If you are in a custody or visitation fight, the family court can send your child for a psychological evaluation, but only when it is genuinely necessary for deciding the case, and not as a routine step every time parents disagree. In June 2026 the Supreme Court of India laid down clear limits on how far a court may go, so that repeated testing does not end up harming the very child it is meant to protect.
Short answer: yes, but only if necessary. A family court can order a psychological assessment of your child, but the Supreme Court in Sheetal Vasant Thakur v. Chirag Arora, 2026 INSC 638 (11 June 2026) held that such tests must not be routine. The court must record specific reasons showing why the test is needed, follow the principle of minimum intrusion, and ordinarily use one independent, court-appointed child psychologist rather than a panel. Repeated or overlapping evaluations should be avoided. The child's welfare, dignity and psychological security remain the paramount consideration.
The case reached the Supreme Court after a family court had directed that a child be assessed by a four-member panel of experts in a custody dispute. A bench of Justices Sanjay Karol and N. Kotiswar Singh set that aside. The court found that a four-member panel breached the principle of minimum intrusion and risked re-traumatising the child.
Beginning at paragraph 97 of the judgment, the court laid down a detailed set of numbered principles to guide when and how a child may be psychologically evaluated in custody, guardianship and related proceedings. These principles are anchored in the settled rule that the welfare of the child is the paramount consideration, and they draw on the framework of the Family Courts Act 1984, the Hindu Marriage Act 1955 and, where a child is a victim, the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act.
You can use the following as a checklist. These points reflect the principles the Supreme Court laid down. If a test is ordered without them, that is your ground to object.
If you believe the family court has ordered an unnecessary, repeated or overly intrusive test on your child, you have practical remedies. Move quickly, because the sessions can begin before you have had a chance to object.
To understand how family court procedure, orders and appeals fit together, keep a copy of The RTI Playbook handy, and read our guide on how a child custody petition is filed and decided.
Imagine a mother and father fighting over custody of their eight-year-old. The father asks the family court to send the child to three different psychologists to “prove” the mother has influenced the child. Under the 2026 ruling, the court cannot simply grant this. It must first ask whether any evaluation is truly necessary, record its reasons, and if it does order one, ordinarily appoint a single neutral child psychologist rather than send the child from expert to expert. Repeated testing designed to build a case against a parent is exactly what the Supreme Court warned against.
Yes, but not automatically. The Supreme Court held in 2026 that such a test can be ordered only where it is genuinely necessary for deciding the case, and the court must record specific reasons. A test cannot be ordered just because the parents are in dispute.
No, not ordinarily. The 2026 ruling says repeated, overlapping or multi-layered psychological evaluations should be avoided unless there are compelling circumstances. If your child has already been assessed, you can object to a fresh test on that basis.
Ordinarily it should not. The Supreme Court said the evaluation should normally be done by one independent, court-appointed child psychologist. A panel is exceptional and permitted only when the facts make it unavoidable. In the very case before the court, a four-member panel was set aside.
The court does. The expert must be independent, neutral and court-appointed, not selected by one parent. This is meant to keep the process fair and child-centric rather than adversarial.
You can first apply to the same family court to recall or modify the order. If that fails, you can challenge the direction before the High Court through a revision or writ petition, relying on the guidelines in Sheetal Vasant Thakur v. Chirag Arora, 2026 INSC 638.
Yes. The Supreme Court directed that the child's identity and disclosures stay strictly confidential, and audio or video recordings of the sessions are not ordinarily made accessible to the parties. The report is limited to its evaluation purpose.
This article explains the law in plain terms and is not a substitute for advice from a lawyer on your specific case. Reviewed for accuracy by Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak.