Encumbrance Certificate Check Online: Search Property History
An encumbrance certificate records the registered legal history of a property. When you purchase a house, land parcel, or commercial structure, conducting an ec online transaction search ensures the title is clear and that no active court attachments or bank mortgages are pending. Digitised land records have simplified checking these public records.
What is an encumbrance search and why does it matter?
State stamps and registration departments digitise transaction registers to assist property buyers. Throughout state websites, running an ec online search is standard practice to confirm that a property has no outstanding liabilities.
When a property has active liabilities, the Sub-Registrar Office (SRO) issues Form 15, which lists all registered transactions. If no transactions are registered during the query period, the portal issues Form 16, which is a Nil Encumbrance Certificate. Both forms serve as essential legal documents for title verification.
📂 State EC Portal Selector
Select your state to identify the correct registration website and search rules.
How to request an EC check online: Step-by-step walkthrough
To apply for and check an encumbrance certificate online, follow this detailed procedure:
- Visit the stamps and registration website for your state (e.g. TNreginet or Kaveri).
- Register a citizen profile and verify with OTP or Aadhaar.
- Select **"Apply for Encumbrance Certificate"** from the portal dashboard.
- Enter the property identification details: Survey Number, SRO office, Taluk, Village, and boundaries.
- Input the query duration. Choose a 30-year period to satisfy lender audit requirements.
- Click search. If the indexes match, pay the government fee online.
- Monitor your dashboard. Once SRO officers approve the request, a download link for the signed PDF will appear.
🧮 EC Search Fee Calculator
Calculate estimated search and copying fees based on your query duration. Calculating estimated charges using our ec online fee calculator below helps manage your budget.
Cross-verifying mutation register (Khata/Patta) with EC search
A comprehensive property title check involves cross-verifying the EC with mutation records. The EC shows transaction history, but the mutation register shows owner details recognized by revenue authorities (e.g. Patta, Khata, or Bhoomi RTC).
Ensure that the seller name in the registered sale deed matches the latest entry in the revenue database. If there is a mismatch, a mutation has not been completed. This mismatch can lead to transaction rejections during future sales. Once search parameters are confirmed, select the ec online portal option to submit your certified copy request.
📋 Title Verification Checklist
Perform these checks to evaluate the title readiness before purchasing the property.
Importance of search duration in EC searches
When you apply for an encumbrance search, the start date and end date are critical. If you are applying for a home loan, banks will require a search duration of at least 30 years. This duration ensures that any long-term mortgage or lease registered in the past is identified. If you only search for the last 13 years, you might miss a mortgage registered 15 years ago that remains active because the loan has not been fully repaid.
Additionally, ensure that the search window extends to the present date. Sometimes, people perform a search that stops a month before the transaction. During this gap, the seller might have mortgaged the property or signed an agreement with another buyer. Always select the current date as the end date of the search window to capture any recent registration records.
How to check application status of your EC online
After submitting your application and completing the payment for your certified copy, you can monitor the status on the registration website. Login to your account, click on "Track Application", and enter the registration number. The system will display if the application is pending, approved, or rejected. Once approved, you can download the digitally signed PDF containing transaction history.
If the application is rejected, SRO officers usually specify the reason, such as mismatched boundaries or incorrect survey numbers. You must resolve these issues and file a new application. The search fees paid for rejected applications are not refunded by the department.
How to verify the digital signature on the EC PDF
Once the SRO approves your application, the status of your request changes to "Approved". You will receive an SMS alert, and the download link will be active in your citizen profile. Save the PDF certificate to your computer.
The downloaded file contains a cryptographic signature certificate. When you open the PDF in a browser or basic PDF viewer, you might see a message saying the signature validity is unknown. To validate it, open the document in Adobe Acrobat Reader. Right-click the signature block, select "Signature Properties", click "Show Signer Certificate", and go to the Trust tab. Click "Add to Trusted Certificates" and check the option to trust the certificate for certifying documents. Once completed, the signature will display a green checkmark, confirming it is a legally certified government copy.
Using certified EC as a legal document
A certified EC containing the digital signature of the Sub-Registrar is legally valid and admissible in courts under the Indian Evidence Act. It is required for registering mortgages, processing bank loans, and resolving civil title disputes. The unsigned search copy is not legally valid and cannot be submitted to banks or government departments.
Bilingual glossary of registration terms
Understanding the local terms used in land records is essential for correct interpretation of the certificate data. We have prepared a glossary explaining terms for the ec online database:
- SRO: Sub-Registrar Office where deeds are formally registered.
- Patta / Khata: Revenue document proving land ownership.
- Chitta / RTC / Pahani: Village field book showing landowner and area extents.
- Form 15: EC listing property transactions.
- Form 16: Nil Encumbrance Certificate.
- Mutation: Process of transferring owner name in revenue records.
- Deed: A signed legal document that transfers ownership or grants rights.
When searching records, ensure you verify both the online portion and the manual portion if required. Banks will always require a comprehensive search history to confirm that no older claims remain active. For details on local regulations, visit our main ec online index page for other regional rules.
How to correct errors or mistakes in your registered EC
If you find any mistakes in the downloaded certificate, such as a spelling error in the owner name, incorrect boundaries, or missing transaction records, you must submit a correction request. Visit the local Sub-Registrar Office where the property is registered and provide your certified copy along with the registered sale deed or parent documents.
If the error is a clerical mistake made during the digitization of registration department records, SRO officers will correct the index database without any additional charges. Once the records are updated, you can submit a new online search request to obtain the corrected certified copy.
Frequently Asked Questions
The certified copy is usually ready for download within 2 to 3 working days from the date of application submission on portal.
Searching and viewing EC on screen is free of cost. However, downloading the certified copy requires paying nominal search and copy fees.
Yes. Select the correct SRO, Taluk, and Village, and search using the revenue survey number.
Open the downloaded PDF in Adobe Acrobat Reader. Right-click the signature panel, select Signature Properties, and add the Registration Department certificate to your trust store.