Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) must be seen by the companies as a responsibility not imposed by outside forces but guided by conscience and the best practices of giving back to society, people, communities, and environment what they took from them. Various firm characteristics like age, size, type of Industry and ownership pattern can play an important role in identifying the level of CSR disclosures made by a firm. This paper is an attempt to measure the amount of CSR disclosures made by Indian listed companies in their annual reports and to empirically examine, whether the ownership structure of a company influence its CSR disclosures. For the purpose of this paper, ownership structure has been divided into promoter ownership, government ownership, institutional ownership and foreign ownership. Companies selected for analysis were those included in the CNX Nifty Index of National Stock Exchange. The information related to ownership structure and CSR disclosures was obtained from the annual reports for the year 2013-14 of the sample companies. Content Analysis was used to measure the amount of CSR disclosures and OLS Regression model was used to examine the relationship between the independent variable, ownership structure and the dependent variable, CSR disclosures. The study concluded that the level of CSR disclosures made by the sample companies is very low and the study also found that promoter’s stake and institutional ownership in a firm have negative impact on the level of CSR disclosures while there is no impact of the shareholding by Government and foreign investors on the CSR disclosures .