Three siblings inherit their father's house. One brother wants to give up his undivided share so the other two can hold it cleanly, without dragging anyone into a partition suit. The instrument that does this is a relinquishment deed, also called a release deed.
A relinquishment deed is a registered document by which one co-owner voluntarily gives up their undivided share in a jointly owned property in favour of another co-owner. Registration is compulsory under the Registration Act, 1908. It is usually done among co-heirs without money changing hands.
It is a legal instrument that transfers the share of one co-owner to another co-owner of the same property. The person giving up the share is the releasor; the one receiving it is the releasee. It is commonly used by co-heirs who inherit property jointly and want to consolidate ownership in fewer hands, usually without any sale price.
A relinquishment deed that gives up an interest in immovable property must be registered. Under Section 17(1)(b) of the Registration Act, 1908, every “non-testamentary instrument which purport or operate to create, declare, assign, limit or extinguish, whether in present or in future, any right, title or interest, whether vested or contingent, of the value of one hundred rupees and upwards, to or in immovable property” must be registered. A relinquishment deed extinguishes the releasor's interest, so it falls squarely within this clause.
The consequence of skipping registration is severe. Under Section 49 of the Registration Act, 1908, an unregistered document that the law requires to be registered shall not affect the immovable property comprised in it, nor be received as evidence of any transaction affecting that property. In plain terms, an unregistered relinquishment has no legal effect on the title.
As a general legal understanding, a relinquishment is made in favour of another co-owner or co-heir of the same property, not a stranger. If a share is released to someone who is not already a co-owner, registrars commonly treat the transaction as a gift and tax it accordingly. Because the exact characterisation can vary, confirm the position with your sub-registrar or a property lawyer for your specific facts.
The key distinction: a relinquishment moves a share between existing co-owners, while a gift or sale can move property to anyone.
There is no single national rate. Stamp duty on a relinquishment deed is fixed by each state's stamp law and schedule. Some states levy a low or fixed duty when the relinquishment is among family co-owners, while others charge duty calculated on the value of the share being released. Registration fees are usually charged separately and are also set by the state. Do not rely on a figure quoted in a blog. Check the current rate on your state stamp and registration department's official schedule, or ask the sub-registrar, before you execute the deed.
Generally, once a relinquishment deed has been validly executed, registered and acted upon, it cannot be revoked at will by the person who gave up the share. Like a completed gift, it is treated as final. Cancellation is usually possible only with the mutual consent of both parties, or on recognised legal grounds such as fraud, coercion or misrepresentation, and that often means going to court. Treat a relinquishment as a serious, near-final step and take legal advice before signing.
Ramesh, Suresh and their sister Anita from Pune jointly inherited their late father's flat in 2025. Ramesh, who had settled abroad, wanted no part of the flat and agreed to give up his one-third share to Suresh and Anita. In early 2026 they prepared a relinquishment deed, checked the applicable stamp duty with the sub-registrar, and got it registered. Two months later, when the municipal mutation was still pending, Suresh filed an RTI with the municipal corporation asking for the status of the mutation application and a date for disposal. The reply prompted the office to update the records, and the flat was finally mutated into the two siblings' names. Names and details here are illustrative.
If mutation is stuck after you register a relinquishment deed, an RTI to the municipal or revenue office can unstick it.
To, The Public Information Officer [Municipal Corporation / Revenue Office name and address] Subject: Information under the Right to Information Act, 2005 Sir/Madam, Under Section 6(1) of the RTI Act, 2005, please provide: 1. The current status of my property mutation application no. ______ dated ______, filed after registration of a relinquishment deed for property no. ______. 2. The name and designation of the officer handling the file. 3. The certified date by which the mutation will be decided. 4. Certified copies of any objection or query raised on my file, under Section 7(1). I am an Indian citizen. The fee of Rs 10 is enclosed. If any part is held by another office, please transfer it under Section 6(3) and inform me. If information is refused, please convey my right of first appeal under Section 19(1). Yours faithfully, [Name] [Address] [Date]
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It is a registered document by which one co-owner voluntarily gives up their share in a jointly owned property in favour of another co-owner, usually a co-heir, generally without any money changing hands.
Yes. Because it extinguishes an interest in immovable property, it must be registered under Section 17(1)(b) of the Registration Act, 1908. An unregistered deed has no effect on the title under Section 49 of the same Act.
As a general understanding it is made in favour of another existing co-owner or co-heir. If a share is released to someone who is not a co-owner, registrars often treat the transaction as a gift. Confirm the position for your facts with the sub-registrar or a lawyer.
There is no single national rate. Each state sets the duty. Some states charge a low or fixed duty for relinquishment among family co-owners; others charge on the value of the share. Check your state stamp department's official schedule before executing.
Generally no, once it is executed, registered and acted upon. Cancellation is usually possible only by mutual consent or on legal grounds such as fraud or coercion, and that often requires going to court. Take legal advice first.
A relinquishment moves a share between existing co-owners, usually without a price. A gift transfers property without consideration to any person, including a non co-owner. Both must be registered to be effective.
Yes. Registration transfers the legal interest, but mutation updates the municipal and revenue records so property tax and ownership entries show the correct owner. Apply for mutation with a certified copy of the registered deed.
Yes. You can file an RTI with the municipal corporation or revenue office asking for the status of your mutation application and the expected date of disposal under the Right to Information Act, 2005.