When a family member dies and leaves behind a bank account, shares, a flat, or a will, the first practical question is which court document you need to access or transfer those assets. This guide maps every common situation to the right document and explains the 2025 law change that removed mandatory probate.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
Quick answer
There is no single answer — the right document depends on three factors: whether the deceased left a valid will, whether the assets are movable or immovable, and whether there is a live nominee or survivorship clause.
| Situation | Document you need |
|---|---|
| Deceased left a will; you need to transfer movable assets (bank, shares, mutual funds) | The will itself + death certificate + legal heir identification. Voluntary Probate adds legal certainty but is no longer mandatory anywhere in India (as of December 2025). |
| Deceased left a will; immovable property needs to be transferred or sold | The original will + death certificate + supporting documents. Voluntary Probate is strongly recommended to prevent future disputes, especially if third parties like buyers or banks require court-validated authority. |
| Deceased died intestate (no will); only movable assets — bank accounts, FDs, shares, PF | Succession Certificate from the District Civil Court (under Section 372 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925) |
| Deceased died intestate; immovable property (flat, land) or a mix of movable + immovable | Letters of Administration from the District Civil Court |
| Any asset class — there is a valid nominee or survivorship clause | Claim form + death certificate + nominee's KYC. No court document required below RBI/SEBI thresholds. |
Important update (December 2025): Parliament deleted Section 213 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 through the Repealing and Amending Act, 2025. Probate is no longer compulsory anywhere in India, including Mumbai, Chennai, and Kolkata, where it was previously mandatory for certain communities. This guide reflects the law as of that date.
This guide is for anyone who needs to settle the estate of a deceased person in India — whether you are a legal heir, a nominated executor named in a will, a surviving joint account holder, or an NRI managing a parent's affairs from abroad. It covers:
This guide does not cover Muslim personal law succession, which operates under different rules, or the specific procedures for company shares held in physical certificate form, which require separate SEBI-prescribed transmission forms.
Gather the core documents before you make a single inquiry. You will need at least these:
Make a simple spreadsheet with each asset, the institution holding it, the nominee (if any), and the amount or approximate value. This will drive every subsequent step.
Identify the right document for each asset using the decision tree below, then check whether a nominee or survivorship clause covers any asset — those can be settled without a court order.
Yes, and assets are movable → The will + death certificate usually suffices. Voluntary probate adds safety for high-value or likely-contested estates. Yes, and assets include immovable property → Voluntary probate is strongly recommended; executor proceeds under the will with probate for cleaner title. No will (intestate) → Go to step 3.
Only movable assets (bank accounts, shares, FDs, PF, securities) → Apply for a Succession Certificate from the District Civil Court under Section 372 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925. Immovable property (land, flat, building) or a mix → Apply for Letters of Administration from the District Civil Court.
For immovable property with a will: visit the Sub-Registrar's office to check if the will was registered. Also check the property records at the land records office or online portal for your state to confirm the title still shows the deceased as owner.
Contact a lawyer if you need a court document. Both succession certificate petitions and probate petitions must be drafted and signed in proper legal form, verified as per the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, and filed with the correct District Court. A lawyer familiar with local court practice is essential — even the format of the petition can vary by state. If the estate is straightforward and all heirs agree, costs are generally modest. Get a written quote and ask the lawyer to specify the expected court fees (which vary by state and asset value) separately from professional fees.
Also visit the concerned bank branch on Saturday or Monday to ask what documentation they require. Different banks sometimes have different internal checklists beyond the legal minimum, and knowing this in advance prevents multiple trips.
| Document | For Succession Certificate | For Probate Petition | For Letters of Administration | For Nominee/Survivorship Claim (No Court) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Original death certificate (municipal/gram panchayat) | Required | Required | Required | Required |
| Original will (with witnesses) | Not applicable — used when there is no will | Required — the original must be submitted | Not applicable — used when there is no will | Not required |
| List of all legal heirs with relationships | Required in the petition | Required | Required | Not required for nominee claim |
| Aadhaar and PAN of the deceased | Required | Required | Required | Required |
| Aadhaar and PAN of all claimant heirs | Required | Required | Required | Required |
| Relationship proof (marriage cert, birth cert, or family tree) | Required | Required | Required | Helpful; sometimes required by bank |
| Details of debts and securities (account numbers, demat IDs, policy nos.) | Must be listed in petition | List of assets covered by will | Must be listed in petition | Account/policy number provided to institution |
| Property documents (title deed, mutation record) | Not required for movable-only certificates | Required if immovable property in will | Required | Not applicable |
| Affidavit by petitioner/executor | Varies by court; often required | Required — executor's acceptance affidavit | Required | Some institutions require indemnity affidavit |
| Legal heir certificate from revenue authority (tehsildar/SDM) | Helpful to support petition; some courts insist | Helpful | Helpful | Some banks require for claims without nomination |
| Newspaper publication notice (court arranges this) | Court publishes — you pay costs | Court publishes — you pay costs | Court publishes — you pay costs | Not required |
| Court fee payment (via judicial stamps, varies by state and value) | Payable on filing | Payable on filing | Payable on filing | Not applicable |
Note on court fees: Court fees for succession certificate and probate petitions are governed by the Court Fees Act, 1870 and state-level court fee schedules. The fee is typically calculated as a percentage of the value of the assets covered. The exact percentage and any cap or ceiling vary by state. Do not rely on a figure quoted online — ask the court clerk or your lawyer for the current schedule in your state.
| Stage | What happened | Where to go | Approximate timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bank refuses to settle claim within 15 days despite valid nomination and documents | Branch Manager in writing, citing RBI Directions on Settlement of Claims in Respect of Deceased Customers of Banks, 2025 (effective March 31, 2026). Request compensation at Bank Rate + 4% per annum for delay. | Give 7 days after written complaint |
| 2 | Branch Manager does not resolve | Bank's grievance officer / nodal officer (details on bank website). For PSU banks, this is usually the Zonal Office. | 30 days |
| 3 | Bank grievance officer does not act | Banking Ombudsman via RBI's Centralised Complaint Management System (cms.rbi.org.in) | 30–90 days |
| 4 | Insurance company disputes or delays claim | IRDAI Bima Bharosa portal (bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in) or IRDAI call centre. File a complaint against the insurer. | 15–30 days for insurer response; IRDAI escalation if unresolved |
| 5 | Dispute with another heir over the will or over the estate | Civil Court — a civil suit for declaration or partition under the relevant personal law. A will dispute may also involve a probate petition if probate was not obtained. Engage a lawyer. | Court timelines vary significantly |
| 6 | Depository participant or mutual fund RTA refuses transmission despite SEBI circular | SEBI SCORES portal (scores.sebi.gov.in) for complaints against SEBI-regulated entities. | 30 days for initial response |
| 7 | Revenue office (tehsildar / patwari) refuses mutation after you have Letters of Administration or succession certificate | Sub-Divisional Magistrate (SDM) in writing. If still refused, file an appeal with the District Collector's revenue court. Check your state's land revenue laws for the exact appeal path — procedures vary. | 30–60 days for SDM; longer for revenue court |
Replace the text in square brackets with your own details before sending. This template is for a bank refusing to settle a nominee claim without a succession certificate, citing the 2025 RBI Directions.
To The Branch Manager [Name of Bank] [Branch Name and Address]
Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]
Subject: Non-settlement of deceased depositor's account — valid nominee — violation of RBI Directions 2025
Dear Sir / Madam,
I, [Your Full Name], [relationship to the deceased — e.g., nominee / surviving joint holder], am writing regarding the account of the late [Deceased's Full Name], Account Number [XXXXXX], held at your branch.
[Deceased's name] passed away on [date of death]. I am the nominee/survivor on the above account, as per the account records. I submitted a claim form, the original death certificate, and my identity proof (Aadhaar No. [XXXXXX], PAN No. [XXXXXX]) on [date of submission]. My claim reference number, if any, is [XXXXXX].
Despite [number of days] having elapsed, the branch has not settled the claim and has instead demanded [succession certificate / probate / indemnity bond / other document demanded].
I wish to draw your attention to the Reserve Bank of India (Settlement of Claims in Respect of Deceased Customers of Banks) Directions, 2025 (RBI Notification No. [check official notification reference on rbi.org.in]). Under these Directions, where a valid nominee is in place, banks must not require a succession certificate, letter of administration, probate, or bond of indemnity, irrespective of the balance amount. Payment is to be made within 15 calendar days of receipt of all prescribed documents.
The prescribed documents were submitted on [date]. The settlement deadline was therefore [date + 15 days]. The delay is entirely attributable to the bank's improper demand.
I request that: 1. The claim be settled within 7 days of this letter. 2. Compensation at Bank Rate + 4% per annum be paid on the outstanding amount for the period of delay, as required by the Directions.
If this matter is not resolved within 7 days, I will file a complaint with the RBI Banking Ombudsman and the bank's own grievance officer as the next step.
Please acknowledge receipt of this letter.
Yours faithfully, [Your Full Name] [Mobile Number] [Email Address] [Postal Address]
Enclosures: 1. Copy of claim form submitted on [date] 2. Copy of death certificate 3. Copy of nominee's identity proof 4. Any earlier correspondence with the branch
The Right to Information Act, 2005 applies to public authorities — central and state government bodies, public sector banks, LIC, central public sector undertakings, and their subsidiaries. In the context of probate and succession, RTI can help in specific, limited ways:
For detailed RTI filing strategies applicable to estate matters, see our guide on applying for a succession certificate and how to file a first appeal under Section 19 if your RTI is denied or not answered.
Read The RTI Playbook for a comprehensive guide to using RTI effectively across government departments and public institutions.
No. The Repealing and Amending Act, 2025, which received Presidential assent on 20 December 2025, deleted Section 213 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925. Mandatory probate no longer applies anywhere in India, including these three cities. Probate remains optional and can still be obtained voluntarily to protect against future disputes over a will.
No. A succession certificate only authorises collection of debts, securities, and movable assets such as bank balances, shares, and provident fund amounts. To transfer immovable property like land or a flat without a will, you need a Letters of Administration from the civil court. With a will, the executor can use the will itself along with other supporting documents, or may obtain voluntary probate for additional legal certainty.
No, it is generally not correct. Under the RBI Directions on Settlement of Claims in Respect of Deceased Customers of Banks, 2025, banks must release funds to nominees without demanding a succession certificate, probate, or indemnity bond. Submit the claim form, death certificate, and your identity proof. If the bank still refuses, file a complaint with the Banking Ombudsman.
A legal heir certificate is issued by a local revenue authority and simply identifies who the heirs are. A succession certificate is issued by a civil court under the Indian Succession Act, 1925 and authorises the heir to collect movable assets and debts of the deceased. Letters of Administration are also issued by a civil court and are required when the deceased died intestate and left immovable property, or both movable and immovable property.
The process typically takes between 3 and 7 months. After filing the petition under Section 372 of the Indian Succession Act, the court publishes a notice in a newspaper for a minimum period (often 45 days) to invite objections. The timeline can extend if there are objections from other heirs or if the court requires further evidence. Timelines vary by state and court workload.
For demat accounts with a valid nominee and holdings below the SEBI threshold for simplified transmission, you generally do not need a succession certificate. The depository participant will process the transmission on submission of the death certificate, nominee KYC documents, and a claim form. Above the applicable threshold, or where there is no nominee, a succession certificate or letters of administration is required. Check the current SEBI circular and your depository participant's procedure, as thresholds and requirements are updated periodically.
Courts are partly covered by the RTI Act for administrative matters. You can file an RTI with the Public Information Officer of the court's administrative office to ask about the status of a filed petition, case number, or scheduled hearing dates. However, RTI does not apply to judicial decisions or the reasoning of judges. For actual case status, use the eCourts portal at districts.ecourts.gov.in or the court's own case management system.