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No 'optional' enrollment fee, SC warns BCI, State Bar councils

The Supreme Court has  made it clear that State Bar Councils and the Bar Council of India (BCI) cannot collect any amount beyond the statutory enrollment fee, not even terming this as 'optional'.

News Arena Network - New Delhi - UPDATED: August 11, 2025, 04:12 PM - 2 min read

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The Supreme Court has  made it clear that State Bar Councils and the Bar Council of India (BCI) cannot collect any amount beyond the statutory enrollment fee, not even terming this as 'optional'.

 

A Bench of Justices JB Pardiwala and R Mahadevan said there could be no justification for collecting any fee by describing it as “optional” fees outside the statutory prescription.“We make it clear that there is nothing like optional. No State Bar Council(s) or Bar Council of India shall collect any fees of any amount as optional. They shall strictly collect fees in accordance with the directions issued by this Court in the main judgment,” the Bench said.

 

Pertinently, the Court also directed Karnataka State Bar Council to immediately stop collecting any sum in the name of optional fees.

This was after the Bench was informed that Karnataka imposes additional charges of Rs 6,800 and Rs 25,000 for items such as ID cards, certificates, welfare fund and training, though on a voluntary basis.

 

The Court was hearing a contempt of court petition filed by advocate KLJA Kiran Babu. He alleged that several State Bar Councils were continuing to demand amounts far exceeding the limits fixed under the Court’s July 2024 judgment in Gaurav Kumar v Union of India, which had capped enrolment fees under Section 24(1)(f) of the Advocates Act, 1961 at Rs 750 for general category candidates and Rs 125 for Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe candidates.

 

 

 The Court stopped short of issuing notice but sought the BCI’s personal explanation on the present position.Pursuant to that order, an affidavit was filed on behalf of the BCI by its Additional Secretary, detailing the steps taken since the 2024 ruling. The affidavit said the BCI had written to all State Bar Councils on August 6, 2024, directing them to comply with the Court’s judgment and had reiterated those instructions on July 23, 2025, asking for details of fees currently charged at enrolment.

 

The affidavit stated that most State Bar Councils reported collecting only the statutory fee - Rs 600 for the State Bar Council plus Rs 150 for the BCI in the case of general category candidates, and Rs 100 plus Rs 25 respectively for SC/ST candidates.It also recorded that Himachal Pradesh collects an Advocates’ Welfare Fund fee at the time of enrolment, Jammu & Kashmir charges Rs 900 from general category candidates and Rs 450 from SC/ST candidates under High Court rules and Karnataka imposes additional charges of Rs 6,800 and Rs 25,000 for items such as ID cards, certificates, welfare fund and training.

 

The BCI Chairman told the Court that in Karnataka’s case, these amounts were optional and not mandatory. The Bench rejected this reasoning, holding that no amount over and above the statutory fee can be demanded, irrespective of whether it is labelled voluntary.

The Bench also warned that if the Karnataka State Bar Council was collecting any sum in the name of optional fees, such collection must be immediately stopped. The Court also reminded that while the ruling has prospective effect, all bodies are bound to follow it going forward.

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