On 10 July 2024 the Supreme Court told every divorced Muslim woman in India something simple: you can ask for maintenance under the same secular law that protects every other woman, and you can do it on top of your rights under Muslim personal law. If your marriage has ended, you have more than one door, not fewer.
Quick answer: A divorced Muslim woman can claim maintenance under Section 125 CrPC, now Section 144 BNSS 2023, in addition to her rights under the Muslim Women Act 1986. She can recover unpaid mehr, claim a fair provision beyond iddat, and seek judicial divorce under the 1939 Act. Apply before a Magistrate.
A Muslim woman after divorce has three core money-and-status rights: maintenance to live on, mehr (her dower) as a debt the husband owes, and the option to end a dead marriage through a court. Two laws and one 2024 Supreme Court ruling decide which path she takes. She is allowed to use more than one.
Maintenance under Section 125 CrPC (now Section 144 BNSS 2023). In Mohd Abdul Samad v State of Telangana, 2024 INSC 506 (decided 10 July 2024), a two-judge bench held that a divorced Muslim woman can seek maintenance under Section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The Court ruled the Muslim Women Protection of Rights on Divorce Act 1986 is not in derogation of Section 125 but in addition to it. She may choose either law, or both. Section 125 CrPC is now re-enacted as Section 144 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita 2023, which carries the same principle forward.
The 1986 Act, Section 3. Section 3 entitles a divorced woman to a reasonable and fair provision and maintenance within the iddat period, the waiting period after divorce, two years of provision for children she keeps, an amount equal to her mehr or dower, and the return of property given to her. In Danial Latifi v Union of India, 2001 7 SCC 740, the Supreme Court interpreted Section 3 to mean the husband must make a fair provision for her future life, not just for the short iddat period.
Mehr (dower) is a debt. Mehr is a sum the husband agrees to pay the wife as an essential part of a Muslim marriage. On divorce, any unpaid mehr is recoverable. Section 3 of the 1986 Act lets her apply to a Magistrate for it, and if the husband does not pay, the Magistrate can issue a warrant to levy the amount, as confirmed by the bare Act on indiacode.nic.in.
Judicial divorce under the 1939 Act. The Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act 1939, Section 2, gives a wife grounds to ask a court to dissolve her marriage, including the husband's whereabouts being unknown for four years, failure to maintain her for two years, imprisonment, cruelty, and impotence.
Triple talaq is void. The Muslim Women Protection of Rights on Marriage Act 2019 made instant triple talaq, talaq-e-biddat, void and illegal. This followed Shayara Bano v Union of India (2017), where the Supreme Court struck the practice down as unconstitutional.
Real-life example. Ayesha, 34, from Hyderabad was divorced by triple talaq in 2017. Her husband never paid the ₹2,00,000 mehr written in her nikahnama and gave no maintenance. After the 2024 Supreme Court ruling, she filed under Section 125 CrPC for monthly maintenance and under Section 3 of the 1986 Act for her unpaid mehr. The Magistrate granted interim maintenance and ordered recovery of the mehr as a debt.
This is a court matter, not a public-information request, so the main free route is legal aid, not RTI. Every district has a District Legal Services Authority (DLSA) under the National Legal Services Authority (NALSA). Women are entitled to free legal aid. A simple request reads:
To: The Secretary, District Legal Services Authority, [District] Subject: Request for free legal aid and a lawyer for a maintenance and mehr claim I am a divorced woman and I cannot afford a lawyer. I wish to claim maintenance under Section 125 CrPC and recover my unpaid mehr of [amount] under Section 3 of the Muslim Women Act 1986. Please assign a panel lawyer and guide me on filing before the Magistrate. Name, address, phone, signature, date.
A short RTI to a public authority can still help in narrow cases, for example to ask a government employer for a husband's salary slip or service record, using the AI RTI Drafter. But the claim itself is filed in court, not through RTI.
Yes. In Mohd Abdul Samad v State of Telangana, 2024 INSC 506, the Supreme Court held she can, and that this right is in addition to her rights under the 1986 Act.
Mehr or dower is a sum the husband agrees to pay as part of the marriage. If it is unpaid at divorce, it is a debt you can recover by applying to a Magistrate under Section 3 of the 1986 Act.
No. In Danial Latifi v Union of India, 2001 7 SCC 740, the Supreme Court read Section 3 to require a fair provision for the woman's future life, which can extend beyond iddat.
Yes. The 2024 Supreme Court ruling says the 1986 Act is in addition to, not in place of, Section 125. You may choose either or both.
Section 2 of the Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act 1939 lists grounds such as the husband's whereabouts unknown for four years, failure to maintain for two years, imprisonment, cruelty, and impotence.
No. The Muslim Women Protection of Rights on Marriage Act 2019 made instant triple talaq, talaq-e-biddat, void and illegal, following Shayara Bano v Union of India in 2017.
You apply before the Judicial Magistrate with jurisdiction. Where a Family Court has been set up under the Family Courts Act 1984, matrimonial maintenance is heard there.
Your District Legal Services Authority provides free legal aid to women. You can also read The RTI Playbook for how to use information requests to support your case.