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Palak Muchhal is an Indian playback singer, primarily associated with Hindi cinema. She rose to prominence in the early 2010s with songs in films such as Ek Tha Tiger, Aashiqui 2, and Kick. Beyond her musical career, she is widely recognised for her philanthropic work, particularly the funding of paediatric heart surgeries through charity concerts performed since her childhood.
| Full name | Palak Muchhal |
|---|---|
| Born | 30 March 1992, Indore, Madhya Pradesh, India |
| Occupation | Playback singer, stage performer, philanthropist |
| Languages of work | Hindi, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Bengali, among others |
| Notable films | Ek Tha Tiger, Aashiqui 2, Kick, Action Jackson, Prem Ratan Dhan Payo |
| Sibling | Palash Muchhal (music director, filmmaker) |
| Spouse | Mithoon (composer; married 2022) |
Palak Muchhal was born in Indore, Madhya Pradesh, into a Marwari family. Her father, Raj Kumar Muchhal, worked at a state-run financial institution, and her mother is Amita Muchhal. Her younger brother, Palash Muchhal, is a music director and filmmaker who frequently collaborates with her, often accompanying her on stage and composing for her recordings.
She began performing on stage at a young age and became known in Indore as a child performer who organised charitable concerts. According to widely reported accounts, she began raising money for the medical treatment of underprivileged children when she was around seven years old, with the activity expanding into a sustained programme to fund heart surgeries.
Before entering Hindi cinema, Muchhal performed extensively in concerts across India and abroad, often singing tributes to Lata Mangeshkar, Asha Bhosle and other classical-light playback singers. She made early recordings for regional projects and devotional albums.
Her breakthrough in mainstream Hindi cinema came with "Laariyo" and the song "Saanson Ne" sequence in Damadamm! (2011), followed by significantly larger exposure with "Mujhe Tumse Pyaar Hai" (subsequent version) and most prominently the female version of "Chahun Main Ya Naa" in Aashiqui 2 (2013), composed by Mithoon. The same year she sang "Bin Tere" in Ek Tha Tiger and "Kaise Bataaoon" in 3G.
Through the mid-2010s she recorded songs for films including Kick (2014; "Jumme Ki Raat"), Action Jackson (2014; "Dhoom Dhaam"), Ek Villain (2014; "Awari" — Hindi rendition), Prem Ratan Dhan Payo (2015; "Prem Ratan Dhan Payo" female version), Sanam Re (2016) and M.S. Dhoni: The Untold Story (2016; "Kaun Tujhe").
Muchhal has recorded songs in multiple Indian languages, including Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Bengali, Gujarati and Odia, broadening her presence beyond Hindi-language productions.
Muchhal is closely identified with charitable fundraising for paediatric cardiac surgeries. Funds raised through her concerts have been used to support surgeries for children from economically weaker backgrounds, in association with hospitals in India. The cumulative number of surgeries supported has been cited at successive milestone figures by media outlets over the years. The fundraising effort, often referred to as "Dil Se Dil Tak" in coverage, has continued alongside her commercial singing career.
Her contributions to charitable work have been recognised by entries in record books, including the Limca Book of Records, with related mentions in the Guinness World Records for charitable performance achievements at a young age.
Palak Muchhal married Hindi film composer Mithoon (Mithoon Sharma), with whom she had collaborated professionally on multiple songs, in November 2022. The wedding was held in Mumbai.
Muchhal is notable for combining a mainstream playback career with a long-running, publicly documented programme of charitable performance. Within Hindi film music of the 2010s she was among the younger generation of female playback voices who emerged alongside singers like Shreya Ghoshal and Neeti Mohan in big-budget productions, and her work with composers such as Pritam, Sajid–Wajid and Mithoon contributed to several commercially successful soundtracks.