A traditional Will speaks about your wealth after you die. A living Will speaks about your medical care if you become incapable of speaking for yourself. The Supreme Court legalised them in 2018 and made them practical in 2023. Here is how to make yours.

A living Will — also called an Advance Medical Directive — is a written, witnessed declaration that specifies the medical treatment a person wishes to receive (or refuse) if they become incapable of communicating their wishes due to illness or injury. It applies only during the person's lifetime and only when they are medically unable to express their decisions in real time. It has nothing to do with property distribution.
Common scenarios where a living Will operates:
Without a living Will, these decisions fall to family members, sometimes producing prolonged disagreement and ethically fraught situations where doctors must guess at the patient's preferences.
The legal recognition of living Wills in India came through Supreme Court judgments, not parliamentary legislation:
The 2023 framework is what this article is built around.
Any adult of sound mind, capable of communicating their decision, who is making the declaration voluntarily and not under coercion. Functionally identical to the requirements for a property Will.
A living Will can specify:
What it cannot do:
Draft the living Will in writing. It must be unambiguous about:
Two independent witnesses must be present and sign the document. The witnesses must:
The 2023 modification simplified the original 2018 requirement (which involved a Judicial Magistrate) to allow attestation by:
The notary/officer must record their attestation, signing in the maker's presence.
The original living Will should be kept with the maker, and copies provided to:
Storage with hospitals is increasingly straightforward — most major hospitals now accept living Wills for filing in patient medical records.
If a person becomes incapable of making medical decisions (typically in an ICU, with serious illness or injury), the procedure is:
The treating physician determines that the patient is in a condition where the living Will would apply (terminal illness, persistent vegetative state, irreversible loss of capacity to make decisions).
The hospital constitutes a Primary Medical Board consisting of:
The Board reviews the medical situation and the living Will, and decides whether the directive should be implemented.
A second Board, constituted by the local Chief Medical Officer or similar authority, provides independent review of the Primary Board's decision.
The Judicial Magistrate of First Class is informed of the decision. The Magistrate may, in certain situations, visit to verify the situation but the 2023 framework allows for execution of the directive without prior magisterial approval in most cases.
The treatment specified in the living Will is implemented — either withdrawal of specific interventions or continuation of comfort-focused care only.
One of the most important practical elements of a living Will is the designation of a healthcare representative — a person whom the maker trusts to:
The representative should be:
Always nominate a primary AND at least one alternate representative.
Yes. A living Will can be revoked or modified at any time while the maker has capacity. A new directive automatically supersedes prior versions. The modification should follow the same procedural requirements (witnesses, attestation, distribution of copies).
The living Will represents the maker's own decision and is binding subject to medical board review. Family disagreement is taken into account by the Medical Boards but does not override the maker's express written wishes.
The two-tier Medical Board review is designed precisely to handle this. Disagreements are escalated; the Secondary Board has final say in most cases, with the Magistrate available for borderline situations.
Related but not identical. A DNR is a specific medical order, usually entered into a hospital record on the patient's request, that they should not be resuscitated if their heart stops. A living Will is broader and addresses many possible treatment scenarios, not just resuscitation. Including DNR preferences within a living Will is common.
No, they are different documents covering different things:
A comprehensive estate plan includes both.
A typical Indian living Will, post-2023, includes:
The deepest reason is autonomy. Decisions about your own body, your own dying, your own dignity are decisions you have the right to make for yourself. A living Will lets you exercise that right even when illness has taken away your ability to speak in the moment.
The practical reason is sparing your family. Without a living Will, your spouse or children may be the ones standing in an ICU at 3 a.m. being asked by a doctor "do we continue treatment?" — and they must decide based on their best guess about your wishes, often with intense disagreement among themselves, often with lifelong guilt about whether they decided rightly. A living Will lifts that burden from them. The decision was already made — by you, when you were able to think it through clearly.
At Law Tarazoo we increasingly include the option of a living Will alongside the property Will in our flagship engagement. The marginal cost is small; the value is profound. If you are interested in adding a living Will to your estate planning, mention it during your initial consultation.