All property documents

ancillary document

Genealogy Tree (Vamsha Vruksha)

Also called: Family tree certificate, Vamshavruksha

Certificate from the Tahsildar establishing the legal heirs of a deceased property holder.


What it is

When property is being transferred by inheritance — not by registered sale or gift — a Vamsha Vruksha proves who the legal heirs are. Critical for inherited-property purchases.

Who issues it

Tahsildar of the deceased's last residence.

Where to obtain

Tahsildar's office on application.

Validity

Once issued, accepted as authoritative for property transfer purposes.

What to check

  • Propositus (deceased) name and date of death
  • All listed legal heirs with relationships
  • Whether the seller of the property is named as an heir
  • Issuing Tahsildar's signature and seal

Common red flags on a Genealogy Tree (Vamsha Vruksha)

  • Seller is not listed among the legal heirs
  • Other heirs not named — risk of contested succession
  • Out-of-date certificate that doesn't reflect a recent demise

How PropertyRisk handles Genealogy Tree (Vamsha Vruksha)

PropertyRisk extracts every field from your uploaded Genealogy Tree (Vamsha Vruksha) using multilingual OCR (English, Kannada, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu) and a Karnataka-specific schema for this document type. Each finding cites the exact page and clause it came from in the original document.

On every case where this document is uploaded, PropertyRisk reconciles its contents against the rest of the document chain — sale deeds, RTC, mutation extracts, khata — and against live government portal records to surface inconsistencies a non-expert would miss.

Verify your Genealogy Tree (Vamsha Vruksha) with PropertyRisk

Upload it as part of a free PropertyRisk case. See exactly what we extract and cross-check.

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