DISCLAIMER

The Bar Council of India does not permit advertisement or solicitation by advocates in any form. By accessing www.asklawxperts.com, you acknowledge that you are seeking information of your own accord and there has been no solicitation, advertisement or inducement by ASK Law Xperts or its members.

This web portal is for information purposes only. No information herein constitutes legal advice, nor does accessing this portal create a lawyer-client relationship. ASK Law Xperts shall not be liable for any action taken by relying on the material provided on this portal.

The name, logo, and content of this website are the intellectual property of ASK Law Xperts. Unauthorized use or reproduction is strictly prohibited.

ASK Law Xperts  •  Adv. Sanjay Kumar  •  D/4029/2014, Bar Council of Delhi
9999374141  •  7599923456  •  sanjaykumarji@gmail.com
Skip to main content

ASK Law Xperts

Family Law — Divorce & Matrimonial Practice

Divorce & Matrimonial Disputes

Informational guide to divorce and matrimonial proceedings in Delhi Family Courts — covering contested divorce, mutual consent divorce, judicial separation, NRI matters, and the 2023 Constitution Bench position on irretrievable breakdown under Article 142. The firm's practice covers Family Courts at Rohini, Tis Hazari, Karkardooma, Saket, Dwarka, and the Delhi High Court.

Type to filter the sections on this page · press Enter to search the whole site.
No section on this page matches — press Enter to search the whole site instead.
Last Updated: 17 June 2026 Content Verified: checked against India Code & reported judgments

How the Divorce Process Moves

1
Joint Petition Drafting & Settlement
2
Filing in Family Court with Jurisdiction
3
First Motion Hearing
4
Cooling Period (6 to 18 Months)
5
Second Motion, Final Arguments & Decree
6
Filing the Divorce Petition under Section 13 HMA
7
Issuance and Service of Summons
8
Written Statement by Respondent
9
Mandatory Mediation / Counselling
10
Framing of Issues & Evidence
11
Final Arguments & Judgment
12
Petition under Section 10 HMA
13
Court Proceedings — Same as Contested Divorce
14
After the Judicial Separation Decree

Divorce & Matrimonial Law in India

Matrimonial disputes in India are governed by personal laws applicable to the parties' religion. For Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs, and Jains, the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 (HMA) is the primary statute. The Special Marriage Act, 1954 governs inter-religion and civil marriages. Muslim matrimonial law is governed by the Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act, 1937 and the Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act, 1939. Christians are governed by the Indian Divorce Act, 1869. Parsis are governed by the Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act, 1936.

Divorce may be sought on fault grounds under Section 13 HMA or by mutual consent under Section 13B HMA. A Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court in Shilpa Sailesh v. Varun Sreenivasan, 2023 SCC OnLine SC 544 (decided 01.05.2023), held that the Supreme Court may dissolve a marriage on the ground of irretrievable breakdown under Article 142(1) of the Constitution — even where this is not a statutory ground and even waiving the statutory cooling period in appropriate cases. However, this power remains available only before the Supreme Court, not before Family Courts or the High Court. All matrimonial matters in Delhi are heard exclusively by the Family Courts constituted under the Family Courts Act, 1984 — at Rohini, Tis Hazari, Karkardooma, Saket, and Dwarka.

In 2024, the Supreme Court further clarified (in Prabhavathi @ Prabhamani v. Lakshmeesha MC, 2024) that irretrievable breakdown under Article 142 cannot be used as a tool by a party who is solely responsible for the breakdown of marriage. The power must be exercised equitably, keeping in view the welfare of the party who did not cause the breakdown.

Types of Matrimonial Relief Available

Contested Divorce — HMA Section 13
Filed on specific grounds: cruelty (physical or mental), desertion (minimum 2 years continuous), adultery, conversion to another religion, unsound mind, communicable venereal disease, leprosy, renunciation of world, or presumption of death (not heard alive for 7 years). Filed by petition in Family Court.
Mutual Consent Divorce — HMA Section 13B
Joint petition filed by both parties after 1 year of marriage and at least 1 year of separation. Statutory 6-month cooling period between first and second motion (waivable in appropriate circumstances per Amardeep Singh 2017). Both parties must appear personally for both motions.
Judicial Separation — HMA Section 10
Parties remain legally married but are not required to cohabit. Same grounds as Section 13 divorce. Neither party may remarry during judicial separation. Either party may seek divorce after 1 year of non-resumption of cohabitation following a judicial separation decree under Section 13(1A).
Irretrievable Breakdown — Article 142
Not a statutory ground — available only before the Supreme Court. The SC exercises extraordinary constitutional powers to dissolve a marriage that has completely and irreparably failed. As per Prabhavathi (2024), this power cannot benefit the party solely responsible for the breakdown. Confirmed in Shilpa Sailesh (2023).
Divorce under Special Marriage Act, 1954
For inter-religion and civil marriages. Section 27 — contested divorce grounds. Section 28 — mutual consent divorce (1 year separation required before filing, unlike HMA's 1 year separation). Jurisdiction: Family Court or District Court depending on location.
Muslim Divorce — Talaq / Khula / Faskh
Instant triple talaq (talaq-e-biddat) is criminalised under the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act, 2019. Valid talaq must conform to Talaq-ul-Sunnat principles. Khula — dissolution initiated by wife with return of Mahr. Faskh — judicial dissolution through court.
Key Takeaways
  • Matrimonial relief is governed by the parties' personal law — the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 for Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs and Jains; the Special Marriage Act, 1954 for inter-religion and civil marriages; the Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act, 1939 and allied Muslim law; the Indian Divorce Act, 1869 for Christians; and the Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act, 1936 for Parsis.
  • Under the HMA there are three principal remedies — contested divorce on fault grounds (Section 13) (cruelty, desertion of at least two years, adultery, conversion, unsound mind, and others), mutual consent divorce (Section 13B), and judicial separation (Section 10), where the parties remain married but are not required to cohabit.
  • Mutual consent divorce under Section 13B needs one year of marriage and at least one year of separation, with a statutory six-month gap between the first and second motion. That cooling-off period is waivable in appropriate cases — Amardeep Singh v. Harveen Kaur (2017). Either party may withdraw consent any time before the decreeSureshta Devi v. Om Prakash (1991).
  • The standard pre-conditions and bars apply — a valid Hindu marriage (Section 7), the one-year bar on filing within the first year of marriage (Section 14), and territorial jurisdiction in the Family Court where the marriage was solemnised, where the parties last resided together, or where the respondent resides (Section 19).
  • Irretrievable breakdown is not a statutory ground; only the Supreme Court can dissolve such a marriage using its plenary power under Article 142. The Constitution Bench in Shilpa Sailesh v. Varun Sreenivasan (2023) settled the framework, and the Court has held this power cannot benefit the party solely responsible for the breakdown (Prabhavathi, 2024).
  • On maintenance and alimony, the affidavit of assets, income and expenditure must follow the format mandated in Rajnesh v. Neha (2020), which both parties are required to file; permanent-alimony factors were elaborated in Parvin Kumar Jain v. Anju Jain (2024). Mental cruelty is assessed on the illustrative tests in Samar Ghosh v. Jaya Ghosh (2007).

Essential Conditions for Divorce

The Hindu Marriage Act lays down specific pre-conditions and bars that apply to all divorce petitions, in addition to the substantive grounds. A petition that does not satisfy these conditions is liable to be dismissed at the threshold.

Valid Hindu Marriage
The marriage must be a valid Hindu marriage performed in accordance with customary rites and ceremonies (Section 7 HMA). An invalid marriage (e.g., bigamous marriage) may require a declaration of nullity under Section 11 rather than a decree of divorce under Section 13.
One-Year Bar — Section 14 HMA
No divorce petition can be presented within one year of the date of marriage. However, the court may allow a petition before one year in cases of exceptional hardship to the petitioner or exceptional depravity of the respondent — proviso to Section 14 applies. Courts exercise this discretion cautiously.
Territorial Jurisdiction — Section 19 HMA
Petition may be filed at the place where: (a) the marriage was solemnised; (b) the respondent ordinarily resides; (c) the parties last resided together; or (d) the petitioner resides (if respondent is outside India or untraceable). In Delhi, Family Courts at Rohini, Tis Hazari, Karkardooma, Saket, and Dwarka exercise jurisdiction.
Grounds Must Be Established
In contested divorce, the petitioner must prove the ground(s) relied upon to the satisfaction of the court. Courts apply a preponderance of probability standard. For cruelty, the conduct must be of such a degree that continued cohabitation is harmful or injurious to the petitioner — a single act may not suffice unless it is of exceptional gravity.
Mandatory Mediation / Counselling
The Family Courts Act, 1984 and the court's own practice mandate that the court attempt reconciliation through a trained counsellor or mediator before allowing the matter to proceed to trial. Both parties must participate in mediation. Only upon failure of mediation does the court frame issues and proceed to trial.
Free and Voluntary Consent (Mutual Consent)
In mutual consent divorce under Section 13B, both parties must give free and voluntary consent at both the first and second motions. Consent obtained by fraud, coercion, or undue influence vitiates the petition. Either party can withdraw consent at any time before the passing of the decree — Smt. Sureshta Devi v. Om Prakash (1991).

Applicable Personal Laws — Quick Reference

Divorce law in India is not uniform — the applicable statute depends on the religion of the parties. The table below provides a quick reference to the governing law, the forum, and the primary provisions for each religious community. This informational summary covers the most common scenarios; specific cases may involve overlapping or multiple statutes.

Religion / Community Governing Statute Primary Divorce Grounds Forum in Delhi Related Pages
Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh, Jain Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 Section 13 (fault grounds) | Section 13B (mutual consent) | Section 10 (judicial separation) Family Court (Rohini / Tis Hazari / Karkardooma / Saket / Dwarka) Nullity Maintenance
Muslim Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act, 1937 | Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act, 1939 | Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act, 2019 Talaq (husband's right, subject to law) | Khula (wife's right with return of Mahr) | Faskh (judicial dissolution) | Instant triple talaq now criminal Family Court | Civil Court Maintenance
Christian Indian Divorce Act, 1869 (amended 2023) Section 10 (fault grounds — adultery, cruelty, desertion) | Section 10A (mutual consent divorce after 2023 amendment — 2 years separation required) Family Court / District Court Civil Suits
Parsi Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act, 1936 Sections 32–34 (grounds including non-consummation, adultery, cruelty, desertion of 2 years, unsound mind) | Mutual consent possible through amendment Parsi Matrimonial Court (Delhi District Court)
Inter-Religion / Civil Marriage Special Marriage Act, 1954 Section 27 (fault grounds) | Section 28 (mutual consent — 1 year separation) | Section 36 (interim maintenance) Family Court / District Court Court Marriage
NRI / Foreign Element Cases Personal law of parties + Section 13 CPC (foreign decree recognition) + Hague Convention (service of summons abroad) Jurisdiction based on Section 19 HMA / Section 19 SMA — Indian courts have jurisdiction if marriage solemnised in India or parties last resided in India Family Court (NRI Desk — Rohini / Tis Hazari)

Old Law vs Current Position (Post-2023/24)

Aspect Earlier Position Current Position (Post-2023/24)
Grounds for Divorce Only statutory fault grounds under HMA Section 13 — cruelty, desertion, adultery etc. Irretrievable breakdown not recognised. Fault grounds + Irretrievable Breakdown recognised by SC under Article 142 — Shilpa Sailesh (2023). Not yet a statutory ground — no legislative amendment passed as of May 2026.
Mutual Consent Cooling Period Mandatory 6–18 months — could not be waived even by agreement of parties. Waivable by Supreme Court under Article 142 when reconciliation impossible — Amardeep Singh (2017) and Shilpa Sailesh (2023). Lower courts have limited waiver powers.
Irretrievable Breakdown — Scope Not recognised as a ground. SC exercised Article 142 powers sporadically without a clear framework. Clear framework laid down in Shilpa Sailesh (2023). Cannot be misused by party solely responsible for breakdown — Prabhavathi (2024). Permanent alimony guidelines issued — Parvin Kumar Jain v. Anju Jain (2024).
Triple Talaq (Muslim) Considered valid in some interpretations of personal law — instant dissolution by pronouncing talaq three times. Declared unconstitutional — Shayara Bano (2017). Criminalised by Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act, 2019 — imprisonment up to 3 years.
Maintenance Procedure No standardised procedure. Courts relied on scanty pleadings with inconsistent outcomes across proceedings under HMA, CrPC, and PWDV Act. Standardised Affidavit of Disclosure of Assets mandatory in all maintenance proceedings — Rajnesh v. Neha, (2021) 2 SCC 324. No double maintenance — husband need not pay under multiple proceedings simultaneously.
NRI Divorce — Hague Service Ex parte proceedings could proceed without strict service compliance in many cases. Courts now require proper Hague Convention service for respondents in signatory countries. Delhi courts grant virtual appearances via Video Conferencing to NRI parties in appropriate cases.
Christian Mutual Consent No mutual consent divorce provision under Indian Divorce Act, 1869. Only fault grounds available — prolonged proceedings. Section 10A inserted (2023 amendment) — mutual consent divorce now available for Christians after 2 years of separation. Significant reform.

Step-by-Step Procedure

Mutual Consent Divorce — Step by Step

1
Joint Petition Drafting & Settlement
Both parties instruct an advocate. A joint petition is drafted under HMA Section 13B(1) covering all agreed terms — quantum of alimony (lump-sum or periodic), property division, child custody, visitation rights, and agreement to withdraw all pending cases (FIRs, DV complaints, maintenance cases). All disputed matters must be settled before filing. The advocate prepares a formal settlement agreement / MOU.
2
Filing in Family Court with Jurisdiction
Petition filed in Family Court having territorial jurisdiction under Section 19 HMA — where marriage was solemnised, or where parties last resided together, or where respondent resides. Court fee paid. Petition accompanied by affidavits of both parties, marriage certificate, identity proof, and the settlement agreement. Date is assigned for first motion.
3
First Motion Hearing
Both parties appear personally before the Family Court Judge on the date fixed. The judge satisfies itself that consent is free and voluntary and that the statutory preconditions are met. Statements of both parties recorded. First motion granted. The 6-month cooling period under Section 13B(2) begins from the date of the first motion.
4
Cooling Period (6 to 18 Months)
The statutory period for reflection and possible reconciliation — minimum 6 months and maximum 18 months from the date of the first motion. Either party may withdraw consent during this period by an application to the court, which would stall the proceedings. If neither withdraws, the second motion is filed. In exceptional circumstances, the Supreme Court under Article 142 may waive the cooling period.
5
Second Motion, Final Arguments & Decree
Both parties appear for the second motion within 18 months of the first motion (lapse of 18 months without second motion means petition lapses — Section 13B(2)). Consent reaffirmed before the judge. The court satisfies itself regarding the settlement terms, particularly regarding minor children's welfare. Decree of divorce by mutual consent is passed. Either party may obtain certified copy for remarriage. No appeal lies ordinarily in mutual consent divorce.

Contested Divorce — Step by Step

1
Filing the Divorce Petition under Section 13 HMA
The petitioner instructs an advocate to draft and file a petition in Family Court. The petition sets out the grounds in detail — chronological narration of specific acts of cruelty, period of desertion with dates, or other applicable grounds. The petition must meet the requirement of Section 9 CPC for pleadings. Accompanied by petitioner's affidavit, marriage certificate, address proofs, and all supporting documents. Court fee paid. Cause of action must be stated precisely.
2
Issuance and Service of Summons
Court issues notice or summons to the respondent directing appearance on a fixed date. Service effected personally, by registered post AD, or Dasti through the advocate. For NRI respondents in Hague Convention countries, Letters Rogatory or prescribed Hague Convention service required — ex parte proceedings without proper service are not sustainable. Court may also entertain applications for interim maintenance under HMA Section 24, custody interim orders, or protection orders at this stage.
3
Written Statement by Respondent
Respondent files a written statement denying or admitting the allegations, raising any affirmative defences (condonation, connivance, delay/laches), and may file a counter-petition for divorce on their own grounds. Additional interim applications (cross-maintenance, custody, Stridhan recovery, Section 9 restitution) may be filed. Court fixes dates for hearing contested applications and resolves them before proceeding to main trial.
4
Mandatory Mediation / Counselling
Under the Family Courts Act, 1984, the court mandatorily refers parties to mediation or counselling — at the Mediation Centre attached to the Family Court complex (Rohini, Tis Hazari, Karkardooma, Saket, Dwarka all have active Mediation Centres). A trained counsellor attempts reconciliation. If counselling results in settlement — consent divorce petition may be filed. If mediation fails, a failure report is submitted and the court proceeds to frame issues.
5
Framing of Issues & Evidence
Court frames specific issues based on the pleadings (petition and written statement). Petitioner leads evidence first — examination-in-chief by way of affidavit under CPC Order XVIII, followed by cross-examination by respondent's counsel. Respondent then leads evidence and is cross-examined. Documentary evidence (WhatsApp screenshots, emails, medical records, FIR copies, bank statements, photographs) is filed, formally exhibited and marked. Evidence of witnesses may also be recorded.
6
Final Arguments & Judgment
Both sides address the court in final arguments — oral arguments and/or written arguments/synopses. Court pronounces judgment on the issues framed. If divorce is granted, a decree is passed. The decree is not automatically final — appeal may be filed before the Delhi High Court within 90 days under Section 19 of the Family Courts Act read with Section 28 HMA. If no appeal is filed within 90 days, the decree becomes absolute and the marriage stands dissolved. Either party may obtain a certified copy of the decree for remarriage.

Judicial Separation — Step by Step

1
Petition under Section 10 HMA
Either party may present a petition for judicial separation on any ground that would entitle them to divorce under Section 13 HMA — including cruelty, desertion, adultery, or any other Section 13 ground. The one-year bar under Section 14 applies equally to judicial separation. Petition format, court fee, and affidavit requirements are the same as for a divorce petition. Both parties remain legally married throughout the proceedings and after the decree.
2
Court Proceedings — Same as Contested Divorce
The entire procedure — service, written statement, mandatory mediation, framing of issues, evidence, and arguments — is identical to contested divorce proceedings. The key difference lies in the relief: if the decree is granted, parties are relieved of the obligation to cohabit but the marriage is not dissolved. Maintenance under Section 25, child custody under Section 26, and injunctive relief may be sought simultaneously alongside the judicial separation petition.
3
After the Judicial Separation Decree
If, within one year of the judicial separation decree, cohabitation is not resumed, either party may present a fresh petition for divorce under Section 13(1A) HMA — without needing to establish any new fault ground. This is an important provision: a party who was unable to directly prove grounds for divorce may achieve dissolution of marriage through the judicial separation route if cohabitation remains broken for one year after the decree. This two-stage route is sometimes strategically used in practice.
Important Note
Irretrievable breakdown is not a ground a Family Court can grant — only the Supreme Court may dissolve such a marriage under Article 142, so a District/Family Court petition must still be founded on a statutory ground under Section 13 (or Section 13B for mutual consent). Note the one-year bar under Section 14 HMA: a divorce petition generally cannot be filed within one year of marriage except on the ground of exceptional hardship, with the court's leave. For mutual consent, the six-month gap between the two motions can be waived where the statutory waiting period has already been substantially met and reconciliation is not possible (Amardeep Singh, 2017). Both parties must file the Rajnesh v. Neha (2020) affidavit of assets and income in any proceeding where maintenance is claimed — non-filing can delay interim relief.

Documents Required

The documents listed below are generally required for filing a divorce petition in Delhi Family Courts. Availability of each document may vary based on the specific grounds and type of divorce. An advocate may advise on the minimum documents required in cases where certain documents are unavailable or where alternate proof can substitute.

Marriage Certificate or Marriage Registration Certificate (SDM or Municipal Corporation)
Photographs of marriage ceremony — to corroborate date and performance of rites, particularly for unregistered marriages
Aadhaar Card, Passport, or Voter ID of both parties — identity and address proof for summons service
Proof of last shared residence — utility bill, rent agreement, or property document in either party's name
Birth certificate(s) of children born of the marriage — required for custody, maintenance, and welfare determination
Income proof — salary slips, ITR, Form 16, pension documents, bank statements — for maintenance and alimony claims
Property documents — title deeds, registry, flat allotment letters — if property division, matrimonial home, or Stridhan is in issue
Evidence of cruelty — WhatsApp screenshots, emails, call records, medical records, FIR copies, complaint copies — for contested divorce on cruelty grounds
Settlement agreement or MOU covering alimony, property, and custody terms — mandatory for mutual consent divorce, and recommended for NRI settlements
Copies of all pending proceedings between parties — FIRs, DV complaints, maintenance applications, criminal cases, civil suits
Bank account statements (last 6–12 months) — to substantiate income, expenses, and financial capacity for maintenance calculation per Rajnesh v. Neha guidelines
Address proof of respondent (for summons service) — Aadhaar, voter ID, or any current-address document
For NRI respondents — passport copy with visa stamps, foreign address proof, employer letter — for Hague Convention service / Letters Rogatory
Copies of earlier orders — maintenance orders, protection orders, interim custody orders from any pending proceedings between parties
Practical Tip
Before filing, fix the correct forum and ground: confirm the marriage was solemnised under the applicable personal law, identify the precise statutory ground (and gather the supporting evidence — dates, documents, communications), and verify territorial jurisdiction under Section 19 HMA. In a mutual consent matter, reduce the entire settlement — permanent alimony, custody and visitation, return of stridhan, and withdrawal of all pending civil and criminal cases — to a clear written agreement before the first motion, because a vague settlement is the most common reason these petitions stall. Both spouses should keep their Rajnesh v. Neha asset-and-income affidavit ready. Where the marriage is long dead and the other side is obstructing, an Article 142 petition before the Supreme Court can dissolve it and quash the connected proceedings in one order — but that route lies only before the Supreme Court, not the Family Court, so plan the strategy with counsel accordingly. Always consult an advocate before filing or signing any settlement.

Limitation & Time Periods

Unlike most civil proceedings, matrimonial matters under the Hindu Marriage Act do not have a fixed outer limitation period under the Limitation Act, 1963. However, several important time restrictions and conditions apply under the HMA itself. Courts also consider unexplained delay as a factor — particularly in desertion cases where the cause of action is continuous.

⏱ Key Time Periods — Matrimonial Matters (HMA)
One-Year Bar (HMA Section 14) — no petition within 1 year of marriage1 Year
Desertion Ground (HMA Section 13(1)(ib)) — minimum period of continuous desertion before filing2 Years
Separation before Mutual Consent filing (HMA Section 13B(1)) — statutory minimum1 Year
Cooling Period after First Motion (HMA Section 13B(2)) — minimum before second motion6 Months
Last date to file Second Motion from First Motion date — failing which petition lapses18 Months
Separation under SMA (Section 28) before mutual consent filing — longer than HMA1 Year
Separation for Christians — mutual consent under Indian Divorce Act Section 10A (2023)2 Years
Appeal to Delhi High Court from Family Court decree (Section 19 Family Courts Act)90 Days
After Judicial Separation decree — right to file fresh divorce petition (Section 13(1A))1 Year
Outer limitation period for divorce under HMA — Limitation Act 1963No Fixed Limit
⏳ Procedural Timeline — General Reference
The timelines below are indicative procedural references based on current court practice in Delhi Family Courts. Actual duration varies significantly based on court workload, complexity of issues, cooperation of parties, availability of witnesses, and other case-specific factors. No outcome is implied by any timeline. This is informational only.
Mutual Consent Divorce
8 – 14 months
From first motion filing to decree. Includes minimum 6-month cooling period. Subject to court dates and party availability.
Contested Divorce (Uncontested after filing)
1 – 3 years
Where respondent participates in mediation and cooperates in evidence. Delhi Family Courts are working to reduce pendency.
Contested Divorce (Fully Contested)
3 – 7+ years
Full trial with extensive cross-examination, multiple witnesses, interim applications, and possible High Court proceedings.

Relevant Bare Acts & Statutes

📖 Relevant Section — S.10/S.13 (Hindu Marriage Act, 1955) +

Section 10 — Judicial separation. (1) Either party to a marriage, whether solemnised before or after the commencement of this Act, may present a petition praying for a decree for judicial separation on any of the grounds specified in sub-section (1) of section 13, and in the case of a wife also on any of the grounds specified in sub-section (2) thereof, as grounds on which a petition for divorce might have been presented. (2) Where a decree for judicial separation has been passed, it shall no longer be obligatory for the petitioner to cohabit with the respondent, but the court may, on the application by petition of either party and on being satisfied of the truth of the statements made in such petition, rescind the decree if it considers it just and reasonable to do so.

Section 13 — Divorce. (1) Any marriage solemnized, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, may, on a petition presented by either the husband or the wife, be dissolved by a decree of divorce on the ground that the other party— (i) has, after the solemnization of the marriage, had voluntary sexual intercourse with any person other than his or her spouse; or (ia) has, after the solemnization of the marriage, treated the petitioner with cruelty; or (ib) has deserted the petitioner for a continuous period of not less than two years immediately preceding the presentation of the petition; or (ii) has ceased to be a Hindu by conversion to another religion; or (iii) has been incurably of unsound mind, or has been suffering continuously or intermittently from mental disorder of such a kind and to such an extent that the petitioner cannot reasonably be expected to live with the respondent; or (v) has been suffering from venereal disease in a communicable form; or (vi) has renounced the world by entering any religious order; or (vii) has not been heard of as being alive for a period of seven years or more by those persons who would naturally have heard of it, had that party been alive.

Explanation.—In this sub-section, the expression “desertion” means the desertion of the petitioner by the other party to the marriage without reasonable cause and without the consent or against the wish of such party, and includes the wilful neglect of the petitioner by the other party to the marriage, and its grammatical variations and cognate expressions shall be construed accordingly.

(1A) Either party to a marriage, whether solemnized before or after the commencement of this Act, may also present a petition for the dissolution of the marriage by a decree of divorce on the ground— (i) that there has been no resumption of cohabitation as between the parties to the marriage for a period of one year or upwards after the passing of a decree for judicial separation in a proceeding to which they were parties; or (ii) that there has been no restitution of conjugal rights as between the parties to the marriage for a period of one year or upwards after the passing of a decree for restitution of conjugal rights in a proceeding to which they were parties.

(2) A wife may also present a petition for the dissolution of her marriage by a decree of divorce on the ground,— (i) in the case of any marriage solemnized before the commencement of this Act, that the husband had married again before such commencement or that any other wife of the husband married before such commencement was alive at the time of the solemnization of the marriage of the petitioner (provided that in either case the other wife is alive at the time of the presentation of the petition); or (ii) that the husband has, since the solemnization of the marriage, been guilty of rape, sodomy or bestiality; or (iii) that in a suit under section 18 of the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956, or in a proceeding under section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, a decree or order, as the case may be, has been passed against the husband awarding maintenance to the wife notwithstanding that she was living apart and that since the passing of such decree or order, cohabitation between the parties has not been resumed for one year or upwards; (iv) that her marriage (whether consummated or not) was solemnized before she attained the age of fifteen years and she has repudiated the marriage after attaining that age but before attaining the age of eighteen years.

Section 13B — Divorce by mutual consent. (1) Subject to the provisions of this Act a petition for dissolution of marriage by a decree of divorce may be presented to the district court by both the parties to a marriage together, whether such marriage was solemnized before or after the commencement of the Marriage Laws (Amendment) Act, 1976, on the ground that they have been living separately for a period of one year or more, that they have not been able to live together and that they have mutually agreed that the marriage should be dissolved. (2) On the motion of both the parties made not earlier than six months after the date of the presentation of the petition referred to in sub-section (1) and not later than eighteen months after the said date, if the petition is not withdrawn in the meantime, the court shall, on being satisfied, after hearing the parties and after making such inquiry as it thinks fit, that a marriage has been solemnized and that the averments in the petition are true, pass a decree of divorce declaring the marriage to be dissolved with effect from the date of the decree.

Section 24 — Maintenance pendente lite and expenses of proceedings. Where in any proceeding under this Act it appears to the court that either the wife or the husband, as the case may be, has no independent income sufficient for her or his support and the necessary expenses of the proceeding, it may, on the application of the wife or the husband, order the respondent to pay to the petitioner the expenses of the proceeding, and monthly during the proceeding such sum as, having regard to the petitioner’s own income and the income of the respondent, it may seem to the court to be reasonable. Provided that the application for the payment of the expenses of the proceeding and such monthly sum during the proceeding, shall, as far as possible, be disposed of within sixty days from the date of service of notice on the wife or the husband, as the case may be.

Section 25 — Permanent alimony and maintenance. (1) Any court exercising jurisdiction under this Act may, at the time of passing any decree or at any time subsequent thereto, on application made to it for the purpose by either the wife or the husband, as the case may be, order that the respondent shall pay to the applicant for her or his maintenance and support such gross sum or such monthly or periodical sum for a term not exceeding the life of the applicant as, having regard to the respondent’s own income and other property, if any, the income and other property of the applicant, the conduct of the parties and other circumstances of the case, it may seem to the court to be just, and any such payment may be secured, if necessary, by a charge on the immovable property of the respondent. (2) If the court is satisfied that there is a change in the circumstances of either party at any time after it has made an order under sub-section (1), it may, at the instance of either party, vary, modify or rescind any such order in such manner as the court may deem just. (3) If the court is satisfied that the party in whose favour an order has been made under this section has re-married or, if such party is the wife, that she has not remained chaste, or, if such party is the husband, that he has had sexual intercourse with any woman outside wedlock, it may at the instance of the other party vary, modify or rescind any such order in such manner as the court may deem just.

Section 26 — Custody of children. In any proceeding under this Act, the court may, from time to time, pass such interim orders and make such provisions in the decree as it may deem just and proper with respect to the custody, maintenance and education of minor children, consistently with their wishes, wherever possible, and may, after the decree, upon application by petition for the purpose, make from time to time, all such orders and provisions with respect to the custody, maintenance and education of such children as might have been made by such decree or interim orders in case the proceeding for obtaining such decree were still pending, and the court may also from time to time revoke, suspend or vary any such orders and provisions previously made. Provided that the application with respect to the maintenance and education of the minor children, pending the proceeding for obtaining such decree, shall, as far as possible, be disposed of within sixty days from the date of service of notice on the respondent.

Source: India Code (indiacode.nic.in) — Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 (Act 25 of 1955), ss. 10, 13, 13B, 24, 25 & 26. Reproduced verbatim from the bare-act PDF; amendments by the Marriage Laws (Amendment) Act, 1976 and later Acts incorporated.
📖 Relevant Section — S.27 (Special Marriage Act, 1954) +

Section 27 — Divorce. (1) Subject to the provisions of this Act and to the rules made thereunder, a petition for divorce may be presented to the district court either by the husband or the wife on the ground that the respondent— (a) has, after the solemnization of the marriage, had voluntary sexual intercourse with any person other than his or her spouse; or (b) has deserted the petitioner for a continuous period of not less than two years immediately preceding the presentation of the petition; or (c) is undergoing a sentence of imprisonment for seven years or more for an offence as defined in the Indian Penal Code; (d) has since the solemnization of the marriage treated the petitioner with cruelty; or (e) has been incurably of unsound mind, or has been suffering continuously or intermittently from mental disorder of such a kind and to such an extent that the petitioner cannot reasonably be expected to live with the respondent; or (f) has been suffering from venereal disease in a communicable form; or (g) has been suffering from leprosy, the disease not having been contracted from the petitioner; or (h) has not been heard of as being alive for a period of seven years or more by those persons who would naturally have heard of the respondent if the respondent had been alive.

(1A) A wife may also present a petition for divorce to the district court on the ground,— (i) that her husband has, since the solemnization of the marriage, been guilty of rape, sodomy or bestiality; (ii) that in a suit under section 18 of the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956, or in a proceeding under section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, a decree or order, as the case may be, has been passed against the husband awarding maintenance to the wife notwithstanding that she was living apart and that since the passing of such decree or order, cohabitation between the parties has not been resumed for one year or upwards.

(2) Either party to a marriage may present a petition for divorce on the ground— (i) that there has been no resumption of cohabitation as between the parties to the marriage for a period of one year or upwards after the passing of a decree for judicial separation in a proceeding to which they were parties; or (ii) that there has been no restitution of conjugal rights as between the parties to the marriage for a period of one year or upwards after the passing of a decree for restitution of conjugal rights in a proceeding to which they were parties.

Section 28 — Divorce by mutual consent. (1) Subject to the provisions of this Act and to the rules made thereunder, a petition for divorce may be presented to the district court by both the parties together on the ground that they have been living separately for a period of one year or more, that they have not been able to live together and that they have mutually agreed that the marriage should be dissolved. (2) On the motion of both the parties made not earlier than six months after the date of the presentation of the petition referred to in sub-section (1) and not later than eighteen months after the said date, if the petition is not withdrawn in the meantime, the district court shall, on being satisfied, after hearing the parties and after making such inquiry as it thinks fit, that a marriage has been solemnized under this Act, and that the averments in the petition are true, pass a decree declaring the marriage to be dissolved with effect from the date of the decree.

Source: India Code (indiacode.nic.in) — Special Marriage Act, 1954 (Act 43 of 1954), ss. 27 & 28. Reproduced verbatim from the bare-act PDF; amendments by the Special Marriage (Amendment) Act, 1970 and the Marriage Laws (Amendment) Act, 1976 incorporated.
📖 Relevant Section — S.7 (Family Courts Act, 1984) +

Section 7 — Jurisdiction. (1) Subject to the other provisions of this Act, a Family Court shall— (a) have and exercise all the jurisdiction exercisable by any district court or any subordinate civil court under any law for the time being in force in respect of suits and proceedings of the nature referred to in the Explanation; and (b) be deemed, for the purposes of exercising such jurisdiction under such law, to be a district court or, as the case may be, such subordinate civil court for the area to which the jurisdiction of the Family Court extends. Explanation.—The suits and proceedings referred to in this sub-section are suits and proceedings of the following nature, namely:— (a) a suit or proceeding between the parties to a marriage for a decree of nullity of marriage or restitution of conjugal rights or judicial separation or dissolution of marriage; (b) a suit or proceeding for a declaration as to the validity of a marriage or as to the matrimonial status of any person; (c) a suit or proceeding between the parties to a marriage with respect to the property of the parties or of either of them; (d) a suit or proceeding for an order or injunction in circumstance arising out of a marital relationship; (e) a suit or proceeding for a declaration as to the legitimacy of any person; (f) a suit or proceeding for maintenance; (g) a suit or proceeding in relation to the guardianship of the person or the custody of, or access to, any minor. (2) Subject to the other provisions of this Act, a Family Court shall also have and exercise— (a) the jurisdiction exercisable by a Magistrate of the first class under Chapter IX (relating to order for maintenance of wife, children and parents) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973; and (b) such other jurisdiction as may be conferred on it by any other enactment.

Section 9 — Duty of Family Court to make efforts for settlement. (1) In every suit or proceeding, endeavour shall be made by the Family Court in the first instance, where it is possible to do so consistent with the nature and circumstances of the case, to assist and persuade the parties in arriving at a settlement in respect of the subject-matter of the suit or proceeding and for this purpose a Family Court may, subject to any rules made by the High Court, follow such procedure as it may deem fit. (2) If, in any suit or proceeding, at any stage, it appears to the Family Court that there is a reasonable possibility of a settlement between the parties, the Family Court may adjourn the proceedings for such period as it thinks fit to enable attempts to be made to effect such a settlement. (3) The power conferred by sub-section (2) shall be in addition to, and not in derogation of, any other power of the Family Court to adjourn the proceedings.

Source: India Code (indiacode.nic.in) — Family Courts Act, 1984 (Act 66 of 1984), ss. 7 & 9. Reproduced verbatim from the bare-act PDF.
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955
Primary statute governing marriage and divorce for Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs, and Jains. Key sections: Section 5 (conditions for valid marriage), Section 7 (ceremonies), Section 10 (judicial separation), Section 11 (void marriages), Section 12 (voidable marriages), Section 13 (grounds for divorce), Section 13B (mutual consent), Section 14 (one-year bar), Section 19 (jurisdiction), Section 24 (pendente lite maintenance), Section 25 (permanent alimony), Section 26 (child custody), Section 27 (Stridhan and property disposal).
IndiaCode.nic.in — Hindu Marriage Act →
Special Marriage Act, 1954
Governs inter-religion and civil marriages. Section 19 (jurisdiction), Section 27 (divorce grounds — broadly similar to HMA), Section 28 (mutual consent divorce — 1 year separation required before filing), Section 36 (interim maintenance). Also applies to foreign nationals in India.
IndiaCode.nic.in — Special Marriage Act →
Family Courts Act, 1984
Establishes Family Courts with exclusive jurisdiction over matrimonial and family matters. Mandatory counselling and mediation before trial. Simplified procedure — strict Evidence Act provisions not applied. Camera proceedings permitted to protect privacy. Section 19 provides appeal to the High Court.
IndiaCode.nic.in — Family Courts Act →
Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act, 2019
Criminalises the practice of instant triple talaq (talaq-e-biddat). Section 3 declares such talaq void and illegal. Section 4 provides imprisonment up to 3 years and fine. Section 5 — wife entitled to maintenance for herself and dependent children. Section 6 — custody of minor children. Cognisable, non-bailable offence. Wife or her blood relatives may file the complaint.
IndiaCode.nic.in — Triple Talaq Act →
Indian Divorce Act, 1869 (as amended)
Governs marriage dissolution among Christians in India. Section 10 provides grounds for divorce including adultery, cruelty, and desertion. Section 10A (inserted by amendment) — mutual consent divorce for Christians after 2 years of separation — a significant reform long overdue. Section 11 — nullity. High Court had exclusive jurisdiction in some matters; now largely before Family Courts under Family Courts Act.
IndiaCode.nic.in — Indian Divorce Act →
Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act, 1939
Provides grounds on which a Muslim woman may seek judicial dissolution of her marriage. Section 2 grounds: husband's whereabouts unknown for 4 years, failure to provide maintenance for 2 years, husband imprisoned for 7+ years, failure to perform marital obligations for 3 years, impotency, insanity for 2 years, repudiation of marriage (option of puberty), cruelty, or any other ground recognised by Muslim personal law. A Muslim woman may convert to another religion without losing the right to claim dissolution.
IndiaCode.nic.in — Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act →
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC)
Applicable for territorial jurisdiction (Section 20), execution of decrees, interim injunctions, and procedural matters not specifically provided in personal laws. Section 13 CPC — recognition of foreign judgments and decrees. Order IX Rule 13 — setting aside ex parte decrees. Order XXI — execution proceedings for maintenance arrears.
IndiaCode.nic.in — CPC →
Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956 (HAMA)
Section 18 — a Hindu wife has an independent statutory right to claim maintenance from her husband during her lifetime, even without filing for divorce. Section 18(2) provides specific grounds under which a wife is entitled to live separately without forfeiting the right to maintenance (cruelty, leprosy, second wife, conversion etc.). This right under HAMA is separate from and in addition to maintenance under HMA Section 24/25 and Section 125 CrPC.
IndiaCode.nic.in — HAMA →

Landmark & Recent Judgments

1 2024 — Permanent Alimony Guidelines Parvin Kumar Jain v. Anju Jain Supreme Court of India | 2024 INSC 961 | Decided: 10.12.2024 | Bench: Vikram Nath and P.B. Varale JJ.
A bench of the Supreme Court laid down detailed guidelines for calculation of permanent alimony in cases where divorce is granted under Article 142 on the ground of irretrievable breakdown. The Court considered the couple's 20+ years of separation and granted divorce while fixing a comprehensive alimony framework. Key factors to be considered: duration of marriage and separation, lifestyle and standard of living during marriage, earning capacity and assets of both parties, needs of the wife including age and health, and whether the wife sacrificed career prospects during the marriage. This judgment is now widely cited in Delhi Family Courts while fixing permanent alimony under HMA Section 25.
Read on IndianKanoon →
2 Landmark — Constitution Bench Shilpa Sailesh v. Varun Sreenivasan Supreme Court of India | (2023) 4 SCC 692 | 2023 SCC OnLine SC 544 | Decided: 01.05.2023 | 5-Judge Constitution Bench (Kaul, Khanna, Oka, Nath, Maheshwari JJ.)
The Constitution Bench held unanimously that the Supreme Court has the discretion under Article 142(1) of the Constitution to dissolve a marriage on the ground of irretrievable breakdown, even where this is not a statutory ground under HMA. The Court laid down detailed guidelines: the power is discretionary, not absolute; must be exercised considering factors such as length of separation, impossibility of reconciliation, welfare of minor children, and settlement of all disputes. The 6-month cooling period under Section 13B(2) can also be waived by the Court under Article 142, building on Amardeep Singh (2017). Critically, a party cannot circumvent this by filing a writ petition under Article 32 — the power is available only through appropriate petitions before the Supreme Court. Judgment authored by Justice Sanjiv Khanna.
View on IndianKanoon →
3 Landmark — Maintenance Guidelines Rajnesh v. Neha & Anr. Supreme Court of India | (2021) 2 SCC 324 | Decided: 04.11.2020 | Bench: Indu Malhotra and Subhash Reddy JJ.
Laid down comprehensive guidelines governing payment of maintenance in all matrimonial proceedings across India. Key directions: (1) Standardised Affidavit of Disclosure of Assets and Liabilities to be filed by both parties in all maintenance proceedings including pending cases — no guess-work in assessment of income; (2) Maintenance awarded from the date of filing the application; (3) A husband need not pay maintenance simultaneously under multiple proceedings (HMA, CrPC, PWDV Act) for the same period — overlapping jurisdiction addressed; (4) Mere earning of some income by the wife does not disentitle her from maintenance if her income is insufficient to maintain the standard of living enjoyed during marriage. These guidelines are now uniformly followed by Delhi Family Courts.
View on IndianKanoon →
4 Landmark — Cooling Period Waiver Amardeep Singh v. Harveen Kaur Supreme Court of India | (2017) 8 SCC 746 | Decided: 12.09.2017 | Bench: Adarsh Kumar Goel and Uday Umesh Lalit JJ.
Held that the 6-month cooling period under Section 13B(2) HMA is directory and not mandatory, and can be waived even by courts below the Supreme Court (not just the Supreme Court under Article 142) when: both parties have genuinely settled all disputes; they have been living separately for at least 6 months; there is no possibility of reconciliation; and consent is free and voluntary. Conditions for waiver laid down. This judgment streamlined the mutual consent divorce process significantly and is followed in Delhi Family Courts when parties apply for waiver of the cooling period.
View on IndianKanoon →
5 Landmark — Muslim Law Shayara Bano v. Union of India Supreme Court of India | (2017) 9 SCC 1 | Decided: 22.08.2017 | 5-Judge Constitution Bench (3:2 Majority)
Declared the practice of instant triple talaq (talaq-e-biddat — pronouncing talaq three times in one sitting) unconstitutional by a 3:2 majority. Justice Rohinton Fali Nariman, writing for the majority, held that instant triple talaq is manifestly arbitrary as it allows one party to destroy the marital tie instantly and irrevocably without any attempt at reconciliation — violating Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution. This judgment led to the enactment of the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act, 2019, which criminalised the practice.
View on IndianKanoon →
6 Landmark K. Srinivas Rao v. D.A. Deepa — (2013) 5 SCC 226 Supreme Court of India | Aftab Alam & Ranjana Prakash Desai JJ | 22.02.2013
Held: Mental cruelty under Section 13(1)(i-a) of the Hindu Marriage Act can be caused even when the spouses are not living under the same roof — through false complaints, defamatory allegations and a chain of vindictive litigation; a marriage that is emotionally dead need not be kept alive. The Court also directed that matrimonial disputes be referred to mediation under Section 9 of the Family Courts Act and that pre-litigation mediation clinics be set up.
View on IndianKanoon →
7 Landmark — Mental Cruelty Samar Ghosh v. Jaya Ghosh Supreme Court of India | (2007) 4 SCC 511 | Decided: 26.03.2007 | Bench: B.N. Agrawal and P.P. Naolekar JJ.
The Supreme Court laid down an illustrative (non-exhaustive) list of acts that constitute "mental cruelty" under Section 13(1)(ia) HMA: persistent refusal of marital relations without valid cause; unilateral decision not to have a child; filing of false or frivolous criminal cases to harass the spouse; behaviour that humiliates or demeans; conduct making cohabitation mentally injurious; sustained harassment of parents; and other acts creating reasonable apprehension. Physical cruelty is not required — sustained mental harassment is sufficient. This judgment is frequently cited in Delhi Family Courts in contested divorce matters on cruelty grounds.
View on IndianKanoon →
8 Landmark — Irretrievable Breakdown (Pre-Shilpa Sailesh) Naveen Kohli v. Neelu Kohli Supreme Court of India | (2006) 4 SCC 558 | Decided: 03.03.2006 | Bench: B.N. Agrawal and P.P. Naolekar JJ.
Strongly recommended that Parliament amend the HMA to include irretrievable breakdown of marriage as a statutory ground for divorce — recommendation that has not yet been legislatively enacted as of May 2026. Held that forcing parties to remain married when the marriage has completely failed causes injustice to both. Exercised Article 142 powers to grant divorce despite one party's opposition. Referred to the Law Commission's 71st Report (1978) and directed the Government of India to consider the amendment. The 17-year wait for the legislative amendment was ultimately filled by the judicial framework in Shilpa Sailesh (2023).
View on IndianKanoon →
9 Landmark — NRI Divorce Y. Narasimha Rao v. Y. Venkata Lakshmi Supreme Court of India | AIR 1991 SC 1837 | Bench: M.N. Venkatachaliah and N.M. Kasliwal JJ.
A foreign divorce decree obtained by one Indian spouse abroad will not be recognised in India under Section 13 CPC unless: (a) the foreign court had jurisdiction over both parties; (b) the other party was properly served and had an opportunity to contest; (c) the decree was obtained on merits and not by fraud; and (d) the decree does not violate Indian law or natural justice. An ex parte decree obtained in a foreign court without proper service on the Indian spouse is not binding. Indian courts retain jurisdiction to grant a fresh divorce decree in such cases.
View on IndianKanoon →
10 Landmark — Mutual Consent (S.13B) Sureshta Devi v. Om Prakash Supreme Court of India | (1991) 2 SCC 25 | AIR 1992 SC 1904 | Decided: 07.02.1991 | Bench: K. Jagannatha Shetty and S.C. Agrawal JJ.
In a petition for divorce by mutual consent under Section 13B HMA, mutual consent must subsist not only when the joint petition is filed but right up to the moment the decree is passed. Either spouse may unilaterally withdraw consent at any time before the decree, and the court then cannot grant a decree of divorce by mutual consent. The Court clarified that filing the petition under Section 13B(1) does not by itself dissolve the marriage — the parties must move the second motion under Section 13B(2) after the statutory waiting period. The expression "living separately" was explained to mean not living as husband and wife, irrespective of the place of residence. This remains the foundational ruling on consent under Section 13B, read today alongside Amardeep Singh v. Harveen Kaur on waiver of the cooling-off period.
View on IndianKanoon →

Recent Developments in Matrimonial Law

2026 — Settled Practice
Article 142 Divorce Now Routine; Mediated Settlements Binding
Through 2025–2026 the Supreme Court has continued to apply the Shilpa Sailesh framework regularly — dissolving long-dead marriages under Article 142 even where one spouse opposes, while quashing connected civil and criminal proceedings and fixing one-time permanent alimony in full and final settlement. The Court has also held that a party cannot resile from a duly executed mediated settlement except on limited grounds such as force, fraud, undue influence or non-fulfilment of obligations, underscoring that settlements reached in mediation will ordinarily be enforced.
2023 — Christian Law Reform
Mutual Consent Divorce Now Available for Christians
An amendment to the Indian Divorce Act, 1869 inserted Section 10A, making mutual consent divorce available to Christians after 2 years of separation. This is a significant reform that ended a longstanding disparity — Christians previously had no mutual consent divorce option and were forced to use contested fault grounds only.
2023–2025 — Delhi Family Courts
Strengthened Mediation & NRI Video Conferencing
Delhi High Court has strengthened pre-trial mediation in all Family Courts. Mediation Centres at Rohini, Tis Hazari, Karkardooma, Saket, and Dwarka actively resolve a significant proportion of matters before trial. For NRI parties, Video Conferencing appearances are now routinely granted by Delhi Family Courts in appropriate cases.
2025 — Pending Legislative Reform
Irretrievable Breakdown Codification — Still Awaited
Despite repeated recommendations from the Law Commission (71st Report, 1978 and 217th Report, 2008) and the Supreme Court in Naveen Kohli (2006) and Shilpa Sailesh (2023), Parliament has not yet amended the HMA to include irretrievable breakdown as a statutory ground. The Marriage Laws Amendment Bill (passed Rajya Sabha in 2013) lapsed in the Lok Sabha. As of May 2026, no fresh bill has been passed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I file for divorce without coming to court personally?

Personal appearance before the Family Court is mandatory in matrimonial matters — particularly in mutual consent divorce where both parties must appear for first and second motions, and their statements are recorded by the judge to verify free consent. In contested matters, appearance can sometimes be excused through counsel on certain dates (procedural hearings), but evidence must be given personally. NRI parties residing abroad may apply for Video Conferencing hearings under Supreme Court guidelines and Delhi High Court orders — many Delhi Family Courts now routinely grant VC appearances where genuine hardship is established. The court must be satisfied in all cases that the party's participation is meaningful and not merely a rubber stamp.

How long does mutual consent divorce take in Delhi?

The minimum statutory period is 6 months from the date of the first motion (cooling period under Section 13B(2) HMA). In practice, mutual consent divorce in Delhi Family Courts typically proceeds over 8 to 14 months from filing to decree — accounting for court date availability, filing time, and the cooling period. If the cooling period waiver is applied for under the Amardeep Singh (2017) guidelines (where all disputes are settled, separation exceeds 18 months, and reconciliation is impossible), the proceedings may conclude sooner. Parties who approach the Supreme Court for cooling period waiver under Article 142 may receive quicker resolution but this involves additional process and cost at the Supreme Court level.

What is the jurisdiction for filing a divorce petition in Delhi?

Under Section 19 of the Hindu Marriage Act, a petition may be filed in the Family Court at the place where: (a) the marriage was solemnised; (b) the respondent ordinarily resides at the time of the petition; (c) the parties last resided together; or (d) the petitioner resides, if the respondent is living outside India or if the parties cannot be found. In Delhi, the five Family Courts are at Rohini (North/North-West Delhi), Tis Hazari (Central/North Delhi), Karkardooma (East/North-East Delhi), Saket (South Delhi), and Dwarka (South-West/West Delhi). The appropriate Family Court is determined by the parties' residential addresses at the relevant time.

Can my spouse take back consent in a mutual consent divorce?

Yes — either party can withdraw consent at any time before the decree is passed. The Supreme Court in Smt. Sureshta Devi v. Om Prakash (1991) held that consent can be withdrawn right up to the date of the second motion and the passing of the decree. If consent is withdrawn during the cooling period, the petition fails and cannot proceed as a mutual consent divorce. The petitioner may then convert it to a contested divorce petition, or file a fresh contested petition citing appropriate grounds. The withdrawal of consent does not, by itself, amount to cruelty — but persistent refusals to cooperate in genuine settlement efforts may be relevant in the contested proceedings that follow.

What is "mental cruelty" as a ground for divorce?

Mental cruelty under Section 13(1)(ia) HMA means conduct by the respondent which causes reasonable apprehension in the mind of the petitioner that it will be harmful or injurious for the petitioner to live with the respondent. Physical cruelty is not required. The Supreme Court in Samar Ghosh v. Jaya Ghosh (2007) laid down an illustrative list — including persistent refusal of marital relations without valid cause, unilateral decision not to have children, filing false criminal cases to harass the spouse, sustained humiliation or demeaning conduct, harassment of parents, and other acts creating an unliveable atmosphere. Courts consider the cumulative effect of conduct, not just isolated incidents. A single act of extreme gravity may also constitute cruelty. WhatsApp messages, emails, and recorded conversations are admissible as evidence of cruelty in Delhi Family Courts.

Is there a time limit to file for divorce in India?

There is no fixed outer limitation period for filing a divorce petition under the Hindu Marriage Act — unlike most civil matters governed by the Limitation Act, 1963, which has specific time limits. However, two key internal bars apply: (a) the one-year bar under Section 14 HMA — no petition can be filed within one year of marriage (except in exceptional hardship); (b) the two-year desertion requirement under Section 13(1)(ib). The general doctrine of laches may apply if a petition is filed many years after the cause of action arose — unexplained and inordinate delay may weaken the case. Courts have discretion to consider delay as a factor, particularly when the petitioner also condoned or connived in the acts complained of.

What happens to property after divorce?

India does not have a community property or matrimonial property regime unlike many Western jurisdictions. Each spouse retains ownership of property standing in their individual name. However, several specific rules apply: (a) Stridhan — property exclusively belonging to the wife (gifts at marriage, jewellery, gifts from family) must be returned to the wife; withholding Stridhan is criminal misappropriation — Pratibha Rani v. Suraj Kumar (1985). (b) Joint property is divided by agreement or court order. (c) Ancestral and HUF property is governed by the Hindu Succession Act, 1956. (d) A wife has a right of residence in the matrimonial home under Section 17 of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, even if the property is in the husband's or in-laws' name. (e) Property rights in a settlement as part of mutual consent divorce are governed by the terms agreed and reflected in the consent decree. Permanent alimony under HMA Section 25 may include a share in property depending on the facts — the Parvin Kumar Jain (2024) guidelines now assist courts in quantification.

Can a foreign divorce decree be recognised in India?

A foreign divorce decree is recognised in India under Section 13 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, subject to the following conditions — the foreign court must have had competent jurisdiction over both parties; the decree must have been obtained on merits (not by default or fraud); proper notice must have been given to the other party; the decree must not violate natural justice; and it must not be contrary to Indian law or public policy. The Supreme Court in Y. Narasimha Rao v. Y. Venkata Lakshmi (1991) held that a divorce obtained in a foreign country by one Indian spouse will not automatically dissolve the marriage under Indian law if the other spouse was not a party to those proceedings or was not properly served. Many NRIs make the mistake of obtaining a unilateral foreign divorce decree without ensuring the Indian spouse's participation — such decrees are not recognised in India and the Indian spouse remains legally married.

What is "Stridhan" and can a wife always claim it back?

Stridhan is property that belongs exclusively and absolutely to a Hindu wife — it includes: gifts received before marriage, at the time of marriage, and after marriage from husband, husband's family, wife's family, or any other person; jewellery purchased from the wife's income; and other movable and immovable property received as gifts or inheritance. The husband holds Stridhan merely as a trustee — he has no right to use it without the wife's consent. The Supreme Court in Pratibha Rani v. Suraj Kumar (1985) firmly held that the husband has no right over the wife's Stridhan and cannot use it even for household expenses without consent. A wife can demand return of Stridhan at any time. If the husband refuses, the wife may file a criminal complaint for criminal misappropriation (Section 406 IPC / Section 316 BNS 2023) or civil suit for recovery. Recovery of Stridhan is a significant aspect of matrimonial disputes and is frequently litigated in Delhi District Courts.

Can the court grant divorce if one spouse refuses to appear?

Yes — in contested divorce, if the respondent is duly served with summons but refuses to appear, the court can proceed ex parte and decide the matter on the petitioner's evidence alone (Order IX CPC). The court must be satisfied that proper service was effected before proceeding ex parte. The respondent retains the right to apply to set aside the ex parte decree under Order IX Rule 13 CPC by showing sufficient cause for non-appearance. In mutual consent divorce, ex parte proceedings are not possible — both parties must personally appear and consent cannot be presumed or substituted. If a mutual consent petition fails due to non-appearance of one party, the petitioner's only option is a contested divorce petition.

Test Your Knowledge — Divorce Law Quiz

⚖ Divorce & Matrimonial Law

Key Legal Terms — Matrimonial Law

Decree Nisi / Decree Absolute
A divorce decree in contested matters is initially a decree nisi — it becomes absolute (and the marriage is finally dissolved) if no appeal is filed within 90 days. The parties are not free to remarry until the decree becomes absolute. A certified copy of the final decree is required for remarriage.
Stridhan
Property exclusively and absolutely belonging to a Hindu wife — includes gifts received before, at, and after marriage from any source. The husband holds it merely as a trustee. Must be returned on demand. Withholding Stridhan may constitute criminal breach of trust (Section 316 BNS 2023).
Cooling Period
The 6-month statutory minimum period between first and second motion in mutual consent divorce under Section 13B(2) HMA. Allows parties to reconsider. Maximum period is 18 months. Can be waived by courts in appropriate circumstances per Amardeep Singh (2017).
Irretrievable Breakdown
Judicial ground for divorce recognised by the Supreme Court under Article 142 of the Constitution — available only before the Supreme Court, not in lower courts or High Courts. Means the marriage has completely and permanently failed with no possibility of reconciliation. Cannot benefit the party who alone caused the breakdown — Prabhavathi (2024).
Mahr / Mehr
Mandatory gift or payment from husband to wife at the time of Muslim marriage — it is the exclusive property of the wife. Mahr must be paid promptly (mu'ajjal) or deferred (mu'wajjal). A wife's right to claim Mahr subsists regardless of the cause of divorce and is not affected by the divorce itself.
Iddat
Waiting period observed by a Muslim woman after divorce or husband's death. After revocable divorce: 3 menstrual cycles. After irrevocable divorce: 3 menstrual cycles. After husband's death: 4 months and 10 days. After divorce during pregnancy: until delivery. A woman in iddat cannot remarry during the period and is entitled to maintenance during iddat from her former husband.
Desertion
A ground for divorce under Section 13(1)(ib) HMA — defined as the abandonment of one spouse by the other without reasonable cause and without consent, with the animus deserendi (intention to permanently abandon). A continuous period of at least two years immediately preceding the petition is required. Constructive desertion — where one spouse compels the other to leave — is also recognised.
Article 142 Power
The extraordinary constitutional power of the Supreme Court of India to pass any order or decree necessary to do "complete justice" in any cause or matter before it. Used in matrimonial matters to: grant divorce on irretrievable breakdown; waive cooling periods; quash related criminal cases; and settle all disputes in one comprehensive order. Available only before the Supreme Court — not before High Courts or Family Courts.
Pendente Lite Maintenance (Section 24 HMA)
Interim maintenance and litigation expenses awarded by the Family Court to a spouse who has insufficient independent income — during the pendency of any matrimonial proceeding. Gender-neutral provision — either spouse may apply. Court considers income, assets, standard of living, and reasonable needs. Governed by Rajnesh v. Neha guidelines for assessment.
Permanent Alimony (Section 25 HMA)
Post-divorce financial maintenance awarded by the court at the time of passing any matrimonial decree — lump sum or periodic. The court considers the income, property, and conduct of both parties, and other circumstances. May be varied by the court on change of circumstances. Parvin Kumar Jain v. Anju Jain (2024) has provided fresh guidelines on quantification.
Condonation
A defence in contested divorce where the respondent shows that the petitioner had forgiven or condoned the acts relied upon as grounds for divorce, and thereafter resumed marital relations. A condoned act cannot be relied upon as a ground for divorce unless there is a subsequent act of cruelty or desertion that "revives" the earlier condoned acts under the revival doctrine.
One-Year Bar (Section 14 HMA)
No divorce petition can be presented to the court within one year of the date of marriage, except in cases of exceptional hardship to the petitioner or exceptional depravity of the respondent (proviso to Section 14). Courts scrutinise such applications carefully — a petition filed before one year without the court's prior leave is not maintainable and is liable to be dismissed at the outset.
Was this page helpful?
Thank you — your feedback has been noted.
This is an informational guide and is reviewed periodically against the official sources cited above. If any provision appears outdated or an inadvertent error is noticed, it may be pointed out using the contact details on this page so that the content can be reviewed and corrected. Readers should verify the current statutory text and case law from authentic sources before relying on it.

Get in Touch

For Appointments at the Office in Rohini or Chamber at Karkardooma Courts.
Practicing Since 2014, Bar Council of Delhi.

Monday – Saturday  |  9:30 AM – 7:30 PM
Send Detailed Message

For Non-Urgent matters · Visit Contact Us page to fill the form

Contacting us through this website does not create an advocate-client relationship. Do not share confidential information until a formal engagement is confirmed in writing.

Visit Us

Office and Chamber locations of ASK Law Xperts.
Click any map to open in Google Maps for directions.

Monday – Saturday  |  9:30 AM – 7:30 PM