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Constitutional Amendments of India – Complete List

Complete constitutional amendments of India list with year, key changes & exam facts. Updated 2026. Essential for UPSC, SSC, Banking & State PSC exams. Revise now.

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📅 April 2026
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Constitutional amendments of India define how the world’s longest written constitution evolves to meet the needs of a changing nation.

Since its adoption on November 26, 1949, India’s Constitution has been amended over 106 times — covering everything from Fundamental Rights to the age of voters, from GST to the OBC reservation framework. Questions on specific amendment numbers, years, and what each changed are among the most tested topics in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Banking, State PSC, and Railway exams. This page gives you a complete, exam-focused list of all major constitutional amendments with their key provisions and polity facts.

106 Amendments as of 2024
42nd “Mini Constitution” (1976)
22 Languages in 8th Schedule
12 Schedules in Constitution

⚡ Quick Facts

Must-Know Facts for Exams
  • 106 amendments as of 2024 — one of the most frequently amended constitutions in the world.
  • 1st Amendment (1951) — added the Ninth Schedule, placing land reform laws beyond judicial review.
  • 42nd Amendment (1976) — called the “Mini Constitution”; most sweeping single-amendment changes ever made.
  • 44th Amendment (1978) — restored provisions diluted by Emergency-era 42nd Amendment; right to property made legal right, not FR.
  • 101st Amendment (2016) — introduced GST; single biggest tax reform in post-independence India.
⚠️ Common Exam Trap

Students often confuse the 42nd (1976) and 44th (1978) amendments — 42nd added Emergency powers and curtailed rights; 44th reversed those changes. Also: the Right to Property was removed as a Fundamental Right by the 44th Amendment — it is now only a legal/constitutional right under Article 300A. The 106th Amendment (2023) provides women’s reservation but is not yet in force — it comes into effect only after the next delimitation and Census. And: 22 languages are currently in the 8th Schedule — not 14, 18, or 20.

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📜 Constitutional Amendments — Complete List

🔍
Part A — All Major Constitutional Amendments of India (Exam-Focused)
Amend. ↕ Year ↕ Key Provision ↕ PM / Era ↕ Exam Tag
1st1951Added 9th Schedule; restricted FR to Property; enabled land reformsNehru9th Schedule; land reforms
7th1956Reorganised states on linguistic basis; abolished Part B states; States Reorganisation ActNehruStates reorganisation
10th1961Incorporated Dadra & Nagar Haveli into the Indian UnionNehruDadra & NH integration
12th1962Incorporated Goa, Daman & Diu into the Indian Union after liberationNehruGoa liberation
13th1962Created Nagaland as a state with special provisions (Art. 371A)NehruNagaland statehood; Art. 371A
14th1962Incorporated Pondicherry into the Indian UnionNehruPondicherry merger
21st1967Added Sindhi as the 15th language in the Eighth ScheduleIndira GandhiSindhi; 8th Schedule (15 languages)
24th1971Affirmed Parliament’s power to amend Fundamental Rights; amended Article 368Indira GandhiKesavananda Bharati background; Art. 368
25th1971Restricted right to property; allowed acquisition for public purposeIndira GandhiRight to property; DPSP primacy
26th1971Abolished privy purses and privileges of former rulers of princely statesIndira GandhiPrivy purses abolished
36th1975Made Sikkim a full state of India (22nd state)Indira GandhiSikkim statehood (22nd state)
42nd1976Added “Socialist,” “Secular,” “Integrity” to Preamble; added Fundamental Duties (Part IVA); called “Mini Constitution”Indira Gandhi (Emergency)Mini Constitution; Preamble; Fundamental Duties
43rd1977Restored some powers of High Courts and Supreme Court curtailed by 42nd AmendmentJanata PartyPost-Emergency restoration
44th1978Made right to property a legal right (Art. 300A, not FR); restored press freedom; “armed rebellion” for EmergencyJanata (Morarji Desai)Reversed Emergency changes; Property right
52nd1985Anti-defection law — added Tenth Schedule to prevent floor-crossing by legislatorsRajiv Gandhi10th Schedule; anti-defection law
53rd1986Special provisions for Mizoram (Article 371G)Rajiv GandhiMizoram statehood; Art. 371G
55th1986Special provisions for Arunachal Pradesh (Article 371H)Rajiv GandhiArunachal Pradesh; Art. 371H
56th1987Granted statehood to Goa (25th state); Daman & Diu became separate UTRajiv GandhiGoa statehood (25th state)
61st1989Reduced voting age from 21 to 18 yearsRajiv GandhiVoting age 18
69th1991Gave special status to Delhi (NCT); established Delhi Legislative Assembly and Council of MinistersNarasimha RaoDelhi NCT status
71st1992Added Konkani, Manipuri, Nepali to 8th Schedule (total 18 languages)Narasimha Rao8th Schedule: 18 languages
73rd1992Gave constitutional status to Panchayati Raj Institutions; added 11th Schedule (29 subjects)Narasimha RaoPanchayati Raj; 11th Schedule
74th1992Gave constitutional status to Urban Local Bodies (Municipalities); added 12th Schedule (18 subjects)Narasimha RaoMunicipalities; 12th Schedule
77th1995Provided reservation in promotion for SCs/STs in government servicesNarasimha RaoSC/ST promotion quota
86th2002Made education a Fundamental Right for children 6–14 years (Article 21A); added parental Fundamental DutyVajpayeeRTE; Art. 21A; 11th Fundamental Duty
91st2003Limited size of Council of Ministers to 15% of House strength; strengthened anti-defection lawVajpayeeCabinet size 15%; 10th Schedule
92nd2003Added Bodo, Dogri, Maithili, Santhali to 8th Schedule (current total: 22 languages)Vajpayee8th Schedule: 22 languages (current)
93rd2005Enabled OBC reservation in private unaided educational institutions (except minority institutions)Manmohan SinghOBC quota in private colleges
97th2011Gave constitutional status to cooperative societies; added right to form cooperatives as FRManmohan SinghCooperative societies FR
99th2014Established NJAC (National Judicial Appointments Commission) — struck down by SC in 2015ModiNJAC; struck down by SC 2015
100th2015Gave effect to Land Boundary Agreement with Bangladesh; territory exchange (enclaves)ModiIndia-Bangladesh land boundary
101st2016Introduced GST; added Articles 246A, 269A, 279A; set up GST CouncilModiGST; biggest tax reform post-independence
102nd2018Gave constitutional status to National Commission for Backward Classes (NCBC)ModiNCBC constitutional status
103rd2019Provided 10% reservation for Economically Weaker Sections (EWS) in education and government jobsModiEWS 10% quota; General category
104th2020Extended SC/ST seat reservation in Lok Sabha and State Assemblies by 10 more years (till 2030)ModiSC/ST seat reservation till 2030
105th2021Restored states’ power to identify OBCs; amended Articles 338B, 342A (overturned Maratha quota ruling)ModiStates OBC list power restored
106th2023Provided 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha and State Assemblies (Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam); effective after next delimitationModiWomen’s 33% reservation; not yet in force
No amendments match your filter.
Part B — Amendments by Theme
Theme Key Amendments What They Did
Preamble Changes42nd (1976)Added “Socialist,” “Secular,” “Integrity”
Fundamental Rights1st, 24th, 25th, 44th, 86thLand reform, property right, RTE (Art. 21A)
Fundamental Duties42nd (1976), 86th (2002)Added Part IVA (10 duties); added 11th duty (parent duty)
Emergency Provisions38th, 42nd, 44th44th restored “armed rebellion” wording; removed “internal disturbance”
Panchayati Raj73rd (1992)Constitutional status; 11th Schedule with 29 subjects
Urban Local Bodies74th (1992)Constitutional status; 12th Schedule with 18 subjects
Schedules Added1st (9th), 52nd (10th), 73rd (11th), 74th (12th)Four new Schedules added post-1950
8th Schedule Languages21st, 71st, 92ndLanguages: 14 → 15 → 18 → 22 (current: 22)
Reservation77th, 93rd, 103rd, 104th, 106thSC/ST promotion, OBC private colleges, EWS 10%, Women 33%
Tax Reforms101st (2016)GST; Articles 246A, 269A, 279A; GST Council
Statehood13th, 36th, 53rd, 55th, 56thNagaland, Sikkim, Mizoram, Arunachal Pradesh, Goa
Anti-Defection52nd (1985), 91st (2003)10th Schedule added; cabinet size capped at 15%
Part C — Eighth Schedule: Languages Added by Amendment
Amendment Year Languages Added Total After Amendment
Original Constitution195014 languages (Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Kashmiri, Malayalam, Marathi, Odia, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Tamil, Telugu, Urdu)14
21st Amendment1967Sindhi15
71st Amendment1992Konkani, Manipuri, Nepali18
92nd Amendment2003Bodo, Dogri, Maithili, Santhali22
Current Total2026No additions since 200322 languages
Part D — All 12 Schedules of the Indian Constitution
Schedule Subject Added By
FirstList of States and Union TerritoriesOriginal (1950)
SecondSalaries of constitutional authoritiesOriginal (1950)
ThirdOaths and affirmationsOriginal (1950)
FourthSeats in Rajya Sabha for States/UTsOriginal (1950)
FifthAdministration of Scheduled Areas (tribal areas)Original (1950)
SixthAdministration of tribal areas in Northeast IndiaOriginal (1950)
SeventhThree Lists — Union List, State List, Concurrent ListOriginal (1950)
Eighth22 Official Languages of IndiaOriginal (14); expanded to 22 by amendments
NinthLaws protected from judicial review1st Amendment (1951)
TenthAnti-defection provisions52nd Amendment (1985)
EleventhPanchayati Raj subjects (29 subjects)73rd Amendment (1992)
TwelfthMunicipalities / Urban Local Bodies (18 subjects)74th Amendment (1992)

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📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips

Note 1 — 42nd Amendment: “Mini Constitution” (1976)

The 42nd Amendment (1976) is called the “Mini Constitution” because it made the largest number of changes in one amendment: added “Socialist,” “Secular,” and “Integrity” to the Preamble; inserted Fundamental Duties (Part IVA); shifted subjects from State to Concurrent List; and curtailed judicial review. Passed during the Emergency under Indira Gandhi — it is the most tested amendment in UPSC Polity.

Note 2 — 44th Amendment: Corrective to 42nd (1978)

The 44th Amendment (1978) by the Janata government under Morarji Desai reversed many Emergency-era changes: restored press freedom, replaced “internal disturbance” with “armed rebellion” for Emergency proclamation, and downgraded the Right to Property from a Fundamental Right to a legal right under Article 300A. The property right removal is a top exam fact.

Note 3 — 73rd & 74th Amendments: Twin “Grassroots Democracy” Acts (1992)

The 73rd Amendment gave constitutional status to Panchayati Raj (rural self-governance) and added the 11th Schedule with 29 subjects. The 74th Amendment did the same for Municipalities (urban self-governance) and added the 12th Schedule with 18 subjects. Both were passed in 1992 under Narasimha Rao and are called “grassroots democracy” amendments.

Note 4 — 8th Schedule Language Count: 14 → 15 → 18 → 22

India currently has 22 official languages in the Eighth Schedule. Original Constitution (1950) had 14. 21st Amendment (1967) added Sindhi → 15. 71st Amendment (1992) added Konkani, Manipuri, Nepali → 18. 92nd Amendment (2003) added Bodo, Dogri, Maithili, Santhali → 22. No language has been added since 2003.

Note 5 — 106th Amendment (2023): Women’s Reservation — Not Yet Active

The 106th Amendment (2023), also called the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, provides 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies. However, it comes into force only after the next delimitation exercise — which itself requires a fresh Census. Since the Census has been delayed, this reservation has not yet been implemented as of 2026 — a top exam trap.

🧠 Mnemonic — Key Amendments by Number

“1 Land, 42 Mini, 44 Restore, 52 Defect, 61 Vote, 73 Panch, 86 School, 101 GST”
→ 1st = Land reforms & 9th Schedule | 42nd = Mini Constitution | 44th = Restore rights | 52nd = Anti-defection | 61st = Voting age 18 | 73rd = Panchayati Raj | 86th = RTE/Art.21A | 101st = GST

🧠 Mnemonic — 8th Schedule Language Progression

“14 → +1 = 15 → +3 = 18 → +4 = 22”
→ Original 14 | +Sindhi (21st, 1967) = 15 | +Konkani/Manipuri/Nepali (71st, 1992) = 18 | +Bodo/Dogri/Maithili/Santhali (92nd, 2003) = 22

🃏 Flashcards

Flashcards \u2014 Constitutional Amendments

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Card 1 of 5

🧩 Practice Quiz

Constitutional Amendments \u2014 MCQ Quiz

5 questions · Answer all · Check your score

Question 1 of 5
Which Constitutional Amendment is known as the “Mini Constitution” and why?
A. 44th Amendment \u2014 it reversed the Emergency changes
B. 42nd Amendment \u2014 it made the most sweeping changes in one amendment
C. 86th Amendment \u2014 it added Fundamental Rights for children
D. 52nd Amendment \u2014 it introduced the anti-defection law
\u2705 Explanation

The 42nd Amendment (1976), passed during the Emergency under Indira Gandhi, is called the \u201cMini Constitution\u201d because it made the largest single-amendment changes \u2014 adding \u201cSocialist,\u201d \u201cSecular,\u201d and \u201cIntegrity\u201d to the Preamble, inserting Fundamental Duties, and curtailing judicial review, among many others.

Question 2 of 5
Which amendment reduced the voting age in India from 21 to 18 years?
A. 52nd Amendment, 1985
B. 44th Amendment, 1978
C. 73rd Amendment, 1992
D. 61st Amendment, 1989
\u2705 Explanation

The 61st Constitutional Amendment (1989), passed during Rajiv Gandhi\u2019s government, reduced the voting age from 21 to 18 years. This significantly increased the electorate and gave youth a direct voice in Indian democracy.

Question 3 of 5
Which two amendments together gave constitutional status to Panchayati Raj and Urban Local Bodies?
A. 42nd and 44th Amendments
B. 73rd and 74th Amendments
C. 86th and 87th Amendments
D. 52nd and 61st Amendments
\u2705 Explanation

The 73rd Amendment (1992) gave constitutional status to Panchayati Raj institutions (rural) and added the 11th Schedule with 29 subjects. The 74th Amendment (1992) did the same for Urban Local Bodies (municipalities) and added the 12th Schedule with 18 subjects. Both are called \u201cgrassroots democracy\u201d amendments.

Question 4 of 5
How many languages are currently listed in the Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution?
A. 14
B. 18
C. 20
D. 22
\u2705 Explanation

The Eighth Schedule currently lists 22 official languages. The original Constitution had 14. Sindhi was added in 1967 (21st Amendment), Konkani, Manipuri and Nepali in 1992 (71st Amendment), and Bodo, Dogri, Maithili and Santhali in 2003 (92nd Amendment). No language has been added since 2003.

Question 5 of 5
The 106th Constitutional Amendment (2023) provides for women’s reservation in Lok Sabha and State Assemblies. When does it come into effect?
A. Immediately from 2024 elections
B. From the 2029 general elections
C. Only after the next delimitation exercise following a Census
D. After ratification by at least half the State Assemblies
\u2705 Explanation

The 106th Amendment (Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam), providing 33% reservation for women, comes into effect only after the next delimitation exercise \u2014 which itself requires a fresh Census. Since the Census has been delayed, the reservation has not yet been implemented as of 2026.

\u2705 Key Takeaways

Remember These for Your Exam
1
42nd Amendment (1976) = “Mini Constitution”; added “Socialist,” “Secular,” “Integrity” to Preamble; added Fundamental Duties. 44th Amendment (1978) = reversed Emergency changes; made Right to Property a legal right only (Art. 300A).
2
73rd Amendment (1992) = Panchayati Raj + 11th Schedule (29 subjects). 74th Amendment (1992) = Municipalities + 12th Schedule (18 subjects). Called “grassroots democracy” amendments — both passed same year under Narasimha Rao.
3
8th Schedule has 22 languages (not 14, not 18). Progression: 14 (original) → +Sindhi = 15 (21st, 1967) → +3 = 18 (71st, 1992) → +4 = 22 (92nd, 2003). No additions since 2003.
4
61st Amendment (1989) = voting age from 21 to 18. 52nd Amendment (1985) = anti-defection law (10th Schedule). 86th Amendment (2002) = Right to Education (Art. 21A) for children 6–14.
5
101st Amendment (2016) = GST introduced; Articles 246A, 269A, 279A; GST Council. 103rd Amendment (2019) = 10% EWS reservation. 106th Amendment (2023) = 33% women’s reservation — but not yet active (needs delimitation + Census).
6
Mnemonic for key amendments: “1 Land, 42 Mini, 44 Restore, 52 Defect, 61 Vote, 73 Panch, 86 School, 101 GST” — covers the 8 most-tested amendments in one line.

\u2753 Frequently Asked Questions

FAQs \u2014 Constitutional Amendments of India
How many times has the Indian Constitution been amended?

The Indian Constitution has been amended 106 times as of 2024. The most recent amendment is the 106th Amendment (2023), which provides for 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies. India\u2019s Constitution is one of the most frequently amended constitutions in the world, reflecting the changing social, economic, and political needs of the country since its adoption in 1950.

What is the difference between the 42nd and 44th Constitutional Amendments?

The 42nd Amendment (1976), passed during the Emergency under Indira Gandhi, is called the \u201cMini Constitution\u201d \u2014 it added \u201cSocialist,\u201d \u201cSecular,\u201d and \u201cIntegrity\u201d to the Preamble, inserted Fundamental Duties, and curtailed judicial review. The 44th Amendment (1978), passed by the Janata Party under Morarji Desai, reversed many of these changes \u2014 restoring press freedom, replacing \u201cinternal disturbance\u201d with \u201carmed rebellion\u201d as grounds for Emergency, and demoting the right to property from a Fundamental Right to a legal right under Article 300A.

Which constitutional amendments are most important for UPSC and SSC exams?

The most exam-important amendments are: 1st (land reforms, 9th Schedule), 42nd (Mini Constitution, Preamble, Fundamental Duties), 44th (post-Emergency restoration, property right), 52nd (anti-defection, 10th Schedule), 61st (voting age 18), 73rd and 74th (Panchayati Raj and municipalities), 86th (Right to Education, Article 21A), 92nd (22 languages in 8th Schedule), 101st (GST), 103rd (EWS 10% reservation), and 106th (women\u2019s 33% reservation). These 12 amendments cover the vast majority of polity questions in competitive exams.

What is the Women’s Reservation Act and has it been implemented?

The Women\u2019s Reservation Act, formally called the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, was passed as the 106th Constitutional Amendment in September 2023. It provides 33% reservation for women in the Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies. However, it does not come into effect immediately \u2014 it is linked to the next delimitation exercise, which itself requires a fresh Census. Since the Census has been delayed beyond 2021, the reservation had not yet been implemented as of 2026, making this a frequently tested current affairs trap in Banking and SSC exams.

Relevant For
UPSC Prelims UPSC Mains GS-II SSC CGL Banking GA State PSC Railways RRB

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