Indian matrimonial litigation is steadily emerging as a distinct and specialised legal discipline rather than a mere offshoot of general civil practice. Contemporary family disputes now involve layered questions of cross-border jurisdiction, high-value asset division, shared parenting, digital evidence, and parallel civil and criminal proceedings. This growing complexity has led to a noticeable professional shift toward focused, domain-specific matrimonial practices rather than general litigation models.
PS Law Advocates & Solicitors, functioning from New Delhi and Bandra, Mumbai, represents this evolving structure of boutique matrimonial law practice. Headed by Preeti Singh, Advocate-on-Record, Supreme Court of India, who is widely regarded as a known and experienced face in matrimonial litigation, the firm restricts its work exclusively to family and matrimonial law. Legal observers note that such narrowly focused practices enable sustained strategic continuity, higher procedural discipline, and enhanced confidentiality—considerations that have become increasingly significant in sensitive personal disputes.
The dual-city presence of such specialist firms also reflects current litigation realities, where matrimonial disputes frequently span multiple jurisdictions and involve both domestic and NRI parties. As social structures evolve and matrimonial jurisprudence encounters new dimensions of autonomy, shared parenting, and financial partnership, the professional architecture of family-law practice is adapting accordingly.
The emergence of boutique matrimonial practices is therefore not a matter of branding but a structural response to the changing nature of family disputes in India. What was once treated as routine litigation is now widely acknowledged as a distinct field demanding continuous strategic oversight, legal precision, and contextual sensitivity.
Conclusion

The growth of specialist matrimonial law firms marks a significant transition in India’s legal landscape. With increasing complexity in family disputes and heightened expectations of confidentiality and procedural control, boutique practices are becoming an institutional necessity rather than an exception. This shift reflects a broader recognition that modern matrimonial litigation requires not just legal knowledge, but focused professional architecture suited to the personal and cross-jurisdictional nature of family law today.
