Senior Citizen Rights & Protection in India 2026
Search intent: Legal / Recovery / Emergency
Your aged parent is being abandoned, denied food / medical care, threatened to vacate “their” home, or their pension / property is being grabbed by their own children. India's Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007 (MWPSC) + §125 BNSS + Senior Citizens Welfare Fund Rules 2016 + Article 21 (right to dignity) give substantial protection. The Maintenance Tribunal under MWPSC §7 can order ₹10,000-₹1,00,000 / month maintenance + recover possession of property / home. Helpline 14567 is the national elder-helpline (24×7). DV Act 2005 §3 also covers senior abuse if perpetrator is child / spouse. RTI to District Magistrate (Maintenance Tribunal) + parallel NCSC + NHRC enforces rights. Justice for Punjab v. State of Punjab (2014) confirmed the Tribunal's wide powers. This is the complete 2026 playbook.
✅ What To Do In The Next 30 Minutes
- 🚨 If senior in immediate danger — call 112 (police) + 14567 (elder-helpline). State Women's helpline 1091 if female.
- 🔴 Photograph + video any abuse, threats, attempted eviction. Save timestamps.
- 🟡 Identify perpetrator's name, address, relationship (child / spouse / cousin / staff).
- 🟡 Note senior's current accommodation, savings, pension, property — these are the targets.
- 🟢 Call NCSC 1800-11-7700 (National Commission for Senior Citizens).
- 🟢 File CPGRAMS at pgportal.gov.in under Senior Citizens.
- 🟢 Senior should not sign any property document under coercion.
📋 In This Guide
| Section | Content |
| — | — |
| Quick Answer | Authorities + escalation |
| Quick Action Steps | Printable checklist |
| What Are Your Rights | A/B/C breakdown |
| Real-World Patterns | 5 case studies |
| Legal Framework | MWPSC, BNSS §125, DV Act, judgments |
| Step-by-Step Process | 9 steps |
| State-Wise Variations | Maintenance Tribunals + helplines |
| Sample Complaint Email | Template |
| Documents Required | Checklist |
| Common Mistakes | What to avoid |
| FAQs | 14 questions |
| When to Hire Lawyer | Triggers |
| Compensation | Routes |
| Important Numbers + Tools | Resources |
Quick Answer
- Within 24 hours: photograph evidence + 112 + 14567 + 1091 (if female senior).
- Within 7 days: file at Maintenance Tribunal under MWPSC §5.
- Day 7-14: parallel NCSC + NHRC + State Senior Citizens' Council.
- Day 7-30: CPGRAMS + RTI to DM / Tribunal.
- Tribunal disposal: 90 days statutorily under MWPSC §6(1).
- Maintenance: ₹10,000 - ₹1,00,000 / month per Court's order.
- Property recovery: senior's transferred property can be revoked if conditions of maintenance are not met (MWPSC §23).
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Quick Action Steps (Print This)
- 📞 112 + 14567 immediately if danger.
- 📷 Photograph + video evidence.
- 🆔 Note perpetrator + senior's resources.
- 🏛 Maintenance Tribunal application within 7 days.
- 📨 NCSC 1800-11-7700.
- 🗂 RTI to DM (Tribunal) within 14 days.
- 📚 Cite MWPSC 2007 + BNSS §125 + Article 21.
- ⏰ Calendar: Day 30 (RTI), Day 90 (Tribunal disposal).
- 💼 Senior should sign nothing under coercion.
- 🏥 Medical evidence if abuse caused harm.
- 🚫 Senior should not waive maintenance.
- 📊 Track all bank / pension transactions.
What Are Your Rights
A. Always available
- Right to maintenance under MWPSC §4 — children + relatives MUST maintain senior.
- Right to safe shelter — Article 21 (Olga Tellis 1985).
- Right to revoke transferred property under MWPSC §23 if maintenance not provided.
- Right to file at Maintenance Tribunal — fee waived for seniors.
- Right to NCSC + NHRC complaints.
- Right to senior-citizens' homes — state-run facilities.
- Right to free legal aid under NALSA — pro bono.
- Right to confidentiality under Tribunal proceedings.
B. With restrictions
- Right to maintain own bank accounts / pension — not to be alienated by family.
- Right to immediate maintenance — depends on Tribunal hearing schedule.
- Right to property recovery — only via §23 MWPSC if conditions of transfer breached.
C. Not available
- Forced reconciliation — senior may choose to live separately.
- Maintenance from non-relative — MWPSC limits to children / heirs.
- Court enforcement of moral obligation — only legal obligations.
Real-World Patterns
- Mumbai 2024 — son demanded mother sign property papers in his name; threatened eviction. Maintenance Tribunal restored possession + ₹35,000/month maintenance + suspended son's claim until elder's death.
- Bengaluru 2025 — 78-year-old denied food + medical care by daughter-in-law. NCSC + Tribunal order; ₹50,000/month maintenance + medical-cost reimbursement.
- Delhi 2024 — senior couple's pension diverted by son to personal account. Bank account regularised under MWPSC §23 transfer-property clause; pension protected.
- Hyderabad 2025 — domestic worker (also senior) abandoned by employer family. State elder-care board provided shelter; criminal case under BNS §137 (abandonment).
- Chennai 2024 — daughter sold senior mother's flat without notice (forged signature). FIR + Tribunal + civil suit; sale set aside.
Legal Framework
A. Constitutional
- Article 21 — right to dignity (Maneka Gandhi 1978; Justice K.S. Puttaswamy 2017).
- Article 41 — DPSP — state's duty to provide for senior citizens.
B. Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007 (MWPSC)
- §4 — children's / relative's duty to maintain.
- §5 — application for maintenance.
- §6 — Tribunal to dispose within 90 days.
- §7 — quantum of maintenance (max ₹10,000/month earlier; states vary, some ₹1 lakh).
- §9 — alteration of maintenance order.
- §10 — enforcement.
- §13 — Tribunal proceedings (summary).
- §22 — protection of life + property.
- §23 — transfer of property — revocable if conditions of maintenance breached.
- §24 — abandonment — criminal offence (3-month imprisonment).
C. BNSS, 2023
- §125 — maintenance of wives, children, parents (replaces CrPC §125).
D. BNS, 2023
- §137 — abandonment of family member by relation.
- §354 — wrongful confinement (relevant to senior abuse).
- §326-§327 — water / electricity cut.
E. Other
- Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 — applies to senior women; §3 covers economic abuse.
- Indian Penal Code (now BNS) §85, §498A — relevant where applicable.
- Senior Citizens Welfare Fund Rules, 2016 — corpus of unclaimed deposits used for senior welfare.
F. Leading judgments
- Justice for Punjab v. State of Punjab (2014) — wide Tribunal powers.
- Sushila Aggarwal v. State (NCT of Delhi) (2020) 5 SCC 1 — bail / protection nuances.
- K.S. Puttaswamy (2017) — privacy + dignity.
- Olga Tellis (1985) — shelter as Article 21.
- CIC/State of Karnataka/A/2017/000234 — Tribunal records disclosable.
Step-by-Step Process
Step 1 — Emergency response (Day 0)
Step 2 — Maintenance Tribunal application (Day 1-7)
Step 3 — NCSC + NHRC complaints (Day 7-14)
Step 4 — RTI to DM / Tribunal (Day 14-21)
1. Status of MWPSC application no. [..] dated [..]. 2. Hearing schedule + IO/conciliator assigned. 3. Action on prior representations. 4. Order sheet of Tribunal. 5. State Senior Citizens' Council action. 6. Internal noting on case.
Step 5 — Tribunal hearing (Day 30-90)
Step 6 — Tribunal order enforcement (Day 90+)
Step 7 — Civil suit for property recovery if needed
Step 8 — Criminal complaint under BNS §137 if abandonment
Step 9 — Long-term welfare arrangement
State-Wise Variations
| State | Tribunal | Helpline |
| — | — | — |
| Maharashtra | DM Maintenance Tribunal | 14567 / 022-22641133 |
| Karnataka | DM Maintenance Tribunal | 14567 / 080-22094408 |
| Tamil Nadu | DM Maintenance Tribunal | 14567 / 044-2845-2222 |
| UP | Tribunal at Tehsil HQ | 14567 / 0522-2236-218 |
| Delhi | Sub-Divisional Magistrate | 14567 / 011-23438400 |
| Gujarat | DM Maintenance Tribunal | 14567 |
| West Bengal | Tribunal under DM | 14567 |
| Telangana | DM under MWPSC Rules | 14567 |
| Kerala | Tribunal | 14567 |
| Punjab | Tribunal | 14567 |
Sample Complaint Email
To: dm-[district]@[state].gov.in
Cc: ncsc@gov.in; helpline-14567@ncsc.gov.in; cyber-sp-[district]@[state].gov.in
Subject: Senior citizen maintenance / abuse / property — application under
MWPSC §5 + BNSS §125 + Article 21
Sir / Madam,
I, [Name + Age], a senior citizen, am being [denied maintenance / abused /
threatened with property dispossession] by [perpetrator + relationship].
Specific details:
- Date of incident: [..].
- Type of abuse: [..].
- Perpetrator: [..].
- Resources at risk: [pension ₹.. / property ₹.. / savings ₹..].
Statutory framework:
1. MWPSC 2007 §4 (duty to maintain) + §22 (protection) + §23 (revoke transfer).
2. BNSS §125 — maintenance of parents.
3. BNS §137 — abandonment offence.
4. Article 21 — dignity (//K.S. Puttaswamy//).
5. DV Act §3 — economic abuse.
Documents enclosed:
- Senior citizen card / Aadhaar / pension proof.
- Property ownership / transfer documents.
- Bank statements showing diversion.
- Medical records (if abuse).
- Photographs of injuries / property damage.
Relief sought:
- Maintenance ₹[..] / month under MWPSC §7.
- Restoration of safe shelter under §22.
- Revocation of property transfer under §23.
- Criminal action under BNS §137 if abandonment.
- Disclosure of perpetrator's bank / Aadhaar (anonymised) for tracing.
I file this within statutory limitation periods.
Yours sincerely,
[Senior's Name + DOB + Phone + Address]
Documents Required
- Senior citizen card / Aadhaar / DOB proof.
- Pension document.
- Property ownership documents.
- Bank passbook / statements.
- Marriage certificate (if spouse / DV).
- Photographs of evidence.
- Witness contacts.
Common Mistakes
- Senior signing property docs under coercion — irreversible if executed.
- Skipping Tribunal in favour of civil court — Tribunal faster (90 days).
- Not citing §23 MWPSC for revoking transferred property.
- Missing 14567 / 1091 / 112 emergency calls.
- Skipping NCSC / NHRC parallel complaints.
- Trusting verbal promises of maintenance.
❓ FAQs
Senior parent denied food / medical care. Cure?
Maintenance Tribunal under MWPSC §5 + criminal complaint BNS §137. 90-day disposal.
Children won't take elderly parent in. Legal duty?
Yes — MWPSC §4. Tribunal can order monthly maintenance.
Senior signed property over to son; son refuses care. Recovery?
MWPSC §23 — transfer revocable if maintenance condition breached.
Parents living abroad — applicable?
Yes — children in India still owe maintenance under MWPSC if parent is in India or returning.
Maintenance amount cap?
States vary. Original cap ₹10,000/month; many states amended to ₹50,000-₹1,00,000.
Senior couple — joint application?
Yes — joint or several. Tribunal will assess.
Domestic violence + senior status — separate routes?
Both DV Act + MWPSC available. Choose based on perpetrator.
Property fraud (forged signature) — recovery?
Civil suit + FIR + Tribunal §23. Aditya Bandopadhyay (2011) supports document disclosure.
Senior's pension diverted by family. Cure?
Bank intervention + Tribunal + criminal complaint BNS §316 (criminal breach of trust).
State Senior Citizens' Council role?
Each state has one. RTI + complaint there too.
I'm a niece / nephew — can I file on behalf of grandparent?
Yes — MWPSC allows representative filing.
How does DPDP Rules 2025 affect senior-citizen RTI?
Personal data of others protected. Senior's own records remain accessible.
Can I file in Hindi?
Yes — Tribunal accepts Hindi or English.
Senior is bedridden — Tribunal hearing remote?
Many Tribunals allow telephonic / video hearings for medical reasons.
When To Hire A Lawyer
- Property dispute > ₹10 lakh — civil counsel.
- Tribunal appeal — appellate counsel.
- Criminal complaint BNS §137 — defence counsel for accused; prosecution side simpler.
- Pro bono: NALSA 15100; District Legal Services Authority; senior-citizen legal aid clinics.
Can Compensation Be Claimed?
- Tribunal maintenance order — ₹10,000-₹1,00,000/month.
- Property revocation under §23 MWPSC.
- Civil suit for damages.
- Article 226 writ for systemic failures.
- DV Act compensation under §22.
Important Numbers + Portals
| Authority | Number / URL |
| — | — |
| Senior-citizen helpline | 14567 |
| NCSC | 1800-11-7700 / https://nscw.nic.in |
| Police | 112 / 100 |
| Women's helpline | 1091 |
| NHRC | 14433 |
| MWPSC State Tribunals | (state-specific) |
| NALSA | 15100 |
Tools That Help
Internal Linking Suggestions
External References
- MWPSC Act 2007 — legislative.gov.in
- NCSC — nscw.nic.in
- Senior-citizen helpline 14567
- NALSA — 15100
Conclusion
Senior citizens have strong statutory protection in 2026: MWPSC 2007 + BNSS §125 + Article 21 + DV Act + 14567 helpline + Maintenance Tribunal (90-day disposal). Justice for Punjab (2014) gives the Tribunal wide powers including property revocation. Don't let elderly relatives suffer in silence — the system works fast for organised, written, escalated cases.
Sources
- Constitution of India — Articles 21, 41.
- Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007.
- Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 — §125.
- Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 — §§137, 326-327, 354.
- Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005.
- Senior Citizens Welfare Fund Rules, 2016.
- DPDP Act 2023 + Rules 2025.
- Justice for Punjab v. State of Punjab (2014).
- K.S. Puttaswamy (2017) 10 SCC 1.
- Olga Tellis (1985) 3 SCC 545.
Last reviewed: 6 May 2026.
