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If you are asking whether probate is mandatory in India in 2026, the short answer is no, the Repealing and Amending Act, 2025 deleted Section 213 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925, removing the longstanding requirement for compulsory court validation of wills in certain jurisdictions and for certain communities. This single legislative change, which received Presidential assent on 20 December 2025, has fundamentally altered how executors, beneficiaries, NRIs and private client advisors approach estate administration across the country.
The amendment eliminates a religion-based distinction that had required Hindu, Sikh, Jain and Buddhist testators in the presidency towns of Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai to obtain probate before a will could be acted upon, while also simplifying procedures for all other communities previously governed by Section 213.
What you should do now:
The Repealing and Amending Act, 2025 (Act No. 37 of 2025) is an omnibus piece of legislation that repealed a number of obsolete enactments and amended several others, including the Indian Succession Act, 1925. The critical change for wills and probate India 2026 is found in the Act’s Second Schedule, which lists specific provisions of existing statutes to be omitted. Section 213 of the Indian Succession Act, the provision that made probate compulsory in defined circumstances, appears in this schedule and has been formally deleted from the statute book.
Section 213 had long been the legal basis for requiring executors named in a will to obtain a grant of probate from a competent court before they could establish any right as executor. This requirement applied specifically where a will had been made by a Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh or Jain testator within the ordinary original civil jurisdiction of the High Courts at Mumbai (formerly Bombay), Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) and Chennai (formerly Madras). For wills governed by the Indian Succession Act that fell outside these geographical and religious parameters, probate had technically been optional, though in practice many institutions still insisted on it.
Along with the deletion of Section 213, the Act’s broader tidying-up exercise removed related provisions and cross-references that had supported the mandatory probate framework. The practical legal effect is uniformity: no testator’s will, regardless of religion or geography, now requires compulsory court validation before an executor may act on it.
| Date | Event | Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 (Parliamentary session) | Repealing and Amending Bill, 2025 introduced in Parliament | Bill tabled as part of routine legislative clean-up; Section 213 deletion included in Second Schedule |
| 2025 (Parliamentary session) | Bill passed by both Houses of Parliament | Bipartisan passage with minimal opposition; estate-law provisions attracted limited debate |
| 20 December 2025 | Presidential assent granted; Act No. 37 of 2025 enacted | Section 213 formally deleted from the Indian Succession Act, 1925 with immediate effect |
| January 2026 onwards | Institutional adoption begins | Banks, land registries and courts begin updating internal policies to reflect new legal position |
No. Probate is no longer mandatory anywhere in India. Following the deletion of Section 213 by the Repealing and Amending Act, 2025, there is no statutory obligation for an executor to obtain a grant of probate before acting on a will, irrespective of the testator’s religion, the location of assets, or whether the will covers movable or immovable property.
This does not mean probate has been abolished. The probate process after repeal remains available as a voluntary mechanism. Executors, beneficiaries or any interested party may still apply to a competent court for a grant of probate where they consider it prudent, for instance, where the will is contested, where an institution insists on court validation, or where the executor needs to establish title for cross-border enforcement purposes. Industry observers expect that voluntary probate applications will continue at meaningful volumes in the presidency towns, particularly for high-value or multi-jurisdictional estates where a court-certified grant provides additional certainty.
The geographic scope is pan-India. There is no state-level carve-out or transition period. Early indications suggest, however, that practical acceptance by financial institutions and sub-registrar offices will take time to align fully with the new legal position.
For executors, the Indian Succession Act amendment means that the legal authority to act now flows directly from the will itself, rather than from a court grant. This is both liberating and demanding. Without a probate order to rely upon, executors must be prepared to demonstrate the authenticity and validity of the will through other means when dealing with institutions.
The recommended documents an executor should assemble immediately include:
Prior to the amendment, the mandatory-probate requirement created a de facto difference in how estates were administered depending on the testator’s religion and geography. A Hindu testator in Mumbai whose will covered immovable property needed probate; the same testator in Jaipur did not. This distinction has now been eliminated.
For families, the key practical change is speed. Estate administration that previously stalled for months, sometimes years, while probate applications were processed can now proceed directly, provided all beneficiaries are in agreement and institutions accept the supporting documentation. Where families are aligned, the will and supporting papers (death certificate, witness affidavits, indemnity bonds) should be sufficient to transfer assets.
For intestate succession, where a person dies without a will, the amendment has no direct effect. Succession certificates under the Indian Succession Act, or letters of administration, remain the relevant mechanisms for establishing entitlement to a deceased person’s estate in the absence of a will. The likely practical effect of the amendment will be to encourage more individuals to execute wills, knowing that testamentary succession is now simpler to administer.
Non-Resident Indians managing assets in India face a particular set of challenges. Under the old regime, NRIs with wills covering Indian immovable property in a presidency town had to navigate the probate process remotely, often through a power of attorney holder, adding months to an already complex cross-border administration. With probate no longer mandatory in India, NRIs can expect a more streamlined process, though several practical considerations remain:
The repeal of mandatory probate does not resolve disputes. Where a will’s authenticity, the testator’s mental capacity, or allegations of undue influence are at issue, parties retain the right to approach the court. Industry observers expect that voluntary probate applications, or caveats filed against estates, will remain common in contentious matters. Courts will continue to examine the validity of wills under the remaining provisions of the Indian Succession Act and general civil procedure. In practice, where any beneficiary or heir objects to the will, seeking a voluntary grant of probate or letters of administration with will annexed provides the executor with a judicially confirmed mandate that is far more difficult for institutions to reject.
Within the first two weeks following the testator’s death, the executor should:
| Timeframe | Action | Responsible Party |
|---|---|---|
| Days 1–14 | Secure will, obtain death certificate, notify institutions | Executor / family |
| Weeks 2–4 | Assemble documents, obtain affidavits, prepare indemnity bond | Executor / solicitor |
| Weeks 4–8 | Submit transmission requests to banks, insurers, registries | Executor / solicitor |
| Weeks 4–12 | File for voluntary probate if contested or institutionally required | Solicitor / court |
Individuals who executed wills before the Indian Succession Act amendment should review and update their documents to reflect the new legal landscape. While an existing will remains legally valid, updating it ensures that executors and institutions can act efficiently without unnecessary confusion about whether probate was anticipated or required. Below are specific drafting recommendations and illustrative clauses for those looking to update their will in India.
Key drafting recommendations:
Executor Appointment Clause:
“I hereby appoint [Full Name], residing at [Address], as the sole executor of this Will. In the event that [Full Name] is unable or unwilling to act, I appoint [Alternate Full Name], residing at [Address], as alternate executor. My executor shall have full authority to administer my estate, collect assets, discharge liabilities and distribute the residue in accordance with this Will, without the necessity of obtaining a grant of probate unless my executor, in their sole discretion, considers it prudent to do so.”
Beneficiary Cooperation Clause:
“I direct all beneficiaries named in this Will to cooperate fully with my executor in the administration of my estate, including by executing such indemnity bonds, no-objection letters, affidavits and other documents as may reasonably be required by any bank, financial institution, insurer, depository participant or government authority to give effect to the provisions of this Will.”
Residuary Clause:
“I give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, of whatsoever kind and wheresoever situate, not otherwise effectively disposed of by this Will, to [Full Name of Residuary Beneficiary] absolutely.”
Although the deletion of Section 213 is pan-India in legal effect, the operational reality is that banks, land registries and other institutions are updating their internal procedures at different speeds. Executors and solicitors should prepare for a transitional period in which some institutions may initially be unaware of the change or may continue to request probate out of procedural inertia.
The recommended approach is to contact each institution early, ideally in writing, citing the Repealing and Amending Act, 2025 (Act No. 37 of 2025) and the deletion of Section 213. If an institution persists in requiring probate, escalate the matter to a senior manager or the institution’s legal department, providing a copy of the relevant extract from the official Act.
| Institution Type | Documents Typically Accepted Post-Repeal | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| Banks (savings, FD, locker) | Certified will copy, death certificate, witness affidavits, indemnity bond, executor and beneficiary ID proof | Policies vary by bank, contact the branch manager early and request the institution’s current transmission checklist |
| Insurance companies | Will copy, death certificate, claim form, claimant ID proof, indemnity bond | Nomination registered with the insurer may simplify the process; will overrides nomination in law |
| Depository participants (demat) | Will copy, death certificate, transmission request form, affidavits, indemnity bond | SEBI-regulated process, check with your DP for updated standard operating procedures |
| Sub-Registrar (immovable property) | Will copy, death certificate, affidavits, encumbrance certificate, property tax receipts | Mutation process varies by state, some states may take longer to issue updated guidance |
| Topic | Before the 2025 Amendment | After the 2025 Amendment (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Mandatory probate | Required under Section 213 for wills by Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh and Jain testators in Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai; often demanded by institutions elsewhere | No longer mandatory anywhere in India; probate is entirely voluntary |
| Executors’ default route | Executors routinely applied for probate to establish authority and satisfy institutional requirements | Executors act on the will directly, supported by affidavits and indemnity bonds; probate used selectively |
| Contested wills | Court validation through probate was the primary mechanism for resolving disputes | Court process remains available; voluntary probate or caveat proceedings are used where the will is challenged |
| Institutional acceptance | Many banks and registries required probate as a precondition for processing transmissions | Institutions are transitioning to accepting will plus supporting documents; practices vary during the adjustment period |
| Religion-based distinction | Section 213 applied only to specific communities in presidency towns, creating unequal treatment | Distinction eliminated; uniform regime applies regardless of religion or geography |
The question of whether probate is mandatory in India 2026 now has a clear, unequivocal answer: it is not. The deletion of Section 213 through the Repealing and Amending Act, 2025 has simplified succession planning India 2026 and removed a longstanding procedural barrier that caused delay, expense and inequity. Executors, beneficiaries and NRIs should take this opportunity to review existing wills, assemble comprehensive documentation and engage proactively with financial institutions. For contested estates or complex cross-border situations, voluntary probate remains a valuable tool, but it is now a choice, not an obligation. Consult a qualified Indian private client lawyer for advice tailored to your specific circumstances.
This article does not constitute legal advice. The information provided is for general guidance only and should not be relied upon as a substitute for professional advice on specific facts and circumstances. Consult a qualified Indian private client lawyer before taking any action based on this article.
Last updated: 4 May 2026
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Aakriti Khetan at MZD Legal Consultancy Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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