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Guide · Legal Heir

Legal Heir Certificate in Gujarat: Mamlatdar Process and Documents

Getting a legal heir certificate in Gujarat goes through the Mamlatdar — the taluka-level revenue officer — with a mandatory field visit by the Talati before the certificate is issued. Digital Gujarat has made online applications possible, but knowing the exact documents and what each step involves saves you from unnecessary delays.

By RK Gupta, Company Secretary · Updated June 2026 · 11 min read

Note: The Digital Gujarat portal (digitalgujarat.gov.in) is the primary online channel for this certificate. Jan Seva Kendra centres across Gujarat also accept applications. Both routes go through the same Revenue Department process — the Talati field enquiry and Mamlatdar sign-off remain mandatory regardless of how you apply.

What Is the Legal Heir Certificate in Gujarat?

In Gujarati, the certificate is called Varas Dahvel Praman Patra (વારસ/ઉત્તરાધિકાર પ્રમાણ પત્ર) — officially titled "Legal Heir Certificate" in English documents. The Revenue Department of Gujarat issues it. It is an administrative document, not a court order — that distinction is important because it means you do not need a lawyer or a court filing to obtain it.

The certificate identifies all surviving family members who are entitled to inherit a deceased person's assets: shares in listed companies, bank accounts, property, provident fund balances, LIC policies, and similar financial instruments. For share transmission to legal heirs, this document is the starting point. KFintech (formerly Karvy) and MUFG Intime India (formerly Link Intime) — the two largest RTAs in India — list it as a mandatory requirement for transmission claims where the total holding per company is below ₹5 lakh.

The legal heir certificate is different from a succession certificate. A succession certificate is a court order, obtained through District Court proceedings, and is required only in specific situations — large estates, disputed inheritances, or when an RTA or company specifically demands it. For the vast majority of share transmission cases involving Gujarat-based investors, the Mamlatdar-issued legal heir certificate is sufficient.

Who Issues It in Gujarat — The Mamlatdar

The issuing authority in Gujarat is the Mamlatdar — the revenue officer at the taluka level. Every taluka in Gujarat has a Mamlatdar office. The Mamlatdar in Gujarat is the equivalent of what is called the Tehsildar in states like Rajasthan, UP, or Bihar — the title is different but the function is identical: head of revenue administration at the sub-district level.

Before the Mamlatdar signs and issues the certificate, the Talati — Gujarat's village-level revenue official, also called the Village Accountant — must conduct a mandatory field enquiry. The Talati visits the household at the address in the application, verifies the family composition by examining the ration card, and sometimes speaks with neighbours. The Talati then submits a written report to the Mamlatdar. Only after receiving this report can the Mamlatdar sign the certificate.

The Talati is Gujarat's equivalent of the Patwari in North India or the Revenue Inspector in Telangana. The title is specific to Gujarat's revenue structure and carries the same record-keeping and field verification responsibilities.

In urban areas — Ahmedabad, Surat, Vadodara, Rajkot — the Mamlatdar's office covers different parts of the city. Ahmedabad is divided into zones (east, west, north, south city) and each zone has its own Mamlatdar. Surat has a city Mamlatdar for SMC (Surat Municipal Corporation) areas. Vadodara and Rajkot similarly have city-level Mamlatdar offices for their respective urban areas. When you apply through Digital Gujarat, the system routes your application to the correct Mamlatdar based on the deceased's address.

Digital Gujarat Portal — Applying Online

Gujarat's primary citizen services platform is the Digital Gujarat portal at digitalgujarat.gov.in. The portal enables online applications for legal heir certificates without visiting a government office. You can also apply at Jan Seva Kendra — Gujarat's Common Service Centre network, which has centres across all districts and talukas, including in smaller towns and rural areas.

Here is the step-by-step process on the Digital Gujarat portal:

  1. Register or log in. Go to digitalgujarat.gov.in and create an account using your mobile number and OTP. If you already have an account, log in directly.
  2. Find the service. Under Revenue Department services, look for "Legal Heir Certificate" — it may also appear as "Vaarasan Praman Patra" or "Varas Dahvel Praman Patra" depending on the portal version.
  3. Fill the application form. Enter the deceased person's full name as it appears on their Aadhaar card, date of death, full residential address in Gujarat (district, taluka, village or ward), and a complete list of all legal heirs — each heir's name, relationship to the deceased, date of birth, and Aadhaar number.
  4. Upload required documents. Scan and upload each document in PDF or JPG format, within the file size limit specified on the portal (typically 1 MB per document).
  5. Pay the application fee. The government fee is nominal — ₹20 to ₹50 — payable online through net banking, UPI, or debit/credit card.
  6. Save the acknowledgement number. After submission, you receive an application acknowledgement with a reference number. Use this to track status on the portal.
  7. Talati field enquiry. The Talati assigned to the relevant area visits the household address. This is mandatory and will happen at the address provided in the application. Ensure someone is available at the address during working hours.
  8. Mamlatdar review and digital signing. After the Talati submits the field enquiry report, the Mamlatdar reviews the application and, if everything is in order, digitally signs the certificate.
  9. Download the certificate. Log in to your Digital Gujarat account, go to your application, and download the digitally signed certificate.

Jan Seva Kendra centres provide assisted application for applicants not comfortable with online portals. The centre operator fills the form on your behalf for a small service charge — typically ₹50 to ₹100. Documents must be carried to the centre in original for scanning and pre-verification. Jan Seva Kendra applications sometimes get processed slightly faster because the operator checks documents before submission, reducing the chance of rejection for incomplete uploads.

Documents Required

Gather all of these before starting the application. A single missing document can halt the process mid-way and require re-submission.

  • Death certificate of the deceased — issued by the local body covering the area where the death occurred and was registered. In Ahmedabad: Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation (AMC), which has multiple ward offices across the city for death registration. In Surat: Surat Municipal Corporation (SMC). In Vadodara: Vadodara Municipal Corporation (VMC). In Rajkot: Rajkot Municipal Corporation (RMC). In smaller towns: the relevant Municipality or Nagar Panchayat. In villages: the Gram Panchayat. If the death occurred at a hospital in a different city, the death should have been registered with the local body of that city.
  • Aadhaar card of the deceased — photocopy. If the deceased did not have an Aadhaar card, a PAN card or voter ID is the fallback for identification.
  • Aadhaar cards of all legal heirs — every heir listed in the application must provide their Aadhaar number. Minors who do not have Aadhaar can be listed with their birth certificate and a parent's Aadhaar.
  • Ration card — this is the central document for establishing family composition in Gujarat. The ration card should show the deceased's name and the names of family members who are being listed as legal heirs. If the ration card is outdated or does not include all heirs (for example, a recently married daughter-in-law), supplementary relationship documents must be attached.
  • Affidavit on non-judicial stamp paper — on ₹20 to ₹100 non-judicial stamp paper, declaring that all legal heirs are listed and no heir has been omitted. The affidavit must be executed before a Notary Public or a First Class Magistrate. The Digital Gujarat portal provides the format.
  • PAN card of the deceased — required for identification, particularly when the certificate is being used for financial asset transfer such as share transmission.
  • Electricity or water bill as address proof — to confirm the deceased's residential address in Gujarat and establish jurisdiction for the application.
  • Marriage certificate — if the spouse is among the legal heirs and their name does not appear on the ration card, a marriage certificate is required to establish the spousal relationship.
  • Birth certificates for minor heirs — for children not listed on the ration card, school leaving certificates or municipal birth certificates establish their relationship to the deceased.
  • Voter ID of the deceased and heirs — useful supporting document, particularly if name on Aadhaar has minor discrepancies.

Always carry originals when the Talati visits. The Talati may want to see and verify the originals of the death certificate and ration card even though you have already uploaded scans.

The Talati Field Enquiry

The Talati field enquiry is the mandatory verification step that distinguishes Gujarat's process from purely document-based systems. The Talati — also formally titled the Village Accountant — is assigned to a specific geographic area called a "saza" in rural Gujarat, or to specific urban wards in city areas. When your application reaches the Mamlatdar's office, it is routed to the Talati responsible for the address in the application.

The Talati visits the household, verifies family composition by checking the ration card, speaking with family members present at the address, and occasionally confirms with immediate neighbours. The visit is a routine administrative enquiry — not adversarial in any way. The Talati's report to the Mamlatdar is what enables the certificate to be signed.

In urban Mamlatdar offices — particularly in Ahmedabad and Surat — the Talati function for legal heir certificates may fall under a slightly different designation since there is no traditional "village" in a city. The process still routes through the urban Mamlatdar's office, but the officer conducting the field visit may be a revenue functionary rather than a village-level Talati in the classical sense.

This field enquiry step is the primary factor affecting overall timeline. If the Talati is busy with other cases, the visit can get delayed by 7 to 10 working days. There is no way to bypass this step — it is a statutory requirement. Being available at the address during working hours on weekdays significantly helps.

Timeline and Fees

The official processing time in Gujarat is 30 days from the date of complete application submission. In practice, with complete documents and a reasonably prompt Talati field enquiry, most applicants receive the certificate in 15 to 21 working days. Jan Seva Kendra submissions can sometimes be processed faster because the operator pre-checks documents.

Fee Component Amount Notes
Government fee (Revenue Department) ₹20 – ₹50 Nominal; confirmed at portal checkout
Jan Seva Kendra service charge ₹50 – ₹100 Only if applying through a centre
Non-judicial stamp paper for affidavit ₹20 – ₹100 From licensed stamp paper vendor
Notary fee for affidavit attestation ₹100 – ₹200 Varies by notary
BPL certificate holders No government fee Produce BPL card at application

The total out-of-pocket cost is typically ₹300 to ₹450. This is far less expensive than obtaining a court succession certificate, which involves court fees calculated as a percentage of asset value and usually requires a lawyer.

City-Specific Notes

Ahmedabad: Death certificates are issued by the AMC (Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation). AMC has multiple zonal ward offices — be sure to approach the ward office that covers the locality where the deceased was registered. The legal heir certificate application goes to the Mamlatdar whose jurisdiction covers that part of Ahmedabad — east zone, west zone, north zone, and south city zone each have their own Mamlatdar office. The Digital Gujarat portal auto-routes based on the address entered, but it is useful to know this if you are following up directly.

Surat: Death certificates from SMC (Surat Municipal Corporation). Surat is one of Gujarat's most commercially active cities — with major industries in textiles, diamonds, and chemicals — and has a significant number of retail investors in listed companies, including many first-generation investors who subscribed to company shares in the 1980s and 1990s. RTAs like MUFG Intime and KFintech process a large volume of Surat-originating transmission requests.

Vadodara: VMC (Vadodara Municipal Corporation) issues death certificates. Vadodara has significant industrial investment and a substantial retail investor base, particularly from employees and shareholders of Petrochemicals, GSFC, and other large Gujarat-based companies.

Rajkot: RMC (Rajkot Municipal Corporation) for city areas. Rajkot is the commercial centre of Saurashtra and many investors from that region hold shares of companies across sectors.

For addresses outside municipal limits — in talukas and villages — the death certificate comes from the Gram Panchayat and the Talati who handles the field enquiry is the actual village Talati responsible for that area.

Gujarati Language Certificate — Translation for RTAs

The Digital Gujarat portal may issue the legal heir certificate entirely or primarily in Gujarati script. For submission to RTAs headquartered outside Gujarat — KFintech's registered office is in Hyderabad, and MUFG Intime India's registered office is in Mumbai — some RTAs require a certified English translation attached to the Gujarati original.

Most RTAs have processed Gujarati certificates for decades and do not automatically reject them. However, when in doubt, a certified English translation eliminates any possibility of rejection. To get one:

  • Approach a government-empanelled translator or a sworn translator who works in the Gujarat–English language pair.
  • Have them translate the full text of the certificate, including all heir names and relationships.
  • Get the translation notarised by a Notary Public.
  • Attach the original Gujarati certificate and the notarised English translation together when submitting to the RTA.

If possible, request a bilingual certificate (Gujarati and English) at the time of applying at the Mamlatdar's office or Jan Seva Kendra. Some offices can issue bilingual certificates — this saves the extra translation step entirely.

Using the Certificate for Share Transmission

Once you have the Mamlatdar-signed and digitally stamped legal heir certificate, it forms the core of your share transmission packet. Submit it to the company's RTA — KFintech at kfintech.com or MUFG Intime India at mufgintimeindia.com — along with the following supporting documents:

  • Original death certificate (or certified copy)
  • PAN card of the deceased
  • PAN card of the claimant legal heir
  • Cancelled cheque in the name of the legal heir (for bank account into which shares are to be transferred or dividends credited)
  • Aadhaar of the legal heir claimant
  • Standard affidavit/indemnity as specified by the RTA — this is separate from the affidavit submitted during the legal heir certificate application
  • Certified English translation of the legal heir certificate (if required by the specific RTA)

For holdings below ₹5 lakh per company, the Mamlatdar-issued legal heir certificate is sufficient. A court succession certificate is not required.

State-Wise Guides — Legal Heir Certificate

Need the process for a different state? Each state has its own issuing authority, portal, and document requirements. Select your state below.

Succession Certificate in Gujarat

If the estate is large, disputed, or if the RTA or company specifically requires a court order, a succession certificate must be obtained from the Civil Court or the Gujarat High Court. In Gujarat, succession certificate petitions are filed in the District Court (Civil Court) of the district where the deceased was domiciled. The High Court of Gujarat at Ahmedabad handles succession matters in certain circumstances.

A succession certificate in Gujarat typically takes 6 to 18 months and involves:

  • Filing a petition in the appropriate District Court
  • Court fee calculated on the value of assets — typically 2% to 3%
  • Engagement of an advocate
  • Publication of notice in a newspaper inviting objections
  • Hearing and final order from the court

For standard share portfolios where each company holding is under ₹5 lakh, the Mamlatdar-issued legal heir certificate avoids this entire court process. The general legal heir certificate guide covers when a succession certificate becomes necessary and what the court process involves.

Disclaimer: Investor Helpdesk provides documentation support and process guidance only — we are not affiliated with any government body, SEBI, MCA, or any RTA, and this is not legal or investment advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Questions investors ask about legal heir certificates in Gujarat

Apply through the Digital Gujarat portal at digitalgujarat.gov.in. Register with your mobile number, then under Revenue Department services find "Legal Heir Certificate" (Vaarasan Praman Patra). Fill in the deceased's details, list all legal heirs with their Aadhaar numbers, and upload required documents — death certificate, Aadhaar of all heirs, ration card showing family members, and an affidavit on non-judicial stamp paper. Pay the nominal fee online. The Talati (Village Accountant) will then visit your address for a mandatory field enquiry before the Mamlatdar issues the certificate, which you download from your Digital Gujarat account. You can also apply at a Jan Seva Kendra if you prefer assisted application.
The Mamlatdar is the revenue officer at the taluka level in Gujarat — the equivalent of what is called the Tehsildar in states like Rajasthan, UP, or Bihar. The Mamlatdar is the authority who reviews and signs the legal heir certificate. Before the Mamlatdar signs, the Talati (Village Accountant) — the village-level revenue official in Gujarat — conducts a mandatory field enquiry, visiting the household to verify family composition. The Mamlatdar then reviews the Talati's written report and, if satisfied, signs and issues the certificate. In urban areas like Ahmedabad and Surat, the relevant Mamlatdar depends on which zone or ward covers the deceased's address.
The official processing time is 30 days from complete application submission. In practice, with complete documents and a prompt Talati field enquiry, most applicants receive the certificate in 15 to 21 working days. Jan Seva Kendra submissions can sometimes be processed faster because operators pre-verify documents before submission, reducing the chance of rejection for incomplete uploads. The Talati's field visit is the main factor affecting actual timeline — if that happens within the first week of application, the Mamlatdar can sign relatively quickly.
No. You can also apply at any Jan Seva Kendra (Common Service Centre) across Gujarat — the operator fills the form on your behalf for a small service charge of ₹50 to ₹100. In some talukas, physical applications directly at the Mamlatdar's office are also accepted, though the Digital Gujarat or Jan Seva Kendra route is generally faster and easier to track. Regardless of which route you use, the Talati field enquiry and Mamlatdar approval remain mandatory steps.
Yes, with a certified English translation attached. Most RTAs — KFintech and MUFG Intime India — accept Gujarati certificates when accompanied by a notarised English translation. Approach a government-empanelled sworn translator, have them translate the certificate, and get the translation notarised by a Notary Public. Attach both the original Gujarati certificate and the notarised English translation when submitting to the RTA. If possible, request a bilingual certificate (Gujarati and English) at the time of application — some Mamlatdar offices issue bilingual certificates, which saves the extra translation step entirely.
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