Recovery Guide 2025

Lost Physical Share Certificates? Here is the Complete Recovery Guide

KMFSL KMFSL Legal Desk
8 Min Read Updated: Apr 2026
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Lost Physical Share Certificates in India: Complete Recovery Guide 2025

Losing physical share certificates is a common nightmare for many Indian investors. Decades ago, companies issued paper certificates as proof of ownership. Over time, these documents get misplaced during house shifting, damaged by termites, or lost due to unforeseen circumstances. If you are wondering "what to do if physical share certificates are lost in India," this comprehensive guide covers the end-to-end duplicate share certificate process in 2025.

The Dangers of Lost Physical Shares

Physical share certificates are essentially bearer documents conceptually. While your name is registered with the company, the lack of the physical document means you cannot sell, transfer, or dematerialize these assets. Furthermore, SEBI mandated the dematerialization of all physical shares for trading purposes. You cannot transact without converting them to Demat form, and you cannot convert them to Demat without the original certificates.

Additionally, if you ignore lost shares, the dividends associated with them will remain unclaimed. After 7 consecutive years of unclaimed dividends, both the funds and the underlying shares are forcibly transferred to the Investor Education and Protection Fund (IEPF). Recovering shares from IEPF without original certificates multiplies the complexity tenfold.

Step-by-Step Duplicate Share Certificate Process

Step 1: Contact the Registrar and Transfer Agent (RTA)

The first step is to immediately freeze any physical transfers to prevent fraud. Send a formal intimation to the company or its RTA (like KFintech, Link Intime, etc.) stating that your certificates are lost. Provide them with your Folio Number, shareholder name, and the approximate number of shares you hold. The RTA will mark a "Stop Transfer" flag against your folio.

Step 2: File a Police Complaint (FIR)

You must file an FIR (First Information Report) or a police complaint acknowledging the loss of the physical share certificates. The FIR must clearly state:

  • The name of the company
  • Your Folio Number
  • The exact number of shares
  • The certificate numbers and distinctive numbers (you can request these from the RTA before filing the FIR)

Step 3: Publish a Newspaper Advertisement

SEBI guidelines require you to publish a public notice regarding the loss of share certificates in two newspapers: one widely circulated English national daily and one regional newspaper in the local language of the company's registered office. This notice invites any objections within a specified timeframe (usually 15 days) before the company issues duplicate certificates.

Step 4: Prepare the Affidavit and Indemnity Bond

You will need to submit legally binding documents to the RTA to protect the company against any future disputes.

  • Indemnity Bond: Must be executed on non-judicial stamp paper of appropriate value (varies by state). It protects the company against losses if the original certificates surface later.
  • Affidavit: A sworn statement detailing the loss of shares and your ownership claim.

These documents often require notarization or attestation by a bank manager, adding to the legal complexity of the task.

Step 5: Submission and Letter of Confirmation (LOC)

Submit the FIR, newspaper clippings, Affidavit, Indemnity Bond, and KYC documents (PAN, Aadhaar, Client Master List from your DP) to the RTA. The company's board will then approve the issuance of duplicate shares.

Crucial 2025 SEBI Update: Companies no longer issue physical paper certificates as duplicates. Instead, the RTA will issue a "Letter of Confirmation" (LOC) valid for 120 days. You must submit this LOC to your Depository Participant (DP) immediately to dematerialize the shares. If you fail to do so within 120 days, the shares go to a Suspense Escrow Demat Account.

Common Challenges and Delays

The duplicate process is rarely straightforward. Common bottlenecks include:

  • Signature Mismatch: Because the original purchase happened decades ago, your current signature likely differs from the company's records. This requires banker attestation (Form ISR-2).
  • Name Discrepancies: Minor typos between the physical share register and your modern PAN/Aadhaar card can halt the process entirely.
  • Deceased Original Holder: If the shares belonged to a deceased parent and are now lost, you must undergo Transmission + Duplicate issuance simultaneously—an incredibly exhaustive legal process requiring Succession Certificates or Probate of Will.

Overwhelmed by the Legal Paperwork?

Recovering lost physical shares requires navigating police stations, notary publics, RTAs, and SEBI regulations. A single mistake in the Indemnity Bond can cause months of rejection. Let KMFSL's experts handle the entire process for you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sell my lost physical shares directly?
No. You must first obtain a duplicate Letter of Confirmation (LOC), use it to convert the shares into a Demat account, and only then can you sell them on the stock exchange.

What if my lost shares are already in the IEPF?
If the shares have moved to IEPF due to 7 years of unclaimed dividends, you must file Form IEPF-5 in addition to submitting the duplicate share documentation (FIR, Indemnity Bond) to the company's Nodal Officer.

How long does it take to get duplicate shares?
If all documents are perfect, RTAs take 30-45 days to issue the Letter of Confirmation. However, document discrepancies are common, and the reality is that the process can take 3-6 months for retail investors doing it alone.

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