If the revenue map leaves out your plot or survey number, act on two fronts: trace the original survey record that proves the plot exists, and push the land-records office to correct the map.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When the revenue map leaves out your plot number, the fix is to trace the original survey record and force a correction.
Quick answer
A revenue map that omits your plot number is almost always a record error, not proof that your land does not exist. Your survey number, sub-division or plot may be missing because of a digitisation slip, an un-recorded sub-division or partition, an old map that was never updated, or a clerical error when the cadastral map was redrawn. Your title document, the textual record of rights and the original survey field sketch usually still carry the plot. So your first move is to gather the records that prove the plot exists, then apply to the land-records office to correct the map.
RTI is a strong tool here, because the survey, settlement and land-records department is a public authority under the RTI Act. Use it to obtain the original survey field measurement book, the village map, the file notings and the reason the plot is missing. RTI gets you the evidence and pins responsibility; it does not redraw the map by itself. So pair it with a formal map-correction or sub-division application and, where your state allows it, the time-bound right-to-service route, which together force the office to act.
This guide is for landowners and buyers who find their plot, survey number or sub-division missing from the official revenue or cadastral map, while the textual record still shows the land. It fits whether you are a:
Move while the land-records office and helplines are open. Visit or call the office that holds the village map and ask, in plain terms, why your plot number is not shown and which record they rely on. Get a token or reference for every interaction.
Government offices are usually closed, so use this day to assemble your proof at home and draft your case.
File what can be filed online and line up Monday's office visit.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Title document (sale deed, patta, gift or partition deed) | Proves you are the lawful owner of the plot the map leaves out; the anchor for every application and RTI. |
| Record of rights (7/12, RoR, jamabandi, khatian, chitta or adangal) | The textual land record that usually still lists your survey number even when the map omits it; the strongest proof the plot exists. |
| Copy of the current village or cadastral map sheet | Shows exactly what is missing; ask the office for the sheet covering your survey number if you do not have it. |
| Old map, survey sketch or field measurement book (FMB / tippan) extract | An earlier map or the original field measurement record often shows your plot, proving it was on record before the omission. |
| Partition deed, sub-division order or family settlement | Needed when the missing number is a sub-division or share that was divided on paper but never drawn into the map. |
| Encumbrance certificate (EC) | Confirms the transaction history of the plot and links the survey number to a registered document. |
| Identity and address proof | Required for the RTI, the correction application and to identify yourself at the office. |
| Copies of all applications, tokens and acknowledgments | Every inward number and stamped receipt builds the record of delay and strengthens any escalation. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Map-correction application | Village officer, Tahsildar or district survey (land-records) office | Written application with title document, record of rights and old map, submitted with an inward number | A few weeks for a response |
| Records request (parallel) | State Public Information Officer of the survey and land-records department | RTI through your state RTI portal, or by post to the office holding the map | Reply within the statutory RTI timeline |
| Right to service (if notified) | Designated officer and appeal officer under your state service-guarantee Act | Your state right-to-service or service-guarantee portal or office | Within the timeline notified for that service |
| Senior revenue or survey officer | SDM / RDO, then Collector / District Magistrate; Director or Commissioner of Land Records | Written representation with your application, record of rights and RTI replies | As per office practice, usually a few weeks |
| Public grievance | CPGRAMS or your state grievance portal | File online with your survey number and application reference | As per the portal timeline |
| Information Commission / land-records head | State Information Commission for records; Settlement Commissioner or Director of Land Records for the map | Second appeal for records; written escalation for the correction | Varies; weeks to months |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Plot/survey number [number] missing from the village map - request to correct the cadastral record
To, [The Tahsildar / District Inspector of Land Records / Survey Officer] [Office name and address] Subject: My plot/survey number is not shown on the village map - request to correct the cadastral record and intimate status Respected Sir/Madam, I am the owner of the land bearing Survey/Khasra/Gat No. [number], Sub-division/Hissa No. [number, if any], in Village [village], Taluk/Tehsil [name], District [district]. My ownership is recorded in the record of rights (7/12 / RoR / jamabandi / patta / khatian) bearing entry [number], a copy of which is enclosed. However, this plot is not shown on the current village/cadastral map [printed map / online viewer / both], even though it appears in the textual record. My details are: - Name: [your name] - Land: Survey/Khasra/Gat No. [number], Sub-division [number], Village [village] - Record-of-rights entry: [number] - Contact: [phone] I request you to: 1. Correct the village/cadastral map to show my plot as recorded in the record of rights. 2. Carry out a survey or measurement, if required, to fix the boundary of my plot on the map. 3. Intimate the current status of this request and the officer handling it. 4. State, if any document or fee is required from me, what is needed so I can comply at once. I am attaching my title document, the record of rights, any earlier map or survey sketch, and the partition order [if a sub-division is missing]. I am also separately filing an RTI application to obtain the original survey record and the reason for the omission. Thank you. I request early action and a written reply. Yours faithfully, [Your name] [Address] [Date] Enclosures: Title document, record of rights, current map sheet, old map or survey sketch, partition order (if any), identity proof.
RTI is well suited to this problem, because the survey, settlement and land-records department is a public authority under the RTI Act. Use it to obtain records and pin responsibility, not to redraw the map. From the office that maintains the map you can ask for:
The replies become solid proof that the omission is a record error, which you can carry to the correction application, the senior revenue officer or the right-to-service appeal.
RTI will not, by itself, redraw the map or add your plot to it, because RTI compels disclosure of information, not the performance of a service. It also will not decide who owns the land. Match your remedy to the situation:
Note that this is different from the situation where the village map itself is simply not being supplied to you; if you cannot even obtain the map, see the separate guide on a village map being unavailable.
Almost certainly not. A revenue map error rarely affects the textual record. Your record of rights, title document and encumbrance certificate usually still list your survey number, which is strong proof you own the plot. The map is the record in error, not your ownership. Gather those documents and apply to the land-records office to correct the map so it matches the record of rights.
No, not directly. RTI compels the office to disclose information, not to perform the correction. It gets you the original survey field measurement book, the map sheet, the reason for the omission, the file notings and the responsible officer. Use those records to push a formal map-correction application, the senior revenue hierarchy, the grievance portal and your state right-to-service route, which together can force the fix.
Send them to the office that actually maintains the village map. That is usually the district survey and land-records office (the DILR, ADLR or settlement office, names vary by state), or the Tahsildar or taluk office, and at the village stage the patwari, talati, VAO or lekhpal. File the RTI through your state RTI portal or by post, not the central RTI Online site, because land records are a state subject.
A partition or sub-division recorded on paper is not automatically drawn into the cadastral map. The land-records office must carry out a sub-division survey and update the map sheet, which often lags the textual record. Apply in writing for the sub-division to be measured and shown on the map, attaching your partition deed or order and the updated record of rights, and ask for a survey date.
Ask whether your plot or sub-division appears in the original survey record, when and why it was removed from the map, the original field measurement book or tippan and the relevant map sheet, the file notings on your correction application, the officer responsible, and the procedure to correct a map omission in your state. You can also ask which record the department treats as authentic when the printed and digital maps differ.
RTI can get you the records and the office's stated reason, but it cannot decide a boundary or title dispute. If your plot is missing or merged because a neighbour claims the same parcel, that is a civil or revenue-court matter, not something RTI settles. Use RTI for the survey record and proof, and take the dispute itself to the revenue authority or civil court, with legal advice.
No. Pay only the official survey or correction fee notified by your state, against a proper receipt or challan, and never pay anything off the record to speed up a government correction. If someone demands a bribe to fix the map, that itself is a ground for a written grievance and a complaint to the vigilance or anti-corruption authority of your state.
Once you have filed the correction application and the RTI, give the office a reasonable period and the statutory RTI window. If there is no reply or action, file the first appeal, lodge a grievance with the Collector through CPGRAMS or your state portal, and use the right-to-service appeal if available. Long, documented delay is itself a strong ground to escalate up the survey and revenue hierarchy.