📰 NATIONAL

MTP Act Amendment for Minors: Supreme Court 2026

SC calls for MTP Act amendment to remove time limits for rape of minors (Apr–May 2026). Complete guide: 1971 Act, 2021 Amendment, 20/24-week limits, POCSO tension for UPSC.

⏱️ 17 min read
📊 3,253 words
📅 May 2026
SSC Banking Railways UPSC TRENDING

“No court can compel any woman — especially a minor — to continue an unwanted pregnancy against her will.” — Supreme Court of India, April 2026

The Supreme Court of India, in observations made between 30 April and 4 May 2026, called on the Union government to consider amending the Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act, 1971 to address a structural gap: the absence of a statutory pathway for terminating pregnancies among minors detected beyond the current upper gestational limits. A bench of Chief Justice Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi specifically asked the government to examine removing the statutory time limit for pregnancies resulting from the rape of minors.

These observations arose from a specific April 2026 case involving a 15-year-old girl in Delhi — anonymised as ‘S’ — whose pregnancy of approximately 27–28 weeks was discovered only in early April 2026. The Supreme Court allowed the termination on 24 April 2026, directing the procedure at AIIMS Delhi, overturning the Delhi High Court’s refusal. The case has reignited a wider debate about whether the MTP Act’s gestation-based structure adequately protects minors and rape survivors who discover pregnancies late.

1971 MTP Act Enacted
24 Weeks Current Limit (Special Categories)
16 Million Annual Abortions in India
77% MMR Decline Since 1990
📊 Quick Reference
Act MTP Act, 1971 (amended 2021)
SC Bench CJI Surya Kant + Justice Joymalya Bagchi
SC Observation Date 30 April – 4 May 2026
Authored By Sripati Chandrasekhar (Health Minister, 1971)
Based On Shantilal Shah Committee (1964)
Constitutional Basis Article 21 — Right to Life & Personal Liberty

📜 Origin and Legislative History of the MTP Act

Prior to 1971, abortion in India was a criminal offence under Sections 312 to 316 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, which treated intentional causing of miscarriage as punishable — with limited exceptions only to save the mother’s life. The law was rooted in colonial-era morality rather than public health.

The shift began in 1964, when the Ministry of Health constituted the Shantilal Shah Committee to examine the socio-cultural, legal, and medical aspects of abortion. Its 1966 report found unsafe abortions were the third leading cause of maternal mortality in India, with approximately 3.9 million induced abortions occurring annually — the vast majority in unsafe conditions among a population of 500 million.

Based on these recommendations, the MTP Act was passed in August 1971 and came into force in April 1972. It was authored by Sripati Chandrasekhar, then Union Health Minister. The term “Medical Termination of Pregnancy” was deliberately chosen over “abortion” to reduce resistance from socio-religious groups. The Act was a landmark decriminalisation measure — placing the procedure under medical regulation rather than criminal prohibition.

1860
IPC Sections 312–316 criminalise abortion in colonial India; exception only to save mother’s life
1964
Shantilal Shah Committee constituted to study abortion law reform
1966
Committee report recommends legalisation; unsafe abortions cited as third leading cause of maternal mortality
Aug 1971
MTP Act passed by Parliament; authored by Health Minister Sripati Chandrasekhar
Apr 1972
MTP Act comes into force; upper limit 20 weeks; abortion decriminalised under medical conditions
Mar 2021
MTP (Amendment) Act 2021 enacted; limit raised to 24 weeks for special categories; contraceptive failure ground extended to unmarried women
2022
SC in X v. Health & Family Welfare Dept confirms 24-week limit applies equally to married, unmarried, and live-in women under Article 21
24 Apr 2026
SC allows termination of 15-year-old’s 28-week pregnancy at AIIMS Delhi; overturns Delhi HC refusal
30 Apr 2026
SC calls on Centre to consider removing statutory time limit for terminations in cases of rape of minors

✨ Key Provisions: 1971 Act and the 2021 Amendment

The original 1971 Act permitted termination up to 20 weeks — one registered medical practitioner (RMP) opinion up to 12 weeks, two RMPs between 12 and 20 weeks. Grounds included risk to physical or mental health of the woman, fetal abnormalities, pregnancy resulting from rape, and contraceptive failure (for married women only).

The MTP (Amendment) Act, 2021 was the most significant overhaul since enactment. Key changes:

  • Upper Limit Raised to 24 Weeks for special categories — rape/sexual assault survivors, victims of incest, minors, differently-abled women, those with mental illness, women whose marital status changes during pregnancy (widowhood, divorce), and women in humanitarian/disaster settings. The general limit remains 20 weeks.
  • Opinion Requirements: 1 RMP up to 20 weeks; 2 RMPs between 20–24 weeks; state-level Medical Board for fetal abnormalities beyond 24 weeks.
  • Contraceptive Failure Ground extended to unmarried women (previously only married couples).
  • Confidentiality — identity of the woman mandatorily protected; a new explicit statutory protection.
  • Medical Boards — every State/UT required to constitute a Medical Board for fetal anomaly cases beyond 24 weeks.
Aspect Original MTP Act (1971) After Amendment (2021)
General Upper Limit 20 weeks 20 weeks (unchanged)
Special Category Limit 20 weeks 24 weeks (minors, rape survivors, etc.)
Fetal Abnormality Cases Up to 20 weeks Beyond 24 weeks — Medical Board decision
Medical Opinion (up to 12 wks) 1 RMP 1 RMP (unchanged)
Medical Opinion (12–20 wks) 2 RMPs 2 RMPs (unchanged)
Contraceptive Failure Ground Married women only All women (incl. unmarried)
Confidentiality Not explicitly stated Mandatory statutory protection
🎯 Simple Explanation

Think of the MTP Act as a set of traffic signals for abortion access. Before 2021: a green light up to 20 weeks for most, red after. After 2021: for vulnerable categories (minors, rape survivors), the green light extends to 24 weeks. But if a minor’s pregnancy is discovered at 28 weeks, there is still no green light in the statute — courts have to step in each time. The Supreme Court is now asking Parliament to install a permanent green light for these cases, removing the gestation limit entirely when a minor is a rape victim.

⚖️ The April–May 2026 Cases: Filling the Doctrinal Vacuum

The April 2026 case (S v. Union of India, SLP(C) 14454/2026) involved a 15-year-old girl in Delhi whose pregnancy of approximately 27–28 weeks — arising from a relationship with a 17-year-old boy — was discovered only in early April 2026. She had exhibited severe psychological distress including two suicide attempts upon discovery. The Delhi High Court dismissed her petition on 21 April 2026; the AIIMS Medical Board’s report found the procedure “not advisable.”

The Supreme Court on 24 April 2026 overturned the Delhi HC, holding:

  • Constitutional courts under Articles 226 and 32 must evaluate such requests from the perspective of the woman — a lack of statutory remedy cannot preclude a constitutional remedy
  • No court can compel a woman — especially a minor — to continue an unwanted pregnancy; this is a component of bodily autonomy under Article 21
  • The availability of adoption cannot be used to compel childbirth — what is relevant is the woman’s choice, not the outcome for the child
  • Forcing a minor to carry an unwanted pregnancy, particularly one involving trauma and suicide attempts, would harm both the minor and the child to be born
  • Denial would push minors toward unsafe and illegal abortion methods, undermining the MTP Act’s protective purpose

The procedure was carried out at AIIMS Delhi with the minor’s mother providing guardian consent. Contempt proceedings against the Centre and AIIMS for initial delay were dropped on 4 May 2026 after compliance.

⚠️ Exam Trap

Don’t confuse the two limits:
20 weeks = general upper limit (all women, standard cases)
24 weeks = special categories (minors, rape survivors, differently-abled, etc.) — added by the 2021 Amendment
Beyond 24 weeks = only for fetal abnormalities via Medical Board; or via constitutional court order (Articles 226/32) in exceptional cases
The 2021 Amendment did NOT remove the limit for minors — it only raised it to 24 weeks. The SC is now asking for the limit to be removed entirely for rape of minors.

📌 The Call for Legislative Reform

On 30 April 2026, the bench of CJI Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi addressed the structural legal problem beyond the immediate case. The Court observed that in cases of pregnancies among minors — particularly those resulting from rape — detected beyond 24 weeks, the MTP Act provides no statutory pathway for termination. Courts are forced to exercise constitutional jurisdiction case-by-case, creating inconsistency, delay, and uncertainty.

The bench asked the Union government to consider removing the statutory time limit entirely for terminations of pregnancies resulting from rape of minors. The Court noted that rigid gestational timelines are structurally misaligned with the reality of how such pregnancies are discovered — delayed by:

  • A minor’s lack of awareness of pregnancy symptoms
  • Suppression of reporting due to shame, fear, or family pressure
  • Absence of formal sex education
  • Lack of direct access to healthcare without adult supervision
  • Psychological trauma compounding delays in seeking help
💭 Think About This

The POCSO Act (2012) mandates that any medical practitioner who becomes aware of a sexual offence against a minor must report it to the police (Section 19). This mandatory reporting requirement has — paradoxically — deterred minors and their families from seeking abortions at registered facilities, for fear of police involvement. The Supreme Court’s push for MTP reform must therefore grapple with this POCSO tension: protecting minors from sexual offences and protecting their access to safe abortion pull in opposite legislative directions. How should Parliament reconcile these two protective statutes?

🌍 Scale of the Problem: Data on Unsafe Abortions

India annually records approximately 48.5 million pregnancies, of which 44% (~21 million) are unintended. Of these, approximately 16 million end in abortion. An estimated 800,000 unsafe abortions occur each year. Unsafe abortion remains the third largest cause of maternal mortality, accounting for 8–10% of all maternal deaths — roughly 10 women dying per day from abortion-related causes.

Since the MTP Act’s enactment, India’s Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR) has declined by 77% — from 556 per 100,000 live births in 1990 to 130 per 100,000 in 2016 — outpacing the global average decline of 43% over the same period. Despite this, 56% of all abortions in India are still estimated to be unsafe. Rural women, those from SC/ST communities, and women in the 15–19 age group face disproportionately higher abortion-related death risks.

📖 Constitutional Dimensions: Article 21 and Reproductive Autonomy

The constitutional architecture underpinning the MTP Act is rooted in Article 21 of the Constitution — the right to life and personal liberty. The Supreme Court has interpreted Article 21 to include the rights to privacy, dignity, and bodily autonomy. Reproductive decision-making — including the decision not to continue a pregnancy — has been explicitly recognised as a component of these rights.

Key constitutional provisions at play in MTP cases:

  • Article 21 — Right to life, dignity, bodily autonomy, reproductive decision-making
  • Article 32 — Right to move the Supreme Court for enforcement of fundamental rights
  • Article 226 — High Court’s writ jurisdiction; constitutional courts can permit terminations beyond statutory limits

The POCSO Act, 2012 intersects critically: Section 19 mandates mandatory reporting to police of any sexual offence against a minor — including by medical practitioners. This has in practice deterred minors from seeking abortions at registered facilities, fearing police involvement. The tension between POCSO’s mandatory reporting and the MTP Act’s confidentiality is an ongoing concern the Supreme Court and health rights advocates have flagged.

✓ Quick Recall

MTP Act Author: Sripati Chandrasekhar (Health Minister, 1971)
Committee: Shantilal Shah Committee (1964) → Report 1966
Pre-MTP law: IPC Sections 312–316 (1860)
2022 SC Judgment: X v. Health & Family Welfare Dept — 24-week limit applies to ALL women regardless of marital status (Article 21)
2026 Case: S v. Union of India — 15-year-old, 28-week pregnancy, AIIMS Delhi

🧠 Memory Tricks
The “20-24-Board” Rule:
General cases = 20 weeks. Special categories (minors, rape survivors) = 24 weeks (2021 Amendment added this). Fetal abnormalities beyond 24 = Medical Board decides. Remember the ladder: 20 → 24 → Board.
RMP Opinion Rule — “1 up to 20, 2 up to 24”:
Up to 20 weeks = 1 Registered Medical Practitioner opinion needed. Between 20 and 24 weeks = 2 RMPs needed. Beyond 24 = Medical Board for fetal anomalies. “One-twenty, Two-twenty-four.”
MTP History Hook — “Shah found, Chandrasekhar fixed”:
Shantilal Shah Committee (1964) found the problem (3.9 mn unsafe abortions). Sripati Chandrasekhar (Health Minister) fixed it by drafting the MTP Act, 1971. Shah studied, Chandrasekhar solved.
MMR Decline — “77 vs 43”:
India’s MMR fell 77% (1990–2016); global average fell 43%. India’s decline nearly doubled the world average — a key public health success story linked to MTP Act. 77 > 43: India beat the global trend.
📚 Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip • Master key facts

Question
What key change did the MTP (Amendment) Act, 2021 introduce for special categories of women?
Click to flip
Answer
Raised the upper gestational limit from 20 to 24 weeks for special categories — minors, rape/sexual assault survivors, differently-abled women, victims of incest, and women with changed marital status during pregnancy.
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

⚖️
The MTP Act uses gestational time limits as the primary regulatory mechanism — but these limits assume timely discovery of pregnancy. Is a time-based framework fundamentally flawed for cases involving minors and rape survivors?
Consider: Social and psychological barriers to timely discovery among minors; rural access gaps; POCSO’s mandatory reporting chilling effect; comparison with abortion law frameworks in other countries (UK, USA, South Africa); whether a “cause-based” rather than “time-based” framework would better serve justice.
🌿
The 2021 MTP Amendment extended contraceptive failure grounds to unmarried women — yet 56% of India’s abortions remain unsafe. What does this gap between legal reform and ground reality reveal about the limits of legislation as a public health tool?
Think about: Awareness of legal rights among rural and marginalised women; availability of registered medical practitioners in Tier 2/3 cities and villages; Medical Board capacity across states; the role of ASHA workers and frontline health infrastructure; stigma as a structural barrier to accessing legal abortion even where it is permitted.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions • Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
The MTP Act, 1971 was based on the recommendations of which committee, and who authored the Act?
A) Mudholkar Committee; authored by Indira Gandhi
B) Bhore Committee; authored by C D Deshmukh
C) Shantilal Shah Committee; authored by Sripati Chandrasekhar
D) Datta Committee; authored by Y B Chavan
Explanation

The MTP Act was based on the Shantilal Shah Committee recommendations (1964 committee, 1966 report) and authored by Health Minister Sripati Chandrasekhar. It was passed in August 1971 and came into force in April 1972.

Question 2 of 5
What upper gestational limit does the MTP (Amendment) Act, 2021 set for special categories such as minors and rape survivors?
A) 20 weeks (unchanged from 1971)
B) 24 weeks
C) 28 weeks
D) 30 weeks
Explanation

The 2021 Amendment raised the upper limit to 24 weeks for special categories — minors, rape survivors, differently-abled women, incest victims, and those with changed marital status. The general upper limit remains 20 weeks.

Question 3 of 5
How many Registered Medical Practitioners (RMPs) must give their opinion for a termination between 20 and 24 weeks under the MTP Act?
A) No medical opinion needed
B) One RMP
C) Three RMPs + court order
D) Two RMPs
Explanation

Between 20 and 24 weeks, the opinion of two Registered Medical Practitioners (RMPs) is required. Up to 20 weeks, only one RMP opinion is needed. Beyond 24 weeks, a Medical Board decision is required for fetal abnormality cases.

Question 4 of 5
Which group of women was newly included in the contraceptive failure ground under the MTP (Amendment) Act, 2021?
A) Unmarried women
B) Widows only
C) Minors aged below 14
D) Women above 40 years of age
Explanation

The 2021 Amendment extended the contraceptive failure ground to unmarried women. Previously, this ground was available only to married couples. The change was in response to evolving judicial interpretation of reproductive rights under Article 21.

Question 5 of 5
Which section of the POCSO Act, 2012 creates a tension with the MTP Act’s confidentiality framework in cases involving minors?
A) Section 4
B) Section 7
C) Section 19
D) Section 32
Explanation

POCSO Act Section 19 mandates mandatory reporting of sexual offences against minors by medical practitioners to the police. This has deterred minors from seeking abortions at registered facilities, creating tension with the MTP Act’s confidentiality framework.

0/5
Loading…
📌 Key Takeaways for Exams
1
SC Observation (Apr–May 2026): CJI Surya Kant + Justice Joymalya Bagchi asked Centre to consider removing statutory time limit for terminations in cases of rape of minors. SC allowed 15-year-old’s 28-week termination at AIIMS Delhi on 24 Apr 2026 (Article 21 + Articles 226/32).
2
MTP Act History: Based on Shantilal Shah Committee (1964); authored by Sripati Chandrasekhar; passed August 1971; in force April 1972. Pre-1971: IPC Sections 312–316 criminalised abortion. Unsafe abortions were the third leading cause of maternal mortality.
3
MTP Act Limits: General = 20 weeks (1 RMP). Special categories (minors, rape survivors, differently-abled) = 24 weeks (2 RMPs) — added by 2021 Amendment. Fetal abnormalities beyond 24 weeks = Medical Board decision.
4
2021 Amendment Key Change: Raised limit to 24 weeks for special categories; extended contraceptive failure ground to unmarried women; added mandatory confidentiality protection; required State/UT Medical Boards for fetal anomaly cases.
5
Data: ~16 million abortions annually; ~800,000 unsafe abortions; unsafe abortion = 8–10% of maternal deaths (~10 deaths/day). India’s MMR fell 77% (1990–2016) — vs. global 43%. 56% of India’s abortions still estimated to be unsafe.
6
POCSO–MTP Tension: POCSO Section 19 mandates mandatory police reporting by doctors when minors are sexual offence victims — this deters minors from seeking safe abortions, conflicting with MTP Act’s confidentiality provision. 2022 SC judgment (X v. Health & Family Welfare Dept) confirmed 24-week limit for all women under Article 21.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is the current legal framework for abortion in India under the MTP Act?
Under the MTP Act (as amended in 2021): up to 20 weeks, termination is available to any woman with the opinion of one registered medical practitioner. Between 20 and 24 weeks, two RMP opinions are needed, and this extended limit applies only to special categories — minors, rape/sexual assault survivors, differently-abled women, incest victims, women with changed marital status during pregnancy, and women in humanitarian settings. Beyond 24 weeks, termination is only permitted for fetal abnormalities, decided by a state-level Medical Board. Constitutional courts can also grant permission beyond statutory limits in exceptional cases under Articles 226 and 32.
Why did the Supreme Court allow a termination beyond 24 weeks in the April 2026 case?
The MTP Act provided no statutory pathway for the 15-year-old’s 28-week pregnancy. The Supreme Court invoked its constitutional writ jurisdiction under Articles 226 and 32, holding that a lack of statutory remedy does not preclude a constitutional remedy. The Court held that Article 21’s right to bodily autonomy and reproductive decision-making meant no court could compel a minor — especially one who had attempted suicide twice — to continue an unwanted pregnancy. The unavailability of a legal option cannot push vulnerable women toward unsafe abortion methods.
What significant change did the 2021 MTP Amendment make regarding unmarried women?
The 2021 Amendment extended the contraceptive failure ground — which allows termination when an approved contraceptive method fails — to unmarried women and their partners. Previously, this ground was available only to married couples. The change aligned the statute with the Supreme Court’s evolving interpretation of reproductive autonomy under Article 21. The 2022 SC judgment in X v. Health & Family Welfare Department further confirmed that the 24-week limit and contraceptive failure ground apply equally to all women regardless of marital status.
How does the POCSO Act conflict with the MTP Act in cases involving minors?
Section 19 of the POCSO Act, 2012 mandates that any person — including a registered medical practitioner — who has knowledge of a sexual offence committed against a minor must report it to the police. This means that when a minor seeks an abortion at a registered facility, the doctor is legally required to report the sexual act to the police, even if the minor or her family do not want police involvement. This mandatory reporting requirement has deterred many minors and their families from approaching registered facilities for safe abortions, paradoxically pushing them toward unsafe procedures — directly undermining the MTP Act’s protective purpose.
Why is unsafe abortion still a major public health problem in India despite the MTP Act?
Despite over five decades of legal abortion, approximately 56% of India’s abortions are estimated to remain unsafe. Key reasons include: lack of awareness of legal rights, especially in rural and marginalised communities; shortage of registered medical practitioners willing to perform abortions in smaller towns and villages; slow constitution of Medical Boards across states (required for fetal anomaly cases); social stigma that deters women from accessing healthcare; and the POCSO mandatory reporting requirement that deters minors. The legal framework has improved significantly — the access gap on the ground remains India’s primary challenge.
🏷️ Exam Relevance
UPSC Prelims UPSC Mains (GS-II) SSC CGL SSC CHSL Banking PO State PSC CAT/MBA GDPI Health & Social Justice
Prashant Chadha

Connect with Prashant

Founder, WordPandit & The Learning Inc Network

With 18+ years of teaching experience and a passion for making learning accessible, I'm here to help you navigate competitive exams. Whether it's UPSC, SSC, Banking, or CAT prep—let's connect and solve it together.

18+
Years Teaching
50,000+
Students Guided
8
Learning Platforms

Stuck on a Topic? Let's Solve It Together! 💡

Don't let doubts slow you down. Whether it's current affairs, static GK, or exam strategy—I'm here to help. Choose your preferred way to connect and let's tackle your challenges head-on.

🌟 Explore The Learning Inc. Network

8 specialized platforms. 1 mission: Your success in competitive exams.

Trusted by 50,000+ learners across India
GK365 - Footer