Bhoomi RTC Village Wise Pendency and Parihara Guide

There is a publicly accessible government website that shows—in real time—every land conversion currently stuck in the pipeline in every village in Karnataka. Pending for 47 days. Pending for 112 days. Pending for longer than you think.
It’s called the Village wise Pendency. It’s free. No login is required. And almost no one outside the revenue office knows it exists.
It also has another feature: the Prehara Portal, where you can check — down to the rupee — whether crop loss compensation for your land has been released after floods, drought, or hailstorms.
This guide covers both. Think of it as the land manual you never had when you needed it.

Village Wise Pendency and Parihara

What is Bhoomi RTC? A Quick Grounding Before We Dive In

The Karnataka government launched Bhoomi in 2000 with a straightforward goal: to put an end to the chaos of manual land records—torn papers, locked cabinets, endless trips to the revenue office—and to put them online where anyone could access them.
RTC stands for Record of Rights, Tenancy, and Crops. In Kannada it’s called Pahani. It is the primary document for any agricultural land in the state. It tells you who owns the land, how much there is, what crops have been planted on it, whether there is any loan against it, and whether ownership has recently changed.


Key Services on the Land Portal at a Glance

RTC / Pahani – View and download land records.

Mutation (MR) – Track property transfer applications.

Village-wise Pending – View all pending mutations in your village.

Pehraa – Check the payment status of crop loss compensation.

Mojini / Mojini V3 — Survey-related services

Dhshank – GIS-based land maps.

What is Village Wise Pendency on Bhoomi?

Most people think that once the land changes hands, the record automatically updates. It doesn’t.In Karnataka, every property transfer—sale, inheritance, partition, court order—must go through a formal process called mutation. Until this mutation is approved by the revenue officer, the old owner’s name remains on the RTC. The new owner stays off the papers, even if they’ve paid in full and moved in.
The Village-wise Pendency is the report that shows every change currently stuck in this process — village by village, survey number by survey number.

When you pull the village-wise pending report, you will see a structured table. The columns typically include:

  • Survey Number – the specific parcel of land
  • Surnoc and Hissa – sub-classification and share details
  • Transaction Type – what type of change (sale, inheritance, gift, court order, etc.)
  • Current status — whether it is pending at the RI level, with the Tehsildar, or higher up
  • Application date – how long the case has been open.

How to Check Village Wise Pendency on Bhoomi RTC (Step-by-Step)

This process is much easier than it seems. You don’t need to log in or pay anything – this report is freely accessible to anyone.

Step 1 — Visit the official Bhoomi portal

Go to landrecords.karnataka.gov.in
This is the only official Bhoomi website maintained by the Karnataka Revenue Department.

Step 2 — Go to Report Services → Village-wise Pending.

On the homepage, find the section labeled Report Services. Within it, click on Village-wise Pending.
You will land on a simple form with a drop-down menu. No login is required.

Step 3 – Select your location: District, Taluk, Hobli, and Village

Fill in the location hierarchy from the drop-down menu:
District → e.g., Mysore, Belgaum, Hassan
Taluk → Sub-district administrative unit
Hobli → A cluster of villages within a taluk
Village → The specific village you want to check.
If you are checking your own land and you know the survey number, you can filter further. Otherwise, leave it at the village level to see all pending cases.

Step 4 – Click on “Get Report” and read the results

Press the Get Report button. Within seconds, a table populates with all the pending mutation cases for this village.
You can view it on the screen or download it. If a particular survey number appears here and you are in the process of buying that land – pause, and find out why it is pending before proceeding.

What is Parihara on Bhoomi?

In Kannada, Prehara means relief or compensation. On the Bhumi Portal, Prehara specifically refers to the crop loss compensation scheme launched by the Karnataka government for farmers whose crops have been destroyed by natural disasters.
When a district floods, drought withers the fields, or unseasonal rain destroys standing crops, the government assesses the damage and disburses compensation directly to the affected farmers’ bank accounts. On the ground, the Priyara portal is where this entire process is documented: who applied, what was approved, how much was disbursed, and whether the funds actually reached the beneficiaries.
This portal was developed in-house by the Karnataka Revenue Department, and it connects directly to the land record to verify eligibility against the RTC—which is why having an accurate land record is so crucial.

Types of disasters covered under the  Parihara

  • Drought (Bale Preyhara is the most sought-after, referring to specific crop loss)
  • Floods and inundation
  • Hailstorms and unseasonal rains
  • Pest attacks (in specific seasons and districts)
  • Application date – how long the case has been open.

Who is eligible for Preyhara compensation?

  • They own or cultivate agricultural land in Karnataka.
  • The land and crop details are updated in the RTC (Pahani).
  • The disaster has been officially declared by the district administration.
  • Pest attacks (in specific seasons and districts)
  • They have registered with the land and entered their bank details linked to Aadhaar into the system.

How to Check Bele Parihara Payment Status Village Wise

Checking your Parihara status is synonymous with a pendency check — it’s location-based, and no login is required to view the report.

  • Go to landrecords.karnataka.gov.in.
  • On the homepage, find the Other Services section.
  • Click on Parihara.
  • On the Parihara page, select:
    Year – the agricultural year of the disaster
    Season – Kharif or Rabi
    Disaster Type – Drought, Flood, etc.
    District → Taluka → Hobli → Village
  • Click on Get Report.
    The report will load with a list of all applicants for this village for this disaster and season.

What details appear in the Parihara village report

  • Entry ID – Unique application reference number
  • Applicant’s Name – Registered farmer
  • Survey Number – The land parcel against which the claim was made.
  • Payment Status – Whether the compensation has been issued, is pending, or has been rejected.
  • Payment Amount – the figures approved by the government

If your name does not appear on the list, it could mean that your application was not registered, your land record was not updated at the time of the survey, or there was no name match in the system. The name-match algorithm on the Bhumi Portal can help check for variations in names—a surprisingly common issue with transliterated Kannada names.

Village Wise Pendency vs. Bhumi Dashboard: What’s the difference?

Both tools deal with mutations, but they serve different purposes.

Village-wise Pendingcy is detailed and personal. It lets you check specific survey numbers pending in a particular village—ideal for tracking your own land or a single transaction.

The Bhumi Dashboard provides the big picture. It shows district and taluka-level statistics: total mutations received, cleared, and average processing time. It’s great for understanding the overall performance of revenue offices. You cn read an amazing article on Dishaank App of Bhoomi RTC

Frequently Asked Questions

No. It is completely free to view and download The Village Wise Pendency Report. You don’t even need to create an account or log in.

The report reflects the live status of the mutation pipeline. For most districts, it is updated weekly or more frequently. However, the exact update frequency may vary by jurisdiction.

Yes. When you select the preharal option, you can select the year from the dropdown — so you can see if compensation was issued for the previous disaster season.

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