President Droupadi Murmu appointed 24 judges to the Allahabad High Court in a single batch, and the newly appointed judges took oath on 27 September 2025. The appointees included senior advocates Vivek Saran, Garima Prashad and Sudhanshu Chauhan. Because the appointments came together in one batch, the development was treated as one of the largest single-day judicial appointments in recent years.

For exam preparation, the Allahabad High Court matters because its sanctioned judge strength is 160, making it the largest High Court by sanctioned strength. After the 24 newly appointed judges took oath, the working strength rose to 110, but 50 posts still remained vacant. This shows the governance issue clearly: even a large appointment improves capacity, but it does not by itself remove the wider challenge of judicial vacancies and pending cases.

High Court judges are appointed in the name of the President, and reporting on this batch stated that the appointments were made after consultation with the Chief Justice of India. In prelims, the likely focus is on the court, the number of appointments, the sanctioned strength and the named appointees. In mains, it can be used as an example for judicial capacity, case pendency, access to justice and the functioning of constitutional offices. For RAS, UPSC and state-level exams, remember the 24 appointments, 160 sanctioned posts and 50 remaining vacancies. For static GK, connect it with the structure of High Courts, sanctioned strength and judicial vacancies.