Should The Age Of Consent Be Lowered?

Should The Age Of Consent Be Lowered? 13 Jan 2026

Should The Age Of Consent Be Lowered?

Recently, in State of Uttar Pradesh vs Anurudh & Anr., the Supreme Court acknowledged the growing misuse of the POCSO Act, 2012, in consensual romantic relationships between adolescents where one party is a minor.

Legal Framework on Age of Consent in India

  • Meaning of Age of Consent: The age of consent is the legally defined age at which an individual can consent to sexual activity.
    • In India, the age of consent is 18 under the gender-neutral POCSO Act, 2012.
    • Any person under 18 is legally a child, and consent is legally irrelevant.
    • Sexual acts with minors are treated as statutory rape based on presumed incapacity to consent.
  • Mandatory Reporting under POCSO: Section 19 of the POCSO Act mandates that anyone who knows or suspects an offence must report it to the police or the Special Juvenile Police Unit.
  • Alignment with Criminal Law: The Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2013, amended IPC Section 375 and raised the age of consent from 16 to 18 years, aligning IPC with the POCSO framework.
    • The Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023, retained this position under Section 63.
  • Historical Evolution of the Age of Consent: The age of consent was 10 years under the IPC, 1860.
    • It was raised to 12 under the Age of Consent Act, 1891, then to 14, and later to 16.
    • POCSO raised the age of consent to 18 years in 2012.
  • Distinction from Minimum Age of Marriage: The age of consent is legally distinct from the minimum age of marriage.
    • Under the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006, the minimum age is 18 for females and 21 for males.

Arguments in Favour of Reducing the Age of Consent

  • High Share of Consensual Adolescent Cases: There has been a surge in POCSO cases involving adolescents aged 16–18, where the girl reports consensual relationships.
    • This indicates that the law is frequently invoked in romantic relationships rather than abuse cases.
  • Autonomy and Sexual Agency of Adolescents: It is argued that adolescents aged 16–18 are capable of mature consent. They contend that criminalising such relationships violates personal autonomy.
  • Original Objective of POCSO: POCSO was designed to prevent child sexual abuse, not to criminalise consensual adolescent intimacy.
  • Evidence from National Surveys and Studies: NFHS-4 (2015–16) reported that 39% of girls had their first sexual experience before 18.
    • An Enfold study of 7,064 judgments found that 24.3% involved romantic relationships, and 82% of victims refused to testify.
    • Another study found that 25.4% of aggravated assault cases involved consensual relationships.
  • Need for Nuanced Legal Response: It is suggested that the law should recognise the consent of adolescents aged 16 and above, while retaining strong safeguards against coercion, exploitation, and abuse of authority.
    • There is a need for shifting the conversation towards informed, open dialogue around sex education, relationships, and consent, rather than blanket criminalisation, which often leads to misuse.
  • International Practice: Many Western democracies set the age of consent at 16.
    • Countries like the U.K. and Canada follow close-in-age or Romeo-Juliet exemptions to prevent criminalisation of teenage relationships.

Arguments Against Reducing the Age of Consent

  • Risk of Weakening Child Protection: Reducing the age could enable trafficking and sexual exploitation under the guise of consent.
  • Bright-Line Rule for Legal Certainty: Treating everyone under 18 as incapable of consent provides a clear, objective standard and avoids subjective judicial assessments of maturity and vulnerability.
  • Prevalence of Abuse by Known Persons: A 2007 Ministry of Women and Child Development (MWCD) study found that over 50% of abusers were known to the child.
    • In such situations, claims of consent may reflect coercion or emotional dependence.
  • Risk of Normalising Exploitation: Diluting the law could suppress reporting and legitimise exploitative relationships. It may also encourage premature sexual activity among emotionally immature children.

Parliamentary and Law Commission Position

  • Justice Verma Committee and Parliament: The Justice Verma Committee recommended retaining 16 as the age of consent under the IPC.
    • Parliament rejected this and raised the age to 18 through the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2013.
  • Standing Committee Reports: The 240th HRD Standing Committee Report (2011) rejected the recognition of minor consent under POCSO.
    • The 167th Standing Committee on Home Affairs (2012) supported raising the age to 18 and opposed close-in-age exemptions.
  • Law Commission Report, 2023: The 283rd Law Commission Report warned that lowering the age would make POCSO a “paper law”.
    • It cautioned that it would weaken action against child marriage, prostitution, and trafficking.

Judicial Responses and Interpretational Divide

  • High Court Emphasis on Autonomy: The Delhi HC, in State vs Hitesh (2025), held that consensual adolescent relationships free from coercion should be recognised.
    • Bombay HC in Ashik Ramjaii Ansari vs State of Maharashtra (2023) held that sexual autonomy includes both engagement and protection.
  • Strict Statutory Interpretation: The Delhi HC in Mohd. Rafayat Ali vs State of Delhi held that consent is legally immaterial if the victim is under 18.
  • Supreme Court Position: On August 20, 2024, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that POCSO does not recognise consensual sex with minors.
    • Under Article 142, it declined to impose a sentence in a specific case and clarified that it was not a precedent.
  • Recent Judicial Observations: On August 19, 2025, Justice B.V. Nagarathna observed that near-majority romantic relationships require different consideration.
    • The Court noted that parental complaints often convert elopement into POCSO cases.

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Way Forward

  • Clarify Judicial Interpretation: The Supreme Court should clarify conflicts between statutory law and High Court rulings to ensure uniform guidance for police, prosecutors, and trial courts.
  • Go Beyond Law Alone: Policy must go beyond law alone by strengthening social support systems and education to address the complex realities of adolescence.
  • Strengthen Structural Support: Governments should ensure comprehensive sex education, reproductive health services, and gender-sensitive, adolescent-friendly law enforcement.
  • Prevent Parental Weaponisation: Legal processes must prevent misuse arising from parental opposition that clogs courts and erodes trust without addressing root causes.
  • Introduce Pragmatic Safeguards: The law should introduce close-in-age exemptions for 16–18-year-olds within a 3–4-year gap, subject to mandatory judicial scrutiny to detect coercion or a power imbalance.
  • Build Complementary Social Measures: Schools should strengthen education on consent, relationships, and emotional resilience to protect adolescents while respecting autonomy and reducing misuse of the law.
Mains Practice

Q. Critically analyse the conflict between child protection and adolescent autonomy under the POCSO Act’s rigid ‘age of consent’. In light of recent judicial views, suggest measures to balance safety with the reality of consensual adolescent relationships. (15 Marks, 250 Words)

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UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
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Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

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