Anupama
Anupama Mehra
Assistant Manager – Content
New Delhi, Updated on Jul 18, 2025 20:48 IST
During the hearing, BCI’s counsel submitted that following the Court’s July 30 ruling, revenue sources for the BCI have been significantly constrained, affecting its ability to discharge various responsibilities. He argued that the INR 3,500 charged for AIBE is relatively modest when compared to fees charged in other competitive exams.

During the hearing, BCI’s counsel submitted that following the Court’s July 30 ruling, revenue sources for the BCI have been significantly constrained, affecting its ability to discharge various responsibilities. He argued that the INR 3,500 charged for AIBE is relatively modest when compared to fees charged in other competitive exams. It was also noted that most candidates appear for AIBE within two years of joining the legal profession.

 

 

The Supreme Court has asked the Bar Council of India (BCI) to consider framing a policy for fee exemptions under the All India Bar Examination (AIBE) for candidates who are financially unable to pay the existing INR 3,500 fee. A bench comprising Justice P.S. Narasimha and Justice A.S. Chandurkar was hearing a writ petition challenging the current AIBE fee structure, which was argued to be exorbitant and in violation of the Court’s earlier judgment dated July 30, 2024.

In that judgment, a Constitution Bench led by Chief Justice D.Y. Chandrachud and Justices J.B. Pardiwala and Manoj Misra had ruled that enrolment fees charged by State Bar Councils must be capped at INR 750 for general category candidates and INR 125 for SC/ST candidates.

During the hearing, BCI’s counsel submitted that following the Court’s July 30 ruling, revenue sources for the BCI have been significantly constrained, affecting its ability to discharge various responsibilities. He argued that the INR 3,500 charged for AIBE is relatively modest when compared to fees charged in other competitive exams. It was also noted that most candidates appear for AIBE within two years of joining the legal profession.

In light of these figures, the Court encouraged BCI to explore the creation of a special fund or scheme to assist those who genuinely cannot afford the examination fee. “Is there any such scheme? If someone applies for exemption, can you consider it? You must have some provision like that,” Justice Narasimha said in an oral remark. The matter is likely to be taken up again after the BCI assesses the feasibility of such an exemption policy.

Videos you may like

Follow Shiksha.com for latest education news in detail on Exam Results, Dates, Admit Cards, & Schedules, Colleges & Universities news related to Admissions & Courses, Board exams, Scholarships, Careers, Education Events, New education policies & Regulations.
To get in touch with Shiksha news team, please write to us at news@shiksha.com

About the Author
author-image
Anupama Mehra
Assistant Manager – Content

She has over 10 years of experience in the education and publishing sectors. She specialises in exam coverage and content creation. At Shiksha, she writes, analyses, and presents information for students preparing f

Read Full Bio
qna

Comments

(1)

S

Sugandha Padole

4 months ago

Sir.yes fees reduce for

Reply to Sugandha Padole