When a government valuation differs from your registered sale deed, find which record is wrong, use RTI to get the basis, and then correct the deed or appeal the value.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When the government's valuation record and your registered deed disagree, the figures sit on an unbalanced scale until you reconcile them.
Quick answer
A government valuation record and your registered sale deed can disagree in three common ways: the official guidance value or circle rate is higher than the price in your deed, a clerical error crept into the encumbrance certificate or online record, or the municipal assessment value does not match what you registered. First identify which of these you are facing, because each has a different fix. The registration, stamps and municipal records all sit with public authorities, so RTI is a powerful tool to obtain the exact basis they used.
RTI gets you the evidence; it does not change the value. The actual correction happens through a rectification deed at the Sub-Registrar for a data error, a statutory appeal to the Collector of Stamps against any undervaluation or deficit-stamp-duty order, or an objection before the municipal assessment authority for a tax-valuation mismatch.
This guide is for property owners and buyers in India who find a government record showing a valuation that does not match their registered deed. Use it if:
Pin down exactly which two figures disagree. Lay your registered sale deed next to the document that shows the other value, the encumbrance certificate, the municipal assessment, or the undervaluation or stamp-duty notice. Write down both amounts, the property identifier (survey, plot, flat or door number), and the date and reference of any notice. Decide which of the three patterns you have: a circle-rate or guidance-value gap, a clerical data error, or a municipal-assessment mismatch.
Gather your proof bundle: the registered sale deed, the latest encumbrance certificate, the property-tax receipt or assessment, your identity proof, and any notice you received. Draft a short RTI application to the State Public Information Officer of the registration or stamps office (or the municipal body, depending on which record is wrong) asking for the exact basis of the valuation they recorded.
If the figures differ only because of an obvious typing or transcription error, draft a clerical-error correction or rectification request instead.
Decide your route and prepare both tracks in parallel. Track one is the correction or appeal: a rectification deed and correction application at the Sub-Registrar for a data error, a statutory appeal to the Collector of Stamps for an undervaluation order, or an objection to the municipal assessing authority for a tax mismatch. Track two is the RTI to extract the basis. Keep one folder with your deed, the conflicting record, the notice, the RTI draft and the correction draft, ready to submit on Monday.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Registered sale deed (certified copy) | The anchor document showing the price and details you actually registered; get a certified copy from the Sub-Registrar if you do not hold the original. |
| Encumbrance certificate (EC) | Shows the transaction history and recorded value; reveals whether the mismatch is a data-entry error in the registration record. |
| The conflicting valuation document | The guidance-value or circle-rate extract, undervaluation reference, deficit-stamp-duty notice, or municipal assessment that carries the differing figure. |
| Property-tax assessment and latest receipt | Needed when the mismatch is with the municipal capital or rental value; shows the area and value the local body has assessed. |
| Property identifiers | Survey number, plot, flat or door number and approved-plan area, so every authority can match the exact property in question. |
| Any notice or order received | An undervaluation reference or deficit-stamp-duty order carries a reference number and timeline; it is your starting point and your deadline. |
| Photo identity and ownership proof | Aadhaar, PAN or passport plus the deed, to establish you are the owner entitled to seek correction or file an appeal. |
| Communication and date log | A simple timeline of every application, RTI, notice and reply; essential if you later appeal or approach a grievance portal. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Records request (parallel) | State Public Information Officer of the registration, stamps or municipal body | RTI application to the State PIO; see how to file an RTI online in India | Reply due within the statutory RTI timeline |
| Clerical correction | Sub-Registrar / registration office | Correction or rectification-deed application at the office that registered the deed | A few weeks, depending on the office |
| Undervaluation appeal | Collector of Stamps or the appellate authority under the state stamp law | Statutory appeal filed within the timeline on the notice, with valuation evidence | As per the state stamp law; act before the notice deadline |
| Municipal assessment objection | Municipal or local-body assessing authority | Objection or appeal before the assessment authority of your urban local body | Within the revision window the local body allows |
| Grievance for inaction | State or central grievance system | CPGRAMS or your state's grievance portal, quoting your application reference | A few weeks for a tracked response |
| Last resort | High Court | Writ petition, with legal advice, only after the statutory appeal is exhausted | Slow; varies widely by court workload |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Request to reconcile the valuation in official records with my registered sale deed
To, The Sub-Registrar / Collector of Stamps / Municipal Assessing Authority [Name of office] [Address] Subject: Mismatch between the valuation in your records and my registered sale deed for property at [property identifier] Dear Sir/Madam, I am the owner of the property described as [survey / plot / flat / door number, locality, area]. I registered the sale deed [deed number and date] before [Sub-Registrar office] at a consideration of [registered value]. I find that your records show a different valuation, namely [the conflicting value], in [name the document: encumbrance certificate / undervaluation reference / deficit-stamp-duty notice / property-tax assessment, with its reference and date]. This does not match my registered deed. I request you to: 1. Reconcile the records with my registered sale deed, a certified copy of which is enclosed. 2. [If a data error] Correct the clerical error in the encumbrance certificate / online record to reflect the registered value. 3. [If an undervaluation or deficit demand] Share the exact notified value applied to my property and the basis for it, so that I can file my statutory appeal within time. 4. Confirm in writing the corrected position and the next step, if any. I am separately filing an RTI application to obtain the basis of the valuation recorded. Name: [Your full name] Property: [Property identifier] Mobile: [Your mobile] Email: [Your email] Date: [Date] Enclosures: Certified copy of the registered sale deed, encumbrance certificate, the conflicting record or notice, identity proof.
RTI is one of your strongest tools here, because the registration, stamps, revenue and municipal records all sit with public authorities. File an RTI to the State Public Information Officer of the office that holds the disputed figure and ask for:
This forces the authority to put the basis of its valuation on record, which is exactly what you need to challenge a wrong figure or correct a data error. Remember RTI extracts the evidence; the value itself is changed through the rectification or appeal route.
RTI does not by itself reduce a stamp-duty demand, correct a deed, or revise an assessment. It is an information tool, not a decision tool, so do not expect the PIO to fix the value. The correction always happens through the statutory route. RTI also does not reach a purely private side of the deal, such as your own advocate, a private valuer you hired, or a builder's internal pricing, since those are not public authorities.
For the actual fix, use the correct first remedy for your situation:
Consumer forums and sector ombudsmen do not fit here, because stamp duty and tax assessment are statutory functions of the state, not a service you bought.
Stamp duty is charged on the higher of your actual sale price or the state's notified minimum value. That minimum is called the circle rate, guidance value, ready reckoner rate or guideline value, depending on the state. If your deed price is below it, the office treats the property as undervalued and may demand the difference, even though your sale was genuine.
No. RTI is an information tool, not a decision tool. It can force the registration, stamps or municipal authority to disclose the notified rate they applied, any undervaluation report, and the notings on your file. That evidence helps you correct a data error or win a statutory appeal, but the value itself is changed only through the rectification or appeal route, not by the RTI reply.
If your registered deed is correct but the encumbrance certificate or online record shows a wrong value, apply to the Sub-Registrar for a clerical-error correction, attaching a certified copy of the deed. If the mistake was a genuine mutual error between buyer and seller, it is set right by a rectification deed that both parties sign and register at the same office.
Do not ignore it, because it carries a deadline. You have a statutory right to appeal an undervaluation or deficit-stamp-duty order to the Collector of Stamps or the appellate authority named in your state's stamp law. File within the time on the notice, with valuation evidence for your property, and use an RTI in parallel to obtain the basis the office used.
Registration, stamps, revenue and municipal matters are state subjects, so the RTI goes to the State Public Information Officer of that office under your state's RTI process. The central RTI Online portal covers only central public authorities. File through your state's RTI route or in person at the office, and address it to the PIO of the registration or municipal body that holds the record.
It can. If you register below the official notified value, income-tax law can treat the higher value as deemed consideration for both the buyer and the seller, beyond a small tolerance band. If you get a tax query on this, respond through your income-tax account with the same valuation evidence and any appellate finding, rather than leaving it unanswered.
Generally no. Stamp duty and property-tax assessment are statutory functions of the state, not a service you purchased, so consumer forums usually cannot revise them. The right routes are a rectification at the Sub-Registrar, a stamp appeal to the Collector, or an objection before the municipal assessing authority, with a grievance on CPGRAMS or the state portal if the office does not act.
It depends on the route and the office. A simple clerical correction may take a few weeks, while a stamp-duty appeal follows the timeline in your state's stamp law and a municipal objection runs within the local body's revision window. Keep a dated log of every application and RTI, so you can escalate through the grievance portal if the office crosses its own timelines.