CM Sai Pushes Digital Land Reforms in Chhattisgarh
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai on Saturday, 11 July 2026, highlighted the state government's push to make revenue services simpler, more transparent, and time-bound for ordinary citizens, spotlighting two digital tools — auto-mutation and auto-diversion — as central to that effort.
Context
In his post, CM Sai wrote that his government is 'निरंतर कार्य कर रही है' ('continuously working') to reform revenue services for the common person. He specifically named auto-mutation (स्वतः नामांतरण) — the automatic updating of land ownership records — and auto-diversion (स्वतः भूमि उपयोग परिवर्तन) — the automatic conversion of land-use classification — as systems that have made land-related processes 'simpler, faster, and more reliable than before.' He concluded that Chhattisgarh is setting a new example of people-centric administration through technology and good governance.
Policy Backdrop
The push for digitising land records in India dates to the National Land Records Modernisation Programme launched in 2008, which aimed to computerise revenue records, reduce disputes, and improve transparency across states. This was later subsumed into the broader Digital India programme launched in 2015, which incentivised states to move public services online and reduce citizen dependence on physical bureaucratic channels.
Across India, automated mutation and land-use change systems have been adopted by multiple states to cut processing times and curtail the discretionary powers of local revenue officials — a long-standing source of delay and corruption complaints. Chhattisgarh's current measures under the BJP government that took office in December 2023 continue this national pattern of technology-enabled revenue administration.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries of these reforms are landowners and farmers across Chhattisgarh, who historically faced lengthy waits and multiple visits to revenue offices for routine processes such as transferring land ownership after inheritance or sale, or changing how a parcel of land is classified for use. Automated systems reduce the need for intermediaries and limit opportunities for rent-seeking at the local administration level.
For the state government, the digital push also creates a more auditable record of land transactions, which can help reduce litigation and boundary disputes — a persistent challenge in rural Chhattisgarh, where a significant share of the population depends on agriculture and forest land.
What's Next
Observers will watch whether Chhattisgarh publishes performance dashboards or audit data to substantiate gains from these digital tools — a step that would allow independent assessment of processing times and citizen uptake. Potential integration with central land-record platforms could further streamline cross-departmental verification. Budget allocations in upcoming state finance cycles will signal how deeply the government intends to invest in expanding this automation across all revenue subdivisions.