The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, lets any woman facing physical, sexual, verbal, emotional, or economic abuse in a domestic relationship file a complaint (Domestic Incident Report) with a Protection Officer, police, or directly before a Magistrate under Section 12, seeking protection, residence, monetary relief, custody, and compensation orders.
Quick Answer Box
Who can file: Any woman in a “domestic relationship” with the respondent — wife, live-in partner, mother, sister, daughter, or other female relative facing abuse from a male relative (and, per evolving case law, certain female relatives too).
Where to file: With a Protection Officer, a registered Service Provider, the police, or directly before the Judicial Magistrate (First Class) under Section 12 of the Act.
What you can get: Protection orders (Section 18), residence orders (Section 19), monetary relief (Section 20), custody orders (Section 21), and compensation (Section 22) — often as interim/ex parte relief within days.
Immediate helpline: Women Helpline 181 (24×7), or the nearest One-Stop Centre (Sakhi), which provides police, medical, legal, and shelter assistance under one roof.
Latest legal position (2025): The Supreme Court has confirmed that DV Act proceedings can be challenged for quashing under Section 482 CrPC/Section 528 BNSS at any stage, and has directed all States and UTs to properly appoint and notify Protection Officers.
Key Takeaways
- The Domestic Violence Act, 2005 is a civil law with criminal enforcement teeth — orders passed under it are civil in nature, but breaching a protection order is a cognizable, non-bailable criminal offence under Section 31.
- “Domestic violence” under Section 3 is defined broadly to include physical, sexual, verbal/emotional, and economic abuse — many women don’t realise that controlling access to money, denying maintenance, or disposing of joint assets without consent also qualifies.
- The right to reside in a “shared household” under Section 17 exists independent of ownership — a woman cannot be thrown out of the house merely because her name isn’t on the title deed, a principle reinforced by Satish Chander Ahuja v. Sneha Ahuja (2020).
- A 2024 Supreme Court ruling clarified that the Act functions as a uniform civil code for women, applicable irrespective of religion, and a 2016 ruling (Hiral P. Harsora) confirmed that complaints can be filed against female relatives of the husband too, not only adult males.
- In 2025, the Supreme Court settled a long-running procedural dispute: petitions to quash DV Act proceedings under Section 482 CrPC (now Section 528 BNSS) are maintainable, and can be filed at any stage — this is critical for both complainants defending against quashing attempts and respondents seeking early relief.
- One-Stop Centres (Sakhi), funded under the Nirbhaya Fund, provide integrated police, medical, legal aid, psychological counselling, and temporary shelter — and are often the fastest practical entry point, faster than approaching a Magistrate directly.
H1: Domestic Violence Act 2005 – Know Your Rights: A Complete Legal Guide
Table of Contents
- What the Law Says
- Relevant Legal Provisions
- Relevant Sections of the DV Act
- Latest Legal Position (Updated to June 2026)
- Supreme Court Judgments
- High Court Judgments
- Court Procedure
- Jurisdiction
- Documents Required
- Evidence Required
- Timeline
- Costs Involved
- Common Defences
- Common Mistakes
- Risks and Limitations
- Practical Legal Advice
- Litigation Strategy
- Alternative Remedies
- Step-by-Step Action Plan
- Frequently Asked Questions
- What the Law Says
The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 (“DV Act”) came into force on 26 October 2006, and was India’s first comprehensive civil law specifically addressing violence within the home. Before this Act, a woman facing abuse from her husband or his family had only Section 498A of the IPC (now Section 85/86 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita) — a criminal provision focused on punishment, with no mechanism for immediate protection, residence rights, or maintenance during the proceedings.
The DV Act filled that gap. It does not create a new crime in the conventional sense; instead, it creates a fast civil remedy — protection orders, the right to stay in the home, monetary support, custody arrangements, and compensation — that a woman can obtain from a Magistrate, often within days, while any separate criminal or matrimonial proceedings continue independently. Breach of an order passed under the Act, however, is a criminal offence under Section 31, which is what gives the Act its enforcement strength.
Importantly, the Act is gender-specific in its protective scope — only women can be “aggrieved persons” — but the definition of who can be a “respondent” has been judicially expanded, as discussed below.
- Relevant Legal Provisions
The DV Act operates alongside, and sometimes in tension with, several other laws:
- Article 15(3) of the Constitution — Empowers the State to make special provisions for women, the constitutional foundation the Supreme Court has repeatedly cited when describing the DV Act’s protective purpose.
- Section 85/86, Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 (formerly Section 498A IPC) — The criminal counterpart dealing with cruelty by a husband or his relatives; frequently invoked alongside a DV Act application, though the two proceedings are legally distinct.
- Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 / Special Marriage Act, 1954 — Maintenance and residence claims under the DV Act often run parallel to matrimonial proceedings under these Acts; Section 26 of the DV Act allows reliefs under the Act to be sought in any pending civil/family court proceeding too.
- Section 125, Code of Criminal Procedure / Section 144, Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 — Maintenance proceedings often run alongside DV Act monetary relief applications; courts are required to avoid double recovery but a woman is not barred from pursuing both.
- Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Rules, 2006 — The procedural rules that operationalise the Act, including the format of the Domestic Incident Report (DIR), the duties of Protection Officers, and the registration of Service Providers and shelter homes.
- Section 482, Code of Criminal Procedure / Section 528, Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 — The inherent power of the High Court to quash proceedings, now confirmed by the Supreme Court as applicable to DV Act Section 12 applications.
- Relevant Sections of the DV Act
The sections every reader should know:
- Section 2(a) — “Aggrieved person”: Any woman who is, or has been, in a domestic relationship with the respondent and alleges domestic violence.
- Section 2(f) — “Domestic relationship”: Covers relationships through marriage, blood relations, adoption, or “a relationship in the nature of marriage” (i.e., live-in relationships) — and joint family living arrangements.
- Section 2(q) — “Respondent”: Originally defined as an “adult male person,” but judicially expanded (see Section 5 below) to include female relatives of the husband/male partner.
- Section 2(s) — “Shared household”: The household where the aggrieved person lives or has lived in a domestic relationship — irrespective of whether she has any title or rights in it.
- Section 3 — “Domestic violence”: Defines abuse to include physical, sexual, verbal and emotional, and economic abuse, as well as harassment to coerce dowry-related demands.
- Section 12 — Application to the Magistrate: The core procedural section — an aggrieved person, a Protection Officer, or any person on her behalf can apply directly to the Magistrate for one or more reliefs.
- Sections 18–22 — The five core reliefs: Protection orders (18), residence orders (19), monetary relief (20), custody orders (21), and compensation orders (22).
- Section 23 — Interim and ex parte orders: Allows the Magistrate to pass immediate, even ex parte, orders based on the affidavit of the aggrieved person, without waiting for the respondent’s reply.
- Section 31 — Penalty for breach of protection order: A cognizable and non-bailable offence, punishable with imprisonment up to one year, a fine up to Rs. 20,000, or both.
- Latest Legal Position (Updated to June 2026)
The substantive scope of the DV Act has not changed since 2005, but 2024–25 saw three significant clarifications that directly affect how the Act is used:
First, in September 2024, the Supreme Court (Justices B.V. Nagarathna and N. Kotiswar Singh) reaffirmed that the DV Act is, in effect, a uniform civil code for women — applicable to every woman in India regardless of her religion or social background — while clarifying the interplay between Section 25(2) (modification of orders due to changed circumstances) and finality of earlier orders.
Second, in 2025, the Supreme Court resolved a sharply divided question across High Courts: can a respondent approach the High Court under Section 482 CrPC (now Section 528 BNSS) to quash a Section 12 application under the DV Act? In Shaurabh Kumar Tripathi v. Vidhi Rawal (2025), followed by V. Krishnamma v. State (October 2025), the Court held yes — such petitions are maintainable, and can be filed at any stage of the proceedings, overturning a line of High Court decisions (including from Madhya Pradesh and, earlier, the Allahabad High Court relying on Kamatchi v. Laxmi Narayanan, 2022) that had held otherwise.
Third, in May 2025, in We The Women of India v. Union of India, the Supreme Court directed all States and Union Territories to identify and formally designate Protection Officers — responding to evidence of patchy, inconsistent implementation of the Act across the country, with many districts lacking functional Protection Officer infrastructure more than 18 years after the Act came into force.
What this means practically: the rights under the Act remain as broad as ever, but (a) respondents now have a clearer route to challenge frivolous or legally defective DV Act applications before the High Court at any stage, and (b) aggrieved persons should be aware that the quality of implementation — particularly Protection Officer availability — varies significantly by district, and the Supreme Court has acknowledged this as an ongoing systemic problem that it is actively monitoring.
- Supreme Court Judgments
- Hiral P. Harsora v. Kusum Narottamdas Harsora (2016) — The Supreme Court struck down the words “adult male” from Section 2(q)’s definition of “respondent,” holding that restricting complaints to adult male respondents alone violated Article 14, since domestic violence is frequently perpetrated jointly by, or solely by, female relatives of the husband (mothers-in-law, sisters-in-law). After this ruling, a DV Act complaint can name female relatives as respondents.
- Indra Sarma v. V.K.V. Sarma (2013) — Laid down the criteria for when a live-in relationship qualifies as a “relationship in the nature of marriage” under Section 2(f), distinguishing genuine domestic partnerships from casual or “live-in” arrangements that do not meet the threshold — relevant for unmarried women seeking DV Act protection.
iii. Satish Chander Ahuja v. Sneha Ahuja (2020) — A landmark ruling on “shared household” under Section 2(s) and Section 17, holding that a daughter-in-law’s right to reside in a shared household is not defeated merely because the house is owned exclusively by her parents-in-law; the right to residence is independent of ownership, subject to the Magistrate’s power to pass alternate accommodation orders in appropriate cases.
- S. Vijikumari v. Mowneshwarachari C. (2024) — Clarified the scope of Section 25(2), holding that an order under Section 12 can be altered, modified, or revoked on proof of a genuine change in circumstances, but this power cannot be used as a backdoor to relitigate settled findings.
- Shaurabh Kumar Tripathi v. Vidhi Rawal (2025) and V. Krishnamma v. State (2025) — Together, these establish that High Courts retain inherent jurisdiction under Section 482 CrPC/Section 528 BNSS to quash DV Act proceedings, at any stage — a procedural clarification with significant strategic implications discussed in Section 17.
- We The Women of India v. Union of India (2025) — Systemic implementation case directing states to designate Protection Officers; ongoing monitoring is expected to continue.
- High Court Judgments
- Vithal Manik Khatri v. Sagar Sanjay Kamble (Bombay High Court, 2024) — Held that transgender persons are entitled to protection under the DV Act, reading the definitions of “aggrieved person” and “domestic relationship” purposively to extend the Act’s protective umbrella beyond a narrow cisgender reading — a significant development for inclusive interpretation.
- Delhi High Court (2024, residence order enforcement) — Reinforced that residence orders under Section 19 must be enforced in substance, not merely on paper, directing police assistance where family members physically resisted a woman’s return to a shared household pursuant to a Magistrate’s order.
- Bombay High Court (2024, economic abuse compensation) — Affirmed compensation of approximately Rs. 3 crore under Sections 20 and 22 in a case involving significant economic abuse, signalling that monetary relief under the Act is not limited to subsistence-level maintenance where the respondent’s means and the scale of economic abuse justify a higher award.
- Allahabad High Court line of cases — Prior to the 2025 Supreme Court clarification, had held (relying on Kamatchi) that Section 482 CrPC petitions against Section 12 DV Act proceedings were not maintainable; this position is now superseded by Shaurabh Kumar Tripathi and V. Krishnamma.
- Court Procedure
- Filing the Domestic Incident Report (DIR) — Typically the first formal step: a Protection Officer or registered Service Provider records the DIR in the prescribed format under the 2006 Rules, documenting the incidents of violence. This is not mandatory before approaching the Magistrate directly, but it strengthens the application.
- Filing the Section 12 application — Filed before the Judicial Magistrate of the First Class (or Metropolitan Magistrate) having jurisdiction, either directly or through a Protection Officer/advocate.
- Notice to the respondent — The Magistrate fixes a date, generally not beyond three days from receipt of the application, and is required to dispose of the application within 60 days of the first hearing (Section 12(5)), though in practice this timeline is often extended.
- Interim/ex parte relief (Section 23) — Where the affidavit discloses a prima facie case of violence or imminent threat, the Magistrate can pass immediate protection, residence, or monetary orders even before the respondent is heard.
- Final order — After hearing both sides (the proceedings are summary in nature, broadly following Section 125 CrPC-type procedure), the Magistrate passes a final order under Sections 18–22.
- Appeal — Under Section 29, an appeal against any order of the Magistrate lies to the Court of Sessions within 30 days of the order being served.
- Enforcement/breach — Any breach of a protection order is reported to the police and prosecuted under Section 31 as a cognizable, non-bailable offence, which can be tried alongside any pending Section 85/86 BNS (Section 498A IPC) proceedings under Section 32.
- Jurisdiction
| Forum | Role |
| Protection Officer / Service Provider | First point of contact; records DIR, assists in filing applications, liaises with police and shelters |
| Judicial Magistrate First Class (JMFC) / Metropolitan Magistrate | Original jurisdiction over Section 12 applications; passes orders under Sections 18–23 |
| Court of Sessions | Appellate forum under Section 29 (appeal within 30 days) |
| High Court | Quashing jurisdiction under Section 482 CrPC/Section 528 BNSS (now confirmed maintainable at any stage); writ jurisdiction for systemic implementation issues |
| Supreme Court | Final interpretive authority; SLPs against High Court orders; systemic monitoring (e.g., Protection Officer implementation) |
Territorial jurisdiction (Section 27) is unusually wide and woman-friendly: an application can be filed where the aggrieved person resides or carries on business, where the respondent resides or carries on business, or where the cause of action arose — giving a woman who has left the matrimonial home the option to file in her current location rather than being forced back to the respondent’s jurisdiction.
- Documents Required
To file a Section 12 application, gather:
- Proof of identity and address (Aadhaar, voter ID, etc.) of the aggrieved person
- Marriage certificate, or evidence of the domestic relationship (photographs, joint bank accounts, ration card showing joint residence, for live-in relationships)
- Any prior police complaints (FIR copies, NC/General Diary entries) related to incidents of violence
- Medical records/reports documenting injuries from physical abuse, where applicable
- Evidence of economic abuse — bank statements, salary slips, property documents, evidence of denial of access to funds or disposal of jointly-owned assets
- Communication records (messages, emails, call logs) evidencing verbal/emotional abuse or threats, where available
- The Domestic Incident Report (DIR), if already recorded by a Protection Officer
- Details of dependents (children) for whom custody or maintenance is sought, including their birth certificates and school records
- Evidence Required
Because DV Act proceedings are civil and summary in nature, the standard of proof is the civil standard — preponderance of probabilities — not the criminal “beyond reasonable doubt” standard. This is a crucial distinction many aggrieved persons (and respondents) misunderstand.
- For physical abuse: medical reports, photographs of injuries (with dates), and witness testimony from family members, neighbours, or domestic staff.
- For verbal/emotional abuse: contemporaneous records — diary entries, messages, voice recordings (subject to admissibility rules), and witness accounts of incidents.
- For economic abuse: bank and property records showing denial of maintenance, disposal of streedhan (a woman’s personal property/gifts) or joint assets, or exclusion from financial decision-making.
- For establishing a “domestic relationship” (especially in live-in relationships): joint lease agreements, utility bills, photographs, social acknowledgment of the relationship, and testimony from common acquaintances — applying the Indra Sarma criteria.
- For “shared household” claims: any document showing residence at the property (utility bills, ration card, voter ID with that address), regardless of ownership.
The Magistrate also has the power under Section 12(4) to seek a report from the Protection Officer or Service Provider, which itself becomes important corroborative material.
- Timeline
| Stage | Statutory/Typical Timeline |
| Filing of application before Magistrate | Immediate; can be filed any time, no limitation period akin to civil suits (though delay may affect interim relief) |
| First hearing fixed | Within 3 days of receipt of application (Section 12(5)) |
| Interim/ex parte orders | Can be passed at the first hearing itself, on affidavit |
| Disposal of application | Within 60 days of first hearing (Section 12(5)) — frequently extended in practice |
| Appeal to Court of Sessions | Within 30 days of the order (Section 29) |
| Breach of protection order — police action | Immediate; cognizable offence, arrest without warrant possible |
| Quashing petition before High Court | No fixed timeline; per 2025 SC rulings, maintainable at any stage, including after final order |
- Costs Involved
- Filing a Section 12 application — No substantial court fee is typically charged for DV Act applications given their protective, welfare-oriented character; nominal stamp/process fees may apply depending on the state.
- Legal Aid — Every District Legal Services Authority (DLSA) is required to provide free legal aid to women under the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987, for DV Act proceedings — this is often underutilised.
- Private counsel fees — Vary significantly by city and complexity; a straightforward Section 12 application with interim relief is generally less expensive than a fully contested matrimonial suit, but contested monetary relief or custody disputes can become as involved (and costly) as any civil litigation.
- Quashing petitions before the High Court — Higher court fees and counsel fees than at the Magistrate level, given the drafting and record compilation required.
- One-Stop Centres and shelter homes — Free of cost, government-funded under the Nirbhaya Fund, providing medical aid, police facilitation, legal aid coordination, psychological support, and temporary shelter at no charge to the woman.
- Common Defences
Respondents in DV Act proceedings commonly raise:
- Denial of a “domestic relationship” — particularly in live-in relationship cases, arguing the relationship does not meet the Indra Sarma threshold for “relationship in the nature of marriage.”
- Maintainability/limitation arguments — though courts have generally held there is no rigid limitation period, respondents argue that significant, unexplained delay undermines the credibility of allegations, especially for interim relief.
- Mala fide/retaliatory filing — alleging the DV Act application was filed in retaliation to, or as leverage in, a separate matrimonial dispute (divorce, maintenance, custody) — this is now a recognised ground for seeking quashing under Shaurabh Kumar Tripathi.
- Lack of specificity — arguing the application contains vague, omnibus allegations without dates, particulars, or corroboration, making it difficult to mount a defence — courts have, in appropriate cases, found such applications liable to be quashed.
- Ownership disputes regarding “shared household” — arguing the property in question was never a “shared household” as defined under Section 2(s), distinct from simply disputing title.
- Common Mistakes That Weaken Such Cases
For aggrieved persons:
- Filing without supporting documentation — vague, undated allegations weaken both the credibility of the application and the chances of interim relief.
- Not approaching a Protection Officer or One-Stop Centre first — while not mandatory, skipping this step often means losing the benefit of a professionally documented DIR and coordinated support (medical, shelter, legal aid) at the outset.
- Delaying the filing significantly after leaving the shared household — while there’s no strict limitation, delay can be used by the respondent to argue the application is an afterthought tied to other litigation.
- Mixing up DV Act relief with criminal complaint strategy — treating the Section 12 application as a “criminal case” against the husband can lead to unrealistic expectations; the primary reliefs are protective and compensatory, not punitive (except for breach under Section 31).
For respondents:
- Ignoring the notice or failing to appear — leads to ex parte orders that, while appealable, are far harder to unwind than to contest at the first hearing.
- Breaching interim orders — even informally (e.g., contacting the aggrieved person despite a no-contact direction) — exposes the respondent to Section 31 prosecution, which is cognizable and non-bailable.
- Waiting too long to consider quashing — while V. Krishnamma confirms quashing is maintainable at any stage, raising genuine maintainability or mala fide arguments early, before evidence is led, is strategically far stronger.
- Risks and Limitations
- The Act does not provide for divorce or annulment — it provides protective and monetary reliefs; a woman seeking to dissolve the marriage must pursue separate proceedings under personal law.
- Implementation gaps remain real — as the Supreme Court itself acknowledged in We The Women of India (2025), many districts lack adequately staffed Protection Officer offices, which can delay the practical realisation of rights even where the law is clear.
- Interim orders can be modified or vacated — an ex parte order obtained at the first hearing is not final; the respondent has the right to be heard and to seek modification under Section 25(2) on a genuine change of circumstances.
- Quashing is now a real risk for poorly-drafted applications — following the 2025 Supreme Court rulings, an application built on vague or demonstrably retaliatory allegations is more vulnerable to being quashed at the High Court stage than it might have been under the earlier, more restrictive view of Section 482’s applicability.
- Overlap with criminal proceedings can cause confusion — a DV Act order and a Section 85/86 BNS (498A IPC) prosecution are legally distinct; an acquittal or quashing in one does not automatically affect the other, and vice versa, though courts increasingly look at the overall picture.
- Practical Legal Advice
If you are facing domestic violence right now: Your safety comes first — contact the Women Helpline (181) or the nearest One-Stop Centre, which can coordinate police assistance, medical examination, and emergency shelter simultaneously. Once safe, approach a Protection Officer to record a Domestic Incident Report — this creates a contemporaneous, professionally documented record that significantly strengthens any later Section 12 application.
If you are considering filing a Section 12 application: Start documenting incidents now — dates, descriptions, photographs of injuries, screenshots of threatening messages, and any financial records showing economic abuse. The strength of an application for interim relief under Section 23 depends heavily on what can be shown on affidavit at the very first hearing, so the more organised your documentation before filing, the faster meaningful protection can follow.
If you have been named as a respondent: Do not ignore the notice. Engage counsel promptly to assess whether the allegations meet the statutory definitions, whether any interim order needs urgent modification, and whether the facts support a maintainability or quashing challenge under the 2025 Supreme Court position — but also comply scrupulously with any interim order in force, since breach carries independent criminal liability.
- Litigation Strategy
For aggrieved persons seeking strong interim relief:
- File the Section 12 application with a detailed affidavit covering each category of abuse under Section 3 (physical, sexual, verbal/emotional, economic) separately — omnibus, undifferentiated allegations are weaker.
- Annex the DIR, medical reports, and any prior police complaints to maximise the chance of ex parte relief under Section 23 at the first hearing.
- Where the respondent’s family also participated in the abuse, consider naming them as respondents under the Hiral Harsora precedent — but only where the allegations against each individual are specific and substantiated.
- For economic abuse claims, compile financial records early — bank statements, property documents, and evidence of streedhan — since monetary relief and compensation awards (as in the Rs. 3 crore Bombay High Court case) are increasingly tied to demonstrable financial harm, not just subsistence needs.
For respondents:
- Assess at the earliest stage whether the application discloses a genuine “domestic relationship” and specific, dated allegations — if not, a quashing petition under Section 482 CrPC/Section 528 BNSS, now confirmed maintainable by Shaurabh Kumar Tripathi and V. Krishnamma, may be appropriate even before the Magistrate’s proceedings conclude.
- If quashing is not viable, focus on contesting interim relief with documentary rebuttal (e.g., evidence the respondent has continued to provide maintenance, or that the “shared household” claim is factually incorrect) rather than broad denials.
- Where allegations appear linked to a parallel matrimonial dispute, consider whether mediation or settlement (often facilitated through the Family Court or DLSA) could resolve both the DV Act and matrimonial issues together, which courts generally encourage.
- Alternative Remedies
- One-Stop Centres (Sakhi) — Integrated support for medical aid, police assistance, legal aid counselling, psychosocial support, and temporary shelter, available across India under the Nirbhaya Fund — often faster and less adversarial as a first step than direct litigation.
- Mahila Police Volunteers / Women’s Police Stations — For immediate police assistance and recording of complaints in a more supportive environment.
- District Legal Services Authority (DLSA) — Free legal aid, including drafting and filing of Section 12 applications, for women who qualify (income-based eligibility is liberally applied for DV Act matters).
- Mediation/Conciliation through Family Courts — Particularly useful where the underlying dispute is matrimonial and both parties are open to a negotiated resolution covering residence, maintenance, and custody together.
- National/State Commissions for Women — Can intervene, facilitate complaints, and in some cases directly assist with coordination between police and Protection Officers where local implementation is weak.
- Section 498A IPC / Section 85-86 BNS criminal complaint — A parallel route for cruelty-based criminal prosecution, distinct from but often filed alongside the DV Act application.
- Step-by-Step Action Plan
- Ensure immediate safety — if in danger, call 181 (Women Helpline) or approach the nearest One-Stop Centre or police station; emergency protection does not require a lawyer first.
- Document everything — incidents, dates, injuries (photographed and medically examined where possible), messages, and financial records, starting today regardless of whether you’ve decided to file yet.
- Approach a Protection Officer to record a Domestic Incident Report — locate your district’s Protection Officer through the State Women & Child Development Department or local DLSA.
- Consult a lawyer (or DLSA legal aid counsel) to assess which of the five reliefs (protection, residence, monetary, custody, compensation) are appropriate for your situation, and to draft the Section 12 application with a comprehensive supporting affidavit.
- File the application before the Magistrate having jurisdiction where you reside, where the respondent resides, or where the incidents occurred — choose based on practical convenience and safety.
- Seek interim relief under Section 23 at the first hearing if there is an ongoing risk or urgent need (e.g., to remain in the shared household, or for immediate maintenance).
- Attend all hearings and comply with any interim orders — both to protect your position and, for respondents, to avoid Section 31 liability.
- If dissatisfied with the final order, file an appeal before the Court of Sessions within 30 days under Section 29; if a quashing ground exists (for respondents) or arises (for aggrieved persons defending against a quashing petition), engage counsel for High Court proceedings without delay.
- Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. Who can file a complaint under the Domestic Violence Act, 2005? Any woman who is, or has been, in a domestic relationship with the respondent — including wives, live-in partners (meeting the Indra Sarma criteria), mothers, sisters, daughters, and other female relatives living in a joint household — can file a Section 12 application.
Q2. Can a complaint be filed against a mother-in-law or sister-in-law? Yes. Following Hiral P. Harsora v. Kusum Narottamdas Harsora (2016), the Supreme Court removed the restriction limiting “respondent” to “adult male” persons, so female relatives can be named as respondents where specific allegations are made against them.
Q3. What is an emergency protection order, and how quickly can I get one? Under Section 23, a Magistrate can pass interim or ex parte protection, residence, or monetary orders based on the affidavit of the aggrieved person, often at the very first hearing — which by law must be fixed within three days of filing.
Q4. Can I be evicted from my husband’s house if my name isn’t on the property documents? Not automatically. Under Section 17 and Satish Chander Ahuja v. Sneha Ahuja (2020), the right to reside in a “shared household” exists independent of ownership; eviction without due process and a court order can itself be a ground for relief under the Act.
Q5. What is a One-Stop Centre and how does it help? A One-Stop Centre (Sakhi) is a government-funded facility providing integrated medical aid, police facilitation, legal aid, psychological counselling, and temporary shelter to women affected by violence, free of charge, in one location.
Q6. Is economic abuse covered under the DV Act? Yes — Section 3 explicitly includes economic abuse, covering denial of financial resources, disposal of household or jointly-owned assets without consent, and denial of access to streedhan or shared financial resources.
Q7. Can DV Act proceedings be quashed by the High Court? Yes — the Supreme Court confirmed in Shaurabh Kumar Tripathi v. Vidhi Rawal (2025) and V. Krishnamma v. State (2025) that petitions under Section 482 CrPC (now Section 528 BNSS) to quash Section 12 proceedings are maintainable, and can be filed at any stage of the proceedings.
Q8. How long does it take to get a final order under the DV Act? The Act envisages disposal within 60 days of the first hearing (Section 12(5)), though in practice contested matters often take significantly longer; interim relief, however, can be granted much sooner.
Q9. Can a live-in partner file a DV Act complaint? Yes, provided the relationship qualifies as a “relationship in the nature of marriage” under the criteria laid down in Indra Sarma v. V.K.V. Sarma (2013) — factors include duration of the relationship, shared household, pooling of finances, and social perception of the couple as partners.
Q10. What happens if the respondent violates a protection order? This is a cognizable, non-bailable offence under Section 31, punishable with imprisonment up to one year, a fine up to Rs. 20,000, or both — and can be prosecuted alongside any pending criminal cruelty proceedings.
Q11. Do I need a lawyer to file a DV Act complaint, or can I do it myself? While a Protection Officer or Service Provider can assist with filing, a lawyer (including through free legal aid via DLSA) is strongly advisable — particularly for drafting the supporting affidavit to maximise the chance of interim relief, and for navigating the interplay with any parallel matrimonial or criminal proceedings.
Conclusion
The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, remains one of the most practically powerful — and most underused — legal tools available to women in India, precisely because its civil, fast-track design is often overshadowed in public understanding by criminal law. Two decades on, the law itself is well-settled on its core protections: a broad definition of abuse, a residence right independent of property ownership, and an expanded class of potential respondents. What 2024–25 has added is procedural clarity — confirming that the High Court’s quashing jurisdiction applies to DV Act proceedings at any stage, and putting systemic implementation gaps, particularly around Protection Officers, squarely on the Supreme Court’s radar. For anyone facing domestic violence, the practical path is clear: prioritise safety, document everything, use the One-Stop Centre and Protection Officer infrastructure that exists precisely for this purpose, and engage a lawyer — through legal aid if needed — before the first hearing, since the quality of the initial application often determines how quickly real protection arrives. For those named as respondents, the message is equally clear: interim orders must be complied with even while being contested, and genuine procedural or factual defects in an application can now be raised before the High Court without waiting for the Magistrate’s proceedings to conclude.