⚖️ Delhi Court Fee Calculator
Calculate court fees for Delhi civil courts and Delhi High Court under the Court-Fees Act, 1870. The 2012 Delhi Amendment was struck down — original 1870 rates apply.
Calculate Court Fee — Delhi
Partition Suit Court Fee in Delhi
Court fee for a partition suit in Delhi is not on the total value of the property but only on the market value of the plaintiff's undivided share. This is provided under Section 19(vi) of the Court-Fees Act, 1870 (Central Act No. 7 of 1870). The same progressive slab rates under Schedule I, Article 1(c) apply to the share value.
How is the court fee calculated?
- Identify the total market value of the property to be partitioned (use the current circle rate as the minimum reference for immovable property).
- Calculate the plaintiff's fractional share: e.g., 1/3rd share in a ₹9,00,000 property = ₹3,00,000.
- Enter this share value into the calculator. The Schedule I Article 1(c) slab rates with ceiling-rounding apply to this amount.
- If partitioning multiple properties, sum the values of the plaintiff's share in each and enter the total.
Key points advocates must know
- The court may appoint a local commissioner to assess market value if the defendant disputes the plaintiff's valuation. Under-valuation risks return of the plaint.
- Claims for past profits (mesne profits) and accounts in the same suit require additional court fee on the amounts claimed for those reliefs.
- Preliminary decree does not require additional court fee. Final decree proceedings, however, may attract further fees if the share values are revised.
- Ancestral property vs self-acquired property: valuation method is the same — current market value of plaintiff's share.
Frequently asked questions
Can I pay court fee on the circle rate value even if market value is higher? ▼
What if the property has no clear market value (rural agricultural land)? ▼
⚖️ Source: Court-Fees Act, 1870 (Central Act No. 7 of 1870) · Verified March 2026 · Report incorrect rate