The Rise of Voluntary Childlessness in Urban India: A Psychological Shift
Voluntary Childlessness in Urban India: A Psychological Shift

The Rise of Voluntary Childlessness in Urban India: A Psychological Shift

On weekends, Mumbai-based writer Sonam Deshmukh and her husband navigate a delicate balance between freelance work and caring for their rescued cats. Their home reflects intentional living rather than absence—books stacked in corners, feeding schedules on the refrigerator, and conversations that linger into the night. The absence of children in their lives is not circumstantial; it is a deliberate choice. However, this deliberateness did not come without significant resistance.

While the decision strengthened their marital bond, Deshmukh recalls emotionally charged conversations with her family, who believed she would eventually come around to motherhood. Not having children wasn't seen as a decision, she says. It was seen as a phase. Her husband actively supported her through these discussions. We were aligned as a couple, she notes, but alignment doesn't protect you from family pressure.

Urban India's Quiet Negotiations

Across urban India, similar negotiations are unfolding quietly within marriages and loudly across dining tables. Increasingly, young, married professionals in their 30s are embracing voluntary childlessness, defined as a deliberate and permanent decision to not have biological or adopted children. This is not a story of postponement or indecision; it is about intention and the psychological labor required to uphold it.

Indian research indicates this phenomenon is gaining momentum. A 2025 paper published in the International Journal of Creative Research Thoughts highlights a rising incidence of voluntary childlessness among educated, urban Indian couples. Key factors cited include mental health concerns, autonomy, and ethical unease about bringing children into an increasingly uncertain world. While these individuals may not be Gen Z by age, clinicians observe that their thinking reflects a Gen Z–like psychological orientation, shaped by climate anxiety, economic precarity, and a rejection of inherited life scripts.

An Unsafe World, Internalized

Beneath sociological explanations lies an intimate question: what does choosing a child-free life do to the human psyche, identity, marriage, purpose, and the emotional architecture of aging? Psychotherapists argue that the decision to go child-free is far deeper than fear or convenience; it reflects how this generation has psychologically metabolized instability.

Voluntary childlessness may look practical on the surface, says Mumbai-based psychotherapist Rashna Elavia, but it reflects something much deeper about how people are processing the world. They've grown up with climate change, economic uncertainty, and political chaos. Living in a world that feels constantly unsettled creates a deep sense of lack of safety.

For many couples, parenthood becomes a high-stakes emotional and ethical calculation. Rohan, a 35-year-old brand manager in Mumbai, arrived at his decision with his wife gradually rather than defiantly. Sitting alone in his apartment on a muggy July evening, he scrolled through another extreme-weather alert. I can't promise a child a safe world, he remembers thinking.

His reasoning crystallized slowly, accumulating across years—the 2005 floods, the 2008 terror attacks, the 2012 Nirbhaya case. These were not just national traumas but deeply personal reference points. It felt like daily there were adversities to deal with, he says. There was no way of guaranteeing the safety of life. So I decided it wouldn't be right to bring life into this world if it was doomed.

Dr. Kersi Chavda, consultant psychiatrist at Hinduja Hospital in Mumbai, observes this pattern regularly in his clinic. A large number of people make this decision based on a realistic appraisal of the world, he says. Many frame the choice as almost moral and a form of responsibility rather than avoidance. There's a kind of evangelism to it, Chavda notes. They believe they're doing the world a good deed by not adding to its burden.

Identity Without Inheritance

For previous generations, adulthood followed a predictable arc: education, career, marriage, and children, with each stage providing meaning through continuity. Identity was inherited through roles. Today, urban professionals increasingly author meaning from the inside out. They're far more aware of what feels good and what doesn't, Elavia says. Choosing differently feels like reclaiming space for themselves.

For some, this clarity is rooted in temperament. Anu Kumar, a 38-year-old designer in Mumbai married for nine years, says she never felt drawn to the domestic arc of adulthood. I was never excited about having a boyfriend, getting married, having a family. Having children is a very big responsibility as you have to kind of forget yourself, she explains.

For many, the decision is also shaped by an acute awareness of psychological inheritance. Deshmukh has seen schizophrenia, anxiety, depression, and Alzheimer's disease up close in her family. She describes her choice as a conscious end to a cycle. These are not the genes to be mixed, she says.

For others, the refusal is quietly feminist. Kumar speaks candidly about rejecting the gendered labor of motherhood. Even if your partner is supportive, society expects the mother to handle everything, she says. That burden didn't feel acceptable to me. Kumar frames her choice not in terms of what she wants more of, but what she already feels saturated by: anxiety, emotional labor, and survival planning. Parenthood, in this context, is experienced not as a source of meaning but as an additional mental load in lives already operating at full psychological capacity.

The Architecture of Aging

Yet, voluntary childlessness is rarely a clean or uncomplicated decision. I don't think this is ever black and white, says Deepali Dave, a counseling psychologist in Pune married for seven years. There's a constant struggle between social norms, your upbringing, family values, and what you practically want. Dave describes a decade-long internal negotiation to go child-free. Eighty to ninety percent of me thinks I don't want children, she says. But a small part is unsure. Saying 'I don't want them' comes with a lot of difficult feelings.

Psychologists describe this as ambiguous or anticipatory grief, mourning a future that will never exist without rituals or social permission. Like Dave, several individuals describe a lingering sadness alongside certainty, a psychological tension between relief and mourning.

One of the most consequential psychological shifts among voluntarily child-free couples lies in how they imagine aging. Unlike previous generations, who assumed children would form an emotional and logistical safety net in later life, many child-free adults begin planning for old age far earlier and more explicitly. Psychologists refer to this as anticipatory adaptation—the conscious effort to design financial, medical, and emotional support systems in advance.

Ageing becomes something you design rather than something you inherit, says Dr. Nischol Raval, consultant neuropsychiatrist at Sahyadri Hospitals in Pune. There's a psychological shift from expectation to preparation.

For Deshmukh and her husband, this preparation has already begun. In their mid-30s, the couple has started consulting a financial planner to build a robust retirement corpus. We don't want to reach our 50s and suddenly realise we've outsourced ageing to assumptions, she says. Without the expectation of adult children stepping in, financial independence feels non-negotiable.

Rohan and his wife plan a long-term move from Mumbai to Goa for retirement. We think a lot about pace, about what kind of life we want when we're older, and what environments will support that, Rohan says. Dave and her husband are investing in property in Pune and have taken out independent health insurance. We don't want our health decisions to be reactive, notes Dave. If you're choosing not to have children, you have to be more honest about what support will and won't be available to you.

Psychiatrists note that while earlier generations planned financially for retirement, they rarely planned emotionally. Children were assumed to fill gaps of companionship, care, and advocacy during illness or decline. For child-free couples, those roles must be consciously distributed across friendships, partnerships, professional care systems, and chosen communities.

Redefining Connection and Legacy

For Kumar and her husband, this design includes deep involvement with extended family. The couple is close to her husband's sister's children in Jaipur. We spoil them, spend time with them, take them out. The relationship is not framed as substitution but as continuity and an ongoing presence in children's lives without full-time parental responsibilities. It feels meaningful, she says, to be consistently there.

Rohan finds his way into children's worlds through friendship. Every year, he takes his friends' kids to the Bandra fair, buys them balloons and snacks, and walks them through the chaos of lights and rides. It's energising, he says. It reminds me that connection doesn't have to follow one script.

In these everyday acts—showing up for nieces and nephews, doting on friends' children, building rituals of care—voluntarily child-free adults are not opting out of connection. They are rearranging it, stitching together networks of belonging that may look different from the past but are no less intentional. However, therapists caution against romanticizing these relationships. Chosen families require work, says Rashna Elavia. Friendships need maintenance, repair, and reciprocity. There is no default structure holding them together.

While rejecting parenthood can free people from financial strain, gendered expectations, and ecological guilt, therapists are careful not to frame voluntary childlessness as inherently superior or deficient. Raval says, There may be moments of doubt or regret just as there are in parenthood. Mental health outcomes depend less on the choice itself and more on whether the individual feels agency, support, and alignment.

What child-free couples are ultimately doing is not rejecting life but rewriting adulthood itself. No longer a conveyor belt of prescribed milestones, life becomes a landscape of choices, each with trade-offs, each requiring responsibility. Just because it's a different point of view doesn't make it wrong, Chavda reminds us. If legacy is no longer guaranteed by blood, Elavia reflects, then it has to be earned through care and how we love, what we protect, and how consciously we live. That may be a harder path. But it's not an emptier one. And perhaps that is the most psychologically revealing shift of all.