What did the SC say about paid maternity leave?


SC on Paid Maternity Leave for Adoptive Mothers — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1929 Bombay Maternity Benefit Act — first statutory protection; covered women factory workers [S4]
Pre-1961 Several state-level maternity benefit laws enacted in run-up to Independence [S4]
1961 Parliament passed the Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 — provided 12 weeks paid maternity leave to working women nationally [S4]
2017 Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act, 2017 — extended leave for biological mothers to 26 weeks; for the first time extended coverage to adoptive and surrogate mothers (12 weeks, child below 3 months) [S1][S2][S3]
2020 Social Security Code, 2020 consolidated 9 labour laws including the Maternity Benefit Act; Section 60 replaced Section 5; Section 60(4) retained the three-month age-cap restriction for adoptive mothers [S4]
March 2026 Supreme Court struck down Section 60(4) — unconstitutional age-cap; extended right to all adoptive mothers irrespective of child's age at adoption [S4]

4. Core Static Facts

Legislation & Provisions - Parent Act: Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 (now subsumed in Social Security Code, 2020) - Codified under: Social Security Code, 2020 — one of the Four Labour Codes (the others: Wages; Industrial Relations; Occupational Safety) - Struck-down provision: Section 60(4), Social Security Code, 2020 [= erstwhile Section 5(4), Maternity Benefit Act, 1961] - Implementing authority: Ministry of Labour and Employment

Duration of Paid Maternity Leave (post-2017 amendment)

Category Leave entitlement
Biological mother (1st or 2nd child) 26 weeks (max 8 weeks pre-delivery) [S1][S2]
Biological mother (3rd child onwards) 12 weeks [S1][S2]
Adoptive / Surrogate mother 12 weeks [S1][S2]
Work-from-home Mutual agreement under Section 5(5) [S2]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Social / Gender Justice

Economic

Governance / Administrative

Ethical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Bombay Maternity Benefit Act, 1929 was the first statutory maternity protection law in India, covering women factory workers. [S4]
  2. The Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 originally provided 12 weeks of paid maternity leave. [S4]
  3. The Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act, 2017 extended paid maternity leave for biological mothers (1st/2nd child) to 26 weeks — among the highest globally. [S1][S2]
  4. Adoptive and surrogate mothers were brought under maternity leave coverage for the first time by the 2017 Amendment. [S3]
  5. Under the 2017 Amendment, adoptive/surrogate mothers were entitled to 12 weeks of leave only if the child was below three months of age — the restriction SC struck down in 2026. [S4]
  6. The struck-down provision was Section 60(4) of the Social Security Code, 2020 (previously Section 5(4) of the Maternity Benefit Act, 1961). [S4]
  7. The Social Security Code, 2020 is one of the Four Labour Codes consolidating 9 labour laws. [S4]
  8. The Maternity Leave Incentive Scheme reimburses employers for 7 weeks' wages for women workers earning up to ₹15,000/month in establishments with fewer than 50 employees. [S5]
  9. Implementing ministry for maternity benefit laws: Ministry of Labour and Employment. [S1]
  10. The work-from-home provision for women post-maternity was introduced under Section 5(5) of the Maternity Benefit Act (now Social Security Code). [S2]
  11. For the third child onwards, paid maternity leave is 12 weeks (not 26). [S2]
  12. ILO Convention No. 183 (Maternity Protection Convention, 2000) sets international standards for maternity leave — India is not a formal ratifier but uses it as a reference. [S6]
  13. The SC's 2026 ruling is premised on the principle that adoptive mothers have the same rights and obligations as biological mothers. [S4]
  14. Eligibility for maternity benefit requires a woman to have worked a minimum of 80 days in the 12 months preceding the date of expected delivery/adoption.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper(s): - GS-II: Government policies and interventions; social justice; women and vulnerable sections; statutory bodies and legislation - GS-II: Judiciary — significant SC judgments; constitutional provisions

Syllabus Headings: - "Issues relating to women" / "Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections" - "Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability" - "Indian Constitution — significant provisions and basic structure"

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Supreme Court's 2026 ruling on maternity leave for adoptive mothers reflects a child-centric and gender-just reading of the Constitution. Examine the ruling's constitutional basis and its implications for the pending Four Labour Codes." 2. "India's maternity benefit regime has evolved significantly since 1929, yet large coverage gaps persist. Critically analyse the legislative journey and the challenges of extending benefits to informal sector workers." 3. "The absence of statutory paternity leave in India perpetuates unequal caregiving burdens. In light of the Supreme Court's recent recommendation, discuss the need for paternity leave legislation and its socio-economic implications."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Four Labour Codes (2019–20) Social Security Code, 2020 is the parent statute of the struck-down provision
ILO Convention No. 183 — Maternity Protection International benchmark against which India's law is assessed
Hindu Adoption and Maintenance Act, 1956 Governs legal framework of adoption that underpins the SC's equality reasoning
Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015 Alternate adoption pathway; relevant to who qualifies as an "adoptive mother"
Female Labour Force Participation in India Maternity leave is a key demand-side factor in women's employment decisions
Unorganised Sector Social Security Maternity benefits for informal workers remain the largest coverage gap
Paternity Leave — Global Comparisons Sweden, Iceland, Japan as comparative models; ILO evidence on shared parenting
Article 21 Jurisprudence (Right to Life) SC's expanding reading of dignity — connects to this and other social rights rulings

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing 26 weeks with universal entitlement: The 26-week benefit applies only to biological mothers of the first or second child. Adoptive/surrogate mothers and mothers of third or subsequent children get 12 weeks — a classic MCQ trap. [S2]
  2. Wrong parent statute: The provision was Section 5(4) of the Maternity Benefit Act, 1961, now Section 60(4) of the Social Security Code, 2020 — confusing the two or citing the wrong section number will cost marks. [S4]
  3. Thinking paternity leave is already statutory: India has no statutory paternity leave law for private sector workers (central government employees get 15 days under CCS Leave Rules — a separate administrative order, not a labour code). The SC only recommended legislation in 2026. [S4]
  4. Misattributing the implementing ministry: The Ministry of Labour and Employment implements maternity benefit laws — not the Ministry of Women and Child Development (which handles PMMVY and related schemes). [S1]
  5. Assuming the Social Security Code is fully in force: As of 2026, the Code has been passed but rules have not been fully notified by all states — creating ambiguity about which law formally governs. Courts, however, treat struck-down provisions as directly impugnable.

11. Sources