The Tamil Nadu government has revised its maternity leave policy through a government order dated March 13, 2026. The amendment addresses a long-standing gap in rules that had placed women with twin births at a disadvantage compared to other employees.
Under the earlier framework, a twin delivery was treated as fulfilling an employee’s two-child maternity leave eligibility, leaving women in such circumstances eligible only for a heavily restricted leave period. These were typically capped at two weeks, with limitations on pre-delivery leave for any subsequent childbirth.
The revised rules change this, making women in government service eligible for up to 365 days of maternity leave for one additional childbirth, regardless of whether their first delivery resulted in twins.
The amendment follows judicial intervention. Court rulings, including those by the Madras High Court and the Supreme Court, had flagged that equating twin births with two independent deliveries created unintended inequities in the application of maternity benefits.
The revision reflects a broader recalibration of workplace benefit frameworks across India, where judicial scrutiny has increasingly driven policy corrections. Tamil Nadu’s move is likely to prompt similar reviews in other states, particularly those still operating under older maternity leave provisions that predate current interpretations of employee welfare and gender equity.
