Living apart for years and wondering if the law will finally let you out? In June 2026 the Supreme Court dissolved a marriage where the couple had lived together for barely two to three months but stayed legally tied for over fifteen years. This page explains exactly when prolonged separation can break a marriage in the eyes of the law, and the one big catch most people miss.
In short: Long separation by itself is not a stand-alone ground for divorce in an ordinary family court. But where a couple has lived apart for many years with no chance of reconciliation, that separation becomes strong proof of mental cruelty and desertion under Section 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act. Only the Supreme Court, using Article 142, can dissolve such a dead marriage purely on irretrievable breakdown.
So there are really two different doors. One is the door the Supreme Court can open for you. The other is the door an ordinary family court works behind. They are not the same, and knowing the difference saves you months of false hope.
In Sonal Talpada v. Veerbhan Singh, 2026 INSC 620 (Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice Augustine George Masih, decided 2 June 2026, read on Indian Kanoon), the couple had been married for around eighteen years on paper. In reality they had lived together for only about two to three months. They had been separated for more than fifteen years with no reconciliation.
The Court held that a long, continuous separation, combined with failed attempts at reconciliation, shows that the matrimonial bond is beyond repair. Forcing two people to stay legally married after such a prolonged gap, the Court said, would itself amount to cruelty. It dissolved the marriage on the ground of irretrievable breakdown, using its special power under Article 142 of the Constitution to do complete justice, even though one spouse was resisting the divorce.
What the Supreme Court can do under Article 142
What a normal family court needs under Section 13 HMA
This is the catch most people miss. You may read headlines saying the Supreme Court grants divorce for irretrievable breakdown and assume your district family court will do the same. It will not. The family court is bound by the grounds written in Section 13. Irretrievable breakdown has been recommended for inclusion in the Act for years but is still not a statutory ground that an ordinary court can use on its own.
If you cannot reach the Supreme Court, your route is still Section 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act. The good news is that a long separation is one of the strongest pieces of evidence you can bring. Here is how it usually fits together.
For the full list of grounds and how cruelty and desertion are proved, see our detailed guide on divorce on cruelty and desertion under Section 13 HMA. If both of you actually agree to part ways, the faster and cheaper route is mutual consent divorce.
Whatever route you take, get your paperwork and evidence in order first. The RTI Playbook shows how to file clean applications and gather documents that stand up in any forum.
A divorce decree does not switch off financial duties. The spouse with lesser means can still claim a one-time settlement under permanent alimony under Section 25 HMA. A wife, children or dependent parents can separately seek monthly support through Section 125 maintenance, now BNSS Section 144. Long separation does not erase these rights, so factor them in before you file or settle.
Not automatically in a family court. By itself, long separation is not a ground. But you can use it as powerful evidence to prove cruelty or desertion under Section 13. Only the Supreme Court, under Article 142, can dissolve a marriage purely on the basis that it has irretrievably broken down.
It is not a stand-alone statutory ground in the Hindu Marriage Act that an ordinary court can use. It has been recommended for inclusion for years but is still not in the Act. In practice, only the Supreme Court grants divorce on this basis, using its special power under Article 142 of the Constitution.
Article 142 lets the Supreme Court pass any order needed to do complete justice in a case. In divorce, the Court uses it to dissolve a marriage that is clearly beyond repair, even when one spouse objects. No family court or High Court has this power, which is why the route only opens at the top of the system.
Yes. A contested divorce is possible if you prove a Section 13 ground such as cruelty or desertion in a family court. The 2026 ruling also shows the Supreme Court can dissolve a dead marriage despite one spouse resisting, but reaching that stage usually means years of litigation.
For desertion under Section 13, the law generally needs a continuous gap of at least two years before you file. There is no fixed number of years that guarantees divorce on irretrievable breakdown, because that route depends on the Supreme Court assessing whether the marriage is truly beyond repair.
No. Ending the marriage does not end financial duties. A dependent spouse can still claim permanent alimony under Section 25 HMA, and a wife, children or parents can seek monthly maintenance under Section 125 of the old code, now BNSS Section 144. Settle these along with the divorce.
This page explains the law in simple terms and is not a substitute for advice from a qualified family lawyer on your own facts. Reviewed by Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak.