. | After first appeal outcome |
| 9 | Civil Court (if title is disputed) | If the mutation is refused because of a title dispute — rather than a procedural delay — a civil suit for declaration of title may be needed. Consult a lawyer. | Last resort for genuine title disputes |
Replace the text in square brackets with your own details before sending.
To, The Talathi, Village [Village Name], Taluka [Taluka Name], District [District Name], Maharashtra — [PIN Code]
Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]
Subject: Application for ferfar mutation / correction of 7/12 extract — Survey No. [Survey / Gat Number], Village [Village Name]
Respected Sir / Madam,
I, [Your Full Name], son/daughter/wife of [Father's / Husband's Name], residing at [Your Complete Address], am the [owner / legal heir / purchaser] of agricultural land bearing Survey No. [Survey / Gat Number], situated at [Village], Taluka [Taluka], District [District], Maharashtra.
The current 7/12 extract for the above survey number shows the following error / pending entry:
Existing entry: [State exactly what is currently shown on the 7/12] Correct / required entry: [State exactly what should be shown] Reason for change: [Sale after registered deed / Inheritance after death / Spelling correction / Other — briefly explain]
I am attaching the following documents in support of this application: 1. Copy of the current 7/12 extract (downloaded from bhulekh.mahabhumi.gov.in) 2. Copy of the current 8A extract 3. [Registered Sale Deed dated [Date] registered at Sub-Registrar, [SRO Name] / Death Certificate of [Deceased's Name] dated [Date] issued by [Issuing Authority] / Other document as applicable] 4. Copy of Aadhaar card of applicant 5. Latest property tax receipt 6. [Any other supporting document]
I request you to kindly initiate the ferfar / correction entry for the above survey number, issue a public notice as required, and update the 7/12 after the notice period if no valid objection is received.
Please provide me with a dated acknowledgment of this application.
Yours faithfully,
[Your Full Name] [Your Address] Mobile: [Your Mobile Number] Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]
— [For RTI follow-up — attach this section to an RTI application if no action is taken]
RTI Application to: The Public Information Officer, Office of the Taluka Inspector of Land Records / Tahsildar, Taluka [Taluka Name], District [District Name], Maharashtra
Under Section 6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005, I request the following information:
1. Current status of my ferfar / correction application for Survey No. [Survey No.], Village [Village], submitted on [Date], acknowledgment number [Number if available]. 2. A copy of any order, note, or entry passed in connection with the above application. 3. If no action has been taken, the specific reasons for the delay. 4. Name and designation of the officer responsible for processing the application.
RTI fee of Rs. 10 is enclosed by [Indian Postal Order / demand draft / court fee stamp — as applicable to your submission method].
[Your Name, Address, Date]
The Talathi, Circle Officer, Tahsildar, Sub-Divisional Officer, and the District Collector are all public authorities under the RTI Act, 2005. The revenue department's land record offices — including the Taluka Inspector of Land Records — are public authorities with designated Public Information Officers. This makes RTI a powerful and completely legitimate tool for land record problems in Maharashtra.
Use RTI when:
For a broader guide on land records and RTI, see our article on using RTI for land records and the Khasra Khatauni correction guide for the all-India perspective. For CPGRAMS-based complaints, see our CPGRAMS guide.
The 7/12 extract, locally called Saat Baara Utara or Satbara Utara, is Maharashtra's primary land record combining Village Form VII (ownership and rights) and Village Form XII (cultivation details). It is maintained by the Talathi (village revenue officer) and shows the owner's name, survey number, area, land type, cultivation details, outstanding loans, and any litigation. It is essential for property transactions, bank loans, and inheritance transfers.
Ferfar is the mutation entry recorded in Maharashtra's land registers whenever ownership changes due to sale, inheritance, gift, partition, or court order. Once a ferfar is approved and certified, the Talathi updates the 7/12 extract to show the new owner's name. Without a completed ferfar, the buyer's or heir's name does not appear on the 7/12, which blocks agricultural loans, property sales, and succession transfers.
A standard mutation with no objections typically takes around 30 days from the date of application: the Talathi issues a public notice, anyone who objects must do so within the notice period, and the Circle Officer then certifies the entry. Inheritance cases requiring court certificates (such as a succession certificate) can take longer depending on how quickly those documents are obtained. Exact timelines can vary by taluka and workload.
Visit your local Talathi office with a written application, the current 7/12 extract showing the error, and supporting documents that prove the correct name (registered sale deed, Aadhaar, PAN, or identity documents). The Talathi records a correction entry, the Circle Officer verifies it, and the 7/12 is updated. If the error originated from a registered deed, you may also need to get the deed itself corrected through a rectification deed before the Talathi will update the record.
Yes. Maharashtra has an automated e-Mutation system where, after property registration at a Sub-Registrar Office, a mutation request is triggered automatically through the Department of Registration and Stamps portal (igrmaharashtra.gov.in). For cases not linked to fresh registration — such as inheritance or gift — you can apply through the Aaplesarkar portal (aaplesarkar.mahaonline.gov.in) or by visiting the Talathi office. You can track ferfar status at the Mahabhulekh portal (bhulekh.mahabhumi.gov.in) or through the Digital Satbara portal (digitalsatbara.mahabhumi.gov.in).
Use RTI when your mutation application has been pending without action for several weeks beyond the expected processing time, when you have not received any written response or acknowledgment, or when you have been verbally told to wait indefinitely. File an RTI to the Public Information Officer of the Taluka Inspector of Land Records or the Tahsildar's office, asking for the current status of your application, copies of any order passed, and copies of the relevant ferfar entries. This creates a documented paper trail and often prompts swift action.
No. The free unsigned 7/12 available on bhulekh.mahabhumi.gov.in is for general information only and is not legally valid for bank loan applications or court proceedings. For those purposes, you need a digitally signed 7/12 from the Digital Satbara portal (digitalsatbara.mahabhumi.gov.in), which carries an official digital signature. Check the current fee on the portal before applying.