You agreed a price below the government circle rate, and the sub-registrar wants stamp duty on the higher rate. You can pay duty on the higher value to register now, then dispute the under-valuation by asking the Collector of Stamps to determine the true market value, with evidence. An appeal lies if the order is wrong.
A circle rate, also called guidance value or ready reckoner rate, is the minimum value the state government fixes for land and buildings in an area for the purpose of charging stamp duty. Stamp duty is charged on the higher of the agreement value and this notified circle rate, so a genuine low-price deal can still attract higher duty.
A circle rate dispute arises when your honest purchase price is below the notified circle rate, and the registering officer either charges duty on the higher rate or marks the document as under-valued and refers it to the Collector of Stamps. You then face a demand for extra stamp duty and, sometimes, an income-tax adjustment on the same gap.
Stamp duty is a state subject, so rates, the section numbers, and the appeal routes differ from state to state. Two ideas are common across India.
The principal central Act has no Section 47-A of its own; it is a state amendment. In some states the appeal from the Collector lies to the District Judge, in others to a Commissioner or a Chief Controlling Revenue Authority. Treat the section number as state-specific.
The same gap between price and stamp value can trigger income tax. Under the Income-tax Act, 1961, where property changes hands below its stamp-duty value, the stamp value can be deemed the sale consideration:
A safe-harbour tolerance applies. The Finance Act, 2020 raised the band to 10 per cent, so the adjustment is ignored if the stamp value does not exceed the consideration by more than the higher of fifty thousand rupees and ten per cent of the consideration. Check the current limit when you file, as it has changed over the years.
Real-life example. Ramesh, a buyer in Pune, agreed to pay ₹62 lakh for a flat in March 2025, but the ready reckoner value was ₹71 lakh because the building faced a disputed access lane. The sub-registrar wanted stamp duty on ₹71 lakh and marked the deed for under-valuation. Ramesh paid the duty on the higher value under protest to register, then filed an objection before the Collector of Stamps with a registered valuer report, two comparable deeds near ₹63 lakh, and proof of the access dispute. The market value was revised down to ₹64 lakh, and the excess duty was refunded. He also kept the valuer report for his income-tax file.
You can use the AI RTI Drafter to build this, or the AwaazRTI voice tool if you prefer to dictate it.
To, The Public Information Officer, Office of the Sub-Registrar / Collector of Stamps, [District] Subject: Information under the Right to Information Act, 2005 Under Section 6(1) of the RTI Act, 2005, please provide: 1. A certified copy of the notings and the reference order in document number ____ dated ____ marked for under-valuation. 2. The notified circle rate or guidance value applied to the property, with the notification number and date. 3. The procedure and timeline for filing a valuation objection. I enclose the fee of ₹10 under Section 7(1). If part of this information is held by another office, please transfer that part under Section 6(3) and inform me. Name, address, signature, date.
After you file, track your reply window with the Timeline Tracker, and if the reply is evasive, run it through the PIO Reply Checker. If you get no reply in time, build a first appeal with the First Appeal Builder.
State stamp rules charge duty on the higher of the deed value and the notified circle rate. The circle rate is a floor to stop under-reporting, so even an honest low-price deal pays at least the duty on that minimum.
You can dispute it, but you usually cannot register without paying. The practical route is to pay on the higher value under protest, register the deed, and then ask the Collector of Stamps to determine the true market value.
If the registering officer believes the market value was not truly set forth, many states let the officer refer the document to the Collector of Stamps. The Collector hears the parties, holds an enquiry, and fixes the market value and duty. The exact section and appeal route vary by state.
A registered valuer report dated to the execution date, recent comparable sale deeds in the same locality, and proof of defects such as a disputed title, an encumbrance, a tenant in occupation, poor access, or litigation that a buyer would discount.
Yes. State stamp law provides an appeal, often to a District Judge or a Commissioner, within a short limitation period from the order. Confirm your state law and the deadline, because they differ across states.
It can. Section 50C affects a seller, Section 43CA a builder, and Section 56(2)(x) taxes a buyer on the gap. A tolerance band, raised to 10 per cent by the Finance Act, 2020, ignores small differences. Check the current limit when you file.
They are different names for the same idea in different states: the minimum government-notified value of property for charging stamp duty. Maharashtra calls it the ready reckoner rate, Karnataka the guidance value, and the north often says circle rate.
If the Collector or an appeal reduces the market value, the excess duty you paid under protest can be refunded under your state procedure. Keep the payment challan, the order, and the refund application within the time limit.
For the full step-by-step playbook on filing and appealing RTI requests, read The RTI Playbook.