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SC Allows Abortion at 31 Weeks for Minor: Article 21 Overrides MTP Act

Supreme Court allows termination of 31-week pregnancy of 15-year-old minor (April 2026). Full UPSC guide — MTP Act limits, Rule 3B, Article 21, landmark cases & quiz.

⏱️ 17 min read
📊 3,279 words
📅 April 2026
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“No court in India can compel a woman — especially a minor — to carry a pregnancy to full term against her will.” — Supreme Court of India, 24 April 2026

On 24 April 2026, the Supreme Court of India allowed a 15-year-old girl to medically terminate her pregnancy, which had crossed 31 weeks, citing that reproductive autonomy is a fundamental right under Article 21 of the Constitution. The bench of Justice B.V. Nagarathna and Justice Ujjal Bhuyan held that compelling a minor to continue an unwanted pregnancy is a direct violation of her right to life, dignity, privacy, and personal liberty.

The termination was directed to be carried out at AIIMS, New Delhi. The case arose from a consensual relationship between two minors; the girl had unequivocally expressed her unwillingness to continue the pregnancy and had reportedly made two attempts at suicide. The Court firmly rejected the government’s argument that she could deliver and place the child for adoption — holding that adoption does not mitigate the compulsory gestational experience imposed on the woman.

31 Weeks — Pregnancy Terminated
24 Weeks — MTP Act Maximum
2021 MTP Amendment Act
Art. 21 Constitutional Basis
📊 Quick Reference
Ruling Date 24 April 2026
Bench Justice B.V. Nagarathna + Justice Ujjal Bhuyan
Petitioner 15-year-old minor; 31-week pregnancy
Termination Venue AIIMS, New Delhi
Primary Legal Basis Article 21 (Right to Life & Personal Liberty)
Key Prior Precedent Suchita Srivastava v. Chandigarh (2009)

⚖️ MTP Act: Legal Framework & Gestational Limits

India’s legal framework for abortion is governed by the Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act, 1971, enacted as an exception to criminal provisions on miscarriage under the then-IPC, 1860 (now re-enacted under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023). Abortion in India remains criminalised outside MTP Act compliance — it is a legal exception, not a rights-based entitlement.

The MTP (Amendment) Act, 2021, which came into force on 25 March 2021, significantly expanded access:

  • Up to 20 weeks: Termination on the opinion of one Registered Medical Practitioner (RMP)
  • 20–24 weeks: Opinion of two RMPs required; applies to special categories under Rule 3B (see box below)
  • Beyond 24 weeks: Permitted only in cases of substantial foetal abnormalities, on recommendation of a state-level Medical Board (must decide within 3 days)
  • Medical abortion (mifepristone + misoprostol): Available up to 9 weeks of gestation

The 2021 Amendment also removed the “married women only” restriction for contraceptive failure grounds, extending access to unmarried women. However, it did not decriminalise abortion or create an unconditional right to terminate. For pregnancies beyond 24 weeks without foetal abnormalities — including rape or severe mental distress — the only legal recourse remains a writ petition before a constitutional court (HC under Article 226 or SC under Article 32).

✓ Quick Recall — Rule 3B Special Categories (24-Week Limit)

Women who can seek termination up to 24 weeks (with 2 RMPs): Minors • Rape/incest survivors • Differently-abled women • Women with change in marital status (divorce/widowhood) • Women in disaster/humanitarian settings • Women with foetal malformation risk. All others are limited to 20 weeks.

Gestational Period Requirement Who Is Eligible
Up to 9 weeks Medical abortion (mifepristone + misoprostol) All eligible women
Up to 20 weeks Opinion of 1 RMP All eligible women
20–24 weeks Opinion of 2 RMPs Special categories only (Rule 3B) — minors, rape survivors, etc.
Beyond 24 weeks State Medical Board recommendation (within 3 days) Substantial foetal abnormality cases only
Beyond 24 weeks (no foetal abnormality) Writ petition to Constitutional Court (HC/SC) Exceptional cases — judicial discretion under Article 21
🎯 Simple Explanation

Think of MTP Act limits like traffic signals: up to 20 weeks = green (1 doctor enough); 20–24 weeks = yellow (2 doctors, only special cases); after 24 weeks = red (Medical Board, only if baby has abnormalities). But the Supreme Court acts like an emergency override — it can allow the “red” cases when someone’s fundamental rights are directly at stake, especially for minors.

📌 What the Court Held: Key Legal Reasoning

1. Reproductive autonomy as Article 21 right: The Court affirmed that a woman’s right to decide about her own pregnancy is an essential component of personal liberty under Article 21 — first articulated in Suchita Srivastava v. Chandigarh Administration (2009).

2. Primacy of the pregnant woman’s choice: Where she has “clearly expressed her unwillingness to continue the pregnancy,” no court or state authority can override that choice. What matters is whether she intends to give birth — not whether the child could survive or be placed for adoption.

3. Rejection of the adoption alternative: The government argued the minor could deliver and the child be placed for adoption. The Court explicitly rejected this — adoption addresses parenthood but does not mitigate the compulsory gestational experience imposed on the woman. Compelling childbirth to facilitate adoption is not a constitutionally permissible substitute for bodily autonomy.

4. Constitutional courts override statutory limits: Courts exercising writ jurisdiction (Articles 32 and 226) must prioritise the wishes and welfare of the pregnant woman over MTP Act procedural limitations, especially when continuation would cause severe mental and physical trauma — and especially for minors.

5. Psychological harm as constitutional injury: The minor’s documented distress — including two suicide attempts — was treated not merely as a medical factor but as a constitutional one. Forcing her to continue would directly violate her right to live with dignity and cause irreversible harm to her education, mental health, and social development.

💭 Think About This

The Court said: “What is relevant is whether the pregnant woman intends to give birth — not whether the child could survive or be placed for adoption.” This draws a sharp line: the state’s interest in potential life does not override the woman’s right to bodily autonomy. But where does this leave cases where the foetus is viable at 31 weeks? The Court navigated this by treating the minor’s suicidal distress as a constitutional emergency — leaving foetal viability as a factor only in non-crisis cases.

📖 Statutory vs. Constitutional Framework: A Persistent Tension

The 2026 ruling continues a pattern of courts going beyond the 24-week statutory limit. The tension exists because the MTP Act does not give constitutional courts an explicit pathway to allow terminations beyond 24 weeks except for foetal abnormalities. Courts have consistently treated such petitions as matters of constitutional jurisdiction under Article 21 — making each ruling fact-specific and dependent on judicial discretion.

Three landmark rulings form the doctrinal arc:

  • Suchita Srivastava v. Chandigarh Administration (2009): Reproductive choices are integral to personal liberty under Article 21. First SC articulation of reproductive autonomy as a fundamental right.
  • X v. Principal Secretary, NCT of Delhi (2022): Unmarried women have the same right to abortion as married women under Rule 3B. Excluding them violates both Article 14 (equality) and Article 21 (liberty). Decision to terminate vests solely with the pregnant person — marking a doctrinal shift to a rights-based interpretation.
  • X v. Union of India (October 2023): The Court denied termination of a 26-week pregnancy where the Medical Board found the foetus viable — introducing foetal viability as a relevant consideration at late gestation. This created tension with the 2022 ruling.

The April 2026 ruling — 31-week pregnancy, minor, suicidal ideation — takes the position that constitutional courts must prioritise the pregnant woman’s welfare and clearly expressed choice in such exceptional circumstances, and that the government’s statutory argument cannot override Article 21 rights.

1971
MTP Act enacted — abortion legalised as an exception to IPC criminal provisions; limit set at 20 weeks
2009
Suchita Srivastava v. Chandigarh Administration — SC holds reproductive choices are integral to personal liberty under Article 21
25 March 2021
MTP Amendment Act 2021 comes into force — 24-week limit for special categories; Medical Board for foetal abnormalities; medical abortion up to 9 weeks; unmarried women included
2022
X v. Principal Secretary, NCT Delhi — unmarried women get equal abortion rights; decision vests solely with pregnant person (authored by then-CJI D.Y. Chandrachud)
October 2023
X v. Union of India — SC denies termination of 26-week pregnancy on viability grounds; foetal viability introduced as a consideration at late gestation
24 April 2026
SC allows termination of 31-week pregnancy of 15-year-old minor (Justice Nagarathna + Justice Bhuyan); adoption rejected as alternative; Article 21 overrides statutory MTP limit

⚖️ Related Constitutional Provisions & Statutes

Article 21 — Right to life and personal liberty: The primary anchor for reproductive rights, encompassing dignity, privacy, and bodily integrity. The K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) nine-judge bench — which declared privacy a fundamental right — deepened the constitutional basis for reproductive autonomy.

Article 14 — Equality before law: Invoked to strike down gender-based discrimination in abortion access, notably in extending MTP Act protections to unmarried women in the 2022 ruling.

POCSO Act, 2012 (Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act): Healthcare providers treating pregnant minors are legally obligated to report to police under POCSO — which can create barriers to minors seeking timely abortion care, as mandatory reporting may delay medical intervention.

Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023: Replaced the IPC; re-enacted provisions criminalising miscarriage (Sections 88–90 BNS, corresponding to Sections 312–314 IPC). Abortion remains a criminal act outside MTP Act compliance.

⚠️ Exam Trap

Three things students often confuse: (1) The MTP Act gives a right to abort — WRONG. It creates a legal exception to criminal liability; abortion is not a right under the statute. (2) After 24 weeks, courts can’t intervene — WRONG. Constitutional courts can override MTP limits under Article 21 in exceptional cases. (3) The 2021 Amendment decriminalised abortion — WRONG. Abortion is still criminalised under BNS; the MTP Act only exempts compliant terminations.

🌍 Why This Judgment Matters for Exam Prep

The April 2026 ruling advances India’s abortion jurisprudence in three significant ways:

  • Beyond statutory limits: Constitutional courts can and must intervene beyond the 24-week statutory limit when fundamental rights are at stake, especially for minors.
  • Adoption rejected: Compelling delivery for the purpose of adoption is not a constitutionally valid alternative to reproductive autonomy — a direct answer to a common government argument in such cases.
  • Psychological harm = constitutional harm: Suicidal ideation and severe mental distress are constitutional injuries under Article 21, not merely medical considerations — broadening the circumstances in which courts can act.

The ruling also highlights a structural legislative gap: no clear, non-judicial pathway exists for termination beyond 24 weeks in rape, suicidal distress, or severe mental health cases without foetal abnormality. As long as this gap persists, vulnerable individuals depend on courts — a slow, stigmatising, and inaccessible process for most.

🧠 Memory Tricks
MTP Act Limits — “1-2-Board”:
Up to 20 weeks = 1 RMP. 20–24 weeks = 2 RMPs (special categories). Beyond 24 weeks = Medical Board (foetal abnormality only). 1 → 2 → Board. Then for emergencies beyond this: Constitutional Court.
Rule 3B Special Categories — “MR DIWD”:
Minors • Rape/incest survivors • Differently-abled women • Internally displaced (disaster/humanitarian) • Widows/divorced (change of marital status) • Diagnosis risk (foetal malformation). MR DIWD = eligible for 24-week limit.
Landmark Cases Timeline:
2009 = Suchita Srivastava (reproductive choice = Art. 21). 2017 = Puttaswamy (privacy = fundamental right). 2022 = X v. NCT Delhi (unmarried women included). 2023 = X v. Union of India (viability matters). 2026 = 31-week minor (adoption not an alternative).
📚 Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip • Master key facts

Question
What did the Supreme Court rule on 24 April 2026 regarding abortion rights?
Click to flip
Answer
Bench of Justice Nagarathna + Justice Bhuyan allowed termination of a 15-year-old’s 31-week pregnancy — reproductive autonomy is a fundamental right under Article 21; no court can compel a minor to continue a pregnancy against her will.
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

⚖️
India’s abortion law is a statutory exception to criminal law — not a right. Should Parliament enact a rights-based abortion law, or is judicial intervention under Article 21 a sufficient safeguard for reproductive autonomy?
Consider: the difference between a criminal exception and a positive right; who can afford to petition the Supreme Court vs. access a medical facility; POCSO’s mandatory reporting creating barriers for minors; comparison with global models (US pre-Roe, UK’s Abortion Act 1967, South Africa’s Choice on Termination of Pregnancy Act 1996).
🌍
The Court treated suicidal ideation as a constitutional injury under Article 21. Does extending constitutional rights to mental health crises open a principled pathway, or does it risk making reproductive rights dependent on the severity of demonstrated trauma?
Think about: whether rights should be conditional on proving harm; how requiring proof of psychological distress disadvantages those without access to mental health professionals; the dignity dimension of forcing any woman — regardless of her distress level — to continue an unwanted pregnancy; international human rights standards on bodily autonomy.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions • Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
When did the MTP (Amendment) Act, 2021 come into force, and what was a key change it introduced?
A) 1 January 2021; extended limit to 28 weeks for all women
B) 1 April 2021; decriminalised abortion for all women up to 20 weeks
C) 25 March 2021; allowed unmarried women to terminate up to 20 weeks only
D) 25 March 2021; extended limit to 24 weeks for special categories; included unmarried women
Explanation

The MTP Amendment Act 2021 came into force on 25 March 2021. Key changes included extending the limit to 24 weeks for special categories (Rule 3B), allowing Medical Board approval for foetal abnormalities beyond 24 weeks, permitting medical abortion up to 9 weeks, and removing the “married women only” restriction for contraceptive failure.

Question 2 of 5
Which landmark case first held that reproductive choices are integral to personal liberty under Article 21?
A) K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017)
B) Suchita Srivastava v. Chandigarh Administration (2009)
C) X v. Principal Secretary, NCT Delhi (2022)
D) Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India (2018)
Explanation

Suchita Srivastava v. Chandigarh Administration (2009) was the landmark case where the Supreme Court first held that reproductive choices are integral to personal liberty under Article 21 — the foundation of India’s reproductive autonomy jurisprudence.

Question 3 of 5
Under Rule 3B of MTP Rules 2021, which category of women is eligible for termination up to 24 weeks?
A) All married women regardless of circumstance
B) Women in rural areas only, due to limited healthcare access
C) Minors, rape/incest survivors, differently-abled women, women with change in marital status, and women in disaster settings
D) Women over 35 years of age with high-risk pregnancies
Explanation

Under Rule 3B, special categories eligible for 24-week termination (with 2 RMPs) include: minors, rape/incest survivors, differently-abled women, women with a change in marital status (widowhood/divorce), women in disaster/humanitarian settings, and those with foetal malformation risk. Memory aid: MR DIWD.

Question 4 of 5
How did the Supreme Court respond to the government’s argument that the minor (April 2026 case) could deliver and place the child for adoption?
A) Explicitly rejected it — adoption does not mitigate the compulsory gestational experience; compelling childbirth for adoption violates bodily autonomy
B) Accepted it as a viable alternative but allowed termination due to suicide risk
C) Referred the question to a five-judge constitutional bench
D) Accepted it in principle but noted the minor was too young to consent to adoption
Explanation

The Court explicitly rejected the adoption argument, holding that adoption addresses parenthood but does not mitigate the compulsory gestational experience imposed on the woman. Compelling childbirth to facilitate adoption is not a constitutionally permissible substitute for respecting bodily autonomy.

Question 5 of 5
In the October 2023 X v. Union of India ruling, the Supreme Court introduced which limiting factor for late-term abortions?
A) Financial ability of the pregnant woman to raise the child
B) Whether the pregnancy was a result of marital rape
C) Foetal viability — the Court denied termination of a 26-week viable foetus
D) The religion of the pregnant woman
Explanation

In X v. Union of India (October 2023), the Supreme Court denied termination of a 26-week pregnancy where the Medical Board found the foetus viable — introducing foetal viability as a relevant consideration at late gestation. This created doctrinal tension with the 2022 ruling’s emphasis on reproductive autonomy.

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📌 Key Takeaways for Exams
1
April 2026 Ruling: Bench of Justice B.V. Nagarathna + Justice Ujjal Bhuyan allowed termination of 31-week pregnancy of a 15-year-old minor at AIIMS, New Delhi — on grounds of reproductive autonomy under Article 21.
2
MTP Act Limits (post-2021 Amendment): Up to 20 weeks = 1 RMP. 20–24 weeks = 2 RMPs (special categories: minors, rape survivors, differently-abled, etc.). Beyond 24 weeks = Medical Board (foetal abnormality only). Medical abortion up to 9 weeks.
3
Key Precedent Chain: Suchita Srivastava (2009) → reproductive choice = Art. 21. Puttaswamy (2017) → privacy = fundamental right. X v. NCT Delhi (2022) → unmarried women included. X v. Union of India (2023) → viability is a factor. April 2026 → adoption not an alternative; Article 21 overrides statute.
4
Adoption Rejected: The Court held that compelling childbirth to facilitate adoption is not a constitutionally valid alternative to bodily autonomy — a direct answer to the government’s argument and a significant doctrinal contribution.
5
Abortion status in India: Still criminalised under BNS (Sections 88–90). The MTP Act is a criminal exception, NOT a rights-based entitlement. The 2021 Amendment did NOT decriminalise abortion. For cases beyond 24 weeks without foetal abnormality, writ petition is the only legal route.
6
POCSO Intersection: Healthcare providers treating pregnant minors must report to police under POCSO Act, 2012 — creating potential barriers to timely abortion care for minors. This structural tension between POCSO’s mandatory reporting and MTP Act access remains unresolved.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

How could the Supreme Court allow abortion at 31 weeks when the MTP Act only permits it up to 24 weeks?
The MTP Act is an ordinary statute. When statutory provisions fail to protect fundamental rights, constitutional courts can intervene under their writ jurisdiction — the Supreme Court under Article 32 and High Courts under Article 226. The Court held that Article 21 (right to life with dignity, privacy, and bodily integrity) is a higher law than the MTP Act. When the continuation of pregnancy causes direct, irreversible harm — especially for a minor with documented suicidal ideation — the constitutional right to life and dignity overrides the 24-week statutory limit. Each such intervention is fact-specific and cannot be used as a general licence to circumvent the statute.
Is abortion a “right” in India?
Not in the direct sense. The MTP Act, 1971, is a criminal exception — it decriminalises abortion under specific conditions but does not create a positive right to terminate. Abortion remains criminalised under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (Sections 88–90) outside MTP Act compliance. However, through constitutional jurisprudence — particularly after Suchita Srivastava (2009), Puttaswamy (2017), and X v. NCT Delhi (2022) — reproductive autonomy has been recognised as an intrinsic dimension of Article 21. This means courts can protect it even when statutes fall short, but women cannot exercise it without navigating either the MTP Act or a constitutional court.
What are the “special categories” eligible for 24-week termination under Rule 3B?
Under Rule 3B of the MTP Rules 2021, the following categories can seek termination between 20 and 24 weeks with the opinion of two registered medical practitioners: (1) Minors; (2) Rape or incest survivors; (3) Differently-abled women; (4) Women with a change in marital status during pregnancy (widowhood or divorce); (5) Women in disaster or humanitarian settings; (6) Women with foetal malformation risk not amounting to “substantial abnormality.” Memory aid: MR DIWD.
How does the POCSO Act create barriers for minors seeking abortions?
The Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012, mandates that any person including healthcare providers who becomes aware of a sexual offence against a minor must report it to the police. For a pregnant minor, this means that when she approaches a doctor for a termination, the doctor is legally obligated to file a police report — even if the pregnancy resulted from a consensual relationship between minors. This mandatory reporting requirement can deter minors and their families from seeking timely medical care, fearing stigma, legal scrutiny, or family disruption — thereby delaying the process until the pregnancy is at a more advanced stage.
What structural gap does this ruling expose in India’s abortion law?
The MTP Act allows terminations beyond 24 weeks only for substantial foetal abnormalities (via Medical Board). There is no statutory pathway for terminations beyond 24 weeks in cases of rape, severe mental health distress, suicidal ideation, or serious psychosocial harm — unless a constitutional court intervenes. This means individuals in such situations must file writ petitions before the High Court or Supreme Court — an expensive, time-consuming, and psychologically demanding process that is practically inaccessible to most women in India. Parliament has not addressed this gap despite successive court rulings drawing attention to it.
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