The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 (PWDVA) provides civil remedies for women suffering domestic violence — including physical violence, emotional abuse, economic abuse, and sexual abuse within a domestic relationship. Crucially, the DV Act provides fast interim relief that can be obtained within days to weeks, unlike civil court proceedings that take years.
The Act applies not just to wives but to any woman in a “domestic relationship” — live-in partners, sisters, mothers, and daughters living in a shared household can all apply.
Prohibits the respondent (abuser) from committing any act of domestic violence, communicating with the applicant, entering the applicant’s workplace or child’s school, and alienating assets. Violating a protection order is a criminal offence punishable with imprisonment up to 1 year.
Gives the woman the right to continue residing in the shared household — even if she has no ownership rights in the property. The abuser can be directed to vacate part or all of the household or to arrange alternate accommodation for the applicant.
Covers loss of earnings, medical expenses, damage to property, and maintenance for the applicant and children. This is in addition to any maintenance claim under S.144 BNSS or S.25 HMA — both can run simultaneously.
Interim custody of children can be granted under the DV Act simultaneously with protection and residence orders. This is often faster than waiting for the Family Court’s interim custody order.
The Magistrate can award compensation for physical and mental injury suffered due to domestic violence — in addition to monetary relief.
Yes. The DV Act applies to women in any “domestic relationship” — which includes live-in relationships, relationships in the nature of marriage, and relationships between family members sharing a household. You do not need to be legally married to seek DV Act protection. The key requirement is that you share or have shared a household with the respondent.
In urgent cases, an ex-parte interim protection order can be obtained within 3 working days of filing the application under S.23 PWDVA — without even the respondent being present. This is one of the fastest remedies available in Indian courts. Final orders after hearing both sides typically follow within 2–6 months.
Yes — and this is commonly done. The DV Act provides civil remedies (protection, residence, maintenance) through the Magistrate Court. A 498A FIR initiates criminal prosecution through the police and Sessions Court. Both can proceed simultaneously — they address different aspects of the same domestic violence situation. Many advocates recommend pursuing both tracks for maximum protection and legal relief.
Advocate Akash Chikate handles DV Act applications at Pune Magistrate Courts and Family Court, providing urgent relief to women facing domestic violence. Contact us immediately for a confidential consultation.
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