How to Check Land Records Online in Telangana Using the Dharani Portal [2026 Guide]
With over 1.5 million property registrations happening every year in Telangana, verifying land records before buying is not optional. It is the single most important step that separates informed buyers from those who discover costly surprises after the sale deed is signed.
Yet the numbers tell a sobering story. According to industry data, 1 in 5 properties in India carry hidden legal risks that surface only after purchase. In our analysis of property title documents across Telangana districts, we have found that buyers who rely solely on the Dharani portal miss critical information available in other government databases -- court records, CERSAI filings, and cross-district encumbrance data that Dharani simply does not display.
Making matters more confusing, Telangana's land records system underwent a major transformation in 2025 when the Dharani portal was officially replaced by the Bhu Bharati system. Many property buyers are still unsure which portal to use and what each record type actually reveals.
This guide walks you through exactly how to check land records on the Dharani and Bhu Bharati portals, what each record type means, common data errors to watch for, and why a Dharani check alone is not sufficient for safe property buying. Whether you are a first-time buyer following a complete property due diligence checklist or an experienced investor looking to verify property documents in Telangana, this guide covers what you need to know.
What Is the Dharani Portal in Telangana?
The Dharani portal is Telangana's integrated digital land records management system launched by the Revenue Department in October 2020. It was designed to bring all land-related services -- ownership records, encumbrance data, property registrations, and mutation applications -- under a single online platform accessible to every citizen.
Dharani replaced the older fragmented system where land records were spread across multiple departments, each with its own paper-based or partially digital workflow. Before Dharani, checking land ownership required visiting the Mandal Revenue Office, the Sub-Registrar's office, and sometimes the district collector's office -- each with separate records that did not always match.
Under the Telangana Bhu Bharati (Record of Rights in Land) Act, 2025, the state government officially transitioned from Dharani to the Bhu Bharati portal. This was not merely a rebranding. Bhu Bharati introduced structural changes to how land records are maintained and accessed, aimed at fixing long-standing data integrity issues that plagued Dharani. The property registration process in Telangana now runs through this updated infrastructure.
From Dharani to Bhu Bharati -- What Changed in 2025
The most significant change is the introduction of Bhudhaar, a 14-digit unique identification number assigned to every land parcel in Telangana. Think of it as an Aadhaar card for land. Every property now has a permanent digital identity that follows it through every transaction, mutation, and registration.
Other key changes include:
- LPM (Land Parcel Map) identifiers replacing traditional survey numbers for all new registrations
- 11-column Pahani restoration, adding back the Enjoyment Column (showing the actual occupant) and Mode of Acquisition (inherited vs purchased)
- Simplified modules -- the previous 33 complex service modules have been consolidated into just 6 streamlined modules
- Real-time SMS updates for every transaction status change
Key Services Available on the Portal
Both Dharani (for legacy records) and Bhu Bharati (for current records) provide these core services:
- Pahani (Adangal) -- Land ownership, cultivation, and crop details
- ROR 1B (Record of Rights) -- Official ownership record with encumbrance notes
- Know Land Status -- Quick ownership and classification lookup
- -- Transaction history and registered charges (agricultural land)
How Do You Check Land Records on the Dharani Portal?
Checking land records on the Dharani/Bhu Bharati portal is a straightforward process that takes about 5-10 minutes per property. The portal provides free access to basic land details, though officially certified documents require a small fee. Here is the step-by-step process for each record type.
Checking Pahani (Adangal) Records
The Pahani is the most commonly searched record. It contains ownership details, land classification, crop information, and survey details. To search:
The Pahani will display the landowner's name, survey number, extent of land, land classification (wet/dry/garden), and any recorded encumbrances. You can download or print this record for your files.
Checking ROR 1B (Record of Rights)
The ROR 1B is the more detailed ownership document. Under Bhu Bharati, it now includes the restored 11-column format with additional fields like the enjoyment column and mode of acquisition. The search process is identical to Pahani -- select "ROR 1B" instead of "Pahani" in step 3.
Key Fact: The ROR 1B document serves as the official record in disputes and legal matters. As per Section 17 of the Registration Act 1908, any transfer of immovable property worth more than Rs.100 must be registered -- and the ROR 1B reflects these registered transfers.
Using the Know Land Status Feature
For a quick check without the full Pahani detail, use the "Know Land Status" feature at dharani.telangana.gov.in/knowLandStatus. This shows:
- Current owner name
- Land classification and extent
- Whether the land is in a prohibited list
- Basic survey and location details
This is useful for a rapid preliminary check before investing time in detailed verification.
How Do You Check Encumbrance Certificates Online in Telangana?
An encumbrance certificate (EC) is one of the most critical documents in property verification. It reveals every registered transaction, mortgage, lien, and charge against a property over a specified period. In Telangana, the process for obtaining an EC differs based on whether the property is agricultural or non-agricultural land. For a deeper understanding of what ECs contain and why they matter, see our encumbrance certificate guide.
Agricultural Land EC via Dharani/Bhu Bharati
For agricultural land registered after 2020 (when Dharani went live), encumbrance data is available through the Dharani/Bhu Bharati portal. The portal shows all transactions registered through its system.
However, there is a critical limitation: Dharani only contains records of transactions processed through its own system. Any pre-2020 transactions, or transactions that went through other registration channels, may not appear.
Non-Agricultural Land EC via IGRS Telangana
For non-agricultural properties (apartments, plots in urban areas, commercial properties), the Telangana encumbrance certificate is obtained through the IGRS (Inspector General of Registration and Stamps) portal at registration.telangana.gov.in.
Important: Online EC in Telangana is available only for transactions recorded after 01-01-1983. For any property with a transaction history predating 1983, you must visit the concerned Sub-Registrar's Office (SRO) in person to obtain physical records.
What Changed for Property Buyers? Dharani vs Bhu Bharati Compared
The transition from Dharani to Bhu Bharati is not just a portal change. It represents a fundamental restructuring of how Telangana manages land records. Understanding the differences matters because it affects what data is available, how you search for it, and what deadlines you need to be aware of.
Bhu Bharati is the official Integrated Land Records Management System of Telangana, operating under the Telangana Bhu Bharati (Record of Rights in Land) Act, 2025. It serves as the definitive successor to Dharani with several structural improvements designed to address data integrity problems that affected the earlier system. The most significant shift is the move from survey numbers to LPM-based identification, creating a map-linked digital identity for every parcel.
Critical deadline for buyers and current owners: Under the Bhu Bharati Act, any corrections to Record of Rights must be filed within one year from the Act's commencement date of April 14, 2025. This means the window to fix old Dharani-era data errors closes on April 13, 2026. If you own property in Telangana and have noticed discrepancies in your records, file for correction before this deadline.
What Do Dharani Land Records NOT Tell You?
This is where most buyers make a critical mistake. They check Dharani, find the owner's name matching the seller's name, see no obvious red flags, and assume the property is clean. But Dharani land records have significant blind spots that can cost lakhs.
In our experience verifying properties across Telangana, we have encountered cases where Dharani showed a clean record while other government databases revealed active court cases, undisclosed bank mortgages, or disputed ownership claims. 34% of the time, even lawyers disagree with each other on the same property -- which underscores how complex property verification really is.
Court Cases Against Property Parties
Dharani does not display court case information. A property party could have pending litigation in any of India's 18,000+ courts -- district courts, high courts, debt recovery tribunals (DRT), NCLT, consumer forums, or revenue tribunals. None of this appears in Dharani.
To check pending court cases against property parties, you need to search the eCourts database separately. This requires searching by party name across multiple court complexes, each requiring individual captcha verification -- a process that takes hours when done manually.
Cross-Verification Gaps
Beyond court cases, Dharani does not cross-reference with:
- CERSAI (Central Registry of Securitisation) -- reveals undisclosed bank mortgages and institutional charges
- RERA database -- shows builder registration status and compliance for under-construction properties
- Property tax records -- outstanding tax dues that become the new owner's liability
- Prohibited property lists from other sources -- some restrictions may not be reflected in Dharani's data
A comprehensive property verification requires searching 15+ government portals simultaneously and cross-referencing the data. When LegiTract runs a property verification, it searches all these sources in parallel -- including 18,000+ courts across 28 states, 600+ districts, and 8 UTs -- and presents the findings in a unified 29-section legal opinion. This is the difference between checking one portal and verifying a property.
Common Issues and Data Errors on the Dharani Portal
The Dharani portal, despite its digital promise, has been plagued by data quality issues since its launch. In 2024, the Telangana Revenue Minister ordered a comprehensive code audit of the portal to investigate irregularities. As noted in a Lexology legal analysis, "untangling the complexities of Dharani" has been an ongoing challenge for the state government.
Common issues that buyers should watch for include:
- Incorrect survey numbers -- records entered with wrong survey numbers or survey numbers incorrectly included in prohibited property lists
- Missing sub-division data -- Dharani often lacks essential sub-survey number details, which can lead to confusion about which specific portion of a larger survey is being referenced
- Patta-passbook delays -- the process of issuing and updating patta-passbooks has faced delays and inconsistencies, complicating title verification
- Module confusion -- the Revenue Department provided about 35 modules for correcting mistakes, but landowners often struggle to identify which module applies to their specific issue
These data errors are particularly dangerous for buyers because they create a false sense of security. A record that looks clean on Dharani may simply be incomplete or incorrectly entered. Always cross-verify Dharani data against physical records at the Mandal Revenue Office and watch for red flags in property documents that suggest data inconsistencies.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Dharani portal still working in 2026?
The Dharani portal (dharani.telangana.gov.in) remains accessible for viewing legacy agricultural land records. However, all new services and updated records have migrated to the Bhu Bharati portal (bhubharati.telangana.gov.in) under the Telangana Bhu Bharati Act, 2025. For the most current land records, use Bhu Bharati. For historical records from 2020-2025, Dharani still contains the data.
How do I check property ownership in Telangana?
For agricultural land, use the Dharani/Bhu Bharati portal's "Know Land Status" or "Pahani" search with the property's district, mandal, village, and survey number. For non-agricultural property (apartments, urban plots), check IGRS Telangana (registration.telangana.gov.in) for registration and encumbrance details. Both services are free for basic viewing.
What is a Bhudhaar number and how do I find mine?
Bhudhaar is a 14-digit unique identification number assigned to every land parcel in Telangana under the Bhu Bharati system. It acts as a permanent digital identity for land, similar to Aadhaar for individuals. You can find your Bhudhaar number by searching your property on the Bhu Bharati portal using your existing survey number or pattadar passbook number.
Can NRIs access Dharani and Bhu Bharati from abroad?
Yes. Both portals are accessible from anywhere with an internet connection. NRIs can search land records, view pahani data, and check land status online. However, certain services like registration, mutation, and obtaining certified copies require either physical presence or a registered Power of Attorney holder in Telangana. For NRIs looking to verify property remotely, automated verification services that cross-reference multiple government portals can provide a comprehensive check without requiring a visit to India.
Conclusion
The Dharani and Bhu Bharati portals have made land records more accessible than ever for Telangana property buyers. Checking pahani records, ROR 1B data, and land status online takes minutes and costs nothing. Every buyer should use these portals as the first step in property verification.
But the first step should not be the last. Land records on Dharani show ownership and registered transactions -- they do not show court cases, undisclosed mortgages, cross-district encumbrances, or RERA compliance status. A clean Dharani record does not mean a clean property.
For complete peace of mind, property verification needs to go beyond any single portal. LegiTract's automated property verification searches Dharani, IGRS, eCourts (18,000+ courts), RERA, property tax records, and CERSAI simultaneously -- producing a comprehensive 29-section legal opinion with a LegiTract Property Score (LPS) rated at 95% accuracy. What takes days of manual portal visits happens in under 15 minutes.
Get your property rated before you sign. Your future self will thank you.
Related Reading
- Property Due Diligence in Hyderabad: Area-Wise Guide [2026] -- Covers area-specific verification for Hyderabad buyers
- How to Get Encumbrance Certificate in Telangana Online [2026 Guide] -- Deep dive into the EC process
- First-Time Home Buyer Property Checklist India [2026] -- Comprehensive checklist for new buyers