An unprecedented metal-free synthesis of fused quinoxaline 1,5-disubstituted-[1,4]-diazepine hybrids have been reported under mild conditions through a domino intermolecular SNAr followed by an internal nucleophile-triggered intramolecular SNAr pathway. Our strategy offers the flexibility for the introduction of a broad variety of functionalities at the N-1 position of fused diazepine moiety by using suitable diamine tails to design structurally diverse scaffolds. The DNA binding properties of representative quinoxaline diazepine hybrids were studied using UV–vis absorbance and EtBr displacement assay and were found to be governed by the functionalities at the N-1 position. Interestingly, compound 11f containing the N-1 benzyl substitution demonstrated significant DNA binding (KBH ∼ 2.15 ± 0.25 × 104 M−1 and Ksv ∼ 12.6 ± 1.41 × 103 M−1) accompanied by a bathochromic shift (Δλ ∼ 5 nm). In silico studies indicate possible binding of these diazepine hybrid 11f at the GC-rich major groove in the ct-DNA hexamer duplex and showed comparable binding energies to that of ethidium bromide. The antiproliferative activity of compounds was observed in the given order in different cell lines: (HeLa > HT29 > SKOV 3 > HCT116 > HEK293). Lead compound 11f demonstrated maximum cytotoxicity (IC50 value of 13.30 μM) in HeLa cell lines and also caused early apoptosis-mediated cell death in cancer cell lines. We envision that our work will offer newer methodologies for the construction of fused quinoxaline 1,5-disubstituted-[1,4]-diazepine class of molecules.