Congratulations on your new property in Bengaluru. You have the sale deed, the Khata, the encumbrance certificate — the works. Now all you need is to transfer the electricity connection to your name. Simple, right?
For most new homeowners, what seems like a two-hour administrative task quickly becomes a weeks-long ordeal. Applications get flagged. Portals return cryptic errors. Sub-division office visits multiply. The reason is straightforward: the 2026 BESCOM compliance framework is tighter than ever, and the rules have quietly changed.
This guide explains exactly what the BESCOM name transfer process involves in 2026, what causes rejections, and why engaging a Licensed Electrical Contractor (LEC) in Bangalore is the most reliable path to getting your meter in your name — fast.
What Is a BESCOM Name Transfer — and When Do You Need One?
A BESCOM name transfer, officially called a Change of Ownership or Consumer Name Change, is the process of updating the electricity service connection (SC number) registered in the previous owner's name to your name as the new owner of the property.
You need a name transfer when you:
- Purchase a resale apartment, independent house, or commercial space
- Inherit a property and wish to update electricity records
- Receive property through a gift deed or family settlement
- Have a property where the registered owner is deceased
- Are a developer handing over flats to individual buyers
Without completing this transfer, you will continue receiving bills and legal notices in the previous owner's name — and more critically, you bear liability without legal ownership of the connection.
The 2026 Compliance Shift: Why Your Application Gets Stuck
BESCOM processes name transfer applications through the Janasnehi Vidyuth Sevegalu (JVS) portal. While the portal is publicly accessible, the back-end scrutiny has become significantly more rigorous in 2026 for two primary reasons:
1. Kaveri 2.0 — BESCOM Property Data Synchronisation
The State government's Kaveri 2.0 portal now synchronises property transaction data with BESCOM's consumer database. This means any mismatch — even minor discrepancies in your name spelling between the sale deed and the Khata — will cause an automatic flag on your application. The BESCOM system will mark the application "On Hold — Document Mismatch" before a human officer even reviews it.
2. Smart Meter Rollout Compliance Checks
BESCOM is simultaneously executing a large-scale smart meter replacement drive. During name transfer applications, field officers are now empowered to flag installations that do not meet the updated meter board specifications under the 2026 Smart Metering Standards — which means your name transfer could stall because of an electrical compliance issue that predates your purchase.
⚠️ Important: If the existing meter board in your property does not conform to 2026 standards, BESCOM may require a board rectification before approving the name transfer. This is a licensed electrical work requirement — it cannot be self-executed.
Documents Required for BESCOM Name Transfer in 2026
The standard document checklist has expanded. Here is what is typically required — though requirements can vary by sub-division and property type:
- Registered Sale Deed (certified copy) — name must match Khata exactly
- Updated Khata Certificate and Khata Extract (post-mutation)
- Latest BBMP/Gram Panchayat Tax Paid Receipt
- Aadhaar Card of the new owner (for identity verification)
- Previous Owner's No-Objection Certificate (NOC) or Indemnity Bond
- Clearance of all outstanding BESCOM dues and True-Up charges
- Passport-size photographs
- Current electricity bill (most recent, in previous owner's name)
- Encumbrance Certificate (EC) — in some sub-divisions
The Indemnity Bond: The Most Commonly Missed Requirement
The ₹550 Indemnity Bond is one of the most critical documents in the name transfer process — and the most frequently rejected.
This legally notarised document is required when the previous owner's NOC is unavailable — a common situation in resale transactions where the seller is uncooperative, unreachable, or deceased. The bond is an undertaking by the new owner assuming full responsibility for the connection, any prior unpaid dues, and indemnifying BESCOM from liability.
The bond must be drafted with specific legal phrasing mandated by the current BESCOM guidelines. Bonds with incorrect clauses, missing annexures, or outdated legal language are rejected outright. At Bright Wire Works, we coordinate the preparation of the ₹550 Indemnity Bond on your behalf, ensuring it meets every 2026 BESCOM requirement before submission.
The Hidden Issue: Inherited Arrears and "True-Up" Charges
One of the most damaging surprises for new homeowners is discovering that the electricity account they are transferring carries a hidden debt.
BESCOM periodically issues "True-Up" adjustments — retroactive billing corrections when estimated bills are reconciled against actual consumption. These charges can accumulate over years and are often not visible in the regular monthly bill. They are, however, fully visible to the BESCOM system at the time of a name transfer — and the application will not proceed until all dues are cleared.
A professional audit of the existing BESCOM account before filing your transfer application is not optional — it is essential due diligence.
The BESCOM Name Transfer Process: Step by Step
We review your sale deed, Khata, tax receipts, and current BESCOM account to identify any mismatches or dues before a single document is submitted.
We prepare the complete document set, including coordination of the ₹550 Indemnity Bond with legally accurate clauses.
We file the application on the Janasnehi Vidyuth Sevegalu portal with error-free data entry, minimising the risk of automated rejection.
We handle all follow-up communication with the concerned BESCOM Sub-Division and Section Office, including responding to queries and attending inspections.
If the field officer raises a meter board compliance issue, we handle the licensed electrical work required to meet 2026 standards.
We confirm the successful update in BESCOM records and hand over all documentation to you.
Why This Is Not a DIY Process
The JVS portal is publicly accessible — anyone can attempt to submit an application. However, a successful outcome requires more than portal access. It requires knowledge of the exact document standards, legal drafting of the indemnity bond, familiarity with the specific requirements of your BESCOM sub-division, and the ability to respond correctly to technical queries raised during site inspection.
Errors at any stage restart the clock. In Bengaluru's high-transaction property market, delays in name transfer can hold up property registration confirmations, affect your home loan records, and leave you liable for a connection you legally own but cannot yet manage.
Frequently Asked Questions
Don't Let a Document Error Delay Your Name Transfer
Bright Wire Works handles the entire BESCOM name transfer process — documents, bond preparation, portal filing, and office liaisoning — so you don't have to.