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Corporate Lawyers India 2026: Companies Act & LLP Changes, Thresholds, NFRA and M&A Compliance

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 represents the most significant overhaul of India’s company and LLP legislation in nearly a decade, and corporate lawyers India‑wide are advising clients to begin compliance preparations immediately. The Bill recalibrates key financial thresholds, raising the share capital benchmark to Rs 20 crore and the turnover benchmark to Rs 200 crore, which will reclassify thousands of entities and trigger new disclosure, filing and governance obligations. It also broadens the registration mandate of the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA), reshapes merger and amalgamation procedures for mid‑market transactions, and grants the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) substantially expanded rule‑making powers.

For general counsel, company secretaries and CFOs, the practical question is no longer whether to act but how quickly internal processes can be recalibrated before the amended provisions take effect.

Executive Summary: What the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 Means for Your Company

The Bill, introduced in Parliament in early 2026, proposes amendments to both the Companies Act 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership Act 2008. Its stated objectives are to reduce the compliance burden on smaller entities while strengthening regulatory oversight of larger ones. In practical terms, the legislation creates four distinct workstreams for in‑house teams:

  • Threshold reclassification. Companies and LLPs that meet or exceed a paid‑up share capital of Rs 20 crore or an annual turnover of Rs 200 crore will face additional compliance, reporting and audit obligations that previously applied only to listed entities or prescribed classes of companies.
  • NFRA auditor registration. The Bill expands the categories of auditors and audit firms required to register with NFRA, extending beyond those auditing listed companies to include auditors of all entities crossing the new thresholds.
  • M&A and scheme procedure changes. Merger and amalgamation thresholds are being recalibrated, altering which transactions qualify for simplified procedures and which require full National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) approval.
  • Expanded MCA rule‑making powers. Several provisions that previously required Parliamentary amendment can now be adjusted through MCA notifications and rules, meaning compliance timelines may shift without further legislative action.

Quick Decision Checklist

  1. Determine whether your entity crosses the Rs 20 crore share capital or Rs 200 crore turnover threshold based on the most recent three financial years.
  2. Confirm that your statutory auditor is registered, or has initiated registration, with NFRA.
  3. Review all pending or planned M&A transactions to assess whether scheme approval procedures will change under the amended thresholds.
  4. Assign a compliance owner (company secretary or legal head) to monitor MCA notifications on a weekly basis.
  5. Schedule a board meeting within 30 days to table a compliance gap analysis and resolution.

What Changed: Key Provisions of the Corporate Laws Amendment Bill 2026

The Bill amends more than 50 sections of the Companies Act 2013 and several provisions of the LLP Act 2008. For corporate lawyers India‑focused practice teams, four clusters of changes demand immediate attention.

Threshold Changes: Share Capital Rs 20 Crore and Turnover Rs 200 Crore

Under the existing Companies Act framework, various compliance obligations, including the appointment of independent directors, internal auditors and audit committees, are triggered at lower thresholds. The Bill proposes raising these to a paid‑up share capital of Rs 20 crore or a preceding financial‑year turnover of Rs 200 crore. The likely practical effect will be two‑fold: entities currently above the old thresholds but below the new ones may see their compliance burden reduced, while entities that were previously exempt but now cross the raised benchmarks will need to build governance infrastructure for the first time.

The threshold test applies on a rolling basis, assessed against audited financials for the immediately preceding financial year. Companies that fluctuate around the threshold boundary should consider maintaining compliance structures year‑round to avoid repeated set‑up and wind‑down costs.

NFRA Registration Requirement

The Bill expands NFRA’s oversight jurisdiction beyond auditors of listed companies, certain unlisted public companies and prescribed private companies. Once enacted, all auditors and audit firms that serve entities meeting the new threshold tests will be required to register with NFRA and comply with its quality review and disciplinary framework. This represents a significant expansion of NFRA’s remit and is expected to bring several thousand additional audit practices within its ambit.

Merger and Amalgamation Procedure Changes

The amendments recalibrate the financial parameters that determine whether a merger or amalgamation qualifies for the simplified “fast‑track” process under sections of the Companies Act or requires a full NCLT‑supervised scheme. Industry observers expect mid‑market transactions, those involving entities near the Rs 20 crore share capital mark, to be most affected, as deal teams will need to reassess which procedural route applies to their transaction.

Expanded MCA Rule‑Making Powers

Several provisions previously locked into the statute are being delegated to MCA for regulation through rules and notifications. While this creates flexibility, it also introduces regulatory uncertainty: compliance deadlines, form specifications and procedural details may change through executive action rather than Parliamentary debate. In‑house teams should establish a formal monitoring process to track the MCA notification gazette.

Which Companies Are Affected? Entity‑Level Reclassification Under the Companies Act Amendments 2026

Determining whether your entity is affected requires a structured, three‑step analysis. This section provides corporate lawyers India practices can adapt for their own client base, as well as worked examples relevant to mid‑market companies.

Step‑by‑Step Reclassification Analysis

  1. Extract audited financials. Pull the paid‑up share capital and turnover figures from the most recently filed annual return (Form MGT‑7/MGT‑7A) and audited financial statements for FY 2025‑26.
  2. Apply the threshold test. If paid‑up share capital is Rs 20 crore or above, or turnover is Rs 200 crore or above, the entity falls within the enhanced compliance category. Note that these are alternative thresholds, meeting either one is sufficient.
  3. Assess three‑year trajectory. Even if the entity currently falls below the thresholds, review projections for the next two financial years. Entities approaching the boundary should plan compliance infrastructure proactively to avoid a last‑minute scramble.

Worked example: A private limited company with paid‑up share capital of Rs 18 crore and FY 2025‑26 turnover of Rs 210 crore crosses the turnover threshold of Rs 200 crore. Despite its share capital falling below Rs 20 crore, the entity is reclassified into the enhanced compliance category and must appoint independent directors, constitute an audit committee, and ensure its auditor registers with NFRA, all subject to the Bill’s enactment and MCA rule‑making timelines.

Companies vs LLPs: Immediate Differences and Filing Consequences

The Bill also amends the LLP Act 2008, though the LLP Act changes 2026 are narrower in scope. LLPs do not have “share capital” in the traditional sense; instead, their threshold tests are expected to reference contribution and turnover figures. LLPs crossing the prescribed limits will face additional audit and disclosure requirements, including mandatory filing of updated LLP agreements reflecting new governance structures. Early indications suggest that the MCA will prescribe LLP‑specific thresholds through a separate notification, meaning exact figures may differ from the Companies Act benchmarks.

Entity Type Threshold Test (Share Capital / Turnover) Immediate Action Required
Private limited company Share capital ≥ Rs 20 crore OR turnover ≥ Rs 200 crore Review last 3 FYs; pass board resolution to update disclosures; update filings; consult auditor on NFRA implications
Public company Share capital ≥ Rs 20 crore OR turnover ≥ Rs 200 crore Same as private limited company, plus ensure compliance with additional public company disclosure and governance requirements
LLP Contribution / turnover tests under amended LLP Act (subject to MCA rule‑making) Assess whether LLP obligations change; update LLP agreement; file required forms with Registrar of Companies

Auditor Obligations: NFRA Registration and Audit Firm Impacts

The expansion of NFRA auditor registration requirements is among the most operationally significant elements of the Bill. Until now, NFRA’s jurisdiction covered auditors of listed companies, unlisted public companies with paid‑up capital above Rs 500 crore or turnover above Rs 1,000 crore, and a few other prescribed categories. The Bill significantly lowers this bar, bringing auditors of all entities crossing the new Rs 20 crore / Rs 200 crore thresholds into NFRA’s regulatory perimeter.

NFRA Registration Process: Preparatory Checklist for Audit Firms

Audit firms that have not previously registered with NFRA should begin preparing documentation immediately. Based on existing NFRA guidance, the registration process requires:

  1. Firm constitution documents (partnership deed, LLP agreement or certificate of incorporation for corporate audit entities).
  2. Details of all partners and key audit personnel, including their individual membership numbers with the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI).
  3. A register of audit engagements covering entities that will fall within the expanded NFRA jurisdiction.
  4. Internal quality control policies and procedures documentation, including peer review reports where available.
  5. Fee and engagement details for all qualifying audit mandates.

The timeline for mandatory NFRA registration under the Bill is subject to MCA rule‑making. Industry observers expect the MCA to provide a transition window, likely six to twelve months after the Bill receives Presidential assent, during which audit firms must complete registration. However, firms that delay preparation risk being unable to accept or continue qualifying audit mandates once the deadline passes.

Controls Companies Must Implement

The obligation does not rest solely on the auditor. Companies that cross the reclassification thresholds must verify that their appointed statutory auditor holds, or has applied for, NFRA registration. Boards should:

  • Request a written confirmation from the statutory auditor regarding NFRA registration status at the next audit committee meeting.
  • Include NFRA registration as a mandatory criterion in the auditor appointment resolution proposed at the AGM.
  • Update the company’s auditor appointment policy to require NFRA registration as a threshold eligibility condition.
  • Disclose in the board’s report whether the auditor is NFRA‑registered, as this is expected to become a mandatory disclosure under forthcoming MCA rules.
Auditor Type NFRA Registration Required? Action for Company
Auditor of listed company Yes (already required) Verify current registration; confirm annual renewal
Auditor of entity crossing new thresholds Yes (once Bill enacted) Obtain written confirmation; include in appointment resolution
Auditor of entity below all thresholds Not required (unless prescribed by future MCA rule) Monitor MCA notifications for further expansion

M&A and Scheme Changes: Merger Scheme Thresholds, Documentation and Process

The Companies Act amendments 2026 will materially alter the procedural landscape for mergers, amalgamations and demergers. Transactions that previously qualified for the simplified fast‑track route may now require full NCLT supervision, and vice versa, depending on how the revised thresholds interact with the size parameters of the merging entities.

Impact on Mid‑Market Transactions

The recalibration of the merger scheme thresholds, anchored to the Rs 20 crore share capital and Rs 200 crore turnover benchmarks, means that deal teams must reassess the procedural pathway at the structuring stage. A merger between two private companies, each with share capital below Rs 20 crore, may still qualify for the fast‑track process. However, if either party’s turnover exceeds Rs 200 crore, the transaction may be channelled into the full NCLT‑supervised scheme process, with longer timelines, higher costs and additional creditor‑meeting requirements.

Valuation reports, explanatory statements and share‑exchange ratios will all need to be prepared with reference to the new threshold parameters. Counsel drafting schemes should ensure that the scheme document expressly addresses which procedural pathway applies and includes conditions precedent that account for the possibility of the pathway changing if MCA issues further rules before completion.

Practical Negotiating Points for Transaction Documentation

In light of these changes, industry observers expect the following adjustments to standard M&A documentation:

  • Threshold representations. Sellers and targets should represent their current share capital and turnover figures with specificity, and warrant that these have been disclosed accurately for the purposes of determining the applicable approval route.
  • Regulatory pathway covenants. Transaction agreements should include a covenant requiring parties to cooperate in the event that the applicable approval pathway changes during the pendency of the transaction due to MCA rule‑making.
  • Timeline adjustment clauses. Long‑stop dates should be extended to accommodate potential delays if the NCLT route is triggered by the new thresholds.
  • Break‑fee recalibration. Where a transaction is restructured to avoid the NCLT route, break fees and cost‑sharing arrangements should reflect the additional structuring effort.

Checklist for Counsel Drafting a Scheme

  1. Confirm threshold classification of all merging entities against Bill parameters.
  2. Determine whether fast‑track or NCLT route applies; document the analysis in a board note.
  3. Obtain independent valuation reports referencing the new statutory framework.
  4. Prepare explanatory statement disclosing why the chosen procedural route is correct.
  5. Build MCA rule‑change contingency into conditions precedent.
  6. Coordinate with the share capital structuring team if any pre‑merger capital reorganisation is contemplated.

Corporate Governance: AGM/EGM Provisions and Compliance Calendar

The Bill introduces targeted changes to AGM and EGM provisions that will affect meeting logistics, notice requirements and quorum calculations. While these amendments are less dramatic than the threshold and NFRA changes, they carry real operational consequences for company secretaries managing annual compliance calendars.

Key AGM EGM provisions under the proposed amendments include adjustments to the minimum notice periods for certain categories of companies crossing the new thresholds, as well as enhanced quorum requirements for board meetings at which key compliance decisions, such as auditor appointments and scheme approvals, are taken. Companies that are reclassified into the enhanced compliance category will need to align their governance procedures with requirements previously applicable only to larger entities.

Sample 12‑Month Compliance Calendar

Timeline Action Owner
Month 1–2 Conduct threshold assessment; prepare board note on reclassification Company Secretary / CFO
Month 3 Board meeting: table compliance gap analysis and pass enabling resolution Board of Directors
Month 4–5 Appoint independent directors (if required); constitute audit committee Nomination Committee / Board
Month 6 Verify auditor NFRA registration; update appointment resolution Audit Committee / Company Secretary
Month 7–9 Update internal policies (related‑party transactions, minority shareholder protections, whistle‑blower mechanism) Legal / Compliance
Month 10 File updated annual return reflecting new disclosures Company Secretary
Month 11–12 AGM: present compliance status to shareholders; table updated policies for approval Board / Company Secretary

Regulatory Monitoring: MCA Rule‑Making Powers and Risk Management

The expanded MCA rule‑making powers represent a structural shift in how corporate compliance timelines are set. Under the amended framework, the MCA can prescribe thresholds, forms, timelines and procedural details through rules and notifications without returning to Parliament. This means that the compliance landscape may evolve rapidly after the Bill is enacted.

In‑house teams should establish a dedicated regulatory tracking mechanism. At minimum, this should include weekly monitoring of the MCA notification gazette, subscription to MCA’s electronic alert service, and a formal internal escalation process, from the company secretary to the general counsel and ultimately to the board, whenever a notification with compliance implications is published. Companies that are undergoing or planning corporate law transitions should integrate MCA monitoring into their existing regulatory change management framework.

Practical Implementation Plan and 90‑Day Checklist for Corporate Lawyers India Teams

The following phased action plan provides a practical framework for GCs, company secretaries and CFOs:

Phase Actions Owner
Days 1–30 Complete threshold assessment; identify reclassification status; brief the board; request NFRA registration status from auditor Company Secretary / CFO
Days 31–60 Prepare compliance gap analysis; draft board resolution for governance changes; begin independent director search (if required); review all pending M&A transactions for procedural pathway impact Legal / Company Secretary / Nomination Committee
Days 61–90 Implement governance changes (audit committee, policies, disclosures); update auditor appointment terms; establish MCA notification monitoring process; file updated forms with Registrar Board / Company Secretary / Compliance

How to Choose Corporate Counsel and Audit Partners for 2026 Compliance

Selecting the right advisory team is critical. When evaluating corporate counsel for Companies Act amendments 2026 compliance, prioritise practitioners with demonstrable experience in statutory compliance transitions, NFRA engagement and mid‑market M&A structuring. Key selection criteria include familiarity with MCA rule‑making processes, track record on NCLT scheme approvals, and the ability to provide integrated advice across corporate, tax and regulatory work streams.

The Global Law Experts lawyer directory provides a curated listing of practitioners across India who specialise in corporate compliance, Companies Act advisory and transaction structuring, an essential resource for in‑house teams assembling their advisory panel for the 2026 transition.

Next Steps

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 demands structured, prompt action from every entity that may cross the new thresholds. Whether your priority is entity reclassification, NFRA auditor verification, M&A scheme restructuring or governance overhaul, the 90‑day window following enactment will be decisive. Corporate lawyers India practices are already advising clients to treat preparation as a board‑level priority. To discuss your compliance position or request a tailored implementation assessment, contact Global Law Experts for a confidential consultation.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shuva Mandal at Anagram Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

 

Sources

  1. PRS Legislative Research, Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026
  2. Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA)
  3. National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA)
  4. Lexology, Corporate Law Alerts
  5. EY India, Client Alerts
  6. The Legal 500
  7. Chambers and Partners

FAQs

What are the key changes in the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026?
The Bill introduces four principal changes: raised financial thresholds (Rs 20 crore share capital; Rs 200 crore turnover) that reclassify entities into enhanced compliance categories; expanded NFRA auditor registration requirements; revised merger and amalgamation procedure thresholds affecting mid‑market transactions; and broadened MCA rule‑making powers allowing the Ministry to prescribe compliance details through notifications rather than legislation.
Any company, private or public, with paid‑up share capital of Rs 20 crore or above, or turnover of Rs 200 crore or above in the preceding financial year, falls into the enhanced compliance category. For example, a private company with share capital of Rs 15 crore but turnover of Rs 210 crore would be reclassified based on the turnover test alone.
Yes. The Bill extends NFRA registration requirements to all auditors and audit firms serving entities that meet or exceed the new thresholds. The exact registration deadline is subject to MCA rule‑making following the Bill’s enactment. Industry observers expect a transition window of six to twelve months.
The revised thresholds will alter which transactions qualify for the simplified fast‑track merger process versus full NCLT‑supervised scheme approval. Transactions involving entities near the Rs 20 crore share capital or Rs 200 crore turnover thresholds should reassess their procedural pathway and build regulatory contingency into deal timelines.
Within 30 days: (1) extract audited share capital and turnover figures for the latest financial year; (2) determine whether either threshold is met; (3) request a written NFRA registration update from your statutory auditor; (4) assign a compliance owner to track MCA notifications; and (5) schedule a board meeting to table a preliminary compliance gap analysis.
Enforcement mechanisms will be detailed in MCA rules following enactment. The existing Companies Act penalty framework, which includes monetary fines and officer‑in‑default liability, is expected to apply to entities that fail to comply with the enhanced obligations within prescribed timelines. Companies should monitor MCA notifications for specific penalty schedules.
The full Bill text and clause‑by‑clause analysis are available on the PRS Legislative Research bill tracker. Official notifications, rules and gazette publications are available on the Ministry of Corporate Affairs website. NFRA registration guidance is published on the NFRA portal.

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Corporate Lawyers India 2026: Companies Act & LLP Changes, Thresholds, NFRA and M&A Compliance

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