The Bar Council of India (BCI) spent ₹180.25 crore on legal education in 2024-25, nearly four times the ₹46 crore it spent the previous year, according to an independent auditor's report on the regulator's financial statements published in the Gazette of India on May 12.
The figures, certified by New Delhi-based chartered accountancy firm GK Kedia & Co, paint the picture of the statutory body making legal education its defining financial priority for the year.
The BCI, established under the Advocates Act of 1961, has long faced criticism over the quality and regulation of legal education across India's hundreds of law colleges. With over a thousand law schools operating across the country and concerns about standards persistently making headlines, the Council appears to have responded with its most aggressive spending push in recent memory.
The ₹180 crore outlay dwarfs every other item on the BCI's expenditure list. By comparison, the Council spent just ₹14.22 crore on its own activities and meetings, ₹10.27 crore on employee benefits and a modest ₹3.41 crore on establishment costs during the same period.
The Council's total income for the year stood at ₹234.49 crore, down from ₹250.32 crore the previous year. Inspection fees, the BCI's single largest revenue stream, came in at approximately ₹130.54 crore.
Meanwhile, the All India Bar Examination (AIBE) generated ₹36.96 crore in fees from its XIX edition, compared to two editions conducted the prior year that together fetched ₹50.19 crore.
Despite healthy revenues, the BCI's surplus for the year fell to ₹23.42 crore, a dramatic compression from the ₹173.50 crore surplus reported in 2023-24. The legal education spending spree is the clearest explanation.
Even so, the Council remained financially strong. Its total assets rose to ₹815.83 crore from ₹752.55 crore the previous year, supported mainly by investments of more than ₹733 crore, most of which are parked in fixed deposits with scheduled banks.
The financial statements also reveal that law colleges seeking regularisation paid significantly more this year. Legal Education Regularisation Fees collected from law colleges nearly tripled to ₹9.08 crore from ₹3.16 crore the previous year.
Whether this spending translates into measurably better law schools remains to be seen. But for now, the money is moving.
[Read audited financial statement report]