Daughters' Ancestral Property Share Calculator | Hindu Succession Act | Bharat Samvidhan
Verify your equal inheritance rights in ancestral and self-acquired properties. Get calculations based on the Hindu Succession Act 2005 and Vineeta Sharma ruling.
GENDER EQUALITY UNDER HINDU LAW
Daughters' Property Rights Checker
Check your legal share in ancestral or self-acquired property under the Hindu Succession Act, 1956/2005 and landmark Supreme Court rulings.
Property & Family Tree
Property Classification
setPropertyType(e.target.value)}
>
Ancestral / Coparcenary Property
Self-Acquired Property
Deceased without a Will (Intestate)
Deceased with a Will
Father is Alive
0
1
2
3
4+
Number of Daughters
setDaughtersCount(e.target.value)}
>
1
2
3
4+
setWidowAlive(e.target.checked)}
/>
)}
>
)}
Check Share
Reset
Evaluation Result
Hindu Succession Act Guidelines
Q1: Does a married daughter lose her right to ancestral property?
No. The 2005 Amendment makes no distinction between married and unmarried daughters. A daughter remains a coparcener in her father's family by birth throughout her life, regardless of her marital status.
Q2: Can the father write a Will for ancestral property?
A father can only write a Will for his **own share** in the ancestral property, not the entire property. He cannot deprive his daughters (or sons) of their respective shares in ancestral property through a Will.
Q3: What partitions are exempted under the 2005 law?
Any registered partition deed or court-decreed partitions that took place prior to **December 20, 2004** are protected and cannot be challenged or reopened by daughters under the 2005 amendment.