Form 1A has two distinct parts: the applicant declaration (which you fill) and the medical examination report (which the registered medical practitioner fills after examining you).
This walkthrough covers what goes into each section, common mistakes that cause RTO rejection, and what to double-check before you leave the doctor's office.
Quick facts
Get your Form 1A correctly filled
Open the Form 1A hub to find a registered doctor and the right workflow for your state.
Prefer clarity before you pay?
Read the steps + FAQs below. Written for patients, not policy documents.
Choose the closest match so the certificate format and wording fit your use case.
Sections 1 and 2 are completed by you (the applicant) before or at the start of the medical visit. The doctor verifies your ID against what you've written.
Clear guidance and an application flow designed for real-world acceptance.
Sections 3 and 4 are completed by the medical practitioner during and at the end of the examination. You should not fill these even with the doctor's permission — that's the legal purpose of Form 1A.
Clear guidance and an application flow designed for real-world acceptance.
Most RTO rejections happen because of name spelling mismatches between Form 1A and the Sarathi application, missing photographs, or an unsigned/unstamped doctor's section.
Clear guidance and an application flow designed for real-world acceptance.
A simple flow that feels like a modern healthcare app — not a confusing form.
Before the visit: print the latest Form 1A format (download from Parivahan if not provided by the clinic) and fill applicant details and self-declaration in blue ink.
Pick the right option so the certificate matches what your HR/college expects.
At the visit: hand the partially-filled form and ID to the doctor. They will verify and proceed to the medical examination.
Follow the next step and submit complete details to avoid delays.
During exam: cooperate with vision, hearing, and BP measurements. Inform the doctor of any chronic conditions and current medication.
Follow the next step and submit complete details to avoid delays.
Before leaving: confirm the doctor has signed, stamped, and dated the form. Verify their registration number is legible.
Follow the next step and submit complete details to avoid delays.
Clear answers to the questions people have before paying.
Two parts, two signatories
You sign the applicant declaration; the doctor signs the medical certification. Both are required.
Match name spelling exactly
Form 1A name should be character-for-character identical to your Sarathi application — RTOs reject mismatches.
Doctor stamp matters
The form needs the doctor's signature, name, registration number, and clinic stamp. Missing any of these can cause rejection at upload.
Written in plain language to reduce doubts.
No. Sections 1–2 are filled by the applicant; Sections 3–4 (medical examination and certification) must be filled by a registered medical practitioner who has examined you in person.
Always blue or black ballpoint ink. Pencil entries are not accepted. Avoid corrections — if you make a mistake, ask for a fresh form rather than overwriting.
Match the name on your DL/Sarathi application exactly. If the two ID names differ, the doctor may need to verify both — bring both documents.
Politely ask them to complete it before you leave. Blank fields in the medical section are a common reason for RTO rejection at upload.
Some states require signed photographs (your signature partially across the photo). Check your state RTO's specific requirement — when in doubt, attest.
Discover related services and resources.
Get your Form 1A correctly filled
Open the Form 1A hub to find a registered doctor and the right workflow for your state.
Get your Form 1A correctly filled
Open the Form 1A hub to find a registered doctor and the right workflow for your state.