There is an increasing need to understand the intersecting linkages between gender, migration and precarity, and its consequent disadvantage-producing impact on the dynamics of inclusion/exclusion amongst informal workers of the Global South. This is especially true for South Asian nation-states, who have historically lacked a comprehensive migration policy framework to deal with regional inter-state flows within themselves, despite having witnessed the unprecedented demography-altering ‘event’ of Partition firsthand. To this end, using a case study of Nepalese women domestic workers in Delhi city, this paper explores the relationship between differential inclusion and livelihood precarity amongst informal migrant labourers in India who (in most cases) willfully adopt such high-risk migration strategies for survival. Further, employing David Mosse’s concept of ‘relationality of poverty’ as well as Martha Nussbaum’s ‘Gender Capabilities’ framework in this context, it argues that notwithstanding the indecent conditionalities of domestic work in itself, the precarity of such migrant workers’ livelihoods multiply because of their uneven incorporation into the Indian economy that relationally affects their individual capabilities in the longer run.