
Tamil Nadu’s much-celebrated digital patta transfer system, launched to ensure instant and transparent land ownership updates, is now facing growing criticism from property buyers and legal experts. Despite the state’s move to digitize records and link the revenue and registration departments for faster processing, many applicants say delays and old inefficiencies have made a comeback.
Earlier, patta transfer was a tedious process that required several visits to the taluk office for land measurement and verification. To fix this, the Survey and Settlement Commissionerate introduced an online system, reducing manual work and the scope for corruption. Under the new model, title changes were supposed to happen automatically within minutes after property registration—especially for non-subdivided plots. These “fulfilled pattas” could be directly downloaded from the official Tamil Nadu e-services website.
However, the on-ground reality tells a different story. Residents in several parts of Chennai, including South Chennai and Perambur, say they have been waiting for weeks to receive their updated pattas. Lawyer and activist Sandhya Vedullapalli, who registered a property in South Chennai in September, said the system initially worked well but has now become slow and unreliable. “The process was supposed to be transparent and efficient, but now even after three weeks, title updates are pending. It feels like the old system of running from pillar to post has returned,” she said.
Another buyer, Priya (name changed), who purchased an apartment in Perambur three months ago, said she is still waiting for her updated patta. Social activist Satish Galley also raised concerns, stating that while the digital shift was a welcome reform, the lack of monitoring and system glitches have nullified its benefits.
Officials from the Survey and Settlement Department maintain that cases involving land subdivisions require manual verification by village administrative officers or surveyors, and pattas in such cases are issued within 30 days.
While the intent behind digitisation remains commendable, citizens say the government must now focus on system reliability, real-time monitoring, and accountability to restore public confidence in Tamil Nadu’s e-governance initiatives.
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