| If you want to... | Action needed |
|------------------|----------------|
| Check vehicle ownership/insurance | Get the full 10‑character Registration Number (e.g., DL 3C AB 1234). 4-139-7 alone is insufficient. |
| Track an application | Find the full Application Number on your receipt or SMS from Parivahan. Usually 15‑20 digits, may include 4-139-7 as a part. |
| Verify if this is a genuine Vahan record | Contact the RTO where the application was made. Provide any document reference that includes 4-139-7. |
Vahan uses a check-digit validation for chassis numbers. If the original dealer entry had a typo (e.g., MH12AB1234 instead of MH12AB1235), any subsequent transaction triggers vahan 4-139-7 because the scanned chassis number at the time of fitness (Module 4) fails validation rule 7. vahan 4-139-7
You buy a new car or bike. The dealer logs into the dealer portal of Vahan 4. After entering your details (Form 21, Form 22, insurance, PUC), the system throws Vahan 4-139-7. This usually means: | If you want to
Assuming this is a Vahan portal Application Number (seen on the "Vahan 4.0" or "Sarathi 4.0" receipts): ✅ Most probable: 4-139-7 is a partial transaction
| Field | Possible Meaning |
|-------|------------------|
| 4 | Could be the version of Vahan platform (Vahan 4.0) or a district/zone code (extremely rare) |
| 139 | Likely the RTO office code (e.g., RTO code 139 exists in some states – manually check state RTO lists) |
| 7 | A check digit, user ID suffix, or sequence batch number |
✅ Most probable:
4-139-7is a partial transaction ID for a vehicle-related application (new registration, transfer of ownership, duplicate RC, NOC, etc.). The full ID would be longer when logged into the Vahan portal.
If 4-139-7 is all you have, you cannot retrieve vehicle details directly – it’s just a fragment.