Yes, a Muslim and a Hindu can get married in India (including Jammu and Kashmir) without either person having to change their religion.
This is made possible through a specific law called the Special Marriage Act, 1954. While traditional religious laws (Personal Laws) usually require both partners to be of the same faith, the Special Marriage Act is a secular law that treats marriage as a civil contract.+1
1. The Two Paths to Marriage
Couples generally have two options, depending on whether they want to keep their original religions:
| Feature | Path A: Special Marriage Act (Civil) | Path B: Personal Laws (Religious) |
|---|---|---|
| Conversion | Not Required. Both stay in their own faith. | Required. One partner must convert. |
| Ceremony | Done in a court/office (no rituals). | Done via Nikah or Hindu rituals. |
| Legal Status | Legally valid across India. | Valid only if conversion is legal. |
| Succession | Governed by the Indian Succession Act. | Governed by religious personal laws. |
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2. Key Requirements for Court Marriage
To marry under the Special Marriage Act in 2026, you must meet these criteria:
- Age: The groom must be 21+ and the bride must be 18+.
- Marital Status: Both must be currently unmarried (or legally divorced/widowed).
- Mental Health: Both must be of sound mind and capable of giving free consent.
- Prohibited Relationships: You cannot marry close blood relatives (the law has a specific list of “prohibited degrees”).
- Residence: At least one of you must have lived in the district where you are applying for at least 30 days.
3. The 30-Day “Notice” Rule
This is the most important part of the legal process:
- File Notice: You submit a “Notice of Intended Marriage” to the Marriage Officer (Tehsildar/SDM).
- Public Display: The officer puts this notice on their office board for 30 days.
- Objections: During these 30 days, any person can raise a legal objection (e.g., if someone is already married or underage).
- Registration: If no valid legal objection is raised after 30 days, the marriage is solemnized in the presence of three witnesses.
4. Why This Path is Often Preferred
- Identity: Neither partner is forced to give up their religious heritage, name, or culture.
- Property Rights: Your right to inherit property from your parents remains protected under secular law.
- Legitimacy: Any children born from this marriage have full legal rights to inheritance and status.
5. Important Legal Protections
Inter-religious couples often worry about safety or family pressure. In India, the Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that:
- Right to Choose: Adults have a fundamental right to choose their life partner (Hadiya Case, 2018).
- Police Protection: If a couple feels threatened by their families or society, they can approach the High Court or the SSP for police protection or a “Safe House” stay.
- Privacy: Some courts have recently ruled that the “30-day public notice” should not be used to harass couples, making the process more private in several states.
A Note on “Love Jihad” Laws: In some Indian states (like UP or MP), there are specific “anti-conversion” laws that make it difficult to convert just for marriage. However, the Special Marriage Act bypasses these issues because it does not involve conversion at all.+1
Are you considering a court marriage to keep your respective religions, or are you looking for information on how religious ceremonies work for inter-faith couples?