Fifth vs Sixth Schedule of the Constitution + PESA: Difference & Areas
The Fifth and Sixth Schedules of the Constitution govern the administration of Scheduled Areas and Tribal Areas in India — one of UPSC's favourite (and most-confused) topics. This guide gives the full difference, the state-wise mapping, the PESA Act, 1996, and worked examples. Remember the trap: North-East tribal areas fall under the SIXTH Schedule, not the Fifth.
India's Constitution provides a special administrative framework for areas with dominant tribal populations, to protect their land, culture and customs from exploitation and to enable self-governance. This is done through two distinct schedules — the Fifth Schedule and the Sixth Schedule — supplemented by the PESA Act, 1996. Telling them apart is a recurring UPSC trap, so let's settle it clearly.
The tribal areas of Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram are administered under the SIXTH Schedule — NOT the Fifth. UPSC repeatedly frames statements putting these North-Eastern states under the Fifth Schedule; that statement is always wrong. (Prelims 2026 used exactly this trap.)
The Constitutional Basis: Article 244
Both schedules flow from Article 244 in Part X of the Constitution:
- Article 244(1) → Fifth Schedule: administration & control of Scheduled Areas and Scheduled Tribes in states other than the four North-Eastern states listed below.
- Article 244(2) → Sixth Schedule: administration of Tribal Areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram (read with Article 275(1)).
Fifth Schedule vs Sixth Schedule — At a Glance
- Article 244(1)
- Applies to 10 states (not the NE four)
- "Scheduled Areas" & Scheduled Tribes
- Governor + Tribes Advisory Council (TAC)
- More Union/State control
- Article 244(2) & 275(1)
- Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram
- "Tribal Areas"
- Autonomous District & Regional Councils
- Far greater self-rule & autonomy
| Basis | Fifth Schedule | Sixth Schedule |
|---|---|---|
| Article | Article 244(1) | Article 244(2) & 275(1) |
| Applies to | Scheduled Areas in 10 states (except the NE four) | Tribal Areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram |
| Terminology | "Scheduled Areas" | "Tribal Areas" |
| Who declares / organises | The President declares an area a Scheduled Area | The four states are named in the Constitution; the Governor organises/reorganises the autonomous districts within them |
| Key body | Tribes Advisory Council (TAC) — advisory only | Autonomous District Councils (ADCs) & Regional Councils — real powers |
| Powers | Advisory; Governor can adapt/exempt central & state laws | Legislative, judicial & executive powers (land, forests, marriage, inheritance, village courts) |
| Degree of autonomy | Lower — greater state control | Higher — substantial self-governance |
| Panchayats | Extended via PESA, 1996 | Governed by Councils; Part IX (Panchayats) does not apply |
The Fifth Schedule in Detail
The Fifth Schedule provides for the administration and control of Scheduled Areas and Scheduled Tribes in any state except the four North-Eastern states. Its key features:
- Declaration: The President may declare an area to be a Scheduled Area (and alter its boundaries) after consulting the Governor.
- Executive power: The executive power of the Union extends to giving directions to states on the administration of Scheduled Areas.
- Tribes Advisory Council (TAC): Each state with Scheduled Areas has a TAC of up to 20 members (three-fourths being Scheduled Tribe MLAs) to advise on tribal welfare — it is advisory, not decision-making.
- Governor's power: The Governor may direct that a particular central or state law shall not apply (or apply with modifications) to a Scheduled Area — a key protective tool.
- Report: The Governor submits an annual report to the President on the administration of Scheduled Areas.
Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha and Rajasthan. (Memory tip: the classic "tribal belt" of central and peninsular India.)
The Sixth Schedule in Detail
The Sixth Schedule — based on the recommendations of the Bordoloi Committee of the Constituent Assembly — provides a much higher degree of self-governance for Tribal Areas in the four North-Eastern states, mainly through Autonomous District Councils (ADCs) and Regional Councils. The four states are named in the Constitution itself; the Governor is empowered to organise, reorganise, alter boundaries/names and divide districts into autonomous regions. There are currently 10 autonomous districts across the four states.
- Autonomous District Councils (ADCs): Each has up to 30 members — 26 elected (5-year term) and 4 nominated by the Governor. They enjoy legislative, executive and judicial powers.
- Law-making powers: Councils can make laws on land, forests (except reserved forests), canal water, shifting cultivation (jhum), village administration, inheritance, marriage/divorce and social customs — subject to the Governor's assent.
- Judicial powers: Councils can constitute village councils/courts to try suits between tribals; the High Court's jurisdiction over these is specified by the Governor.
- Financial powers: Councils can assess and collect land revenue and impose certain taxes.
- Panchayati Raj: Part IX of the Constitution (Panchayats) does not apply to Sixth Schedule areas — the Councils perform those functions.
- Application of laws (a Prelims nuance): Acts of Parliament/State Legislature do not automatically apply to these areas. For Assam, the Governor decides on both Parliamentary and State Acts; for Meghalaya, Tripura & Mizoram, the President decides on Parliamentary Acts and the Governor on State Acts.
Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram. Examples of Councils: Bodoland Territorial Council (Assam), Khasi Hills & Garo Hills ADCs (Meghalaya), Tripura Tribal Areas ADC, and the Chakma & Lai ADCs (Mizoram). (Ladakh's demand for Sixth Schedule inclusion is a live current-affairs issue.)
PESA Act, 1996 — Extending Self-Rule to Scheduled Areas
The Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 — PESA — extends the provisions of Part IX (Panchayati Raj) of the Constitution to the Fifth Schedule areas, with modifications suited to tribal society. It was enacted on the recommendation of the Bhuria Committee (1995) and is often called the "Constitution within the Constitution" for tribal self-rule.
Why PESA Matters
The 73rd Amendment (Panchayati Raj) did not automatically extend to Fifth Schedule areas. PESA bridged that gap — bringing democratic decentralisation to Scheduled Areas while safeguarding tribal customs and the central role of the Gram Sabha.
Key Powers of the Gram Sabha under PESA
- Approves plans, programmes and beneficiaries for social & economic development.
- Mandatory consultation before land acquisition and resettlement in Scheduled Areas.
- Ownership of Minor Forest Produce (MFP).
- Power to prevent land alienation and restore unlawfully alienated tribal land.
- Control over minor water bodies, local plans and resources.
- A say in granting prospecting licences / mining leases for minor minerals and their auction.
- Control over money-lending, local markets and social sectors.
Think of it this way: Fifth Schedule areas get self-rule through PESA (empowered Gram Sabhas under Panchayati Raj). Sixth Schedule areas get self-rule through Autonomous District Councils (which have their own legislative & judicial powers, so PESA/Panchayati Raj is not needed there).
Worked Examples (To Cement the Difference)
- Ladakh is demanding inclusion under the Sixth Schedule to protect its land & identity — a recurring news item.
- The Bodoland Territorial Council (Assam) operates under the Sixth Schedule (Bodo Accord, 2020).
- PESA links to the Forest Rights Act, 2006 and the Samatha judgment (1997) on tribal land in Scheduled Areas.
- The nodal ministry for tribal welfare & the Forest Rights Act is the Ministry of Tribal Affairs.
- Fifth Schedule = Art 244(1), Scheduled Areas, 10 states, TAC (advisory), President declares.
- Sixth Schedule = Art 244(2) & 275(1), Tribal Areas, Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram, Autonomous District Councils (real powers).
- ADC = up to 30 members (26 elected + 4 nominated), 5-year term.
- PESA, 1996 extends Panchayati Raj (Part IX) to Fifth Schedule areas; Bhuria Committee recommendation; empowers the Gram Sabha.
- Part IX (Panchayats) does not apply to Sixth Schedule areas.
Key Takeaways
- Fifth Schedule (Art 244(1)) covers Scheduled Areas in 10 states with a Tribes Advisory Council; Sixth Schedule (Art 244(2)) covers Tribal Areas in the four NE states with Autonomous District Councils.
- The trap: Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura & Mizoram are under the Sixth Schedule — never the Fifth.
- ADCs hold legislative, executive & judicial powers (land, forests, customs); the TAC is only advisory.
- PESA, 1996 extends Panchayati Raj to Fifth Schedule areas and empowers the Gram Sabha (MFP ownership, consultation before land acquisition, land-alienation control).
- Part IX (Panchayats) does not apply to Sixth Schedule areas; Ladakh's Sixth Schedule demand is a live current-affairs issue.
Master Polity for UPSC with Legacy IAS — Bangalore
Expert faculty, structured GS & Optional guidance, and Bangalore's most trusted UPSC coaching — all under one roof.


