A transgender person in India has a legal right to a Certificate of Identity, and you can apply for it online, free of cost, on the National Portal for Transgender Persons run by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment. The first certificate is based on your own self-declaration of gender. No medical test, no surgery, and no physical examination is needed to get it. Once the District Magistrate issues it, your gender is recorded as transgender, and the certificate becomes your official proof to update your gender across other documents.
The right comes from the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019, also called Act 40 of 2019. Chapter III of the Act deals with recognition of identity.
Section 4 gives every transgender person the right to be recognised as such, and the right to a self-perceived gender identity. This means the law accepts your own statement of who you are. It follows the principle the Supreme Court laid down in the NALSA judgment, which recognised the right to self-identify one's gender.
Section 5 lets you apply to the District Magistrate for a certificate of identity as a transgender person. You can read the bare Act on the government's law portal at indiacode.nic.in.
The entire process runs through the National Portal for Transgender Persons. You do not have to visit any office in person.
Tip , The portal works in English, Hindi, Gujarati, Malayalam and Bengali. If the decision is delayed beyond the timeline, use the grievance option inside your login to escalate. Your complaint is forwarded to the concerned authority.
The law is built in two stages, and you control how far you go.
First certificate, Section 6. The District Magistrate issues your Certificate of Identity and records your gender as transgender. This is based only on your self-declaration. Section 6 also says your gender shall then be recorded in all official documents in line with this certificate, and that the certificate is proof of your recognised identity. This first certificate is a valid, nationally recognised document on its own.
Revised certificate, Section 7. If you later undergo gender-affirming surgery to live as a male or a female, you can apply again for a revised certificate that shows male or female instead of transgender. For this second step you must attach a certificate from the Medical Superintendent or the Chief Medical Officer of the hospital where the surgery was done. The District Magistrate checks that certificate and, once satisfied, issues the revised certificate.
You are never forced to take the second step. Surgery is a personal choice, and the first certificate stands fully on its own.
Because Section 6 says your gender must be recorded in all official documents in line with the certificate, the certificate is your legal proof to ask each authority to correct its records. Each document has its own update route, and you submit the certificate as supporting proof:
Changing your gender marker is a separate task from changing your legal name. If you also want a new name to match your identity, that is done through a newspaper notice and a Gazette notification. See our guide on how to change your legal name in the Gazette. To update your name and gender across Aadhaar, PAN, passport, degree and bank records in the right order so they all match, follow our ID correction sequence guide.
For a plain-language guide to how citizen rights and government portals work in India, keep The RTI Playbook handy.
No. The first Certificate of Identity is based only on your self-declaration of gender. Under the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019, your gender is recorded as transgender without any medical or physical examination. Surgery matters only if you later want a revised certificate showing male or female, under Section 7.
The certification takes a maximum of 30 days from the date you submit your application. Applying on the National Portal is free of cost, and the whole process is online, so you do not need to visit any office in person.
Yes. Under Section 5 of the Act, if the applicant is a minor, a parent or guardian makes the application on the child's behalf. The rest of the process is the same.
Yes. The certificate and identity card are issued by the District Magistrate and are recognised nationally. Section 6 requires your gender to be recorded in all official documents in line with the certificate, so you can use it as proof anywhere in the country.
Use the grievance option inside your portal login to flag the delay. Your complaint is then forwarded to the concerned authority for resolution, and you can keep tracking the status online.