Walking on footpath is a fundamental right, says SC
Walking on Footpath is a Fundamental Right — SC Judgment (June 2026)
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The Supreme Court of India, in a landmark judgment dated June 19–20, 2026, declared the right to walk on demarcated, well-maintained footpaths a fundamental right under the Constitution. [S1][S2]
- The right is grounded in Article 19(1)(d) (freedom of movement) read with Articles 19(1)(a), (b), (c) and Article 21 (right to life and personal liberty). [S2]
- The judgment establishes that the right to walk overrides the privilege of motorised vehicles on demarcated paths — a first-of-its-kind constitutional declaration. [S1]
- Critical for GS-II (Polity/Governance) and GS-III (Infrastructure/Urban Planning): touches judicial activism, fundamental rights expansion, and urban road governance. [S2]
2. Why in the News
- Triggering event (June 19, 2026): A bench of Justice P.S. Narasimha and Justice A.S. Chandurkar pronounced judgment in a compensation case involving the death of a five-year-old boy who was crushed by a tanker lorry while walking to school with his father at a location that had neither a footpath nor a pedestrian crossing. [S1][S3]
- The Court awarded the father compensation exceeding ₹11 lakh and converted the case into a suo-motu-style proceeding titled "Re: Fundamental Right to Walk and Footpath" for continued monitoring. [S1][S2]
- The court additionally directed all States and Union Territories to frame guidelines ensuring proper footpaths for pedestrians. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
- Constitutional basis pre-judgment: Article 19(1)(d) guarantees all citizens the right to "move freely throughout the territory of India," but this was historically interpreted as freedom from inter-state restrictions, not pedestrian infrastructure rights. [S3]
- Urbanisation pressure: Over decades, road infrastructure policy in India prioritised motorised vehicles — wide carriageways, expressways, flyovers — while footpaths were left unmaintained, encroached upon, or absent entirely. [S4]
- Earlier SC signals:
- The Supreme Court had, in prior years, urged states to set norms for pedestrian walkways and flagged that "safety of pedestrians is most important," directing states/UTs to frame guidelines. [S5][S6]
- Those earlier directions were administrative; the June 2026 judgment is the first to constitutionalise pedestrian rights explicitly. [S1]
- Global context: The UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 11 — Sustainable Cities) and WHO road safety frameworks recognise pedestrian infrastructure as a public health and equity imperative; India's judgment aligns domestic law with these international standards. [S2]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Judgment date | June 19, 2026 (reported June 20, 2026) |
| Bench | Justice P.S. Narasimha + Justice A.S. Chandurkar |
| Judgment author | Justice P.S. Narasimha |
| Originating case | Death of a 5-year-old boy struck by a tanker lorry (no footpath/crossing at site) |
| Compensation awarded | ₹11 lakh+ to father |
| Fundamental right basis | Art. 19(1)(d) + Art. 19(1)(a)(b)(c) + Art. 21 |
| Right declared | To walk on demarcated and maintained footpaths |
| Priority established | Pedestrian right overrides privilege of motorised vehicles |
| Duty-bearers identified | Urban Development Authorities, Municipal Corporations, Municipalities, Panchayats |
| Ministries directed | Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs; Ministry of Rural Development; Ministry of Road Transport & Highways |
| Case rechristened | Re: Fundamental Right to Walk and Footpath (for continued SC monitoring) |
| Statutory framework called for | National pedestrian law; right to walk + duty-bearers to be codified |
| Enabling constitutional provisions | Part III (Fundamental Rights): Articles 19 & 21 |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- The judgment expands the jurisprudence of Article 19(1)(d) beyond its conventional anti-restriction reading to impose a positive obligation on the State to create pedestrian infrastructure. [S1]
- It creates an enforceable duty (not merely a directive principle) — duty-bearers can be held liable through writ jurisdiction under Articles 32 and 226. [S2]
- The declaration that walking is "inextricably connected to life" invokes the expanded reading of Article 21 established in Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978) and subsequent cases. [S3]
- The court's framing — "the privilege of a motorised vehicle cannot negate the fundamental right to walk" — creates a hierarchy of competing rights novel in Indian road law. [S1]
Social / Equity
- The case itself illustrates a class and equity dimension: the victim was a child from a family that relied on walking; the court explicitly flagged that relegating walking to an inconvenience reflects elitism in infrastructure policy. [S4]
- Footpath denial disproportionately impacts women, children, the elderly, persons with disabilities, and the urban poor who lack access to motorised transport. [S2]
- The judgment potentially strengthens disability rights (Section 45, Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act 2016) by constitutionalising accessible pedestrian infrastructure. [S2]
Administrative / Governance
- Duty-bearers span multiple tiers: ULBs (Urban Local Bodies), PRIs (Panchayati Raj Institutions), and state governments — requiring inter-governmental coordination. [S1]
- The court directed the Registry to forward the judgment to three Central Ministries (Housing & Urban Affairs; Rural Development; Road Transport & Highways) to initiate a statutory framework — indicating legislative action is expected. [S2]
- SC's conversion of the case to Re: Fundamental Right to Walk and Footpath signals continuing mandamus — courts will monitor compliance, similar to the Vineet Narain or MC Mehta environmental cases. [S1]
Economic
- A national pedestrian law and enforceable footpath standards would compel significant public expenditure on urban and rural road infrastructure retrofitting. [S2]
- Compensation liability for governments/local bodies in pedestrian death/injury cases will increase — a fiscal risk that may incentivise proactive infrastructure investment. [S1]
- Road Safety costs India ~3% of GDP annually (WHO estimates); constitutionalising pedestrian rights may reduce this burden over the long term. [S2]
Environmental / Urban Planning
- Prioritising walking infrastructure supports modal shift away from private vehicles → reduced vehicular emissions, congestion, and urban heat. [S2]
- Aligns with SDG 11.2 (safe, accessible transport for all) and SDG 3.6 (halve road traffic deaths). [S2]
- The judgment may reshape Master Plans, Development Plans, and Smart Cities Mission guidelines to mandate footpath standards. [S2]
Historical
- Echoes the evolution of right to education (Art. 21A) — originally a DPSP (Art. 45), converted to a fundamental right by the 86th Constitutional Amendment (2002) after sustained judicial and civil society pressure. [S3]
- International precedent: Several countries (Netherlands, Netherlands-inspired urban codes) treat pedestrian priority as a statutory right; India now joins this trajectory via judicial route. [S2]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- June 19, 2026 — Supreme Court (Narasimha + Chandurkar JJ.) delivers landmark judgment; declares walking a fundamental right; awards ₹11 lakh+ compensation; rechristens case for monitoring. [S1][S3]
- June 2026 — Court directs Ministries of Housing & Urban Affairs, Rural Development, and Road Transport & Highways to consider enacting a national pedestrian statute. [S2]
- Prior to judgment (2024–25) — SC had issued directions urging states/UTs to frame guidelines on pedestrian walkways and flagged pedestrian safety as a paramount concern in earlier PILs. [S5][S6]
- 2024–25 — Smart Cities Mission and AMRUT 2.0 included footpath upgradation components; the judgment now gives these a constitutional underpinning. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The SC declared walking on footpaths a fundamental right on June 19, 2026. [S1]
- The judgment was authored by Justice P.S. Narasimha (bench: Narasimha + Chandurkar JJ.). [S1]
- Constitutional basis: Article 19(1)(d) (free movement) read with Articles 19(1)(a)(b)(c) and Article 21. [S2]
- The right to walk overrides the privilege (not right) of motorised vehicles on demarcated footpaths. [S1]
- The originating case involved the death of a 5-year-old boy struck by a tanker lorry while walking to school. [S3][S4]
- Compensation awarded: ₹11 lakh+ to the child's father. [S4]
- Case rechristened: "Re: Fundamental Right to Walk and Footpath" — under continuing SC monitoring. [S1]
- Duty-bearers identified: Urban Development Authorities, Municipal Corporations, Municipalities, Panchayats. [S1]
- Court directed its judgment be sent to three ministries: Housing & Urban Affairs, Rural Development, Road Transport & Highways. [S2]
- Court called for a statutory framework — both declaring the right and identifying duty-bearers — not a constitutional amendment. [S2]
- The court described walking as "inextricably connected to life" — invoking Article 21 expanded jurisprudence. [S3]
- SC flagged that prioritising roads over footpaths reflects "elitism" in infrastructure policy. [S4]
- India's pedestrian safety agenda aligns with SDG 11.2 (accessible transport) and SDG 3.6 (road traffic deaths). [S2]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper mapping: | Paper | Syllabus Heading | |---|---| | GS-II | Indian Constitution — significant provisions and basic structure; Functions and responsibilities of various constitutional bodies; Welfare schemes; Judiciary | | GS-II | Governance — transparency, accountability; Citizens' charter; Urban governance | | GS-III | Infrastructure — roads, urban transport; Inclusive growth |
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
-
"The Supreme Court's declaration of the right to walk on footpaths as a fundamental right is a transformative expansion of Article 19(1)(d). Critically examine its constitutional basis, implications for urban governance, and the need for a national pedestrian statute." (GS-II, 15 marks)
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"India's road infrastructure has historically privileged motorised transport over pedestrians, reflecting deep socio-economic inequities. In light of the Supreme Court's 2026 judgment, discuss how urban planning frameworks and legislative reform must evolve to make pedestrian rights enforceable." (GS-II/III, 15 marks)
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"Judicial expansion of fundamental rights through purposive interpretation of Articles 19 and 21 has repeatedly driven policy change in India. Illustrate with reference to the right to education, right to privacy, and the 2026 right to walk judgment." (GS-II, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Article 19 — Six Freedoms | Direct constitutional basis of the judgment; understand scope and reasonable restrictions |
| Article 21 — Right to Life | Court invoked expanded Art. 21 jurisprudence (Maneka Gandhi, Olga Tellis); walking = life |
| Urban Local Bodies (74th Amendment) | Duty-bearers for footpath maintenance are ULBs; 12th Schedule functions |
| Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 (as amended 2019) | Governs road use, penalties, compensation for road accidents; interface with pedestrian rights |
| Smart Cities Mission & AMRUT 2.0 | Urban infrastructure programmes now with constitutional pedestrian infrastructure obligations |
| Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 | Section 45 mandates accessible infrastructure; convergence with new pedestrian right |
| SDG 11 — Sustainable Cities & Communities | SDG 11.2 on accessible transport; India's pedestrian rights judgment supports this goal |
| Judicial Activism & PIL jurisprudence | SC's conversion of case into Re: Fundamental Right shows continuing mandamus pattern |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
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Wrong Article cited alone: Many aspirants cite only Article 21 for this right. The judgment explicitly roots it in Article 19(1)(d) read with Articles 19(1)(a)(b)(c) and 21 — all four together, not Article 21 alone.
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Confusing "right" vs. "privilege": The court's key formulation is that walking is a fundamental right while motorised vehicle use is a privilege — this distinction is likely to be tested in MCQs.
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Misidentifying the bench/author: The judgment was authored by Justice P.S. Narasimha (not the CJI); co-bench was Justice A.S. Chandurkar — aspirants may confuse this with other prominent SC benches.
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Scope confusion — "any road" vs. "demarcated footpath": The right is specifically to walk on demarcated and well-maintained footpaths, not on any part of any road. This qualification is frequently missed.
-
Thinking a constitutional amendment was ordered: The court called for a statutory/legislative framework (an Act of Parliament or State legislatures), not a constitutional amendment — no new Article is being added.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Right to walk on demarcated footpath is fundamental right, declares Supreme Court" — The Tribune — https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/delhi/right-to-walk-on-demarcated-footpath-is-fundamental-right-declares-supreme-court/ — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "Supreme Court Declares Right to Walk on Footpaths a Fundamental Right, Pushes for National Pedestrian Law" — Outlook India — https://www.outlookindia.com/national/supreme-court-declares-right-to-walk-on-footpaths-a-fundamental-right-pushes-for-national-pedestrian-law — (Tier 4)
- [S3] "Pedestrians Have Fundamental Right to Have Footpath; Motorists Can't Negate Right to Walk: Supreme Court" — LiveLaw — https://www.livelaw.in/supreme-court/pedestrians-have-fundamental-right-to-have-footpath-motorists-cant-negate-right-to-walk-supreme-court-538327 — (Tier 4)
- [S4] "Walking on footpath is a fundamental right, says SC" — The Hindu (Article content provided) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-20/th_international/articleGGOG4UVQE-15016187.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S5] "Supreme Court urges states to set norms for pedestrian walkways" — Deccan Herald — https://www.deccanherald.com/amp/story/india/supreme-court-urges-states-to-set-norms-for-pedestrian-walkways-3661340 — (Tier 4)
- [S6] "Safety of pedestrians most important, Supreme Court tells states/UTs to frame guidelines for proper footpaths" — Deccan Herald — https://www.deccanherald.com/amp/story/india/safety-of-pedestrians-most-important-supreme-court-tells-states-uts-to-frame-guidelines-for-proper-footpaths-3541023 — (Tier 4)