In the past, transferring movable or immovable inherited property to legal heirs in Pakistan was a slow, complex process. Families had to file a lawsuit in civil courts to secure a succession certificate or a letter of administration. This traditional judicial pipeline routinely dragged on for months or even years, leading to heavy financial and emotional distress.
To resolve this issue, the Government of Pakistan enacted the Letters of Administration and Succession Certificates Act. This legislation empowered the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) to establish dedicated Succession Facilitation Centers. Today, instead of waiting months in court, citizens can acquire a digital NADRA Succession Certificate in just a few weeks through an entirely secure, transparent, and fast-tracked administrative system.
Digital Succession Certificate Eligibility Criteria and Prerequisites
NADRA can only process and issue a digital succession document if the inheritance application is entirely undisputed. The primary prerequisites include:
Absolute Unanimity: All legal heirs must be in complete agreement regarding the asset distribution. If a single heir lodges a dispute or family consensus breaks down, NADRA will immediately terminate the application and direct the family to a civil court for formal adjudication.
Computerized Death Certificate: The deceased person must possess an official computerized NADRA death certificate.
Valid Identification: All surviving legal heirs must hold active Computerized National Identity Cards (CNICs), Smart National Identity Cards (SNICs), or National Identity Cards for Overseas Pakistanis (NICOP).
Digital Succession Certificate Required Documentation
Before booking an appointment at your nearest NADRA Succession Facilitation Center, organize the following documentation to prevent unexpected delays:
Deceased Person’s Profile: Original NADRA computerized death certificate along with a copy of their canceled CNIC.
Heirs’ Identification: Clear photocopies of valid CNICs, SNICs, or NICOPs belonging to all legal heirs.
Family Registration Certificate (FRC): A fresh NADRA-issued FRC detailing the complete lineage of the deceased.
Tangible Proof of Assets:
For Movable Property: Certified bank statements showing closing balances, prize bonds, national savings certificates, or vehicle registration books.
For Immovable Property: Verified registry papers, official mutation documents (Fard), allotment letters, or property tax evaluations.
Step-by-Step Digital Succession Certificate Issuance Process
The digital administration mechanism at NADRA moves through 5 systematic phases:
Application Lodgement
Any single legal heir, acting with the explicit authorization of the remaining family members, can visit a dedicated NADRA Succession Center. The applicant submits all relevant assets, identity documents, and family structures into the secure electronic database.
Biometric Verification
Once the case file is created, every legal heir must undergo biometric fingerprint verification. NADRA accommodates modern logistics for this step:
Heirs living in different cities across Pakistan can walk into any local NADRA office to record their prints.
Overseas Pakistani heirs can securely complete their fingerprint scans remotely via NADRA’s official mobile web applications.
Public Advertisement Notice
To maintain public transparency and protect third-party claims, NADRA publishes a formal legal notice in a widely circulated national newspaper. This public notice alerts society to check if an unlisted legal heir or an active creditor wishes to contest the inheritance claim. A mandatory 14-day public notice window must elapse before moving forward.
Fee Settlement
If no administrative objections are registered within the 14-day window, the application is cleared for final printing. The statutory fee for the NADRA Succession Certificate is determined by the total valuation of the inherited estate:
Rs. 20,000 if the gross value of the collective assets exceeds Rs. 100,000.
Rs. 10,000 if the gross valuation of the estate is under Rs. 100,000.
Document Issuance
Upon successful verification and payment, NADRA prints and hands over the secure Digital Succession Certificate. This high-security document contains a cryptographic QR Code. External entities—such as commercial banks, excise departments, or land revenue authorities—can instantly scan this code to securely verify the certificate’s validity online and execute the transfer of ownership.






