If your adult children or heirs refuse to support you, you can file - for free, without a lawyer - before the Maintenance Tribunal under the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007. The Tribunal can order a monthly allowance of up to Rs 10,000, must decide within 90 days, and can jail a defaulter for up to one month.
Short on time? Jump to the step-by-step filing process.
The Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007 (the “2007 Act”) gives every parent and senior citizen a fast, free legal route to demand support. You apply to a Maintenance Tribunal headed by a Sub-Divisional Magistrate. You do not need a lawyer. You do not pay court fees. The Tribunal can order your children, or certain heirs, to pay a monthly allowance and can enforce that order with a recovery warrant and even imprisonment.
The law is deliberately broad so that a neglected elder can act quickly.
Under Section 2 of the 2007 Act, “children” includes son, daughter, grandson and grand-daughter but excludes a minor. A “relative” means a legal heir of a childless senior citizen who is not a minor and is in possession of, or would inherit, the senior citizen's property. So a nephew who stands to inherit your house can be made liable if you have no children.
Section 9 caps the maximum maintenance the Tribunal may order at Rs 10,000 per month. The exact ceiling within that limit is set by each State Government. The Tribunal fixes the amount by looking at your needs and the children's or relatives' ability to pay. Maintenance covers food, clothing, residence, medical care and treatment.
Under Section 7, every State Government constitutes a Maintenance Tribunal for each sub-division, presided over by an officer not below the rank of Sub-Divisional Officer (the SDM / SDO). That is where you file.
The 2007 Act is built for speed.
Many parents transfer their house to a child expecting care in return, then get neglected. Section 23 protects you.
If you gifted or transferred property after the Act came into force, on the condition that the transferee would provide your basic amenities and physical needs, and that person then refuses or fails to do so, the transfer is deemed to have been made by fraud or coercion or undue influence. At your option, the Tribunal can declare the transfer void.
The Supreme Court reinforced this in Urmila Dixit v. Sunil Sharan Dixit (2025), decided on 2 January 2025. A mother had gifted property to her son under a deed accompanied by a promise (vachan patra) to maintain his parents. When he failed, the Court held that authorities under Section 23 not only can cancel the transfer but may also order eviction and restore possession to the senior citizen. The gift deed was set aside.
Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak, age 71, Lucknow.
After his wife passed away, Dr. Pathak gifted his flat to his only son in 2022 on a written promise of lifelong care. By 2025 the son had stopped paying for his father's diabetes treatment and asked him to leave.
Dr. Pathak filed a one-page application before the Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Lucknow, claiming Rs 9,000 per month and seeking cancellation of the gift deed under Section 23. He paid no fee and used no lawyer.
The Tribunal granted Rs 4,000 interim maintenance within three weeks, then disposed of the case in 78 days: it fixed maintenance at Rs 8,500 per month and declared the 2022 gift deed void, restoring the flat to him.
Total cost: zero. Time to first relief: 21 days.
To,
The Maintenance Tribunal (Sub-Divisional Magistrate),
[Sub-division name], [District], [State]
Subject: Application for monthly maintenance under Section 5 of the
Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007.
Respected Sir/Madam,
1. I, [Full name], aged [age] years, resident of [full address],
am a senior citizen / parent under the said Act.
2. The respondent(s) [name(s)], my son/daughter, residing at
[address], are legally bound to maintain me but have refused
to provide for my food, residence and medical care since [date].
3. I have no sufficient means to maintain myself. My monthly needs,
including medical expenses, are approximately Rs [amount].
4. I therefore request this Tribunal to:
(a) grant interim maintenance under Section 5(2) during this case;
(b) order the respondent(s) to pay me Rs [amount] per month;
(c) [if applicable] declare void, under Section 23, the property
I transferred to the respondent on [date] on condition of care.
Enclosures: proof of age, proof of relationship, [other documents].
Yours faithfully,
[Signature]
[Name, date, contact number]
Yes. Under Section 16, a senior citizen or parent aggrieved by a Tribunal order can appeal to the Appellate Tribunal within 60 days from the date of the order. The Appellate Tribunal is presided over by an officer not below the rank of District Magistrate (Section 15), and can extend the 60-day period if you show good cause for the delay. No lawyer is needed here either.
The Act does not exempt children who live abroad. NRI children remain liable to maintain a parent in India. Service of notice and enforcement against an overseas resident is slower, so name any Indian assets, agents or relatives in your application, and ask the Tribunal to attach Indian property or bank accounts to recover the amount under Section 5(8).
If the home is yours, your children have no right to evict you. Where you transferred the home to them on a promise of care, Section 23 lets the Tribunal declare that transfer void and, as the Supreme Court confirmed in Urmila Dixit (2025), order eviction of the neglectful child and restore possession to you. Raise the eviction directly in your application.
Maintenance and abuse are separate but related. The Tribunal route secures your money and, via Section 23, your property. For threats or physical abuse, also report to the police and the senior-citizen helpline 14567 (Elderline). Keep written records and medical reports, which also strengthen your Tribunal case.
Correct. Filing a maintenance application before the Tribunal carries no court fee, and Section 17 bars legal practitioners from representing parties, so there is no advocate's fee. The process is designed to be free and accessible for elders acting on their own.
By law, the Tribunal must decide within 90 days of serving notice on your children, extendable once by up to 30 days only in exceptional cases. Interim maintenance can come much sooner - often within weeks - so you are not left unsupported while the main case runs.