CRPC §164 → BNSS §183
Recording of confessions and statements
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164. Recording of confessions and statements.—(1) Any Metropolitan Magistrate or Judicial Magistrate may, whether or not he has jurisdiction in the case, record any confession or statement made to him in the course of an investigation under this Chapter or under any other law for the time being in force, or at any time afterwards before the commencement of the inquiry or trial: 1[Provided that any confession or statement made under this sub-section may also be recorded by audio-video electronic means in the presence of the advocate of the person accused of an offence: Provided further that no confession shall be recorded by a police officer on whom any power of a Magistrate has been conferred under any law for the time being in force.]
(2) The Magistrate shall, before recording any such confession, explain to the person making it that he is not bound to make a confession and that, if he does so, it may be used as evidence against him; and the Magistrate shall not record any such confession unless, upon questioning the person making it, he has reason to believe that it is being made voluntarily.
(3) If at any time before the confession is recorded, the person appearing before the Magistrate states that he is not willing to make the confession, the Magistrate shall not authorise the detention of such person in police custody.
(4) Any such confession shall be recorded in the manner provided in section 281 for recording the examination of an accused person and shall be signed by the person making the confession; and the Magistrate shall make a memorandum at the foot of such record to the following effect:— “I have explained to (name) that he is not bound to make a confession and that, if he does so, any confession he may make may be used as evidence against him and I believe that this confession was voluntarily made. It was taken in my presence and hearing, and was read over to the person making it and admitted by him to be correct, and it contains a full and true account of the statement made by him. (Signed) A. B. Magistrate.”
(5) Any statement (other than a confession) made under sub-section
(1) shall be recorded in such manner hereinafter provided for the recording of evidence as is, in the opinion of the Magistrate, best fitted to the circumstances of the case; and the Magistrate shall have power to administer oath to the person whose statement is so recorded. 2[(5A) (a) In cases punishable under section 354, section 354A, section 354B, section 354C, section 354D, sub-section
(1) or sub-section
(2) of section 376, 3[section 376A, section 376AB, section 376B, section 376C, section 376D, section 376DA, section 376DB,] section 376E or section 509 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860), the Judicial Magistrate shall record the statement of the person against whom such offence has been committed in the manner prescribed in sub-section (5), as soon as the commission of the offence is brought to the notice of the police: Provided that if the person making the statement is temporarily or permanently mentally or physically disabled, the Magistrate shall take the assistance of an interpreter or a special educator in recording the statement: Provided further that if the person making the statement is temporarily or permanently mentally or physically disabled, the statement made by the person, with the assistance of an interpreter or a special educator, shall be video graphed. (b) A statement recorded under clause (a) of a person, who is temporarily or permanently mentally or physically disabled, shall be considered a statement in lieu of examination-in-chief, as specified in section 137 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872) such that the maker of the statement can be cross-examined on such statement, without the need for recording the same at the time of trial.]
(6) The Magistrate recording a confession or statement under this section shall forward it to the Magistrate by 1. Subs. by Act 5 of 2009, s.13 (w.e.f. 31-12-2009). 2. Ins. by Act 13 of 2013, s. 16 (w.e.f. 13-3-2013). 3. Subs. by Act 22 of 2018, s. 13, for “section 376A, section 376B, section 376C, section 376D” (w.e.f. 22-4-2018). whom the case is to be inquired into or tried. STATE AMENDMENT Chhattisgarh In clause (a) of sub-section (5A) of Section 164 of the Code, for the words and figures “or section 509” the punctuation, words and figures, “section 376F, section 509, section 509A or section 509B” shall be substituted. [Vide Chhattisgarh Act 25 of 2015, s. 9] Union territories of Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Lakshadweep After sub-section
(1) of section 164, the following sub-section shall be inserted, namely: —“(1A) Where; in any island, there is no Judicial Magistrate for the time being, and the State Government is of opinion that it is necessary and expedient so to do, that Government may, after consulting the High Court, specially empower any Executive Magistrate (not being a police officer), to exercise the powers conferred by sub-section
(1) on a Judicial Magistrate, and thereupon references in section 164 to a Judicial Magistrate shall be construed as references to the Executive Magistrate so empowered.”; [Vide The Code of Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Regulation, 1974 Act (1 of 1974), s. 5.]
(1) Any Magistrate of the district in which the information about commission of any offence has been registered, may, whether or not he has jurisdiction in the case, record any confession or statement made to him in the course of an investigation under this Chapter or under any other law for the time being in force, or at any time afterwards before the commencement of the inquiry or trial.
(2) The recording of confession may also be done by audio-video electronic means in the presence of the advocate of the person accused of an offence.
(6A) In cases punishable under section 64, section 65, section 66, section 67, section 68, section 69, section 70, section 71, sub-section (2) of section 74, section 75, section 76, section 77, section 78, section 79 or section 124 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, the Judicial Magistrate shall record the statement of the person against whom such offence has been committed in the manner prescribed in sub-section (5), as soon as the commission of the offence is brought to the notice of the police: Provided that if the person making the statement is temporarily or permanently mentally or physically disabled, the Magistrate shall take the assistance of an interpreter or a special educator in recording the statement: Provided further that if the person making the statement is temporarily or permanently mentally or physically disabled, the statement made by the person, with the assistance of an interpreter or a special educator, shall be video graphed.
What changedAI-inferred
Recording of confessions and statements — BNSS 183 mandates audio-video electronic means recording in certain cases; statement of victim of sexual offences mandatorily recorded by Judicial Magistrate.
Old position
CrPC 164 is concerned with Recording of confessions and statements. Recording of confessions and statements
New position
BNSS 183 modifies the framework. Topic: Recording of confessions and statements. Any Magistrate of the district in which the information about commission of any offence has been registered, may, whether or not he has jurisdiction in the case, record any confession or statement made to him in the course of an
BNSS 183 modifies CrPC 164 with three innovations: (1) audio-video electronic means recording of confessions in presence of accused's advocate; (2) mandatory Judicial Magistrate recording of statement of victims of sexual offences (BNS 64-71, 74-79, 124) as soon as the offence is reported; (3)...
Editorial deltaAI-indicated (source-linked)
BNSS 183 carries forward, on the supplied extract, the recording-mechanics shell of CrPC 164: sub-section (1) anchors the Magistrate's power to record confessions and statements, now territorially fixed to the district in which information about the offence has been registered (CrPC 164(1)'s 'with or without jurisdiction' cross-district flexibility is reduced or potentially removed in the new framing). Sub-section (2) promotes the audio-video electronic recording proviso into a standalone clause character-identically. Sub-section (6A) preserves the CrPC 164(5A)(a) sexual-offence-victim recording rule with the IPC offence list remapped to Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita sections 64-79 and 124, and the disabled-person interpreter and videograph provisos preserved. The numbering jump from (2) to (6A) signals that sub-sections (3)-(6) - covering voluntariness warning, refusal-no-police-custody, recording-format-and-memorandum, and forwarding mechanics - exist in the bare-act PDF but are not in this extract; input_coverage is therefore partial and the carry-forward of those intermediate sub-sections is not text-confirmed. The single load-bearing observed delta is the omission of CrPC 164(5A)(b) - the deeming clause treating recorded statements of disabled sexual-offence victims 'in lieu of examination-in-chief' per IEA s.137 - which is not visible on the face of BNSS 183(6A). Whether the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam carries a successor deeming clause remains a verification item.
Transitional note (repeal & savings)
For matters initiated before 1 July 2024, CrPC 164 continues to apply. For matters from that date forward, BNSS 183 applies. The transition is governed by the repeal-and-savings clause in the new code (BNS 358 / BNSS 531 / BSA 170 as the case may be); pending proceedings under the old code carry forward unaffected.
Frequently asked
BNSS 183 (Recording of confessions and statements). The relationship is classified as modified — see the change-note above for the textual delta.
Sources
- India Code — Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973
- Gazette of India — Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023
Cite this page
Newlaws.in, CRPC §164 → BNSS §183 Mapping Page, last updated 2026-05-01, accessed 2026-06-12, https://newlaws.in/crpc/164.
Compiled using AI-assisted tools · Source-linked · Last updated 2026-05-01
Not legal advice. Verify against the bare act and consult a qualified advocate for any specific matter.