A wrong name spelling, an incorrect survey number, or a garbled flat-area figure in your registered sale deed can block your home loan, stall mutation, and cloud your title for years. This guide walks you through how a rectification deed works, when a court order is unavoidable, what the sub-registrar needs, and how to use RTI when records are stuck.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
Quick answer
A rectification deed (also called a correction deed) is the standard legal tool for fixing factual or clerical errors in a registered sale deed in India. Both parties — buyer and seller — sign and register it at the same sub-registrar office where the original deed was registered. Stamp duty on a rectification deed is generally nominal and varies by state. The correction deed does not change ownership or consideration — it only aligns the written text with what both parties always intended. If the seller is unavailable or refuses to cooperate, or if the error is fundamental (changes who owns what), you must approach a civil court under Section 26 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963. After registration, update mutation and khata records separately.
This guide is written for:
The guide covers residential and commercial property across India. Because stamp acts and registration rules are state subjects, the exact stamp duty, fees, and forms will differ — the guide tells you where to verify.
Pull out your original registered sale deed and read it end to end. Pay close attention to:
Write down every error you find, exactly as it reads, and what the correct version should be. Then collect your identity and property documents (see Documents Checklist) so you know what supporting proof you have for each correction.
Compare the sale deed against your authoritative source documents:
Call the original seller (or their legal heirs) and let them know about the error. Confirm they are willing to cooperate on a joint rectification deed. If the property is mortgaged, also call your bank's loans/legal department and ask for their procedure to obtain a No Objection Certificate (NOC) for a rectification deed.
Decide your path forward based on what you found:
| Document | Purpose | Who provides it |
|---|---|---|
| Original registered sale deed (certified copy) | Identifies the error in the recorded text and contains document/book number | Your possession; certified copy from sub-registrar if lost |
| Aadhaar card / PAN card / Passport (buyer and seller) | Proves correct spelling of names and addresses | UIDAI / Income Tax Dept / MEA |
| Revenue survey record (7/12, RoR, patta, khasra as applicable) | Proves the correct survey/plot number and area of land | State land records / revenue department portal |
| Approved building plan / layout plan | Proves the correct flat number, wing, floor, and built-up area | Municipal authority / builder |
| Occupancy Certificate (OC) or Completion Certificate (CC) | Confirms the correct area and flat identification as approved | Municipal authority |
| Encumbrance Certificate (EC) | Shows the chain of transactions on the property and confirms original registration details | State registration / IGR portal — see guide |
| Builder-buyer agreement / allotment letter (for flat) | Shows agreed area, flat number and schedule at time of booking | Builder / housing society |
| Bank NOC (if property is mortgaged) | Mandatory lender consent before registering any correction on a mortgaged title | Your bank / lending NBFC |
| Death certificate + succession / legal heir certificate (if seller deceased) | Establishes who can sign on behalf of the deceased seller's estate | Municipal body + probate / revenue court — see guide |
| Two witnesses (identity proof) | Required at the sub-registrar for registration of the rectification deed | Any two adults (non-party) with valid ID |
Read the original deed clause by clause. Write down: the document number, the book number, year, the sub-registrar office name, and the exact erroneous phrase. This precision matters because the rectification deed must quote the original text verbatim before correcting it.
Classify the error as minor (clerical/factual) or major (changes rights):
For each error, identify which official document confirms the correct version. For a name error, your Aadhaar or PAN is sufficient. For a survey number error, the state revenue record (RoR, 7/12, patta) is the authoritative source — download it from your state's land records portal. For a flat area error in an apartment, the approved building plan from the municipal authority is the gold standard. See the Land Records RTI guide if your revenue records are themselves disputed or inaccessible.
Both the original buyer and seller must sign the rectification deed. Contact the other party and confirm their willingness. If the seller's side has changed (due to death, partition, or company winding-up), identify the legally authorised successor and consult a lawyer on whether they can validly execute the deed. If your property is mortgaged to a bank or housing finance company, write to the legal or home loans department requesting an NOC. Most lenders have a standard form for this; processing typically takes a few working days to a few weeks depending on the institution.
Engage a lawyer or licensed document writer (available at or near the sub-registrar office) to draft the deed. The document should:
Visit the same sub-registrar office where the original sale deed was registered. Both parties (and witnesses if required by the sub-registrar) must be present. Stamp duty and registration fees for a rectification deed are generally nominal compared to the original deed, but the exact rate is set by each state's stamp act. Check the current schedule on your state's stamp and registration portal before executing — do not rely on any fixed figure you read online, as state rules change and fees vary with the nature of the correction. Present:
Once registered, collect the endorsed / certified copy of the rectification deed. This is your primary evidence of the correction.
Registration of the rectification deed corrects the record at the sub-registrar office. It does not automatically update:
Apply for mutation correction at each relevant authority separately. Submit the certified copy of the rectification deed along with the original sale deed, identity proof, and the authority's prescribed application form. The khasra and khatauni correction guide explains revenue record corrections in detail for rural/agricultural land.
If the other party is uncooperative, untraceable, or deceased with no willing heirs, you cannot get a rectification deed registered without a court order. File a civil suit for rectification of instrument under Section 26 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963. The court can direct the instrument to be rectified if it is satisfied that, due to a mutual mistake or fraud, the deed does not express the real intention of the parties. The burden of proof is on you to show the error clearly and convincingly. Once the court passes an order, it carries the same weight as a registered rectification deed. Consult a lawyer before filing; court timelines vary widely by state and district.
| Stage | Situation | Action | Forum / Authority |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Minor error; both parties cooperative; property not mortgaged | Draft and register rectification deed | Sub-registrar office (same as original deed) |
| 2 | Property is mortgaged; lender not responding to NOC request | Send written NOC request by registered post / email to legal department; escalate to nodal officer if no response within 30 days | Bank legal / home loans department → Bank's nodal officer / ombudsman |
| 3 | Sub-registrar refuses to register the rectification deed without clear reason | File a written complaint or appeal to the District Registrar / Inspector General of Registration | District Registrar → Inspector General of Registration (state) |
| 4 | Seller refuses to sign or is untraceable / deceased (no heirs) | File suit for rectification of instrument | Civil Court (jurisdiction where property is situated) under Section 26, Specific Relief Act, 1963 |
| 5 | Revenue records (mutation, khata) not updated after registered rectification deed | Written application to revenue / municipal authority with certified copy of rectification deed; file RTI if no response within 30 days | Tehsildar / Municipal Assessor → District Collector → RTI (PIO of revenue dept) |
| 6 | RTI response denied or unsatisfactory | File first appeal, then second appeal to State / Central Information Commission | First appeal guide → State Information Commission |
Replace the text in square brackets with your own details before sending. This template is for a joint request/representation to the sub-registrar for registration of a rectification deed. Use it as a covering letter to accompany your executed rectification deed.
To, The Sub-Registrar, [Name of Sub-Registrar Office], [District], [State] — [PIN Code]
Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]
Subject: Request for Registration of Rectification Deed to Correct [Name/Survey Number/Flat Area/Property Schedule] in Registered Sale Deed — Document No. [XXXX], Book No. [X], Year [YYYY]
Respected Sir/Madam,
We, the undersigned, are the Buyer and Seller in the above-mentioned registered sale deed executed on [Date of original deed] and registered at your office.
We have discovered a factual/clerical error in the said deed, which we wish to bring to your notice and have corrected through the present Rectification Deed:
ORIGINAL (erroneous) text in the sale deed: “[Quote the exact erroneous clause or schedule entry from the original deed]”
CORRECTED text (as it should read): “[Quote the correct version of the clause or schedule entry]”
Proof supporting the correction: - [Name of document 1, e.g., Aadhaar Card No. XXXX XXXX XXXX — confirms correct spelling of name] - [Name of document 2, e.g., Revenue Survey Record / 7-12 Extract dated DD/MM/YYYY — confirms correct survey number as [survey number] - [Name of document 3, e.g., Approved Building Plan by [Municipal Authority] — confirms correct flat area as [X] sq. ft.]
This correction does not alter any right, title, interest, consideration, or ownership of the parties. All other terms and conditions of the original sale deed remain unchanged and in full force.
We request you to kindly register the enclosed Rectification Deed and issue us the registered certified copy at the earliest.
[If mortgaged: “We enclose herewith the No Objection Certificate dated [date] issued by [Bank Name], Branch [Branch Name], confirming their consent to the execution of this rectification deed.”]
Thanking you,
Yours faithfully,
[Signature] Name of Buyer: [Full Name as in original deed] Address: [Full Address] Contact: [Phone/Email]
[Signature] Name of Seller: [Full Name as in original deed] Address: [Full Address] Contact: [Phone/Email]
Witness 1: Name: [Full Name] Address: [Full Address] ID Proof: [Type and Number]
Witness 2: Name: [Full Name] Address: [Full Address] ID Proof: [Type and Number]
Enclosures: 1. Executed Rectification Deed (duly stamped) 2. Certified copy of original registered sale deed 3. [Aadhaar / PAN / Passport copies of both parties] 4. [Revenue survey record / building plan / other proof of correct details] 5. [Bank NOC — if applicable]
Every sub-registrar office and every state land records / revenue department is a public authority under the RTI Act, 2005. RTI can help you in the following situations:
A rectification deed (also called a correction deed or endorsement deed) is a supplementary registered document that corrects a factual or clerical error in an already-registered property document such as a sale deed. It is used when both parties agree that a mistake crept in during drafting or registration — for example, a misspelt name, wrong survey number, incorrect flat area, or an error in the property schedule. The rectification deed is registered at the same sub-registrar office where the original deed was registered.
Minor factual and clerical errors can be corrected by a rectification deed: spelling mistakes in names, wrong house/flat number, incorrect survey number, wrong area or dimensions in the schedule, boundary description errors, or a wrong door number. The key condition is that the correction must not change the fundamental rights, ownership share, or consideration (price) of the parties. Errors that alter who owns what, how much was paid, or which plot is being sold are treated as major errors and typically require a fresh deed or a court order under Section 26 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963.
If the original seller is untraceable, deceased, or refuses to cooperate, you cannot execute a rectification deed at the sub-registrar office without their consent and signature. In that situation, you need to file a civil suit for rectification of instrument under Section 26 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 in the competent civil court. If the court is satisfied that the error was a mutual mistake and the document does not reflect the real intention of the parties, it can direct rectification by court order, which has the same legal effect as a registered rectification deed.
Yes, but you need the bank's No Objection Certificate (NOC) before executing the rectification deed. Since the original sale deed is part of the mortgage title chain, the lender has a direct interest in any changes to that document. Banks typically require an application explaining the nature of the error, the proposed correction, and supporting documents proving the correct details. Once they issue the NOC, you proceed with the rectification at the sub-registrar office. Never attempt to register a rectification deed without the lender's prior written approval on a mortgaged property.
Stamp duty and registration fees for a rectification deed are generally nominal and far lower than those for the original sale deed, because no new consideration is changing hands. The exact amount varies by state — it can range from a small fixed fee (a few hundred rupees) to a percentage of the original deed value, depending on the state's stamp act and the nature of the correction. You must check the current schedule on your state's stamp and registration department portal or at the sub-registrar office before executing the deed.
Yes. A registered rectification deed corrects the title record at the sub-registrar office, but revenue records (mutation, khata, patta) are maintained by a separate authority — the local municipal body, tehsil office, or revenue department. You will need to apply for mutation correction separately by submitting a copy of the registered rectification deed along with the original sale deed to the relevant revenue officer. Until mutation is corrected, property tax notices, utility connections, and future transfer paperwork may carry the old erroneous details.
Yes. Every sub-registrar office and state land record department is a public authority under the RTI Act, 2005. You can file an RTI application to the Public Information Officer of the concerned sub-registrar office or state registration department to obtain certified copies of your registered sale deed or rectification deed, confirm what is recorded in the register, or get information on the status of a pending rectification request. This is particularly useful if you have paid for corrections but the sub-registrar has not issued the corrected certified copy.