Learn the mutual consent divorce process in India in 2026, including online filing, documents, cost, timeline, cooling-off waiver, NRI video hearings and Supreme Court rulings.
NEW DELHI: Mutual consent divorce is often presented as the simplest way to end a marriage. It can certainly be faster and less hostile than contested divorce, but only when the settlement is complete, both parties cooperate and every legal obligation is properly documented.
A badly drafted settlement can create another round of litigation. A husband may pay the agreed amount, only to discover that maintenance proceedings, domestic violence litigation, criminal complaints, property disputes or child-access issues are still pending.
Mutual consent divorce should provide complete closure—not merely a divorce decree.
WHAT IS MUTUAL CONSENT DIVORCE?
Under Section 13B of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, both spouses may jointly seek divorce when:
- They have been living separately for at least one year.
- They have not been able to live together.
- They mutually agree that the marriage should be dissolved.
- Their consent is free and voluntary.
For marriages governed by the Special Marriage Act, 1954, the corresponding provision is Section 28.
“Living separately” does not always mean living in different houses. The Supreme Court in Sureshta Devi v. Om Prakash clarified that spouses may remain under the same roof but still be living separately in the matrimonial sense if they are no longer living as husband and wife.
CAN MUTUAL CONSENT DIVORCE BE COMPLETED ONLINE?
There is no one-click online divorce system in India.
Where the concerned court has adopted electronic filing, spouses or their lawyers may be able to:
- File the petition online
- Upload affidavits and documents
- Pay court fees electronically
- Submit applications digitally
- Seek appearance through video conferencing
However, the marriage does not end merely because documents have been uploaded online.
A competent court must verify the identity of the parties, examine whether their consent is genuine and finally pass the decree of divorce.
Video-conference appearance may be permitted in appropriate cases, especially where one spouse resides abroad, but permission depends on the concerned court and applicable High Court rules.
COMPLETE MUTUAL CONSENT DIVORCE PROCESS
Step 1: Decide All Settlement Terms
Before filing the petition, the parties should settle every major issue arising from the marriage.
The settlement should clearly cover:
- Permanent alimony or full-and-final financial settlement
- Pending maintenance claims
- Child custody and visitation
- School, medical and other child-related expenses
- Return of jewellery, stridhan and household articles
- Joint property and loans
- Bank accounts and investments
- Pending civil and criminal proceedings
- Payment schedule
- Case-withdrawal and quashing obligations
- Consequences of default
Avoid vague terms such as “all cases shall be withdrawn later” or “child access shall be mutually decided.”
Every case should be mentioned by its case number, court, stage and deadline for withdrawal or disposal.
Step 2: File the Joint Petition
The petition must be filed before the Family Court or competent District Court having territorial jurisdiction.
Jurisdiction may depend on:
- Where the marriage was solemnised
- Where the spouses last lived together
- Where the respondent resides
- Other statutory connecting factors
The petition cannot be filed before any court merely because it appears faster or more convenient.
Step 3: Record the First Motion
At the first-motion stage, the court ordinarily verifies:
- Identity of both spouses
- Date and place of marriage
- Period of separation
- Whether reconciliation is possible
- Whether consent is voluntary
- Whether settlement terms are understood
- Whether financial and child-related issues are resolved
The court may record the statements of both spouses and pass the first-motion order.
Step 4: Apply for Waiver of the Six-Month Cooling-Off Period
Under the normal procedure, the second motion is moved after six months.
However, in Amardeep Singh v. Harveen Kaur, the Supreme Court held that the six-month period is directory and may be waived in suitable cases.
The court may consider:
- Length of separation
- Duration of litigation
- Failure of reconciliation and mediation
- Completion of financial settlement
- Settlement of child custody
- Whether further waiting would serve any useful purpose
Waiver is discretionary and cannot be claimed as an automatic right.
Step 5: Complete Settlement Obligations
The period between the first and second motion is often used to complete agreed obligations, such as:
- Payment of settlement instalments
- Withdrawal of maintenance cases
- Filing of criminal quashing petitions
- Return of jewellery and articles
- Property transfer
- Settlement of loans
- Implementation of child-access terms
Payments should be linked to actual performance.
A husband should not ordinarily pay the entire settlement amount at the beginning while the other side’s legal obligations remain pending.
Step 6: Record the Second Motion
At the second-motion stage, both spouses ordinarily confirm that:
- Their consent continues
- They still want the marriage dissolved
- The settlement has been performed
- No reconciliation is possible
- Pending obligations have been completed or properly secured
The second motion must ordinarily be moved within the statutory period.
Step 7: Obtain the Final Divorce Decree
The marriage legally ends only when the court passes the decree.
It does not end merely because:
- A settlement agreement has been signed
- The first motion has been allowed
- The entire amount has been paid
- The parties have lived separately for years
- Connected cases have been withdrawn
Always obtain and verify the certified copy of the decree.
DOCUMENTS REQUIRED
The exact checklist varies between courts, but commonly required documents include:
- Marriage certificate, if available
- Marriage photographs or invitation card
- Identity proof of both spouses
- Address proof of both spouses
- Passport-size photographs
- Joint divorce petition
- Individual affidavits
- Settlement agreement
- Proof of separation
- Child birth certificate and related documents
- Copies of pending court cases
- Copies of FIRs or complaints
- Income documents, where relevant
- Bank details and payment proof
- Inventory of jewellery and articles
- Waiver application
- NRI passport, visa and overseas address proof, where applicable
- Power of Attorney or authenticated overseas affidavits, where permitted
- Video-conference application, where required
All documents must contain consistent dates and facts. Contradictory statements can delay the case.
HOW LONG DOES MUTUAL CONSENT DIVORCE TAKE?
The timeline depends on the facts and the court.
Without Waiver
The ordinary process involves:
- Completion of the required separation period
- Filing of the first motion
- Six-month waiting period
- Filing of the second motion
- Final decree
Court workload, registry objections and pending settlement obligations may increase the actual time.
With Waiver
Where the cooling-off period is waived, the matter may conclude earlier.
However, no lawyer can honestly guarantee a fixed number of days because the final timeline depends on:
- Court availability
- Filing scrutiny
- Settlement compliance
- Presence of both parties
- Connected litigation
- NRI documentation
- Video-conference permission
CAN DIVORCE BE FILED BEFORE ONE YEAR?
Ordinarily, Section 13B requires the parties to have lived separately for at least one year.
In Shiksha Kumari v. Santosh Kumar, the Delhi High Court held that the one-year period may be waived in exceptional cases under Section 14 of the Hindu Marriage Act.
Such waiver is not automatic. The parties must establish exceptional hardship or exceptional depravity.
This ruling should not be advertised as a guaranteed divorce before one year.
WHAT IS THE COST OF MUTUAL CONSENT DIVORCE?
There is no fixed nationwide cost.
The total expense may include:
- Court fee
- Lawyer’s professional fee
- Affidavit and documentation charges
- Certified copies
- Settlement drafting
- Criminal quashing proceedings
- Property documentation
- NRI notarisation or apostille expenses
- Video-conference applications
- Travel and appearance expenses
The alimony or settlement amount is separate from the legal cost.
Professional fees depend on the city, complexity of the settlement, number of pending cases and extent of legal work involved.
IMPORTANT SETTLEMENT RULES FOR HUSBANDS
Never Pay the Full Amount at the Beginning
Payments should be divided into clear stages, such as:
- Signing of settlement
- First motion
- Withdrawal of maintenance case
- Filing or disposal of quashing petition
- Return of articles
- Second motion
- Passing of final decree
Mention Every Case Clearly
The settlement should record:
- Case number
- Court or police station
- Nature of proceeding
- Present stage
- Party responsible for taking action
- Deadline
- Linked payment milestone
Define Child Access Properly
Do not accept vague language such as “reasonable visitation.”
The settlement should specify:
- Days and timings
- Physical and video access
- Holidays and festivals
- School information
- Travel permission
- Passport custody
- Medical decisions
- International relocation restrictions
A father should not lose meaningful access to his child merely to obtain a faster divorce.
Use Traceable Payments
Settlement payments should be made through banking channels.
Keep:
- Bank statements
- Demand draft copies
- UTR numbers
- Receipts
- Written acknowledgements
- Court statements recording payment
CAN CONSENT BE WITHDRAWN?
Ordinarily, consent must continue until the divorce decree is passed.
In Sureshta Devi v. Om Prakash, the Supreme Court held that one spouse may withdraw consent before the decree.
However, the Supreme Court in Dhananjay Rathi v. Ruchika Rathi, 2026 INSC 360 made it clear that a substantially performed mediated settlement cannot be casually repudiated without legal consequences.
This does not mean that every Family Court can force mutual consent after withdrawal. It means that dishonest breach of a substantially performed settlement may have serious legal consequences.
COMMON MISTAKES THAT DELAY MUTUAL DIVORCE
- Filing in the wrong court
- Copying a generic online settlement
- Paying the full amount too early
- Ignoring pending criminal cases
- Using vague child-access clauses
- Assuming online appearance is automatic
- Hiding property or financial information
- Treating the first motion as the final divorce
- Depending on oral promises
- Remarrying without confirming legal finality
FINAL WORD
Mutual consent divorce should bring complete legal closure.
For husbands, the biggest risk is not the divorce petition itself. The real risk lies in vague settlement terms, premature payment, incomplete case withdrawal and uncertain child-access arrangements.
A fast divorce may save time.
A carefully structured divorce protects your money, legal rights and future.
Before signing, verify every amount, every pending case, every deadline and every obligation.
Mutual consent without mutual performance is not settlement. It is surrender.
FAQ’s
No. Filing and appearance may be online where permitted, but a judicial decree is compulsory.
waived
Ordinarily, one year of separation is required. Exceptional waiver may be available in limited cases.
Ordinarily, yes, before the decree. Breach of a substantially performed settlement may still have legal consequences.
There is no fixed national amount. Cost depends on the court, lawyer, settlement, connected cases and NRI requirements.


Leave A Comment