Last Updated:May 15, 2026, 23:54 IST
Delhi begins special intensive revision of electoral rolls June 30, with online enumeration forms, house visits by over 13,000 BLOs, draft roll on August 5, final roll on October 7

SIR exercise will begin with door-to-door verification by booth-level officers (BLOs) from June 30 in Delhi
Delhi voters will be able to submit their enumeration forms online as part of the Election Commission’s mega special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, officials said on Friday. The exercise will begin with door-to-door verification by booth-level officers (BLOs) from June 30.
Political parties have also stepped up preparations for the SIR exercise in the capital. Training of booth-level agents (BLAs) has been intensified across more than 13,000 polling booths in Delhi.
Delhi Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) office said the main objective of the SIR is “no eligible citizen is left out while no ineligible person is included in the electoral roll".
The exercise will cover all voters aged 18 years and above by the qualifying date, which is October 1.
During SIR, over 13,000 BLOs will conduct house-to-house enumeration. Every existing elector, whose name exists in the electoral roll will be provided an enumeration form (in duplicate) to be filled by them and return one copy to the BLOs, said a Delhi CEO office statement.
Provision will also be given to electors to fill out the enumeration form online during the SIR period, said the CEO’s office.
The voter list of SIR, held in 2002 in Delhi, has been uploaded to the website of the CEO, Delhi. Voters who have shifted in Delhi from other states after 2002 can find their names on the Election Commission of India (ECI) portal.
Door-to-door visits by BLOs will start from June 30 and conclude on July 29, after which the draft electoral roll will be published on August 5. The final electoral roll after SIR will be published on October 7.
The voters who are permanently staying in Delhi prior to 2002 can check their names in the voter list of 2002 and note down their details.
The CEO office said that voters who moved to Delhi from other states after 2002 will not find their names in Delhi’s 2002 voter list. Such voters will have to visit the website – www.voters.eci.gov.in – and search for their names in the voter lists of 2002, 2003 or 2005 — the year when the last SIR was conducted in their respective states.
They will also need to note details such as the relative’s name, state name, assembly constituency number, part number and serial number, it said.
These details will be filled in the enumeration forms and submitted to them. No document is required to be submitted with the Enumeration Form, it said.
Voters whose names do not appear in the voter list of the year 2002, but the names of their parents are there, will provide details of their parents/relatives in the enumeration form, it said.
Rationalisation of polling stations will also be undertaken during SIR, as ECI has reduced the limit of 1,500 voters per polling station to 1200 voters per polling station for ease of electors during the poll.
The Delhi CEO and district election officers or electoral registration officers, with representatives of political parties seeking their cooperation, will provide them with important information, said the statement.
The Delhi CEO has also called a meeting with all District Election Officers to review preparedness for SIR in the coming week.
Delhi BJP leader Sanket Gupta, associated with SIR, said that the party has already appointed its BLAs on almost all the booths and training was also imparted to them.
“We have to ensure cooperation with the poll body to ensure that the objective of the exercise is achieved," he said.
The BLAs of the party will assist voters in finding their details from the voters’ list and also ensure they successfully submit their enumeration forms, Gupta added.
Delhi Congress president Devender Yadav said the party has already appointed around 13,000 BLA-2s across Delhi and will begin district-level training camps to prepare them for the SIR.
“They will be properly trained well in advance before June 30 through district-level camps so they can effectively deal with the forthcoming issues during the SIR process," Yadav said.
He added that the party BLAs will keep watch on booths with higher numbers of minorities and Dalit voters to ensure their names do not get deleted during the exercise.
According to the special summary revision of electoral rolls ahead of Assembly polls in Delhi, there were 1,55,24,858 registered voters, of which 83,49,645 were men, 71,73,952 women, and 1,261 third-gender voters.
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