A Section 47A notice means the sub-registrar suspected your sale deed was undervalued and has referred it to the Collector to fix the correct market value and the extra stamp duty. You have a legal right to a hearing before any demand is finalised, and you can appeal the Collector's order. The exact appeal forum, the time limit, and the interest or penalty all vary by state, because Section 47A is a state-inserted provision, not part of the original central Act. This guide explains the common structure and your next steps.
Section 47A was not in the original Indian Stamp Act, 1899. It was added by individual states through amendment (Punjab, for example, inserted it via Punjab Act 21 of 1982). That is why there is no single national text, fee, or deadline. Each state has its own wording and its own “Prevention of Undervaluation of Instruments” rules, such as the Tamil Nadu rules of 1968.
The common core across states is this. When you register a sale or transfer deed, the registering officer compares your declared consideration against the government guideline value (circle rate or ready reckoner). If it looks lower, the officer can refer the instrument to the Collector to determine the true market value and proper duty. The Collector must then give you a reasonable opportunity of being heard and hold an enquiry before fixing any deficient duty.
The trigger is a suspicion of undervaluation, usually because your declared price is below the guideline value for that locality. In some states the officer “may” refer after registering; in others the wording is “shall.” The reference can also come later: in many states the Collector can examine a registered deed on his own motion (suo motu) within a fixed limitation period, but that period is state-specific.
A reference is not supposed to be automatic. The Supreme Court in Chief Revenue Controlling Officer cum Inspector General of Registration v. P. Babu (2025 INSC 44) held that a reference under Section 47A is not a mechanical act: the officer must have tangible material and a prima facie basis for believing the property is undervalued, and an unreasoned notice can vitiate the whole enquiry. The Court warned that Section 47A must not become an engine of oppression or a matter of routine.
Whatever your state's procedure, the statute requires a “reasonable opportunity of being heard” before the Collector fixes any extra duty. You are entitled to a notice stating the basis of the alleged undervaluation, to file a written reply with evidence of the real market value, and to be heard in person or through a representative. A demand finalised without this hearing is open to challenge.
If the Collector fixes extra duty against you, the law gives you an appeal, but the forum and deadline are state-specific. In some states the appeal lies to the District Judge; in others to a Commissioner or a specially designated appellate authority. The window is commonly short (such as 30 days from the order in several states), but check your own state's Stamp Act amendment and rules for the exact forum and period. Interest on the deficient duty and any penalty for deliberate undervaluation are also set by state law and differ widely, so do not rely on a figure quoted for another state.
The Right to Information Act, 2005 helps here. You can file an RTI under RTI Act 2005, section 6(1) to obtain the guideline value records, the file notings, and the recorded reasons the sub-registrar relied on for the reference. After P. Babu, those reasons must exist, and getting them in writing strengthens both your reply and any appeal. Draft it with the AI RTI Drafter, escalate a stonewalling authority with the First Appeal Builder, and track deadlines with the Timeline Tracker.
Do not panic over the demand figure; it is a proposal, not a final liability, until the Collector decides after hearing you. Reply on time with real market-value evidence, demand the recorded reasons behind the reference, and preserve the dated order so you can appeal if needed. To use RTI as a leverage tool throughout, read The RTI Playbook. See also our guide on how to pay court fees and buy stamp paper, and the full RTI Act, 2005.
No. It begins an enquiry. The Collector can only fix deficient duty after giving you a reasonable opportunity of being heard. The amount in the notice is a proposed figure, not a settled liability.
Yes. The Supreme Court in P. Babu (2025 INSC 44) held that a reference cannot be mechanical and must rest on tangible material and recorded reasons. If the notice gives no reasons, that is a ground of challenge.
It depends on your state, because Section 47A is state-inserted. The forum may be the District Judge in one state and a Commissioner or designated authority in another. Check your state's Stamp Act amendment and undervaluation rules.
The appeal period is fixed by your state's law and is usually short, sometimes 30 days from the order. Confirm the exact window in your state's rules and count it from the date of the order.
A registered valuer's report, comparable registered sale deeds in the same area and period, the guideline-value extract for the execution date, and proof of factors that genuinely depressed the price, such as tenancy, encumbrance, or poor condition.
Yes. Under RTI Act 2005, section 6(1) you can seek the guideline value records, file notings, and the reasons recorded for the reference. Because reasons are now legally required, obtaining them in writing supports both your reply and any appeal.