Supreme Court bans public feeding of stray dogs in India
In a landmark decision that will alter the manner in which India treats animal welfare in urban areas, the Supreme Court of India has ordered that stray dogs cannot be fed in public places, on the streets, and in open areas. Rather, the Court has mandated all Municipalities to allow designated feeding areas in every ward to ensure the well-being of stray dogs and also ensure that the people are not attacked.
The judgment, which was ruled on 22 August 2025 by a three-judge bench consisting of Justice Vikram Nath, Justice Sandeep Mehta, and Justice NV Anjaria, alters a previous order dated 11 August that proposed moving stray dogs to shelters in the Delhi NCR. The new policy seeks a balance by making it clear that stray dogs should not leave the environment/habitat they were initially placed in once they have been vaccinated and sterilised, unless dogs tend to turn rabid after vaccination, are suspected to be rabid, or are aggressive.
This ruling does not just reflect the increasing alarm towards the number of dog-biting occurrences and city safety, but it also attempts to carve out some organization to a discussion which polarized citizens and policymakers for decades; the rights of animals and the safety of human beings.
The order of the Court clearly mentions that:
Dog bite cases have intensified tremendously in India. Government health statistics show that there were about 18 million cases of dog bites in India between the years 2019 and 2024. Some of these concerned children and the reason they attract public indignation and calls for stronger legislation.
This public anxiety is seen in the case under discussion, City Hounded by Strays, Kids Pay Price, where the number of children who are mauled or attacked by street dogs has been brought out in the different reports.
Whether or not to feed stray dogs has been a contentious topic for a very long time. On the one hand, animal rights movements and animal-welfare activists say that dogs are entitled to sustenance and survival, and that citizens have the freedom to give them food. On the other side, resident welfare associations and city dwellers claim that such feeding invites packs of dogs, results in a territorial nature of aggressive behavior, and poses challenges to human life at the street level.
The directive issued by the Court tries to find a compromise between these two goals, creating a safe middle road that will keep dogs out of danger of starving to death, whilst also keeping humans safe.
Local governments throughout India have frequently been unable to enact reasonable stray dog management policies. Sterilization campaigns have also been uneven, and free-feeding has not helped the situation. The Court has now provided clear guidelines to authorities on how to better handle the problem, as they require specific feeding areas.
Municipal Corporations
To Animal Rights Activists
For Public Safety
The Supreme Court has struck a tentative decision after changing its previous order to set up dog shelters, which required that these stray dogs be relocated. Animal rights organizations had explained that relocation disrupts the territorial stability of stray dog populations, which often increases aggression and associated territorial aggression or fights.
The Court appears to be taking a cue from the Animal Birth Control (Dogs) Rules, 2023 ,which have given priority to sterilization and vaccination as the most effective methods of reducing stray dog populations.
This is a smart balance, one that does not leave dogs to starve but at the same time does not endanger citizens.
The case involved the intervention of some of the most senior lawyers of the country, including Kapil Sibal, Dr Abhishek Manu Singhvi, Siddharth Luthra, Colin Gonsalves, and Aman Lekhi on behalf of different stakeholders.
There was a variety of arguments used, including constitutional rights under Article 21 (Right to Life of both humans and animals), municipal duties under section # under various state laws.
The Court, whilst echoing the interests of animal feeders, was emphatic that the interests of society should take precedence and that governance by a municipality could not be undermined by practices left without any regulation.
India has had a special connection with animals, particularly dogs, cows, and monkeys, that happen to be sanctified in religious and cultural practices. The order by the Supreme Court is governed by the logic of the law, but there is a wider social dialogue present within the issues that are considered in such a decision, i.e., how does an increasingly urbanized India reconcile compassion and security?
The Supreme Court ban on feeding stray dogs in the streets is more than a legal decision; it is a shift in policy in the governance and handling of animals. By introducing feeding zones, the Court is striking a balance between compassionate treatment of stray animals with the safety of people who have increasingly suffered because of unregulated feeding habits.
The decision will lead to practical issues but also present fresh avenues to manage India’s stray dog population in a structured, humane, and sustainable manner. At the moment, it preconditions a certain new social contract between people and street animals that would not be established based on confrontation, but rather on the balance of forces.
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