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SEBI QTP Rule: Claim Deceased Parents' Shares Easily

   


Summary

  • SEBI approved the Quick Transmission Processing (QTP) rule on June 19, 2026, at its 214th board meeting.
  • Physical holdings up to ₹10,000 and demat holdings up to ₹30,000 can now be transmitted with minimal documentation.
  • The simplified documentation threshold has been doubled — ₹5L to ₹10L/company for physical, ₹15L to ₹30L/BO for demat.
  • PAN card submission is no longer mandatory for demat transmission as it is already linked to the account.
  • The mandatory requirement of probate of will has been dispensed with in line with succession law amendments.
  • QR code-enabled death certificates are now accepted alongside original or attested copies.

What is the SEBI QTP Rule?

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) approved the Quick Transmission Processing (QTP) rule on June 19, 2026. It is a new fast-track framework that allows legal heirs or nominees to claim a deceased investor's shares with minimal documentation. Claims up to ₹10,000 for physical holdings and ₹30,000 for demat holdings no longer require a succession certificate, probate of will, or separate NOC.

The Problem Every Indian Family Knows

Imagine a common Indian family. A father passes away, leaving behind a modest estate — some fixed deposits, a bank account, and a few company shares he bought in 2010 worth around ₹25,000. His son now needs to claim those shares.

Until recently, this is what that process looked like: file for a succession certificate in court, wait months for probate proceedings, submit a separate affidavit, arrange a separate NOC, and hand over a PAN card that was already linked to the demat account. The entire process could take six months to a year, and the legal costs alone could exceed ₹15,000 for shares worth ₹25,000. It made no sense.

On June 19, 2026, SEBI addressed this problem head-on with a landmark decision: the Quick Transmission Processing (QTP) rule. The process is now simpler, faster, and significantly cheaper. This Finowings guide explains everything you need to know.

 

 

Definition: What is Securities Transmission?

  • Transmission is the process by which a deceased investor's shares, mutual funds, or other securities are transferred to their legal heirs, nominees, or surviving joint holders.
  • It is different from Transfer — a transfer is a voluntary act by a living shareholder (e.g., selling shares). Transmission happens by operation of law upon death.
  • In demat accounts, transmission is faster because the successor interacts with just one entity — their Depository Participant (DP).

When a nomination is registered, transmission is the simplest — only a death certificate and transmission form are needed.

SEBI Board Meeting, June 19, 2026: What Was Decided?

SEBI held its 214th Board Meeting in Mumbai on June 19, 2026, chaired by SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey. Among several major decisions, the board approved a comprehensive overhaul of the securities transmission framework. The reforms were based on recommendations from a High-Level Committee (HLC) and public feedback received on a consultation paper issued on March 12, 2026.

Quick Transmission Processing (QTP) — The New Fast-Track System

QTP is a brand-new category designed specifically for small-value claims. The goal is to ensure that families dealing with modest inheritances are not forced to go through the same rigorous legal process as those with large estates. For the first time, a proportionate approach has been introduced.

QTP & Simplified Documentation — Limits at a Glance

Securities Type

Claim Limit

Route

Physical Shares

Up to ₹10,000

Quick Transmission Processing

Demat Holdings

Up to ₹30,000

Quick Transmission Processing

Physical — Simplified

Up to ₹10 lakh/company

Simplified Documentation

Demat — Simplified

Up to ₹30 lakh/BO account

Simplified Documentation

All claims falling within these limits will now be processed with minimal documentation — no court, no probate, no separate affidavit stack.

SEBI's 6 Major Changes — Explained One by One

 

1. QTP — Instant Processing for Small Claims

Physical share certificates worth up to ₹10,000 and demat holdings worth up to ₹30,000 will be processed through the QTP route. This is especially valuable for middle-class and lower-income families whose deceased members held small share portfolios and cannot afford the cost of legal proceedings.

2. Simplified Documentation Threshold Doubled

The threshold for simplified documentation has been doubled. For physical holdings, the limit per listed company has increased from ₹5 lakh to ₹10 lakh. For demat holdings, the limit per beneficial owner account has risen from ₹15 lakh to ₹30 lakh. This means a significantly larger number of families can now complete transmission without complex legal procedures.

3. PAN Card — No Longer Required

Previously, a PAN card had to be submitted separately during transmission. SEBI noted that PAN details are already available when demat accounts are opened, making this an unnecessary duplication. The requirement has been removed — a small but genuinely meaningful relief for claimants.

4. Probate of Will — Dispensed With

This is the most significant change. Earlier, if the deceased had left a will, families in cities like Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai had to obtain a court-certified probate — a process that could take months and involve substantial legal fees. In line with recent amendments to succession laws, SEBI has now made this requirement optional. No more probate, no more court delays.

5. Single Combined Affidavit-cum-NOC

Where separate affidavits and No Objection Certificates (NOCs) were required from all heirs, SEBI now allows a single combined Affidavit-cum-NOC document. This effectively halves the paperwork involved in a standard transmission claim.

6. QR Code-Enabled Death Certificates Accepted

Alongside original or notarised death certificates, copies bearing a QR code are now accepted for verification. For deaths that occurred in foreign jurisdictions, SEBI has also specified additional verification mechanisms through overseas branches of Indian banks or foreign banks with correspondent banking relationships with Indian banks — a major relief for NRI families.

 

 

Before vs. After QTP — Side-by-Side Comparison

Feature

Before QTP

After QTP (June 2026)

Minimum documentation threshold

₹5L (Physical) / ₹15L (Demat)

₹10L (Physical) / ₹30L (Demat)

Fast-track for small claims

Not available

QTP: ₹10K Physical / ₹30K Demat

PAN card required?

Yes (mandatory)

No (already linked to demat account)

Probate of Will required?

Mandatory (took months)

Dispensed with (per succession law amendment)

Affidavit + NOC

Separate documents

Single combined Affidavit-cum-NOC

Death Certificate format

Original/attested copies only

QR code-enabled copies also accepted

Foreign death certificate?

Cumbersome process

Via Indian bank overseas branches

Who Can Use This Rule?

These reforms are especially beneficial for:

  • Middle-class and lower-income families where the deceased held small share portfolios
  • NRI families who previously struggled with verifying foreign-issued death certificates
  • Families where no nominee was registered — they can now use simplified documentation within the revised thresholds
  • Surviving joint holders — the process was already simpler for them; it is now even more streamlined
  • Legal heirs who cannot afford lawyers and court fees — the QTP route is designed precisely for them

Limitations of QTP

Be aware — in some situations, court intervention may still be required:

  • A regulatory framework cannot resolve family disputes or competing claims among heirs — only courts can adjudicate these
  • Contested wills will still require judicial intervention
  • If the investor died without a will and without registering a nomination, a legal heir certificate or succession certificate may still be needed
  • QTP applies only within its value limits (₹10K physical / ₹30K demat); larger claims use simplified or standard documentation routes

The implementation circular has not yet been issued as of June 26, 2026 — these rules take effect once SEBI releases the formal circular.

How to Claim Shares After a Family Member's Death — Step-by-Step

  1. Determine whether the shares are held physically (share certificates) or in a demat account
  2. Estimate the value of the holding to identify which route applies — QTP, Simplified, or Standard
  3. Check whether a nominee was registered — if yes, the process is the simplest
  4. Obtain the death certificate (a QR code-enabled digital copy is now accepted)
  5. Prepare a combined Affidavit-cum-NOC signed by all legal heirs
  6. Submit the transmission form along with documents to the Depository Participant (DP) or Company/RTA
  7. Standard processing timelines: 7 working days for demat, 21 working days for physical holdings
  8. Shares are transferred to the heir's account once transmission is confirmed.

Why Nomination Is Still the Best Protection

Registering a nomination is always the easiest path. When a nomination exists, transmission is automatic — requiring only a death certificate and a transmission form. QTP and the simplified rules exist to help families where nomination was not registered. Check your demat account, mutual fund folios, and bank accounts today. If no nomination is recorded, register one now.

 

 

Authoritative External Sources

  • SEBI Official Board Meeting Decision — June 19, 2026
  • Business Standard — SEBI Eases Rules for Transfer of Securities After Investor's Death
  • Upstox — Claiming Shares After a Family Member's Death Gets Easier Under New SEBI Rules
  • 5Paisa — SEBI Board Meeting: Buybacks, QTP & Market Reforms
  • BusinessToday — No PAN, No Probate: How SEBI Has Simplified Share Transmission for Families
  • NSDL — Transmission of Securities (Official Guide)

 

DISCLAIMER: This blog is NOT any buy or sell recommendation. No investment or trading advice is given. The content is only for educational purposes. Always discuss with your SEBI-registered financial advisor for investment-related decisions.



Author

Dr Mukul Agrawal - Stock Market Expert

Founder & Market Analyst, Finowings

Dr. Mukul Agrawal is the Founder of Finowings and a stock market mentor, trader, and investor with over 20 years of real market experience. He is a Guinness World Record holder and has trained thousands of investors in stock market strategies, IPO analysis, and wealth creation.

He specializes in IPO research, fundamental analysis, and helping beginners understand how to invest safely in the stock market. Dr. Agrawal has also authored multiple books on investing and regularly shares insights on IPOs, market trends, and long-term wealth building.


Frequently Asked Questions

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SEBI's board approved it on June 19, 2026, but the official implementation circular is still pending as of June 26, 2026. The rules will take effect once SEBI issues the formal circular. Stay updated on finowings.com for the announcement.
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No. The entire purpose of QTP is to eliminate the need for court proceedings for small-value claims. For physical holdings up to ₹10,000 and demat holdings up to ₹30,000, only a death certificate and a combined Affidavit-cum-NOC are required.
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You can still use the QTP or simplified documentation route depending on the value of the holding. If the claim exceeds the simplified documentation threshold, a succession certificate or legal heir certificate may be required — but probate of will is no longer mandatory under the new rules.
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These SEBI reforms primarily apply to listed company shares and demat securities. Mutual fund transmission is governed by AMFI and individual AMC norms. However, SEBI did incorporate feedback from AMFI during the consultation process for these reforms.
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QTP is a fast-track route for very small claims — up to ₹10,000 for physical and ₹30,000 for demat. Normal simplified transmission applies to larger holdings — up to ₹10 lakh per company for physical and ₹30 lakh per beneficial owner for demat. Above those limits, the full standard documentation process applies.
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Yes. SEBI has now specified verification mechanisms for foreign-issued death certificates through overseas branches of Indian banks or foreign banks with correspondent banking relationships with Indian banks, making the process significantly more accessible for NRI families.
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For holdings up to ₹10,000, the QTP route applies. For ₹10,000 to ₹10 lakh per company, the simplified documentation route applies. Above ₹10 lakh, a succession certificate or legal heir certificate is needed — but probate of will is no longer mandatory.
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Municipal corporations and state government digital birth and death registration systems now issue QR code-enabled death certificates. If you only have an older physical certificate, you can apply for a digitally verified copy from the issuing authority.
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Visit a notary public with all legal heirs. The notary will draft a single document combining the affidavit and the no-objection certificate, signed by all heirs, stating that no one objects to the transmission. This replaces the earlier requirement of two separate documents.
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For physical holdings, the ₹10 lakh simplified limit applies per listed company. For demat holdings, the ₹30 lakh limit applies per beneficial owner account — meaning all demat securities across one account are assessed together.


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