As the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls begins in West Bengal, booth-level officers (BLOs) are set to visit homes across the state to verify voter details. The politically charged exercise has raised several questions among voters.

Here’s a clear explainer in a simple FAQ format to help you understand what to expect and how to participate.
Each BLO will carry an official identity card with a QR code. You can scan this QR code to verify their credentials directly from the Election Commission of India (ECI) website. The enumeration forms they carry will also display the BLO’s name and contact number for your reference.
Because of the political sensitivity of this exercise, Booth Level Agents (BLAs) — appointed by political parties — may accompany BLOs during visits.
BLOs have detailed voter lists for every booth. You’ll likely receive prior intimation before the visit.
If you’re unavailable, don’t worry — the BLO will make up to three repeat visits to ensure that every voter is reached. The aim is to include everyone in the ongoing roll revision.
You’ll receive two copies of an enumeration form for every voter in your family. Fill them out, sign both, and hand them back to the BLO, who will countersign and return one stamped copy as an acknowledgement for your records.
Keep these handy:
No need to attach copies of your documents. However, if your family’s names don’t appear in the 2002 rolls, you’ll later be asked to submit citizenship-related documents from the list of 11 indicative proofs specified by the ECI.
It’s a single-page form divided into two sections:
Yes. A family member present at home can fill up the form on behalf of those away for work or study. That person must sign the form and will be held responsible for any clarifications the authorities may seek later.
Submit the filled forms directly to your BLO, who will collect them during their visit.
The house-to-house verification runs till December 4.
Yes. If you or your family members are not home during the BLO’s visit, you can fill the form online. You’ll need to download, fill physically, and upload it as instructed on the ECI website.
However, the online form is not yet live due to technical issues. Officials have assured it will be available soon on the CEO West Bengal webpage.
No. The SIR aims only to verify voter eligibility — it does not determine citizenship. The Election Commission of India does not have the authority to decide citizenship status.
The SIR is a large-scale voter verification and inclusion drive, not a citizenship test. Keep your voter ID, Aadhaar, and 2002 roll details ready, cooperate with BLOs during their visits, and ensure your household’s voter records are up to date before the final rolls are published in February 2026.