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Regulatory Update: India Rewrites The Rule On Cross-Border Guarantee Regulations

By Nidhi Arora
– posted 2 hours ago

A.   INTRODUCTION

 India’s cross-border investment landscape has undergone a quiet but consequential transformation. On 6 January 2026, the Reserve Bank of India (‘RBI’) notified the Foreign Exchange Management (Guarantees) Regulations, 2026 (the ‘2026 Regulations’), formally superseding a framework that had been in place since 2000, a time when India’s commercial footprint in global markets was a fraction of what it is today.  The timing is significant here, annual FDI inflows reached USD 81 billion in FY 2024–25, marking a significant14% increase from FY 2023-24. Against this backdrop, the 2000 era guarantee regulations had become a fundamental hindrance, generating regulatory risk, and leaving entire categories of modern cross-border finance in a grey zone.

The 2026 Regulations adopt a comprehensive approach to cross-border guarantees.  As a foundational rule, no person resident in India shall be a party to a guarantee, whether as principal debtor, surety, or creditor, where the other party is a non-resident, except in accordance with FEMA, the regulations (including the 2026 Regulations) framed thereunder, or with specific RBI permission.

B.   KEY CHANGES

The 2026 Regulations introduce a principle-based architecture with 5 (five) changes of material significance to global investors and cross-border financiers:

  • Expanded definition – The 2000 Regulations defined a ‘guarantee’ narrowly as covering a ‘debt, obligation or other liability’. Under the 2026 Regulations, the definition of ‘guarantee’ now expressly includes ‘counter-guarantees’ and a portfolio of liabilities, a critical update for complex finance structures where back-to-back guarantee chains are common.  The 2026 Regulations also define fundamental terms such as ‘principal debtor’ (a person in respect of whose default the guarantee is given), ‘surety’ (a person who gives a guarantee) and creditor (a person to whom the guarantee is given).  The aforesaid definitions were not covered under the 2000 Regulations.
  • Recognition of the Indian creditor – Regulation 6 of the 2026 Regulations explicitly recognises, for the first time, the position of an Indian resident as a creditor entitled to obtain a guarantee from a non-resident counterpart. The 2026 Regulations specify that the Indian creditor must ensure that the underlying transaction is in compliance with FEMA.  This update fundamentally repositions the framework, India’s regulatory architecture now accommodates both sides of a cross-border guarantee relationship, aligning with global financing norms that have long treated inbound and outbound guarantees symmetrically.  For foreign entities, whether acting as joint venture partners, parent guarantors, or offshore project sponsors, this means their guarantee obligations in favour of Indian joint venture partners, lenders or co-venturers now sit on clear regulatory ground for the first time.
  • Broader automatic route – The most commercially significant change is the inversion of the default rule. A resident may act as a surety or principal debtor without prior RBI approval, provided two conditions are met:

(a) The underlying transaction is not prohibited under FEMA and its regulations; and

(b) The surety and principal debtor are eligible to lend to and borrow from each other under the FEMA (Borrowing and Lending) Regulations, 2018. The 2026 Regulations also preserve targeted carve-outs. The borrowing-lending eligibility condition does not apply to guarantees issued by authorised dealer banks backed by one hundred percent deposit-backed collateral, guarantees issued by Indian agents of foreign shipping or airline companies for statutory dues in India, or guarantees where both the surety and principal debtor are residents.

  • Exceptions – To prevent duplication and regulatory friction, certain categories are expressly excluded from the scope of the 2026 Regulations. These include guarantees issued by overseas branches of authorised dealer banks or IFSC units unless another party is resident in India, Irrevocable Payment Commitments (IPC) issued by authorised dealer banks acting as custodian banks for Foreign Portfolio Investors and guarantees issued in accordance with the FEMA (Overseas Investment) Regulations, 2022. These exclusions preserve coherence across FEMA’s broader regulatory framework while recognising established market practices.
  • Consolidated reporting requirements – The 2026 Regulations replace the prior fragmented reporting regime with a single quarterly framework, covering issuance, modification, and invocation of guarantees. Reports must be filed with an authorised dealer bank within 15 (fifteen) calendar days of quarter-end. For the first time, the reporting responsibility is expressly allocated by regulation, the Indian surety, the principal debtor (where the surety is non-resident), or the creditor (where both surety and debtor are non-resident) bears the compliance obligation.

C.   KEY TAKEAWAY FOR GLOBAL INVESTORS AND ADVISORS

The 2026 Regulations represent India’s most significant update to its cross-border guarantee framework in 25 years. The key changes specified above collectively modernise a framework that had remained static while India’s cross-border commercial activity grew by orders of magnitude. For foreign investors, joint venture partners, lenders, and project sponsors, the practical effect is a faster, more predictable operating environment for structuring cross-border guarantee arrangements in India.

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Regulatory Update: India Rewrites The Rule On Cross-Border Guarantee Regulations

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