MUMBAI: Govt’s shift to drone-based land mapping has lifted rural credit flows, with sanctioned loan amounts rising 23% after residential plots were converted into verifiable collateral under the SVAMITVA scheme, according to an April 2026 working paper published by the economic advisory council to the Prime Minister.The move replaces informal land demarcation with legally recognised, geospatially verified property cards, easing a key constraint that had kept rural households outside the formal credit system. According to the paper by Soumya Kanti Ghosh, Pulak Ghosh, and Falguni Sinha, this formalisation lowers lender risk and verification costs, enabling banks to extend credit more freely to previously excluded borrowers.SVAMITVA (Survey of Villages and Mapping with Improvised Technology in Village Areas) is a central sector scheme launched by India’s ministry of Panchayati Raj in April 2020 to provide legal ownership records (property cards) to rural homeowners.The change is rooted in how Abadi areas are documented. These habitation zones historically lacked standardised land records, leaving households with possession but no documents acceptable to banks. The scheme uses Continuously Operating Reference Stations networks and drone imagery to map precise boundaries, after which staterecognised property cards are issued, turning informal assets into bankable collateral.Credit expansion has been uneven but targeted towards disadvantaged groups. Borrowers from SC, ST, and OBC communities saw an additional 21% rise in sanctioned amounts over the baseline increase. Households in aspirational districts recorded an incremental 23% gain.