CM Sai: 99.95% land registrations get auto-mutation in Chhattisgarh
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai on Sunday, 12 July 2026, highlighted sweeping digital reforms in the state's revenue administration, stating that more than 99.95 per cent of land registration cases now undergo automatic mutation and 83.71 per cent see automatic diversion — eliminating manual bottlenecks that have historically delayed property transactions in the state.
Context
Posting in Hindi on X, CM Sai wrote: 'सुशासन सरकार में डिजिटल नवाचारों के माध्यम से राजस्व सेवाएं पहले से अधिक सरल, त्वरित और पारदर्शी हुईं हैं' — ('Under the good-governance government, revenue services have become simpler, faster and more transparent through digital innovations'). He described automatic mutation and diversion as 'clear proof of technology-based administrative efficiency and the seamless services being delivered to citizens.'
Mutation (namantaran) is the process of updating land ownership records after a sale or transfer, while diversion (diversion) refers to reclassifying agricultural land for non-agricultural use. Both processes have long been flashpoints for delays, corruption, and disputes in Chhattisgarh and across India.
Policy Backdrop
The push to automate land records in Chhattisgarh draws on a national lineage that began with the National Land Records Modernization Programme (NLRMP), launched in 2008, which mandated computerisation of land records to reduce disputes and manual intervention. The state had rolled out e-District and online revenue service initiatives from the mid-2010s onward as part of successive waves of e-governance reform.
The broader Digital India programme, launched in 2015 by the Union government, provided a further impetus for states to integrate Aadhaar-linked portals and online dashboards into revenue administration. CM Sai, who took charge in December 2023, has positioned digital governance as a signature plank of his administration, framing technology-driven service delivery as the hallmark of 'good governance' (sushasan).
Stakeholders and Impact
Chhattisgarh, formed in 2000, has a large rural and tribal population for whom land ownership documentation is foundational to livelihoods, credit access, and legal security. Delays in mutation and diversion have historically forced landowners — particularly smallholders — to make repeated visits to revenue offices and, in many cases, pay informal fees to expedite paperwork.
Automation of these processes directly benefits landowners who complete a registration, as ownership records are updated without a separate manual application. Revenue officials are simultaneously freed from high-volume routine processing, potentially reducing a significant source of administrative friction. The high automation rate in diversion cases also signals faster clearance for small businesses and developers seeking to convert land use.
What's Next
The next phase of reform that analysts and officials have flagged involves full integration of automated land services with state Geographic Information System (GIS) platforms, which would link spatial mapping to ownership records in real time. Legislative changes to formally codify zero-manual-intervention norms in revenue law remain a potential further step. CM Sai's government has signalled continued commitment to expanding technology-driven service delivery, with the stated goal of ensuring 'simple, time-bound and transparent services reach every citizen.'