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Sabarimala 9-Judge Constitutional Bench Verdict
Event overview
Supreme Court ruling on the Essential Religious Practices doctrine and women's entry; arguments April 2026.
A nine-judge constitutional bench of the Supreme Court is expected to deliver its verdict on 15 June 2026 in the Sabarimala reference, which reframes the Essential Religious Practices doctrine for Indian constitutional jurisprudence. The judgment clubs questions referred from the 2018 Sabarimala ruling with pending challenges around Muslim women's mosque entry, Parsi intermarriage and Dawoodi Bohra female genital cutting. Hearings commenced 7 April 2026.
On 28 September 2018, a five-judge bench in Indian Young Lawyers Association v. State of Kerala struck down the bar on women aged 10–50 entering the Sabarimala temple by a 4:1 majority. Review petitions followed; in November 2019, a 3:2 majority referred seven questions to a larger bench rather than deciding the review on merits. The nine-judge bench was constituted under then-CJI S.A. Bobde and reconstituted since. According to Supreme Court Observer's March 2026 bench-composition note, arguments began 7 April 2026 with the CJI presiding. The 22 framed issues ask whether Essential Religious Practices is a justiciable doctrine at all, how courts should balance Article 25 individual worship rights against Article 26 denominational autonomy, and whether PIL petitioners without custom-based standing can challenge religious practice. The bench is also examining the 1962 Shirur Mutt precedent that seeded the ERP doctrine. Devaswom Board records show Sabarimala's 2024-25 pilgrimage season generated ₹430 crore in hundi collections with over four crore pilgrims, giving the verdict direct economic stakes.
Since the reference, allied petitions have accumulated. Women's entry challenges at the Haji Ali Dargah in Mumbai and the Shani Shingnapur temple in Maharashtra, adjudicated in 2016, are cited as comparators. The Kerala government's affidavit filed in 2019 opposed the review, while the Travancore Devaswom Board, historically aligned with custom, has shifted position between hearings. Senior counsel Indira Jaising, Rajeev Dhavan, K. Parasaran and Solicitor General representatives have appeared across the proceedings.
15 June 2026 falls during the Supreme Court summer vacation's resumption week — a slot historically used for constitutional pronouncements. The verdict arrives before the Sabarimala Mandala-Makaravilakku season begins in November 2026, giving the Travancore Devaswom Board five months to implement any directives. It also precedes the Kerala Assembly's first post-2026-election sitting by weeks, letting the LDF or UDF respond through legislative action if needed. The timing mirrors the court's handling of the Ayodhya title suit, where judgment was reserved in October 2019 and delivered before the Constitution Bench's presiding judge retired — a pattern that repeats when benches write against the CJI's retirement calendar.
The ruling touches roughly 80 million Hindu, Muslim, Parsi and Bohra adherents directly named in the clubbed petitions, but its doctrinal reach extends to every denomination governed by Articles 25 and 26. The Travancore Devaswom Board, managing 1,248 temples and the Sabarimala pilgrimage logistics chain, would need to revise access protocols, security arrangements with the Kerala Police and the Pamba base-camp layout. Mosque boards linked to the All India Muslim Personal Law Board, Parsi Panchayats including the Bombay Parsi Panchayet, and the Dawoodi Bohra Syedna's office are all stakeholders. Kerala, Maharashtra and Gujarat governments will update standard operating procedures, and High Courts hearing parallel matters will calibrate to the Supreme Court's framework.
The Sabarimala ruling interacts with the CAA final hearing Supreme Court 2026 on religion–state questions and with the Ram Mandir 3rd anniversary 2027 on temple governance. The Manipur Violence Commission report 2026 also touches on religious-identity disputes.
When exactly is the Sabarimala verdict expected? The verdict is expected on or around 15 June 2026; hearings began 7 April 2026 per Supreme Court Observer, with judgment likely reserved after rejoinders close.
Is the date confirmed or expected? Expected — the Supreme Court sets delivery dates after hearings close; watch the daily order sheet for pronouncement notices and the court's miscellaneous day listings.
Who is responsible for the verdict? A nine-judge Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court of India led by the Chief Justice, with authored opinions likely distributed among senior puisne judges.
Where can I read the official announcement? The judgment will publish on sci.gov.in; case tracking at scobserver.in/cases/sabarimala-review-essential-religious-practices and LiveLaw's dedicated coverage page.
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