Chandigarh, September 16 – Haryana is set to take a major leap in e-governance with the launch of a series of digital initiatives aimed at modernizing the state’s Revenue Department. The reforms, designed to make land and property transactions more transparent, efficient, and citizen-friendly, will be formally inaugurated by Chief Minister, Sh. Nayab Singh Saini on September 29, at Tehsil Ladwa, Kurukshetra.
After presiding over the review meeting with Deputy Commissioners through video conferencing, Financial Commissioner, Dr. Sumita Misra, said that the government’s flagship reform is the introduction of Paperless Registration, which will integrate Jamabandi, Mutation, Cadastral Maps, and Registry data into a unified digital ecosystem. “This will make property registration faster, transparent, and secure. Citizens will no longer need multiple office visits as the process will be fully digitized,” she added. A live demonstration of the new system will be held in Kurukshetra during the launch.
Among other key initiatives is the Demarcation Portal, designed to eliminate delays and disputes in land boundary marking. The portal will standardize and digitize the process, ensuring time-bound and accurate demarcation with active participation of Tehsildars, Kanungos, and Patwaris.
For wider citizen access, the state will also introduce the Haryana Revenue WhatsApp Chatbot, enabling people to check land records, mutation status, and property tax details instantly on their mobile phones. “This will reduce dependence on manual processes, cut down office visits, and provide services at citizens’ fingertips,” Dr. Misra said.
To tackle long-pending disputes, the government will pilot the Revenue Court Case Management System, aimed at fast-tracking mutation, partition, and boundary cases. By combining legal and digital tools, the system is expected to reduce case pendency, speed up justice delivery, and curb corruption.
The reforms are also supported by the Large Scale Mapping Project and Tatima updation drive, which Dr. Misra directed Deputy Commissioners to complete by October 2025. Updated records will ensure accurate mapping and strengthen land data management.
During the meeting, Dr. Misra directed the DCs that pending mutations must be cleared through special village-level camps, with wide publicity to ensure maximum public participation. She also emphasized timely disposal of partition cases, suggesting 10-village clusters for better monitoring.
She further called for visible results under the ongoing Swachhata Pakhwada in DC offices and urged active participation in the tree plantation drive to support environmental sustainability.
Dr. Misra stressed that these digital reforms, backed by administrative efficiency, will not only strengthen transparency and governance but also empower citizens by delivering faster, cleaner, and more reliable revenue services.
















