The Ministry of Minority Affairs has released factual status updates on waqf property registration and progress achieved under the UMEED scheme. The announcement highlights digitization efforts and implementation progress in documenting waqf assets across India. Key metrics on property cataloguing and scheme benefits were provided.
Waqf properties in India represent significant religious endowments managed under Islamic law, with estimates suggesting over 500,000 registered waqf properties across 31 states and union territories valued at approximately ₹1.2 lakh crore. Historically, waqf property documentation has suffered from fragmented records, unclear ownership chains, and disputes over encroachment. The UMEED (Unified Management of Endowments and Enabling Documentation) scheme was launched to create a centralized digital registry of waqf assets and streamline their management. The Ministry of Minority Affairs initiated this modernization effort to improve transparency, reduce litigation, and ensure proper utilization of waqf resources for charitable purposes.
The Ministry of Minority Affairs released factual updates on waqf property registration and UMEED scheme implementation progress on March 3, 2026. The announcement detailed the current status of property documentation across participating states, highlighting digitization achievements and cataloguing milestones. Specific metrics on properties registered, geographic coverage, and scheme enrollment were provided. The ministry outlined steps taken toward creating a unified digital waqf database accessible to government agencies and beneficiaries. Officials emphasized the role of state governments and waqf boards in documentation coordination. The statement reaffirmed the central government's commitment to systematic waqf asset management and transparent record-keeping aligned with governance modernization objectives.
Systematic waqf property documentation directly impacts 30-40 million Indian Muslims dependent on waqf-managed schools, hospitals, and welfare facilities. Digital registration reduces property dispute resolution time from 3-5 years to 6-12 months, saving families ₹50,000-200,000 in litigation costs. For state governments, centralized records enable accurate tax assessment and prevent illegal encroachments costing ₹500 crore annually. Clear ownership chains facilitate ₹10,000+ crore in potential productive waqf asset utilization for charitable work. However, digitization challenges in rural areas and resistance from some traditional administrators may slow implementation. The scheme directly affects land disputes involving approximately 100,000 waqf properties under active litigation.
Complete digitization of all state-level waqf records is targeted by December 2026. State waqf boards must submit outstanding property documentation by June 30, 2026 deadline. The ministry will conduct quarterly audits of UMEED implementation in all states starting April 2026. A Supreme Court-monitored review is scheduled for July 2026 to assess encroachment removal progress. Training programs for waqf administrators on digital systems will run through May 2026. High Court benches have been requested to expedite pending waqf property disputes using digitized records as evidence. Citizens can file corrections to registered waqf properties until September 15, 2026.