Purchasing a property is a time-consuming process and requires considerable financial investment. Moreover, it becomes necessary to prove the ownership of your property. But what makes you the true owner? Is it the registry of the property, its mutation in government records, or its physical possession?
Registry
Under the Indian Registration Act (1908), any sale of immovable property (like land, house, or buildings) worth more than Rs 100 should be registered. It’s done at the sub-registrar’s office and involves the payment of stamp duty and registration charges.
You cannot legally own an unregistered property, despite paying for it. In such a case, you will remain a mere "possessor" with no ownership rights. The seller, or their heirs, can legally reclaim the property. And since it's not in your name in the government records, the seller can sell the property to other buyers as well.
Mutation in records
Mutation is the process of officially updating the new property owner’s name on the government revenue records. Mutation reflects a change of ownership after a property is transferred through sale, inheritance, gift, partition, or a court order. The owner needs it to pay property tax.
If you have registered your property and have not mutated it, the revenue records would still show the previous owner’s name.
Physical possession of the property
Without physical possession, your ownership only exists on paper.
While registration and mutation are incredibly important, they do not automatically grant you physical control over the land if a dispute arises. According to the Supreme Court’s ruling on S. Santhana Lakshmi & Ors. vs. D. Rajammal, in October, 2025. If you do not possess the land physically, you must file for ‘declaration of title’ and ‘recovery of possession’. The law will require you to legally fight to physically recover the land.
What makes you the true owner?
Although Registry is the only process that legally transfers ownership and creates title to the property, on a stand-alone basis. None of these can make you the true owner of the property. A secured safe ownership requires a complete procedure of registration, mutation, and securing land possession.
Documents required
For Mutation:1. Application to the concerned Tehsildar (in whose Jurisdiction you reside on any working day during 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM)
2. Proof of residence
3. Proof of ownership of land (sale deed, etc.)
4. Affidavits from all surviving members, in case property is transferred due to the death of the owner.
For Registration:1. Proof of ownership (Fard of Jamabandi/Certified copy of original old sale deed/Assessment of MC/Mutation)
2. Identification of the parties (Ration Card/Voter Card/Driving License/Aadhar Card/Pan Card/Identity Card and ID Proof of witness also)
3. Registration of document through power of attorney (Verification of GPA from where it has been registered, in case it has been registered out of state only.)
4. NOC required (You apply for NOC to the local Town & Country Planning office in your jurisdiction, or online via your state's official property registration portal)
5. 2 witnesses with valid ID proof
6. Map plan, and description of immovable property.
7. Mutation documents ( for Identification of Ancestral Property)