State-wise checklist: execution, registration & where it differs

This page summarises how Will execution and registration work across India, and flags the places where the rules genuinely differ by state or union territory. It is general information, not legal advice — see our disclaimer.

What is the same everywhere in India

Where it genuinely differs: Goa (and Daman & Diu)

Goa does not follow the Indian Succession Act framework used elsewhere. It continues to apply the Portuguese Civil Code of 1867 (as adapted by the Goa Succession, Special Notaries and Inventory Proceeding Act, 2012), which was retained after Goa's integration into India and has been treated by courts as Indian law in its own right. Two features make it fundamentally different from the general clauses this tool generates:

In 2019, the Supreme Court of India confirmed that this framework applies to a Goan-domiciled person's property wherever it is located in India, not only property physically situated in Goa. Given this, anyone domiciled in Goa should treat this tool's output as, at most, a starting point for a conversation with a Goa-qualified lawyer, not a usable draft.

Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh

Before the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, 2019 took effect, the region had its own separate succession statutes (for example, a distinct Jammu and Kashmir Hindu Succession Act) and was expressly excluded from several central succession laws. Since the 2019 reorganisation, those exclusions have been removed and the central succession statutes used across the rest of India now extend to the union territories of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh as well. Because this is a comparatively recent legal transition, it's still sensible to confirm current local practice with a lawyer in the union territory if your situation is at all complex.

General good-practice checklist (all states)

Sources: Indian Succession Act, 1925; Registration Act, 1908 (Section 18 and the Sub-Registrar's statutory registers); Goa Succession, Special Notaries and Inventory Proceeding Act, 2012; Jose Paulo Coutinho v. Maria Luiza Valentina Pereira, Supreme Court of India, 2019; Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, 2019. This page is general information only and is not a substitute for advice from a lawyer qualified in your state or union territory.

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