Objective: To study the correlation of cytogenetic and molecular abnormalities on induction chemotherapy in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). Study Design: Analytical study. Place and Duration of Study: Department of Haematology, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP), from March 2021 to August 2021. Methodology: Patients aged 1-18 years with newly diagnosed acute lymphoblastic leukaemia were inducted. Patients aged less than 1 year and more than 18 years were excluded from the study. The diagnosis was based on morphology, cytochemistry, flow cytometry, and cytogenetic/molecular analysis. Risk stratification was done on the basis of age, TLC, and cytogenetic/molecular defects. The UKALL 2011 protocol was used for treatment with regimen-A for standard risk and regimen-B for high-risk patients. Bone marrow was repeated on day 29 of induction therapy and blast percentage was assessed to establish post-induction remission. Association between cytogenetic / molecular abnormalities and post-induction remission status was analysed using chi-square test. Results: There were total 142 patients with mean age of 6.4 + 3.6 years and a male- to-female ratio of 2.7:1. Immunophenotyping revealed 85.9% cases as B-cell ALL and 14.1% as T-cell ALL. The most frequent cytogenetic and molecular abnormalities were hyperdiploidy (19%), t(9;22)/BCR-ABL1(p190) (10.6%), complex karyotype (5.6%), E2A-PBX1 (8.5%), and TEL-AML1 (4.9%). A total of 127/142 (89.4%) achieved haematological remission after induction therapy with two deaths during induction therapy (1.4%). Post-induction remission rate in patients with favorable cytogenetic/molecular defects was 100% and in children with bad prognostic changes, the rate of remission was 69.2%. Chi-square test showed a significant association between cytogenetic/molecular abnormalities and post-induction remission (p-value <0.001). Conclusion: Cytogenetic and molecular abnormalities have a significant association with post-induction remission in children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.