Jan Vishwas Bill 2026 – India’s Major Decriminalisation Reform

Jan Vishwas Bill 2026 expands decriminalisation across laws, rationalising offences and improving ease of doing business in India.

Jan Vishwas Bill
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Jan Vishwas Bill Latest News

  • Parliament has passed the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026, expanding India’s decriminalisation exercise across multiple laws.

Jan Vishwas Bill 2026

  • The Jan Vishwas Bill, 2026, is a major legislative reform aimed at rationalising criminal provisions across various laws.
  • It builds upon the earlier Jan Vishwas Act, 2023, which amended 183 provisions across 42 laws.
  • The 2026 Bill significantly expands the scope by:
    • Amending 784 provisions across 79 Central laws. 
    • Decriminalising or rationalising 1,018 offences. 
  • The reform reflects a shift from punitive criminal enforcement to a more balanced regulatory approach.

Scope and Coverage

  • The Bill spans a wide range of sectors affecting both businesses and citizens.
    • Industry and business laws: Tea Act, Coir Industry Act, Legal Metrology Act. 
    • Municipal governance: Delhi Development Act, Municipal Corporation laws, Cantonments Act. 
    • Infrastructure and transport: Motor Vehicles Act, Coastal Shipping Act, pipeline laws. 
    • Colonial-era laws: Cattle Trespass Act, Livestock Importation Act, Indian Succession Act. 
  • This wide coverage indicates a systemic overhaul rather than a sector-specific reform.

Key Features of the Bill

  • Decriminalisation
    • A total of 805 offences are decriminalised. 
    • Criminal penalties such as imprisonment are replaced with civil penalties or warnings. 
    • These offences are removed from the criminal justice system. 
  • Omission of Offences
    • 125 obsolete or redundant offences are removed. 
    • Some offences are omitted because they are already covered under general criminal law, such as BNS. 
  • Compounding of Offences
    • 35 offences are made compoundable. 
    • This allows settlement through payment, reducing litigation burden. 
  • Rationalisation of Punishments
    • 53 offences see reduced or revised penalties. 
    • Disproportionate punishments such as life imprisonment are removed. 

Shift from Criminal to Civil Enforcement

  • A key conceptual change is the distinction between fines and penalties.
    • Fines are imposed by courts and involve criminal proceedings. 
    • Penalties are civil in nature and imposed by adjudicating officers. 
  • This shift aims to:
    • Reduce burden on courts. 
    • Enable faster resolution of minor violations. 
    • Improve regulatory efficiency. 

Types of Offences Addressed

  • Outdated and Minor Offences
    • Removal of trivial offences such as minor public nuisances. 
    • Elimination of obsolete provisions from colonial-era laws. 
  • General Contraventions
    • Omnibus provisions criminalising any violation are reduced. 
    • Example: Under the Motor Vehicles Act, first violations may now attract warnings instead of criminal action. 
  • Procedural Defaults
    • Minor compliance failures such as filing delays are decriminalised. 
    • Example: Failure to furnish returns under the Tea Act now attracts civil penalties. 
  • Obstruction-Related Offences
    • Vaguely defined offences like “obstruction of public servants” are rationalised or removed. 

Graded Enforcement Mechanism

  • The Bill introduces a progressive enforcement framework.
  • Instead of immediate criminal penalties, it provides:
    • Warnings for first-time violations. 
    • Improvement notices to correct behaviour. 
    • Escalation to penalties or sanctions for repeated violations. 
  • For instance, some laws now follow a sequence of notice, suspension, and cancellation for repeated non-compliance. 
  • This ensures proportionality in enforcement.

Need for the Reform

  • India’s regulatory landscape has been characterised by excessive criminalisation.
    • There were 7,305 criminal offences across 370 Central laws
    • Around 5,333 offences carried imprisonment provisions
    • Over 74% of these laws were regulatory, not core criminal laws
  • This created:
    • High compliance burden. 
    • Fear of criminal prosecution for minor lapses. 
    • Inefficiencies in the criminal justice system. 

Significance of the Bill

  • The Jan Vishwas Bill represents a structural shift in governance philosophy.
    • Promotes ease of doing business
    • Reduces overcriminalisation in regulatory laws. 
    • Enhances trust-based governance
    • Improves the efficiency of legal enforcement mechanisms
  • It reflects a move from a control-based state to a facilitative regulatory framework.

Source: TH | IE

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Jan Vishwas Bill FAQs

Q1. What is the objective of the Jan Vishwas Bill 2026?+

Q2. How many laws are amended under the Bill?+

Q3. What is meant by decriminalisation in this context?+

Q4. What are compoundable offences?+

Q5. Why was this reform necessary?+

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