
India claims “child welfare first,” but what actually happens inside courtrooms tells a very different story.
If you think custody is about equality, this reality check will change how you see family law completely.
NEW DELHI: Shared parenting in India is widely discussed but poorly understood. Unlike several Western jurisdictions, India does not yet have a codified “shared parenting law” that mandates equal custody or parenting time.
However, Indian courts—particularly the Supreme Court and High Courts—have progressively evolved jurisprudence that moves away from sole custody towards joint parenting responsibility and meaningful access rights.
This article examines the actual legal position, binding precedents, and courtroom approach to shared parenting in India, cutting through myths and activist narratives.
What is Shared Parenting?
Shared parenting means both parents continue to play an active, meaningful, and roughly balanced role in the child’s life—even after separation or divorce.
It is often confused with “joint custody,” but the difference is critical:
- Sole Custody: One parent has primary control; the other gets limited visitation
- Joint Custody: Both parents have legal rights, but physical custody may still be with one parent
- Shared Parenting: Both parents share time, responsibility, and decision-making in a structured manner
Key elements include:
- Balanced physical custody (time-sharing)
- Equal involvement in education, health, and upbringing
- Continuity of emotional bonding with both parents
Current Legal Framework in India
India does not have a specific law that defines or mandates shared parenting.
Custody matters are governed by:
- Guardians and Wards Act, 1890
The guiding principle is the “welfare of the child.”
However, this principle is highly subjective and left to judicial discretion. There is no statutory guideline that ensures equal parenting or even encourages it.
In practice, courts interpret custody in a traditional way—one parent gets custody, the other gets visitation.
The Reality of Custody Orders in India
On paper, everything sounds balanced. In reality, it is not.
- Custody is overwhelmingly granted to mothers
- Fathers are often restricted to limited visitation (few hours, alternate weekends)
- Interim maintenance orders are passed early, without full trial
- Cases drag on for years, making interim arrangements effectively permanent
Practical issues faced:
- Visitation orders are violated with no real consequences
- Children are influenced or alienated from the other parent
- One parent controls access completely
The result? A parent is not removed legally—but is removed practically.
Concept of Shared Parenting in Indian Courts
Indian courts have, in some cases, acknowledged the importance of both parents.
There have been judgments where:
- Courts encouraged joint parenting
- Structured visitation schedules were expanded
- Child interaction rights were strengthened
However:
- There is no uniform approach
- Orders vary widely from judge to judge
- Shared parenting is not the default—it is the exception
Law Commission & Policy Developments
The Law Commission of India (Report No. 257) recognized this issue.
Key recommendations included:
- Introduction of shared parenting framework
- Mandatory parenting plans
- Joint decision-making responsibilities
A draft concept of a Shared Parenting Bill was also discussed.
But despite clear recognition, no binding law has been enacted.
Judicial Position Through Case Law
Gaurav Nagpal v. Sumedha Nagpal (2009) – Supreme Court
- Established that child welfare overrides legal rights of parents
- Clarified that custody is not about entitlement
Roxann Sharma v. Arun Sharma (2015) – Supreme Court
- Reinforced preference for maternal custody in early years
- Demonstrates that shared parenting is not the starting point
Vivek Singh v. Romani Singh (2017) – Supreme Court
- Recognised parental alienation as a serious concern
- Emphasised need for continued contact with both parents
Yashita Sahu v. State of Rajasthan (2020) – Supreme Court
- Strengthened access rights
- Held that denial of visitation is not acceptable
- Allowed phone and video interaction as enforceable rights
Lahari Sakhamuri v. Sobhan Kodali (2019) – Supreme Court
- Highlighted the role of both parents in child development
- Reinforced a balanced approach
Position emerging from case laws: Courts support involvement of both parents, but stop short of mandating equal custody.
Challenges to Shared Parenting in India
Several structural and practical barriers exist:
- Gender bias: Assumption that the mother is the natural caregiver
- Misuse of laws: Criminal and civil proceedings used strategically in custody battles
- Lack of enforcement: No strict consequences for denying access
- Hostile litigation: Focus on winning, not co-parenting
- Absence of guidelines: No standard parenting frameworks
Parenting Plans: Rare but Critical
A parenting plan is a structured agreement that defines how both parents will raise the child post-separation.
It typically includes:
- Weekly and monthly custody schedule
- Schooling and medical decisions
- Holiday and festival arrangements
- Communication rules
- Dispute resolution mechanism
In India, such plans are rarely standardized or enforced, leading to ambiguity and conflict.
Role of Mediation in Shared Parenting
Mediation can play a critical role in shifting the focus from conflict to cooperation.
Benefits:
- Reduces adversarial litigation
- Encourages mutual decision-making
- Faster resolution
However:
- Mediation is often treated as a formality
- Outcomes are not always effectively implemented
Enforcement Issues in Custody & Access
One of the biggest failures is enforcement.
- Visitation orders are routinely violated
- Police intervention is inconsistent
- Contempt proceedings are slow and ineffective
Without enforcement, even the best orders remain on paper.
What is Actually Needed
For shared parenting to move from theory to practice:
- Statutory recognition of shared parenting principles
- Defined parenting schedules and templates
- Enforceable consequences for denial of access
- Time-bound custody adjudication
Without these, outcomes will continue to depend on individual judicial approach rather than consistent law.
Strategic Legal Approach for Parents
From a practical standpoint:
- Build documented involvement in the child’s life
- Seek structured interim custody orders early
- Avoid purely emotional litigation strategies
- Push for parenting plans instead of vague visitation
- Use mediation strategically, not passively
Conclusion
Shared parenting is not about giving rights to one parent over another—it is about ensuring that a child does not lose a parent because of legal technicalities or adversarial litigation.
The current system creates winners and losers. But in custody battles, even the “winner” loses—because the child loses balance.
Until Indian law shifts from custody-centric to parenting-centric thinking, these disputes will continue to damage families in ways that no judgment can repair.
The question is not whether shared parenting is ideal.
The question is—how long can the system afford to ignore it?
FAQs
- Is shared parenting legally recognised in India?
No, there is no codified law mandating shared parenting; it is granted only at the court’s discretion based on child welfare. - Can a father get equal custody or 50-50 parenting time?
There is no legal presumption of equal custody, but courts may allow balanced time-sharing inappropriate cases. - What if visitation rights are denied despite a court order?
The affected parent can approach the court for enforcement or contempt, though practical enforcementremains weak. - Do courts supporttheinvolvement of both parents after separation?
Yes, courts increasingly recognise the importance of both parents, but usually through access rights rather than equal custody. - Is shared parenting the default rule in custody cases?
No, Indian courts still follow a primary custody model, with shared parenting being an exception rather than the norm.




