If you’re planning a DRT Delhi filing in 2025—whether to start a bank’s recovery case (Original Application, or OA) or to challenge SARFAESI measures (a Section 17 SARFAESI application, commonly called an SA)—you now do almost everything online through the e-DRT portal. 

This guide breaks the process into clean steps: choosing the correct forum (OA vs SA), understanding which Delhi DRT has jurisdiction, preparing documents that pass scrutiny, navigating e-filing and e-payments, and calculating fees. 

OA vs SA in DRT Delhi (2025)

AspectOA (Original Application – RDBA s.19)SA (Section 17 SARFAESI Application)
Who filesBanks, financial institutions, and ARCsBorrowers, guarantors, lessees, or third parties aggrieved by SARFAESI measures
Trigger / WhenDebt due is ₹20 lakhs or more; lender seeks recovery before DRTChallenge to actions under SARFAESI s.13(4) (e.g., possession, receiver, sale/auction notice)
Purpose / ReliefRecovery certificate against borrowers/guarantors; executable before the Recovery OfficerSet aside/modify creditor’s SARFAESI measures; restoration of possession or other appropriate reliefs
Time limit to fileNot specified hereWithin 45 days from receipt/knowledge of the s.13(4) action
JurisdictionBased on bank branch/borrower’s residence or place of business; file in the correct Delhi DRT bench (I/II/III)DRT within whose local limits the secured asset is situated (Delhi DRT for assets in Delhi/NCR)

Jurisdiction of Delhi DRTs in 2025

Jurisdiction is often the trickiest part of a DRT Delhi filing, and choosing the wrong bench can delay your case. Delhi has three Debt Recovery Tribunals (DRT-I, DRT-II, and DRT-III), each with specific territorial coverage. The pecuniary jurisdiction is already set by law—cases below ₹20 lakh are not maintainable before DRTs—but within Delhi, the bench is decided by geography.

Territorial & Functional Jurisdiction: Delhi DRT Benches (2025)

DRT BenchIndicative Areas (examples)Notes
DRT-I (Delhi)Central & North Delhi: Connaught Place, Karol Bagh, Civil Lines, nearby commercial zonesTypical coverage; always verify latest notified list before a DRT Delhi filing
DRT-II (Delhi)South & South-West Delhi: Saket, Vasant Kunj, Dwarka, adjoining commercial hubsBench maps can change via Ministry of Finance notifications
DRT-III (Delhi)East & North-East Delhi: Shahdara, Laxmi Nagar, Delhi-linked Noida transactions, adjoining areasCheck current DRT/DoF site for precise allocation

Exact territorial allocation is periodically notified by the Ministry of Finance; confirm the latest list on the DRT website before filing.

OA Jurisdiction (RDBA s.19)

BasisRulePractical Example
Bank BranchFile where the loan account is maintainedLoan a/c at Connaught Place branch → DRT-I Delhi
Borrower LocationFile where borrower resides or carries on businessBorrower operates from Dwarka → typically DRT-II Delhi

SA Jurisdiction (Section 17 SARFAESI Application)

Asset LocationWhere to FilePractical Example
Secured asset in DwarkaDRT with local limits over the assetDwarka property → DRT-II Delhi
Secured asset in Laxmi NagarDRT with local limits over the assetLaxmi Nagar property → DRT-III Delhi

(For an SA, jurisdiction follows the asset’s location, not the borrower’s residence or bank branch.)

Why Jurisdiction Matters

Filing in the wrong bench can mean weeks of wasted time as your matter may get transferred. For borrowers under SARFAESI, delays are particularly risky because banks can proceed with auctions while jurisdictional objections are sorted out.

Step-by-Step Filing on the e-DRT Portal (2025)

Follow these practical steps to complete a DRT Delhi filing smoothly online.

  • Register & log in

Create an external-user account on the e-DRT portal (lawyer or party-in-person). Registration enables e-filing, e-payments, certified-copy requests, and case tracking. If you need hands-on help, walk into the DRT e-Sewa Kendra; they guide litigants through registration and filing.

  • Pick the correct case type & bench

Start a new filing and choose OA (Section 19 RDBA) or SA (Section 17 SARFAESI application), then select the appropriate Delhi DRT bench. The portal supports OA, SA, MA and IA e-filings end-to-end.

  • Prepare, index & upload your paper-book

Keep OA Parts I–III (memo of parties, pleadings + affidavits, vakalatnama, list of documents) neatly paginated, indexed, and stitched; for SA, follow the same discipline with annexures. Upload PDFs with bookmarks; the system provides 100 MB in four blocks of 25 MB each, and even allows filing if you cannot upload every document at once. This discipline reduces scrutiny objections and speeds listing.

  • Calculate & pay court fees online

The system auto-calculates the applicable court fee and then routes you to BharatKosh for payment—supported modes include Net-banking, cards, and UPI. Do not refresh during payment; on success, you’re returned to the portal. If money is debited but a number isn’t generated, contact the concerned DRT/DDO with your payment reference.

  • Get your Diary Number & track status

On successful submission, you receive a Diary Number—use it to monitor listing, orders, and cause-lists via the Case Details search. You can also apply for certified copies online from the same interface. This tracking is crucial in any DRT Delhi filing to stay ahead of short timelines.

  • Serve the respondent(s)

After filing, serve a copy of the application and paper-book on each respondent—by registered post—as mandated by the DRT Procedure Rules.

Time-bar tip for SAs: An SA (your Section 17 SARFAESI application) must be filed within 45 days from the impugned measure under Section 13(4); tribunals have repeatedly held they cannot extend this limitation. File early and track your Diary Number. 

Documents Checklist for DRT Delhi Filing (2025)

When preparing for a DRT Delhi filing, the completeness of your documents often determines how quickly your matter gets listed. Both OAs (by banks) and SAs (by borrowers under Section 17 SARFAESI) have specific paper requirements. Missing annexures or improper indexing is one of the top reasons for scrutiny objections.

OA (Original Application — Section 19 RDBA)

Document / ComponentWhat to IncludeNotes / Tips
Memo of PartiesFull names, addresses, contact details of applicants & respondentsEnsure spellings match loan files and KYC
Statement of AccountCertified under Bankers’ Books Evidence Act, signed by authorised officerInclude interest calculations and NPA date
Sanction Letters & Loan DocumentsSanction letters, facility agreements, renewals, addendaBookmark clauses on default/interest
Security DocumentsMortgage deeds, hypothecation agreements, guarantees, pledge docsAttach registration/creation-of-charge proofs if any
Default/Recall NoticesDemand/recall notices with proof of serviceTrack dates to establish cause of action
Affidavit of VerificationAffidavit verifying pleadings & annexuresAffirmed by authorised bank officer
Vakalatnama / AuthorisationIn favour of bank’s counselEnclose Board/POA resolution where required
List of Documents & IndexPaginated, stitched, bookmarked PDFsFollow DRT file-naming conventions if prescribed

SA (Section 17 SARFAESI Application)

Document / ComponentWhat to IncludeNotes / Tips
Memo of PartiesCorrect respondent array (bank, authorised officer, ARC if applicable)Use AO’s designation and branch address
Impugned NoticesPossession/sale notices or any Section 13(4) measureAttach photographs/panchanama if possession taken
Loan & Security DocumentsFacility documents, mortgage/guarantee papersHelps establish factual matrix for challenge
Grounds of ChallengeIllegality/non-compliance, valuation issues, procedural lapses; supported by affidavitTie each ground to a statutory breach
Evidence of Timely FilingProof of receipt/service date of the impugned actionCritical to satisfy the 45-day limit
Vakalatnama / AuthorisationExecuted by borrower/guarantor in favour of counselIf party-in-person, annex identity proof
Relief SoughtQuash/modify SARFAESI action, restoration, interim injunctionsFrame precise interim prayers for urgent listing

Common Across OA & SA

RequirementWhat to IncludeNotes / Tips
Court FeeAs per DRT Fee Rules; pay via BharatKoshSave payment receipt for portal upload
Identity / Entity ProofAadhaar/PAN; CIN/incorporation docs for companiesMatch addresses with memo of parties
Cover Page & IndexCorrect bench, case type, advocate detailsAdd mobile/email for e-notifications
Service AffidavitProof of registered post / speed post to respondentsKeep tracking slips and acknowledgments handy

Fee Structure for DRT Delhi Filing (2025)

Application TypeFee CalculationFee Amount
Original Application (OA)Base ₹12,000 for debts up to ₹10 lakh; plus ₹1,000 per lakh (or part) beyond ₹10 lakh, capped at ₹1,50,000 totalUp to ₹10L: ₹12,000 → Above ₹10L: ₹12,000 + ₹1,000 per surplus lakh (max ₹1.5L)
Review Application (RA)50% of the OA fee paidHalf of the OA filing fee
Interlocutory Application (IA)Flat fee₹10 (per the Procedure Rules)
VakalatnamaFlat fee₹5
Appeal against DRT Order (DRAT)Scale based on amount in dispute< ₹10L: ₹12,000; ₹10L–₹30L: ₹20,000; > ₹30L: ₹30,000
Applicability to SA (Section 17 SARFAESI Application)Advocate feeSA advocacy fee: ₹10,000 for ≤ ₹10L, ₹15,000 for ≤ ₹50L, ₹20,000 for ≤ ₹1 crore, ₹25,000 for > ₹1 crore

 

Notes for Clarity:

  • The OA fee structure is framed by Rule 7 of the DRT (Procedure) Rules, 1993: ₹12,000 for up to ₹10 lakh; beyond that ₹1,000 per additional lakh, capped at ₹1.5 lakh.
  • RAs, IAs, and Vakalatnamas carry token but mandatory fees—ensure you include these when filing.
  • Appeals to DRAT see progressive fee slabs reflecting the amount in dispute.

Conclusion

Treat the tribunal like a specialist commercial forum: front-load your record, anchor every assertion to bank statements, notices, and valuation reports, and use clear, bookmarked PDFs so the court can reach the real dispute fast. If you’re resisting enforcement, a well-pled Section 17 SARFAESI application that pinpoints statutory non-compliance and evidences timelines often decides whether possession or sale proceeds. If you’re enforcing, show procedural fidelity and a defensible reserve price; it strengthens interim relief and settlement leverage.

On execution, discipline wins. Build a lean brief, file cleanly through the e-DRT portal, track the diary number daily, and prepare focused interim prayers tied to imminent risks (auctions, third-party rights, asset deterioration). Most importantly, align forum and relief to the business outcome you actually need—cash recovery, time protection, or a negotiated restructure. That strategic clarity is what turns a DRT Delhi filing into a result.