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Step-by-Step Guide — 2026

How to Find Lost Shares in India — Complete Step-by-Step Guide (2026)

Millions of Indian families have physical share certificates, forgotten demat accounts, or old IPO allotments from the 1990s and 2000s that have never been tracked. This guide walks you through every method to find lost shares in India — from IEPF search to RTA contact to depository lookup.

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Why This Happens

Why So Many Indians Have Lost Shares

The 1990s and early 2000s were the golden age of retail investing in India — and also the golden age of forgotten investments.

Between 1991 and 2005, India's capital markets opened to retail investors at scale. The Harshad Mehta boom, followed by the dot-com era, brought millions of first-time investors into the stock market. Most of them bought shares the old way: through a broker who delivered a physical share certificate — a paper document proving ownership. Mutual fund units were also issued in paper form. IPO allotments were posted home.

Demat accounts became mandatory for listed company trading only in 2001, and even then, the changeover was slow. Physical shares could still be transferred and held legally. The result: tens of millions of share certificates sitting in filing cabinets, old envelopes, bank lockers, and in many cases — simply lost.

The Most Common Reasons Shares Go Missing

  • Family member passed away — Shares held in a parent's or grandparent's name were never transmitted to heirs because no one knew the holding existed
  • Address changes — Dividend warrants and annual reports were sent to an old address and never forwarded, leaving shareholders with no reminder of their holdings
  • IPO allotments never tracked — In the early 1990s, it was common to apply for dozens of IPOs. Not all were tracked after allotment
  • Bonus shares and rights issues — Companies issued bonus shares automatically to the registered address; many shareholders never knew they received more shares
  • Demat account dormancy — Early demat accounts opened with DP-broker relationships that are no longer active, and the account was simply forgotten
  • Company mergers — When a company merged or demerged, shareholders received shares in the new entity — often without realising it
  • Bank locker contents — Share certificates stored in bank lockers were sometimes forgotten as generations changed
How much could be at stake? The Ministry of Corporate Affairs estimates that shares worth over Rs. 80,000 crore currently sit in the IEPF fund alone — transferred from companies because dividends went unclaimed for 7+ years. If your family invested even modestly in PSU stocks, blue chips, or IPOs in the 1990s, there is a real chance of unclaimed wealth.
Step 1

Gather What You Know

Before searching any database, make a list of everything you can find. Even fragmentary information helps.

The more information you have going in, the faster the search. Spend an hour going through the following sources before you sit down at a computer:

Physical Documents to Look For

  • Share certificates — Paper certificates with the company name, folio number, number of shares, certificate number, and distinctive numbers. Even old, faded certificates are legally valid
  • Dividend warrants — Cheques or demand drafts from companies for dividend payments. These show you held shares and give you the folio number
  • Annual report envelopes — Companies sent annual reports to all shareholders. Old envelopes show the company name
  • Broker contract notes — If shares were bought through a stockbroker, contract notes will show the company and number of shares purchased
  • Old demat account statements — Monthly or annual statements from your depository participant (DP) showing holdings
  • Bank passbook entries — Credits labelled "dividend" from a company confirm a holding
  • Form 16 / Form 26AS — Dividend income appears in these tax documents; TDS deducted on dividends above Rs. 5,000 would appear in 26AS
  • Income tax returns — Old ITR filings often list dividend income under "Income from Other Sources" with company names
Tip: Check your parent's or grandparent's old papers carefully — especially any documents related to the 1991-1995 era when India's big PSU disinvestments happened (ONGC, BHEL, NTPC, GAIL). These were subscribed widely. Bonus shares issued in subsequent years may have multiplied original holdings significantly.
Step 2

Search the IEPF Portal

The Investor Education and Protection Fund portal is the single most important database for finding lost shares in India.

When dividends on shares remain unclaimed for 7 consecutive years, both the unpaid dividends and the underlying shares are transferred by law to the IEPF (Investor Education and Protection Fund), managed by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs. As of 2026, the IEPF holds shares from thousands of Indian companies worth lakhs of crores.

How to Search the IEPF Portal

  1. Go to iepf.gov.in and click on "Know Your Unclaimed Dividend / Shares"
  2. Select the search type: Investor Name, Folio Number, or DPID/Client ID
  3. Enter your name exactly as on share certificates — and also try variations (initials vs. full name, with/without middle name)
  4. Select the company name from the dropdown
  5. Enter the captcha and click Search
  6. Review results: each record will show the investor name, folio number, number of shares, unclaimed dividend amount, and transfer date

For a detailed walkthrough of the IEPF search process, including screenshots and tips for dealing with common errors, see our dedicated guide: How to Search for Unclaimed Shares in India →

Important: The IEPF portal only shows shares that have already been transferred to IEPF. Shares still held by the company (where dividends were unclaimed for less than 7 years, or where the shareholder never received dividends at all for other reasons) will not appear here. For those, proceed to Steps 3 and 4.
Step 3

Contact the Company's RTA Directly

Registrar and Transfer Agents hold the master register of all shareholders. They can retrieve folio details even from decades-old records.

Every listed company in India appoints a Registrar and Transfer Agent (RTA) to maintain its shareholder registry. The two largest RTAs in India are:

  • KFin Technologies (formerly Karvy Computershare) — kfintech.com — handles Reliance Industries, TCS, Infosys, and many others
  • Link Intime India — linkintime.co.in — handles Tata group, Wipro, HDFC, and many others

Other RTAs include Bigshare Services, Cameo Corporate Services, and Alankit Assignments.

How to Approach an RTA

Write a letter (email or physical) to the RTA with the following details:

  • Your full name (and all variations that may have been used)
  • Your PAN number
  • Your old address (as it may have been registered at the time of investment)
  • Father's name or spouse's name (helps distinguish between investors with similar names)
  • Any folio number or certificate number you may have (even partial information helps)
  • A request to check whether any share holdings exist in your name for the specific company

Both KFin Technologies and Link Intime have online investor service portals where you can submit search requests. KFin's portal is at ris.kfintech.com and Link Intime's is at linkintime.co.in.

Which RTA to contact? If you don't know the RTA for a company, look up the company on the BSE website (bseindia.com) or NSE website (nseindia.com), go to the company's profile page, and look for "Registrar and Transfer Agent" in the contact details section.

Understanding your folio number is essential for this step. If you're unsure what a folio number is or how to find it, read our blog post: What Is a Folio Number and How to Find It →

Step 4

Check the Depository (NSDL & CDSL)

If shares were held in demat form — even in a long-forgotten account — both NSDL and CDSL can help you trace them using your PAN.

India has two depositories: NSDL (National Securities Depository Limited) and CDSL (Central Depository Services Limited). All demat accounts in India are registered with one of these two.

Searching NSDL for Lost Demat Accounts

NSDL provides a Consolidated Account Statement (CAS) service that shows all holdings across all demat accounts linked to a PAN. To get a CAS from NSDL:

  1. Visit nsdl.co.in and navigate to the "Investor" section
  2. Use the IDeAS (Internet-based Demat Account Statement) facility for online access
  3. Alternatively, write to NSDL at their registered office requesting a CAS for your PAN
  4. You can also request a "NSDL Statement of Account" through your current DP

Searching CDSL for Lost Demat Accounts

CDSL offers a similar service through its easi (Electronic Access to Securities Information) portal:

  1. Visit cdslindia.com and navigate to the Investor section
  2. Use the easi portal or the easiest facility
  3. You can also submit a written request to CDSL with your PAN and personal details for a consolidated statement
The SEBI CAS: SEBI mandates that both depositories together issue a Consolidated Account Statement (CAS) each month to investors who have transactions, and a half-yearly CAS to all demat account holders. If you receive an email with this statement, it will show ALL your demat holdings across both NSDL and CDSL accounts. Check your email archive for old statements.
Step 5

What If the Company Has Merged or Changed Name?

Dozens of major Indian companies have merged, been acquired, or changed their names since the 1990s. Tracing shares through corporate history is a key skill.

If you hold shares in a company that no longer exists under that name, your shares did not vanish — they were converted into shares of the successor company as per the merger/scheme of arrangement. Common examples:

  • TISCO → Tata Steel — Tata Iron and Steel Company was renamed Tata Steel in 2004
  • State Bank of Mysore, State Bank of Travancore etc. → State Bank of India — associate banks merged into SBI in 2017
  • Sterlite Industries → Vedanta — via a series of mergers
  • Reliance Petroleum — demerged and re-merged with Reliance Industries; shareholders received shares or were eligible for IEPF claims
  • Hindustan Lever → Hindustan Unilever — name change in 2007
  • ICICI Ltd → ICICI Bank — reverse merger in 2002

How to Trace Through Corporate History

  1. MCA V3 Portal — Visit mca.gov.in and search the company master data. Companies that have merged will show their status as "amalgamated" or "dissolved" and may show the successor company
  2. BSE / NSE Company Master — The BSE website lists historical company name changes and ISIN migrations. Search under the old name on bseindia.com and check for a "name change" or "ISIN transfer" history
  3. Contact the successor company's RTA — Once you identify the successor, contact their RTA with your original share details. The RTA can check whether shares were converted and credited to a folio in your name
  4. Check IEPF under both old and new names — Search the IEPF portal using both the old company name and the current company name, as records may appear under either
Step 6

What If the Company Is Delisted or Dissolved?

Even if a company was delisted or wound up, your shares may still have value — or at minimum, a claim process exists.

Delisted Companies

A company can be delisted from stock exchanges (voluntarily or involuntarily) but still legally exist. In that case:

  • Your shares still represent ownership in the company — they just cannot be traded on an exchange
  • You can still receive dividends if the company declares them
  • The company is still obligated to transfer unclaimed dividends and shares to IEPF after 7 years
  • Search the IEPF portal under the company's full registered name, not its ticker symbol

Dissolved Companies

If a company has been officially struck off or wound up under the Companies Act, the situation is more complex:

  • The company's assets (including share value) would have been distributed as per the winding-up order
  • Check with MCA V3 for the winding-up order and liquidator details — there may have been residual distributions
  • Physical share certificates of wound-up companies may have historical/collector value (scripophily) — some certificates from defunct colonial-era or early Independence-era companies trade among collectors
IEPF and dissolved companies: If a company transferred shares to IEPF before dissolution, the IEPF authority will still hold those shares or their equivalent value. Search the IEPF portal and contact the MCA helpline at 1800-200-8888 for guidance on such edge cases.
Recovery Checklist

Documents You'll Need to Recover Lost Shares

Once you've located the shares, gather these documents before initiating the recovery process. Missing documents are the number-one cause of delays.

Folio Number — From share certificates or old correspondence with the company
PAN Card — Self-attested copy; mandatory for all share transactions
Aadhaar Card — Self-attested copy for identity and address verification
Bank Account Details — Cancelled cheque or passbook copy for dividend/proceeds credit
Original Share Certificate — If held in physical form; submit originals to the RTA
Demat Account (Client Master List) — For crediting recovered shares; from your DP
Indemnity Bond — Required for IEPF claims and lost certificate cases; on stamp paper
ISR-1 Form — SEBI-mandated KYC form; required for all physical shareholder service requests
Death Certificate — If claiming as legal heir of a deceased shareholder
Legal Heir Certificate / Succession Certificate — For share transmission from deceased holder
Form IEPF-5 — If shares have been transferred to IEPF; filed online on MCA portal
Advance Receipt — For IEPF claims; stamped document acknowledging receipt of shares/dividend
Lost share certificates? If you cannot find the original physical share certificate, you will need to apply for a duplicate share certificate before you can dematerialise or sell those shares. This process involves filing an indemnity bond, surety bond, and newspaper advertisement for lost certificates. It typically adds 30–60 days to the recovery timeline. Learn about the lost share certificate process →
When to Get Help

When to Seek Professional Help

Many cases can be handled independently. But some situations are complex enough to warrant expert guidance.

A professional — typically a practising Company Secretary or SEBI-registered intermediary — can significantly speed up the recovery process and help you avoid errors that cause rejections. Consider seeking help if:

Deceased Shareholder

Shares in the name of a parent or grandparent who has passed away require transmission documents. If there is no nomination and no will, obtaining a succession certificate adds legal complexity.

Multiple Company Mergers

If the original company went through multiple mergers, demergers, and name changes over 20–30 years, tracing the current successor and identifying the correct RTA requires research and experience.

Lost Certificates + IEPF Transfer

When shares are both physically lost and have been transferred to IEPF, you need a duplicate certificate first, then an IEPF-5 filing. Two separate processes running in the right sequence.

Name Mismatches

If the name on share certificates differs from your current PAN/Aadhaar (e.g., spelling variations, initials vs. full name), affidavits and supporting documents need to be correctly prepared.

Large Value Holdings

For shares worth more than a few lakhs, professional assistance ensures the claim is filed correctly the first time, reducing the risk of delays, rejections, or disputes.

NRI or Overseas Shareholders

If the original shareholder was an NRI, or if the claimant is currently residing abroad, additional FEMA compliances and documentation requirements apply.

Our Company Secretary-led team at Investor Helpdesk handles all these scenarios — from IEPF claims and duplicate certificates to transmission and demat conversion. We operate 100% remotely and have helped investors across India and overseas. Learn about our IEPF claim assistance service →

Found lost shares? Need help recovering them?

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Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About Lost Shares

How to find lost shares by name in India?
To find lost shares by name, search the IEPF portal at iepf.gov.in using the "Know Your Unclaimed Dividend / Shares" tool. Enter your name and the company name. Also contact the RTAs — KFin Technologies and Link Intime — who maintain shareholder records even for holdings not yet transferred to IEPF. Try multiple name variations as old records may have different spellings or formats. See our full guide on unclaimed shares search →
How to check if I have unclaimed shares in India?
Search the IEPF portal (iepf.gov.in) by your name and PAN. Also check the KFin Technologies and Link Intime investor portals. Review old Form 26AS documents for dividend income credits. If you have physical share certificates, check with the company's current RTA using the folio number on the certificate. Your bank statements may also show old dividend credits that point to forgotten holdings.
What to do with old physical share certificates?
Old physical share certificates are still valid legal documents. First, verify the holding by contacting the company's RTA with the certificate details. Check if shares have been transferred to IEPF. If still with the company and certificates are intact, initiate dematerialisation through a DP. If certificates are lost or damaged, apply for duplicates first. SEBI mandates that physical shares must be dematerialised for any transaction in listed companies.
How to find a demat account I forgot about?
Both NSDL and CDSL allow you to search for demat accounts linked to your PAN. Visit NSDL's IDeAS portal or submit a written request to NSDL with your PAN for a consolidated account statement. For CDSL, use the easi portal at cdslindia.com. SEBI also mandates that both depositories issue a Consolidated Account Statement (CAS) half-yearly to all demat holders — check your email archive for old CAS emails which will show all holdings.
Can I find shares of my deceased parent?
Yes. As a legal heir, you can search for a deceased parent's shares using their PAN and name on the IEPF portal. Once located, you can claim them through share transmission — providing the death certificate, legal heir certificate or succession certificate, your KYC documents, and bank details. For IEPF-held shares, file Form IEPF-5 as a legal heir claimant. No stamp duty is payable on transmission. We assist with legal heir IEPF claims →

Found Lost Shares? Let Us Help You Recover Them.

Our Company Secretary-led team specialises in tracing and recovering lost shares — including IEPF claims, duplicate certificates, transmission to legal heirs, and demat conversion. 30+ years of experience. 100% remote service across India.

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