Indian men are not afraid of marriage. They are afraid of one-sided legal risk, false 498A/85 BNS cases, maintenance pressure, arrest fear, custody battles and years of courtroom trauma.
NEW DELHI: Marriage was once seen as stability. Today, for many Indian men, it has become a legal risk assessment.
This is not because men hate marriage. This is because men have seen what happens when a private marital dispute enters the police station, family court and criminal court at the same time.
One failed marriage can bring:
498A IPC / Section 85 BNS criminal case, Domestic Violence Act proceedings, maintenance claims, child custody litigation, dowry allegations, arrest threats, social stigma, workplace damage, travel restrictions, settlement pressure and years of legal expenses.
That is the real reason more men are afraid of marriage today.
THE FEAR IS NOT IMAGINARY
Section 498A IPC has now shifted into Section 85 BNS, with cruelty defined under Section 86 BNS. The punishment remains imprisonment up to three years and fine. The offence continues to create serious criminal exposure for the husband and his relatives.
The Supreme Court in Arnesh Kumar v. State of Bihar recognised that arrests in 498A-type cases were being made mechanically and held that police cannot arrest automatically merely because a complaint is filed.
That judgment did not come in vacuum. It came because men and their families were being arrested first and heard later.
MARRIAGE TODAY CAN BECOME MULTI-FRONT LITIGATION
A man facing matrimonial litigation is often not fighting one case. He may be fighting multiple proceedings at once:
criminal cruelty case, dowry case, Domestic Violence Act case, maintenance under Section 125 CrPC / BNSS equivalent provisions, divorce, child custody, property allegations and sometimes workplace complaints.
The law must protect genuine victims. No serious person disputes that.
But the law must also protect innocent men from weaponised litigation. Courts exist for justice, not revenge.
WHAT THE SUPREME COURT HAS ACTUALLY SAID
In Sushil Kumar Sharma v. Union of India, the Supreme Court refused to strike down Section 498A, but clearly warned that misuse of the provision can become “legal terrorism.”
In Preeti Gupta v. State of Jharkhand, the Supreme Court expressed concern about exaggerated allegations in matrimonial complaints and the tendency to rope in relatives.
In Social Action Forum for Manav Adhikar v. Union of India, the Supreme Court balanced the issue by refusing to dilute genuine women’s protection, but it did not deny the concern of misuse altogether.
This is the exact legal reality: genuine cruelty must be punished, but false implication cannot be ignored.
NCRB DATA SHOWS WHY THE FEAR HAS SPREAD
NCRB’s Crime in India 2023 data reported about 1.33 lakh cases under “cruelty by husband or relatives,” forming the largest category of crimes against women at 29.8%.
That number tells two stories at once.
First, genuine domestic cruelty remains a serious problem.
Second, matrimonial criminal litigation has become one of the largest criminal law categories in India. For men, this means marriage breakdown is not merely emotional failure; it can become criminal exposure.
ARREST IS NOT SUPPOSED TO BE AUTOMATIC
Under the new BNSS regime, Section 35(3) provides that where arrest is not required, police must issue notice directing the person to appear.
In 2026, the Supreme Court again clarified that for offences punishable up to seven years, notice is the rule and arrest is the exception.
But on the ground, the fear remains: police notice, anticipatory bail, relatives dragged in, reputation damaged, and compromise pressure begins before trial even starts.
MAINTENANCE FEAR IS ALSO REAL
Many men are not afraid of supporting a genuinely dependent wife or child.
They are afraid of being treated as an ATM despite disputed allegations, concealed income, earning capacity of the wife, short marriages, or parallel litigation pressure.
Indian courts have repeatedly held that financial status, income, earning capacity and disclosure of both parties matter in maintenance litigation. Your own legal news coverage shows recent High Court focus on earning capacity and financial disclosure in maintenance cases.
The fear is not maintenance. The fear is unfair maintenance.
WHY YOUNG MEN ARE RECALCULATING MARRIAGE
Men today are asking practical questions:
- What happens if the marriage fails within six months?
- What happens if my parents are named in the FIR?
- What happens if I lose access to my child?
- What happens if my wife earns but still claims maintenance?
- What happens if one allegation destroys my career before trial?
- What happens if I win after 10 years, but lose my youth, money and peace?
These are not anti-woman questions. These are legal survival questions.
THE PROBLEM IS NOT MARRIAGE. THE PROBLEM IS LEGAL IMBALANCE.
A good marriage is still a beautiful institution.
But a bad marriage under one-sided litigation pressure can become a legal battlefield where the man is presumed guilty socially long before any court decides evidence.
This is why more men are delaying marriage, avoiding marriage, insisting on financial clarity, documenting communications and consulting lawyers before taking life decisions.
Men have learnt a harsh lesson: love may be emotional, but litigation is documentary.
FINAL WORD
Men are not afraid of marriage.
Men are afraid of false cases, automatic stigma, arrest pressure, maintenance misuse, child alienation, family harassment and a system where acquittal after years does not restore lost life.
The answer is not to weaken laws meant for genuine victims.
The answer is equal accountability.
Punish real cruelty. Punish false cases. Protect women. Protect men. Protect families from litigation abuse.
That is justice.
FAQs
Because one failed marriage can trigger criminal cases, maintenance claims, DV proceedings, custody battles and years of litigation.
Yes. 498A IPC is now reflected in Section 85 BNS, with cruelty defined under Section 86 BNS.
No. Arrest is not automatic. Arnesh Kumar guidelines and Section 35 BNSS require safeguards before arrest.
It depends on facts. Courts examine income, earning capacity, liabilities, lifestyle and disclosures of both spouses.
No. Genuine cruelty cases exist and must be punished. But false and exaggerated cases also exist and must face consequences.


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