18 May 6 Mistakes That Get Your Karnataka Name Change Application Rejected (And How to Fix Each One)
6 Mistakes That Get Your Karnataka Name Change Application Rejected (And How to Fix Each One)
That "Rejected" Status Is More Common Than You Think
You've signed it, printed it in two newspapers, posted it, paid the fee, you've done it all! The e-Rajyapatra portal will then display: Rejected. Cause: Record is not understandable. It's a sinking feeling. And it's preventable.
The name change process in Karnataka is stringent and for a valid reason – identity theft is a serious matter, and the Directorate of Printing has a scrupulous approach to document verification. A single letter change in the spelling, a fuzzy scan or the wrong gazette Part can mean a loss of your application.
This article details the top 6 reasons why most of the Karnataka gazette applications are rejected and how you can avoid them on the first go.
Table of Contents
Name Change Application For Bengaluru
Why the Karnataka Government Is Strict About the Name Change Process
This is a process of name change in Karnataka which makes a permanent legal document. After publishing in gazette, it can be used for updating Passport, Aadhaar, PAN, bank accounts and educational certificates. That finality doesn't have to go both ways.
Authorities are aware that a lax verification system allows for fraud; someone claiming a name change to remove the legal record is just one example. The e-Rajyapatra system does not cause any obstruction amongst the bureaucracy. The quality gate is it.
If you know that changing it makes you think differently about the process. Each file you upload is having human officers read it and compare its affidavit, newspaper cuttings, and form entries. Inconsistencies are not assumed to be right.
Mistake #1: Mismatched Spellings Across Documents.
This is the reason for rejection that catches people off guard – it's a seemingly insignificant reason.
Your new name is "Aaryan" as stated on your affidavit. The newspaper ad is referring to "Aryan". The online form reads "Aaryan". The difference in the one letter between the affidavit and the newspaper is sufficient to cause rejection.
The person signing your name change affidavit cannot determine which spelling of your name is meant to be your new name. They will both be part of your submission. So they both are not accepted.
The solution is simple, but it takes discipline: Make an "exact spelling note" which is a good old fashioned, simple-text typed note of your brand-new name, with the odd capitalization and vowel selection. Copy / paste that note into all of the fields. The same string of characters should be given to the affidavit drafter, the newspaper ad booking form and the e-Rajyapatra form. Do not type each time! Copy it.
Mistake #2: Ignoring the Newspaper Language Rule
Karnataka needs two newspapers, however not two newspapers, but specifically two newspapers.
The condition: one should be an English newspaper and the other should be a Kannada newspaper. It is not required to publish a paper in two English newspapers, or two Kannada newspapers. No matter how good you do everything else, your name change in Karnataka gazette application will be rejected.
The newspapers should be available in the district you live in, in addition to language. The language rule is not as strictly adhered to as it is in the other rule where a Dharwad-based applicant publishes in a Bengali paper, which does not circulate in Dharwad.
Choose papers that your district's residents read. To be safe, check with the newspaper booking agent – they are used to this and can tell you which dailies to book in your area.
Mistake #3: Improper Affidavit Notarization
This error occurs in two forms: both are rejected.
E-stamp papers are valid and in fact cleaner to scan — but then the notarization will have to be done in person. The e-stamp document is to be printed and stamped and signed by the notary. The part is not to be skipped.
There's one thing to verify: be sure the notary presses the seal properly and clearly. Applications that had a faint seal on the scanned document which was not readable at 72 DPI on a monitor have been rejected by officers who have been reading the documents on-screen.
Mistake #4: Uploading Poor Quality Scans
The top reason for Karnataka gazette application rejection is 'blurred documents'. Yet it continues to happen; because people underestimate the effect that it has on going from "looks fine on my phone" to "readable on a government officer's monitor".
The reasons for scans being rejected are threefold:
Where possible use a flatbed scanner. For affidavits, CamScanner or Adobe Scan will work fine if the lighting is good; but for newspaper cuttings, the best lighting is a flatbed at 300 DPI.
Mistake #5: Selecting the Wrong Gazette Part
The e-Rajyapatra portal has various gazette Parts for various types of notifications. Your application is placed in the queue you've chosen — but without looking at what it contains, it's rejected.
Most people are applying for private name changes in Part 2 (ಖಾಸಗಿ ಪ್ರಕಟಣೆಗಳು / Private Notifications). This includes corrections on persons, religion changes and name changes.
Part 1 will be for government notifications only. Gazette entries relating to trade and business are discussed in Part 4. None of them are appropriate for the personal name change in Karnataka.
Description is provided on the Part selection screen on the portal but this can be easily overlooked when filling in the form quickly. Please read each category description before selecting. For an individual applicant, if in doubt, part 2 is almost invariably the right one to choose.
Mistake #6: Keeping Only the Ad Clipping, Not the Full Newspaper Page
This one will trap users once the application has been approved — when it is in the follow-up process.
If you have cut out your name change notice from a newspaper, retain the entire newspaper page. After cutting out the little notice for the classifieds, do not throw away the remainder of the paper.
The reason for this is that the gazette portal requires proof of publication and the name of the newspaper and the publishing date must be visible in the scan. Most small classified notices do not include the newspaper's name or the date of the notice in the ad itself, that information is only in the top of the ad in the newspaper's header.
Apart from the gazette application, the Passport Seva Kendra (PSK) and few banks also demand to see the complete newspaper page, after the name change has been published. They don't want to take your word for it, they wish to check the publication themselves.
The solution: Original newspaper pages intact, folded, in a folder. Don't cut them. Scan the top part (date and newspaper name) and the notice itself and save all originals for hard copies.
The Golden Rules — A Final Checklist
Before you submit your application on the e-Rajyapatra portal, run through this:
The procedure for name change in Karnataka is genuinely straightforward when each of these is done correctly. The gazette is permanent — once published, it stands. Make sure it says exactly what you intend.
Frequently Asked Questions About the Procedure for Name Change in Karnataka
Conclusion
Most procedures for name change in Karnataka rejections come down to six things: spelling inconsistencies, wrong newspaper combination, improper notarization, poor scan quality, wrong gazette Part, and incomplete newspaper preservation.
None of these are difficult to get right. They just require slowing down at each step instead of rushing to submit.
The gazette is permanent. The investment of getting it right the first time is worth more than the hassle of correcting a rejection.
For document checklists, newspaper booking guidance, and step-by-step walkthroughs of the e-Rajyapatra portal, visit changeofname.in.
Written by the changeofname.in documentation team, with 6+ years of experience helping applicants navigate legal name change processes across Karnataka and other Indian states.