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| + | ====== Surrogacy in India: Eligibility and Rules Under the 2021 Act ====== | ||
| + | In India, only altruistic surrogacy is legal under the Surrogacy (Regulation) Act, 2021. Commercial surrogacy, where the surrogate is paid beyond her medical costs and insurance, is a crime. To be eligible, you must be either a legally married Indian couple (woman aged 23 to 50, man aged 26 to 55) or a single Indian widow or divorcee aged 35 to 45, with a genuine medical need for surrogacy and the required certificates from the appropriate authority. | ||
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| + | If you are reading this while planning a family, take a breath. This is a hard, personal road, and the law has changed a great deal. A reader from Pune wrote to us after a clinic quoted a " | ||
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| + | ===== What the law actually allows ===== | ||
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| + | The Surrogacy (Regulation) Act, 2021 (Act No. 47 of 2021) came into force to stop the unregulated, | ||
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| + | First, surrogacy must be **altruistic**. The Act defines altruistic surrogacy as surrogacy "in which no charges, expenses, fees, remuneration or monetary incentive of whatever nature, except the medical expenses and such other prescribed expenses incurred on surrogate mother and the insurance coverage for the surrogate mother, are given to the surrogate mother." | ||
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| + | Second, **commercial surrogacy is prohibited**. Section 4 of the Act bars surrogacy unless it is "only for altruistic surrogacy purposes" | ||
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| + | Only **gestational** surrogacy is allowed. The surrogate carries an embryo that is not genetically related to her. The Act is clear that "no woman shall act as a surrogate mother by providing her own gametes," | ||
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| + | ===== Who is eligible ===== | ||
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| + | The law allows surrogacy for two categories of people only. | ||
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| + | **An intending couple.** This means a legally married Indian man and woman who have "a medical indication necessitating gestational surrogacy." | ||
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| + | **An intending woman.** This is "an Indian woman who is a widow or divorcee between the age of 35 to 45 years and who intends to avail the surrogacy." | ||
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| + | That is the full list. The Act does not extend eligibility to single men, unmarried couples, or live-in partners. This is a real limitation, and it has been challenged in court, but the statutory text as it stands is narrow. State only what applies to you, and confirm your exact situation with the appropriate authority before spending on any clinic. | ||
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| + | ===== Who can be the surrogate mother ===== | ||
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| + | The surrogate is protected by strict conditions. Under Section 4, she must hold an eligibility certificate confirming that she is: | ||
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| + | * an **ever-married woman** who already has "a child of her own"; | ||
| + | * **between the age of 25 to 35 years** on the day of implantation; | ||
| + | * **willing**, | ||
| + | * medically and psychologically fit, certified by a registered medical practitioner. | ||
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| + | A point that often surprises people: a woman may act "as a surrogate mother more than once" is exactly what the Act forbids. In the words of the statute, "no woman shall act as a surrogate mother more than once in her lifetime." | ||
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| + | Note that the 2019 Bill once required the surrogate to be a "close relative" | ||
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| + | ===== The certificates and legal steps ===== | ||
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| + | Surrogacy is not a private arrangement you settle with a clinic. It runs through the appropriate authority and the courts. Here is the order of events. | ||
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| + | - **Confirm the medical need.** A District Medical Board issues a certificate of a medical indication in favour of the intending couple or intending woman, necessitating gestational surrogacy. | ||
| + | - **Get the certificate of essentiality.** The appropriate authority issues this after checking three things: the District Medical Board' | ||
| + | - **Get the eligibility certificate for the surrogate.** The authority issues this once her age, prior childbirth, willingness, | ||
| + | - **Get the eligibility certificate for the intending couple or woman.** A separate certificate confirming the age band and the no-surviving-child condition. | ||
| + | - **Use a registered clinic only.** "No surrogacy clinic, unless registered under this Act, shall conduct" | ||
| + | - **Take written informed consent.** The clinic must explain all side effects and obtain the surrogate' | ||
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| + | A surrogacy that skips these certificates is illegal, and the people who arranged it can face prosecution. | ||
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| + | ===== Using RTI to check a clinic or authority ===== | ||
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| + | If a clinic claims to be registered, or an authority is sitting on your certificate application, | ||
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| + | You can draft a request fast with the [[https:// | ||
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| + | ===== Common mistakes to avoid ===== | ||
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| + | * **Paying a " | ||
| + | * **Trusting an unregistered clinic.** Always verify registration under the Act first. | ||
| + | * **Assuming old rules apply.** The close-relative requirement and the commercial model are gone. Use only current, post-2021 guidance. | ||
| + | * **Skipping the court order.** The Magistrate' | ||
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| + | ===== Frequently asked questions ===== | ||
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| + | ==== Is surrogacy legal in India in 2026? ==== | ||
| + | Yes, but only altruistic surrogacy through a registered clinic, for eligible people, with the required certificates. Commercial surrogacy remains prohibited under the Surrogacy (Regulation) Act, 2021. | ||
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| + | ==== Can a single person or unmarried couple opt for surrogacy? ==== | ||
| + | The Act allows only a legally married Indian couple or a single Indian widow or divorcee aged 35 to 45. It does not provide for single men, unmarried couples, or live-in partners. | ||
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| + | ==== How much can a surrogate mother be paid? ==== | ||
| + | Nothing beyond her medical expenses and insurance cover. The Act bars any fee, reward, or monetary incentive. Mandatory insurance must cover a period of thirty-six months for postpartum complications. | ||
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| + | ==== Can the same woman be a surrogate more than once? ==== | ||
| + | No. The Act states that no woman shall act as a surrogate mother more than once in her lifetime. She must also be an ever-married woman with a child of her own, aged between 25 and 35. | ||
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| + | ==== Does the surrogate use her own egg? ==== | ||
| + | No. Only gestational surrogacy is allowed, and the surrogate cannot provide her own gametes. The child is not genetically related to her. | ||
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| + | ===== Next steps ===== | ||
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| + | Start by confirming, in writing, that you fall inside the eligibility bands and that any clinic you approach is registered. Get the District Medical Board certificate, | ||
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| + | To verify a clinic' | ||
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| + | **Sources: | ||
| + | ===== Surrogacy Regulation Act 2021 eligibility India (2026) ===== | ||
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| + | - **Step 1: What is Surrogacy Regulation Act 2021 and who is eligible?** (a) Surrogacy: (i) surrogacy — woman carries child for intended parents, (ii) Surrogacy Regulation Act 2021: regulates surrogacy in India, (iii) 2026: commercial surrogacy banned — only altruistic allowed, (b) key rules: (i) SRA 2021: only altruistic surrogacy — no commercial, (ii) eligibility: | ||
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| + | - **Step 2: Comparison table — surrogacy scenarios.** (a) Eligibility: | ||
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| + | - **Step 3: How to do legal surrogacy.** (a) Step 1: Check eligibility — couple + surrogate, (b) Step 2: Medical certificate — infertility, | ||
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| + | - **Step 4: E-E-A-T signals.** (a) Sources: lawmin.gov.in, | ||
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| + | - **Step 5: Practical tips.** (a) altruistic only — commercial banned, (b) close relative — as surrogate, (c) 16 months insurance — mandatory, (d) parentage order — from court, (e) Example: A couple married 8 years with infertility; | ||
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| + | - **Step 6: Key provisions.** (a) Surrogacy Regulation Act 2021, (b) Altruistic only, (c) Close relative, (d) 16 months insurance, (e) Parentage order. | ||
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| + | See [[https:// | ||
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