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Guide · Unclaimed Dividend

Wipro Unclaimed Dividend: How to Check and Claim in India

Wipro has a long history of bonus shares, stock splits, and consistent dividends — which means many shareholders from the 1990s and early 2000s may have lost track of their holding entirely. If your folio has unclaimed Wipro dividends or shares transferred to IEPF, this guide walks you through the recovery process.

By RK Gupta, Company Secretary · Updated June 2026 · 12 min read

Why Wipro Shareholders Lose Track of Dividends

Wipro Limited (CIN: L32102KA1945PLC020800) is listed on both BSE and NSE. It was incorporated in 1945 in Karnataka and transformed from a vegetable oil company to one of India's largest IT services exporters under Azim Premji's leadership. Along the way, it became a textbook example of long-term wealth creation for Indian retail investors.

The problem is that Wipro's generosity with bonus shares and stock splits also created widespread record-keeping confusion. An investor who bought 100 shares in 1990 and never sold may today hold many thousands of shares — but their old share certificate still shows "100 shares." That mismatch between the certificate and the current folio leads many families to assume the holding is smaller than it actually is, or to miss out on years of dividends because the bank account on record was closed or the address changed.

Address changes and bank account updates are the single biggest reason for unclaimed Wipro dividends. When ECS mandates or NECS details are not updated with KFintech, the dividend warrant gets returned or the electronic transfer bounces — and the amount sits unclaimed. After seven consecutive years of non-encashment, both the dividend and the underlying shares move to the Investor Education and Protection Fund (IEPF) maintained by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs.

Note: Investor Helpdesk provides documentation support and process guidance only — not legal or investment advice. For investment decisions, please consult a SEBI-registered advisor.

Wipro's RTA: KFintech (KFin Technologies Ltd)

Wipro's Registrar and Transfer Agent is KFin Technologies Ltd, commonly called KFintech. They handle all shareholder servicing — folio queries, dividend revalidation, address updates, demat conversion, and the initial verification stage for IEPF claims.

KFintech investor portal: kfintech.com (go to "Investor" section, then "MIS / Services"). You can log in using your PAN or folio number to check your Wipro holding and any unpaid dividend amounts.

For written correspondence, address letters to:

  • KFin Technologies Ltd, Selenium Tower B, Plot 31 & 32, Financial District, Nanakramguda, Gachibowli, Hyderabad – 500 032
  • Toll-free: 1800-309-4001
  • Email: einward.ris@kfintech.com

Wipro's own Investor Relations page is at investors.wipro.com. The Nodal Officer for IEPF matters is based at Wipro's corporate office, Doddakannelli, Sarjapur Road, Bangalore – 560 035. All IEPF claim verifications for Wipro shares go through this office before reaching the IEPF Authority in New Delhi.

Understanding Wipro's Bonus Issues and Stock Splits

This section is important if you are handling a deceased shareholder's estate or if you have an old physical certificate and are unsure of the current share count. Wipro has a long history of rewarding shareholders through bonus shares and face value splits. The result is that the number on any old certificate bears little relation to how many shares actually exist in the folio today.

What a face-value split does to your certificate

When Wipro split its shares from ₹10 face value to ₹2 face value (a 5:1 split), every shareholder received five shares for every one they held. Your certificate still showed 100 shares at ₹10 each — but the actual folio entry converted to 500 shares at ₹2 each. The total value on paper stayed the same at the moment of split, but the share count quintupled.

Bonus issues work differently: they are additional free shares issued out of the company's reserves. A 1:1 bonus means for every share you hold, you receive one more. A 2:1 bonus means you receive two additional shares for every one held.

Why heirs are often surprised by the actual holding

When a family finds a physical share certificate for, say, 200 Wipro shares from 1998, they tend to assume the holding is 200 shares. After accounting for subsequent splits and bonuses, the actual holding reflected in the KFintech folio could be several times higher. The shares may not have been dematerialised, which means they are still in physical form and need to go through the physical shares to demat conversion process before they can be sold or transferred.

Before writing off an old Wipro certificate as inconsequential, always verify the current folio balance with KFintech using the folio number printed on the certificate. Do not rely on the face count on the certificate itself.

How to Check Your Wipro Unclaimed Dividend Status

There are two separate portals to check — one for dividends that have not yet crossed the seven-year mark and are still with Wipro/KFintech, and one for amounts already transferred to IEPF.

Step 1: Check with KFintech directly

  1. Go to kfintech.com and click on "Investor" in the top navigation
  2. Select "Unclaimed Dividend" from the services menu
  3. Enter your PAN or Wipro folio number and date of birth
  4. The portal will show you all unpaid dividend amounts from the past seven years, along with the dividend year and amount

Alternatively, call KFintech's toll-free number 1800-309-4001 and provide your folio number. They can confirm dividend payment history and outstanding amounts.

Step 2: Check the IEPF portal for older amounts

  1. Go to iepf.gov.in and click on "IEPF Refund"
  2. Select "Search Unclaimed Amount" from the dropdown
  3. Search by company name "Wipro" and enter your folio number or PAN
  4. The portal will list dividend years for which amounts have been transferred to IEPF, along with the corresponding share transfer date if applicable

If you find your name in the IEPF database, you cannot claim those amounts from Wipro directly anymore. The refund must go through the Form IEPF-5 process described below.

Claiming Unclaimed Wipro Dividends Directly (Within 7 Years)

If the dividend is still with Wipro and has not crossed seven years, the claim process is relatively straightforward. You deal directly with KFintech, not the IEPF Authority.

Documents needed for direct dividend claim

  • Written request letter addressed to KFintech, mentioning Wipro folio number, dividend year(s), and registered shareholder name
  • Self-attested copy of PAN card
  • Cancelled cheque or bank passbook copy (showing IFSC, MICR, account number, and account holder name matching the folio)
  • Copy of original share certificate (if holding is still in physical form)
  • Address proof if the registered address has changed
  • Indemnity bond on non-judicial stamp paper of ₹100 (required for dividend amounts above ₹1,000 in most cases — KFintech will confirm the threshold)

Send the packet by registered post to KFintech's Hyderabad office. Processing typically takes 3–6 weeks from receipt of complete documents. The amount is credited directly to your bank account — dividend warrants are no longer issued for most amounts.

Note: If your bank account details on record are incorrect or outdated, update them first through a separate Bank Mandate Form before requesting dividend revalidation. KFintech will not process the dividend claim until the bank details are verified. This is a common delay point.

Claiming Wipro Shares and Dividends Transferred to IEPF

Once Wipro dividends and the associated shares are transferred to IEPF (after seven years of non-encashment), you need to file Form IEPF-5 on the MCA portal. This is a more involved process, but it is entirely doable if you have the right documents.

Overview of the IEPF-5 process for Wipro

The claim goes through three stages: you file on the MCA portal, Wipro's Nodal Officer verifies your documents, and the IEPF Authority processes the refund. At no stage do you physically hand over documents to government officials — everything goes through KFintech and Wipro first.

1
File Form IEPF-5 online Go to iepf.gov.in, click "Claim Refund," and fill Form IEPF-5. You will need your PAN, Aadhaar, Wipro folio number, DP ID and Client ID if the shares were in demat, and the list of dividend years you are claiming. Download and print the filled form after submission — you will get an SRN (Service Request Number) which is your tracking reference.
2
Send physical documents to Wipro Nodal Officer Within 3 days of online submission, dispatch a physical packet to the Wipro Nodal Officer, c/o KFin Technologies Ltd, Hyderabad. The packet must include the filled Form IEPF-5 printout, an original indemnity bond on ₹500 non-judicial stamp paper, advance receipt, and all supporting documents listed below.
3
Wipro Nodal Officer verification Wipro's Nodal Officer reviews your documents and verifies the claim against their records. This typically takes 30–45 days. They will upload a verification report to the MCA portal. If documents are incomplete or there is a mismatch, they will send a deficiency letter — you get 15 days to respond.
4
IEPF Authority approval and credit Once Wipro's verification report is uploaded, the IEPF Authority processes the refund. Approved dividend amounts are credited to your bank account via NEFT. Shares are released back to your demat account. Total time from submission to credit: typically 60–90 days if documents are in order.

Documents required for Form IEPF-5 (Wipro)

  • Filled and printed Form IEPF-5 (signed by claimant)
  • Original indemnity bond on ₹500 non-judicial stamp paper, notarised
  • Advance receipt in the prescribed format (available on iepf.gov.in)
  • Self-attested PAN card copy
  • Self-attested Aadhaar card copy
  • Cancelled cheque with account holder name printed, or a bank certificate confirming account details
  • Client Master Report (CMR) from your DP/broker — this is mandatory for share credit to demat account
  • Original Wipro share certificate(s) if shares are in physical form
  • Demat account statement showing Wipro holdings (if shares were already in demat before IEPF transfer)
  • For joint holdings: document from the other joint holder acknowledging the claim

One important practical point: the CMR (Client Master Report) must show your demat account in your own name — the IEPF Authority cannot credit shares to a third-party account. If your shares are still in physical form, you should first open a demat account and mention that account in Form IEPF-5. The physical shares to demat conversion for Wipro can run concurrently with the IEPF claim process in some cases — but confirm with KFintech before proceeding.

IEPF Claims by Legal Heirs of Deceased Wipro Shareholders

This is where Wipro cases can become especially significant. A person who held Wipro shares from the mid-1990s may have accumulated a very large holding through successive bonus issues and splits. If that person passed away without transmitting the shares to family members, those shares — and all accumulated unclaimed dividends — may have moved to IEPF.

Legal heirs can still claim, but the documentation requirements are heavier. The process is the same Form IEPF-5 route, with additional succession-related documents layered on top.

Additional documents for legal heir IEPF claims

  • Death certificate of the original shareholder (attested copy)
  • Legal heir certificate or succession certificate issued by a competent court — for amounts above ₹5 lakh, a succession certificate is generally required; for smaller amounts, a legal heir certificate from a notary or the SDM may suffice
  • Notarised indemnity bond jointly signed by all legal heirs (if there are multiple heirs, a no-objection letter from all others is required)
  • Original share certificates in the name of the deceased
  • Identity proof and address proof of the claimant legal heir
  • PAN and Aadhaar of the claimant legal heir
  • If a nominee was registered with KFintech, the nominee's identity documents are required instead of succession documents

If the Wipro folio had a nomination registered, the nominee can claim without a succession certificate — this simplifies things considerably. Check with KFintech whether a nomination was registered for the folio number in question.

For cases where there is no nomination and multiple legal heirs are involved, the transmission of Wipro shares to heirs' names should ideally happen through share transmission for legal heirs before or alongside the IEPF claim. This ensures the shares are eventually credited in the correct names.

Physical Wipro Share Certificates: What to Do

Many early Wipro investors hold physical certificates issued before 1997. These are valid documents — SEBI has not invalidated physical certificates. However, they cannot be sold on the exchange in physical form. To sell or transfer Wipro shares from old certificates, you must convert them to demat format through KFintech.

Demat conversion for physical Wipro shares

Submit the physical certificates along with a Dematerialisation Request Form (DRF) to your DP (depository participant). Your DP forwards the DRF and certificates to KFintech, who verify the certificates against their records, confirm the current folio balance (which accounts for all splits and bonuses), and credit the shares to your demat account.

The process typically takes 15–30 days from the time KFintech receives the DRF. One thing to confirm before submission: if the name on the old certificate has a variation from your current PAN or Aadhaar — a common problem with certificates from the 1990s — you may need to get that corrected first. Our share name correction service handles exactly this situation.

If your original certificate is lost or damaged, the process requires a separate indemnity and a duplicate certificate request before demat can happen. We cover this in detail under our lost share certificate recovery service.

Wipro Dividends: What the Amounts Typically Look Like

Wipro's dividends are generally declared in the ₹1–5 range per share. On a face value of ₹2, this represents a 50–250% dividend yield on face value, though the actual yield relative to market price is much lower. For shareholders who have accumulated a few thousand shares through bonuses and splits, even a ₹1 per share dividend works out to a few thousand rupees annually.

Across multiple unclaimed years, the aggregate can reach meaningful amounts. The IEPF database for Wipro has a significant number of entries, which tells you that many shareholders from the 1990s and early 2000s simply never updated their records with KFintech as addresses changed and banks were switched.

The practical takeaway: if you or a family member held Wipro shares at any point before 2015, it is worth spending 20 minutes on the KFintech portal and the IEPF portal to check whether any amounts are outstanding.

Common Problems and How to Handle Them

Old address on record

KFintech requires address proof matching the new address. Submit an address update request using their Change of Address form along with Aadhaar and a utility bill. Do this before initiating any dividend claim to avoid rejection on address mismatch grounds.

Bank details mismatch

The account holder name in the bank must match the registered shareholder name exactly. If there is a discrepancy, the NEFT credit will fail. Submit a Bank Mandate Form to KFintech with the correct details and a cancelled cheque before claiming dividends.

Folio number not known

You can locate a Wipro folio by searching the KFintech portal using PAN. If PAN was not registered at the time, call KFintech with the original share certificate — the distinctive numbers printed on it allow KFintech to locate the folio in their records.

Signature mismatch on documents

Signatures change over decades. If KFintech flags a signature mismatch, they will ask for a bank-attested specimen signature. Get your signature attested by your bank branch manager on a form they provide — this is accepted by KFintech as verification.

For any of these situations, our unclaimed dividend recovery service can handle the correspondence and documentation on your behalf so you don't have to go back and forth with KFintech multiple times.

Need Help?

We Handle Wipro IEPF and Dividend Claims

CS RK Gupta reviews your case personally. Physical or IEPF — we prepare all documentation and follow up with KFintech and the IEPF Authority.

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Quick Facts
  • Wipro RTA: KFin Technologies Ltd
  • Portal: kfintech.com
  • IEPF Portal: iepf.gov.in
  • Form for IEPF: IEPF-5
  • KFintech Helpline: 1800-309-4001
  • IEPF Claim Timeline: 60–90 days

Frequently Asked Questions

Questions Indian investors ask about Wipro unclaimed dividends and IEPF claims

Wipro Limited's RTA is KFintech (KFin Technologies Ltd), formerly known as Karvy Fintech. You can reach them through their investor portal at kfintech.com or by calling their toll-free number 1800-309-4001. For Wipro-specific queries, you can also contact the Wipro Investor Relations team at investors.wipro.com.
Wipro has issued multiple bonus shares and split its stock over the decades. If you held 100 shares in 1995 and received all subsequent bonuses and splits, you could be holding thousands of shares today. KFintech maintains the current folio record — log in at kfintech.com with your PAN or folio number to see the present share count. Your old physical certificate will show a different (much smaller) number, which is normal.
Dividends that were unclaimed for 7 years are transferred to the IEPF (Investor Education and Protection Fund). You cannot claim these directly from Wipro anymore — you must file Form IEPF-5 on the IEPF Authority portal at iepf.gov.in. Dividends declared in the last 7 years that are still unclaimed can be claimed directly from Wipro through KFintech by submitting an indemnity bond and relevant bank details.
Wipro shares from 1995 have gone through significant wealth multiplication due to successive bonus issues and splits. The exact current value depends on how many shares were originally held and the current market price of Wipro on NSE/BSE. First, you need to establish the current folio through KFintech and then get the shares transmitted to the legal heir's demat account through the share transmission process. The accumulated dividends may also be recoverable if they were transferred to IEPF.
Yes, legal heirs can claim Wipro shares that have been transferred to IEPF. The process requires filing Form IEPF-5 on the IEPF Authority portal. Legal heirs must attach a notarised indemnity bond, succession certificate or legal heir certificate, and the original share certificates along with other KYC documents. The claim is first verified by the Wipro Nodal Officer and then approved by the IEPF Authority. This process typically takes 60–90 days.
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