Cheating
Cheating (IPC 420 equivalent)
Cheating by Personation
Property Fraud
The iconic IPC Section 420 (Cheating) is renumbered to BNS Section 318. The law is substantively identical — dishonest inducement to deliver property remains the core — but the cultural shorthand "420" is now legally obsolete.
Misappropriation, CBT, Receiving Stolen Property, Cheating
Snatching
Snatching
House-Breaking (day/night)
Fabricating Evidence
Forgery, Documents, Currency Notes
The newly nationalised offence of Snatching moves from state-specific IPC amendments to BNS Section 304, creating India's first uniform national snatching law.
Concealing Design to Wage War
Fabricating Evidence / Using False Evidence / False Declaration
The legal framework for ensuring the privacy and dignity of sexual offence survivors in the digital age.
Receiving / Retaining Stolen Property
Concealing War Design
Personating a Public Servant
Laws relating to the negligent or malignant spread of dangerous diseases — critical for pandemic enforcement.
Collecting Arms for Waging War
Counterfeiting Currency / Selling / Using / Possessing Counterfeit Currency; Counterfeiting Government Stamps
Dishonestly Breaking Open Receptacle Containing Property
Counterfeiting Seals / Devices / Property Marks / Trade Marks
Lurking House-Trespass/House-Breaking Causing Grievous Hurt
The restructuring of perjury laws to consolidate definitions and maintain strict penalties for lying in court.
False Evidence / Using False Evidence / False Certificate / False Declaration / Making False Charge
Dishonestly Preventing Debt Being Available for Creditors
House-Trespass / House-Breaking to Commit Robbery or Dacoity
False Personation in Legal Proceedings
Wearing Garb or Carrying Token Used by Public Servant
Taking Gratification / Bribery / Public Servant Disobeying Law / Framing Incorrect Record
Collecting Arms for War
Lurking House-Trespass/House-Breaking with Preparation for Hurt
Lurking House-Trespass/House-Breaking to Commit Imprisonable Offence
Collective Guilt for House-Breaking where Any Member Commits Capital Offence
Taking Gratification Under Pretence of Recovering Stolen Property
Belonging to Gang of Thieves / Gang of Dacoits / Habitual Receiving of Stolen Property
Kidnapping/Abducting for Grievous Hurt, Slavery, or Unnatural Lust
Outraging Religious Feelings / Disturbing Religious Assembly / Bribery at Elections / False Weights and Measures
Receiving Property Taken by War or Depredation Against Allied Nations
IPC Sections 489A–E (counterfeiting currency notes and bank notes — life imprisonment) map to BNS Section 178's comprehensive document/currency forgery framework. Life imprisonment for counterfeiting legal tender is fully preserved.
How the law punishes insults and interruptions in the courtroom, featuring updated financial penalties.
IPC Section 302 (Murder) transitions to BNS Section 103, which retains Death/Life imprisonment AND introduces India's first dedicated mob lynching clause under sub-section (2).
Contempt of Court (IPC)
Public brawling laws updated with a much higher financial deterrent in BNS 204. Fine increased 50-fold from ₹100 to ₹5,000.
The legal framework for punishing escapes and the rescue of prisoners from IPC (224-225) to BNS (262-263).
Matrimonial Cruelty / Dowry Harassment
House-Trespass with Preparation for Hurt, Assault or Wrongful Restraint
Trespass and Housebreaking
Child Abandonment
Child Abandonment
Waging War Against India
False Evidence — Aggravated Forms
Homicide Extended Provisions
Armed Forces Discipline Offences
Protection of religious gatherings and the dignity of the dead from IPC to BNS.
The transition of laws protecting women from deceitful marriages from IPC 493 to BNS 81.
The legal framework for protecting communal harmony and national integration has moved to BNS 196 and 197.
The transition of laws protecting a woman's modesty from IPC 354 to BNS 74, with identical penalties maintained.
The legal transition of laws protecting the physical sanctity of religious sites from IPC 295 to BNS 298.
The core legal right to defend body and property remains unchanged in the transition to BNS 34-44, preserving decades of judicial precedent.
The colonial Sedition law (IPC 124A) is replaced by BNS 152 which focuses on secession, armed rebellion, and subversive activities — protecting the Nation rather than the Government.
BNS Section 4 introduces Community Service as India's sixth formal punishment — a historic first in the general penal code, shifting philosophy from purely retributive to partially reformative.
Defamation, Intimidation, Modesty — Extended
Bribery and Misconduct of Public Servants
Public Health, Safety and Nuisance
BNS Section 111 is one of the most transformative new provisions in Indian criminal law — the first time "Organised Crime" appears in the general penal code, bringing gang-based criminal enterprise under a national framework previously handled only by state MCOCAs.
For the first time in India's legislative history, "Terrorist Act" is defined and criminalised within the general penal code (BNS 113), not just special statutes like UAPA. This gives ordinary courts and police a clearer framework for terror-adjacent crimes.
BNS Section 69 creates a standalone offence for sexual intercourse obtained through deceit — including false promises of marriage, false identity, or other fraudulent inducements. Courts no longer need to stretch the rape definition (BNS 63) for these cases.
The definition of Culpable Homicide has been carried over from IPC 299 to BNS 100 with procedural renumbering.
The legal definition of Murder and its five exceptions have moved from IPC 300 to BNS 101.
The punishment for culpable homicide not amounting to murder transitions from IPC 304 to BNS 105.
The law for Simple Hurt moves from IPC 323 to BNS 115, with a significant increase in the potential fine.
IPC 325 is renumbered to BNS 117. The criteria for Grievous Hurt has been slightly updated for modern medical standards.
The stringent laws against acid attacks have moved from IPC 326A to BNS 124, maintaining their severity.
The definition and punishment for kidnapping have transitioned to BNS 137 and 140 respectively.
The definition of Abduction by force or deceit has moved from IPC 362 to BNS 138.
Criminal Breach of Trust (CBT) renumbered from IPC 406 to BNS 316, with identical legal elements.
The legal provisions for dishonest misappropriation of property have moved from IPC 403 to BNS 314.
Transition of Robbery laws to Section 309, maintaining the focus on violent theft.
Punishment for extortion has been significantly increased in the transition to BNS 308 — from 3 years to 7 years.
The transition of gang-robbery (Dacoity) laws from Section 395 to Section 310.
Laws on unlawful assembly and rioting move to BNS 189 and 191 with consolidation and identical core principles.
One of the most powerful legal tools against mob violence remains intact in BNS 190.
The most serious offence against the state has transitioned from IPC 121/121A to BNS 147/148, maintaining its stringent penalties.
The law of Mischief overhauled with a tiered punishment system based on the value of property damage. Modern thresholds replace the ₹50 IPC standard.
Protection of private property through criminal trespass laws strengthened in BNS 329 with higher penalties — 3 months jail and ₹5,000 fine.
Serious house-trespass involving preparation for violence has moved from IPC 452 to BNS 333.
The transition of foundational legal excuses — Mistake of Fact, Accident, and Necessity — from IPC 76-81 to BNS 14-19, preserving the Mens Rea principle.
The renumbering of legal protections for those lacking criminal capacity — children, the insane, and the involuntarily intoxicated.
Consolidation of specific offences against women from IPC 354A-D into the BNS 75-78 framework.
The consolidation of bigamy (IPC 494) and bigamy with concealment (IPC 495) into a single BNS 82 with tiered penalties.
The transition of legal protections for the unborn and minors from IPC (312-318) to BNS (Sections 88-94).
The transition of laws against enticing married women from IPC 498 to BNS 84.
The restructuring and consolidation of public order offences from IPC (141-160) to BNS (189-204) with significant fine increases.
The re-enactment of communal harmony and national integration laws as BNS Sections 196 and 197.
The transition of Waging War and related high-security offences from the IPC (121-125) to the BNS (147-151).
The continuation of laws against tampering with a crime scene or hiding evidence to protect offenders.
The legal shield against fake FIRs and false criminal charges remains strong in BNS 248.
The transition of laws penalising those who give shelter or aid to fugitives from IPC 212 to BNS 249.
The redefinition and modernisation of public nuisance laws — fine increased from ₹200 to ₹5,000 with new repeat offender imprisonment.
The transition of food safety laws to BNS, featuring higher financial penalties for adulteration and sale of noxious food.
Modernising the penalties for dangerous and negligent driving — fine increased 10-fold from ₹1,000 to ₹10,000.
The transition of obscenity laws from IPC to the new Sanhita with updated fines.
Comparing IPC 295A and the modernised BNS 299, now explicitly including electronic means and digital hate speech.
The re-numbering of religious insult laws — CRITICAL ALERT: BNS 302 is NOT murder. Murder moved to BNS 103. BNS 302 now handles verbal insults to individual religious feelings.
Major updates to defamation law — Community Service added as a new punishment option, and the 10 IPC exceptions fully preserved.
The transition of laws against threats and coercion from IPC to BNS Section 351, unified and preserved.
How the Sanhita handles intentional insults meant to provoke violence.
The redefinition and renumbering of laws against verbal and gestural harassment of women — punishment enhanced from 1 year to 3 years.
The legal framework against fake news, communal rumours, and public alarm transitions to BNS 353.
The definition of legal participation and assistance in a crime transitions from IPC 107 to BNS 45.
The renumbering and reorganisation of laws against criminal agreements in the BNS.
The renumbering of the general catch-all for criminal attempts from the last section of IPC (511) to early in BNS (62).
Comparing the laws against performing mock or fraudulent marriage ceremonies in IPC and BNS.
The landmark removal of Adultery as a criminal offence in India, following the Supreme Court's Joseph Shine judgment (2018). The BNS has no equivalent to IPC 497.
IPC 498A transitions into BNS 85 (offence) and BNS 86 (definition of cruelty), with mental health explicitly added to the definition.
The landmark introduction of a specific law against sexual intercourse obtained through false promises of marriage or deceitful identity.
Offences Against Public Justice — Diverse
Desecrating Burial Grounds
Public Tranquillity — Extended Provisions
Contempt and Obstruction of Public Authority
Concealing Design to Commit Imprisonable Offence
Punishment for Perjury / Fabricating Evidence
Revealing Rape Victim Identity
Revealing Rape Victim Identity
Murder / Mob Lynching
Preventing Live Birth / Infanticide
Preventing Live Birth / Neonaticide
Destroying Evidence / Screening an Offender
Causing Miscarriage / Preventing Child from Being Born Alive
Fraudulent Removal or Concealment of Property to Cheat Creditors
Lurking House-Trespass / House-Breaking by Night / Armed Housebreaking
Waging War / Conspiracy to Wage War / Collecting Arms to Wage War
IPC 304B (Dowry Death) is renumbered as BNS 80 with no substantive change — the 7-year marriage rule, the "soon before death" standard, and the statutory presumption of guilt remain fully intact.
IPC 378 + 379 (Theft) merge into BNS 303 with two historic changes: community service as an alternative for first-time petty thieves (property under ₹5,000), and a minimum 1-year sentence for repeat offenders — neither existed in the IPC.
Every section indexed is matched against the latest 2024 Gazette datasets.
Instantly find the equivalent BNS provision for any IPC section.
Judicial commentary and simplified explanations with every result.