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companies amendment bill india

Companies (amendment) Bill 2026, Practical Compliance Checklist for Indian Companies

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Last reviewed: 12 May 2026

The Companies (Amendment) Bill 2026, formally titled the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, was introduced in the Lok Sabha on 23 March 2026, proposing a suite of targeted changes to the Companies Act, 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008. For company secretaries, CFOs, audit committee chairs and board members across India, the Bill’s provisions on decriminalisation of routine defaults, expanded NFRA oversight of auditors, revised AGM and meeting rules, and recalibrated CSR thresholds demand immediate attention. This practical compliance checklist translates the legislative text into a step-by-step action plan organised around 7-day, 30-day and 90-day timelines, so that companies can begin preparing now, well before the Central Government notifies an effective date.

Executive Summary, What the Companies (Amendment) Bill India Does and Immediate Takeaways

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 is a targeted reform package rather than a wholesale overhaul. It amends specific sections of the Companies Act, 2013 alongside parallel changes to the LLP Act, 2008, with the stated objective of improving ease of doing business while strengthening accountability where it matters most, auditor oversight and financial reporting.

Key takeaways for boards and management teams:

  • Decriminalisation of routine lapses. Several procedural and minor technical defaults currently punishable as criminal offences are re-categorised as civil defaults attracting monetary penalties adjudicated by the Registrar of Companies (RoC) or regional directors.
  • Expanded NFRA powers. The National Financial Reporting Authority gains broader oversight tools, including enhanced auditor registration requirements and wider investigative reach over prescribed classes of companies and their auditors.
  • AGM and meeting rule reforms. Notice periods, quorum rules and the framework for remote shareholder participation are updated to reflect post-pandemic corporate practice.
  • LLP Act amendments. The Bill introduces accountability and governance measures for LLPs that mirror several Companies Act provisions, including enhanced filing obligations and penalties for non-compliance.
  • CSR threshold recalibration. Triggering thresholds for mandatory CSR spending are adjusted, potentially widening the pool of companies subject to CSR obligations.
  • Auditor independence requirements. Stricter conflict-of-interest and rotation rules reinforce auditor independence, with enhanced disclosure obligations to audit committees.

What to do in the next 7 days: Circulate a board-level briefing note summarising the Bill’s scope, instruct the Company Secretary to map every affected provision to current internal policies, and confirm your statutory auditor’s NFRA registration status.

Key Legal Changes Under the Companies (Amendment) Bill 2026, Quick Reference

Below is a concise summary of each major reform area. Each subsection identifies the change, its statutory basis and its immediate practical impact on companies act amendments in India.

Decriminalisation of Routine Lapses

The Bill converts multiple criminal offences, primarily procedural defaults such as late filing of annual returns, minor errors in statutory registers and missed compliance deadlines, into civil defaults. Penalties will be adjudicated by the RoC or regional directors rather than through criminal courts. Industry observers expect this to reduce the litigation burden significantly while preserving criminal liability for fraud and serious misconduct.

Auditor Oversight and NFRA-Related Changes

NFRA’s jurisdiction is expanded to cover additional classes of companies and their auditors. The Bill proposes mandatory NFRA auditor registration for audit firms and individual partners auditing prescribed entities, including listed companies, certain large unlisted public companies and entities with significant public interest. Enhanced investigative powers allow NFRA to summon documents and examine witnesses beyond the scope of the current framework.

AGM and Meeting Rules

The Bill codifies hybrid and fully remote AGM mechanisms, updates minimum notice periods, and introduces revised quorum thresholds for certain resolutions. The new AGM rules 2026 also clarify the validity of electronic voting, record-date calculations and the admissibility of digital attendance registers, changes directly relevant to upcoming AGM planning cycles.

LLP Act Amendments

The LLP Act amendment 2026 introduces governance obligations previously absent from the LLP framework: mandatory annual compliance certificates, enhanced partner-disclosure requirements, and civil penalty regimes for late filings. These changes bring the LLP governance structure closer to the Companies Act model.

CSR Threshold and Other Corporate Governance Changes

Triggering thresholds for mandatory CSR activity are adjusted, the likely practical effect will be to bring a larger cohort of mid-sized companies within the CSR net. Separately, the Bill proposes updates to related-party transaction disclosures and introduces additional requirements for independent director appointments, reinforcing the corporate governance architecture.

Practical Compliance Checklist, What Companies Must Do Now

This is the core compliance checklist for companies in India affected by the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026. Actions are grouped by urgency: immediate (7 days), short-term (30 days) and medium-term (90 days). Each item identifies the responsible party and the reason it matters.

Immediate Actions, 7-Day Checklist

  1. Circulate a board briefing note.
    Owner: Company Secretary / General Counsel
    Why it matters: Directors need to understand the Bill’s scope before acting on any operational change. A one-page summary referencing the PRS BillTrack page is sufficient at this stage.
    Sample wording: “The Board notes the introduction of the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 in the Lok Sabha on 23 March 2026, and directs the Company Secretary to prepare a compliance impact assessment within 30 days.”

  2. Confirm statutory auditor NFRA registration status.
    Owner: Audit Committee Chair / CFO
    Why it matters: The NFRA auditor registration changes may require your audit firm or individual engagement partner to register (or update their registration) with NFRA. Delay creates audit-validity risk.
    Action: Request a written confirmation from your audit firm that the lead engagement partner is registered with NFRA or that steps are underway.

  3. Identify all sections where current practice relies on criminalised provisions.
    Owner: Company Secretary
    Why it matters: Decriminalisation under the companies act shifts the penalty regime, but companies with pending proceedings must understand the transitional impact. Map each affected provision now.

  4. Review upcoming AGM and board-meeting schedules.
    Owner: Company Secretary / Board Secretariat
    Why it matters: If the Bill is enacted before your next AGM, revised notice and quorum rules may apply. Plan contingency drafts now.

Short-Term Actions, 30-Day Checklist

  1. Conduct a full compliance gap analysis.
    Owner: Company Secretary / Legal Team
    Why it matters: Every internal policy, delegation of authority matrix and board charter provision referencing the Companies Act, 2013 must be reviewed against the Bill’s proposed amendments. Pay particular attention to penalty clauses cited in standing instructions to employees.
    Deliverable: A clause-mapping document comparing current policy to proposed provisions.

  2. Convene an audit committee meeting.
    Owner: Audit Committee Chair
    Why it matters: The committee should formally review auditor independence attestations, confirm NFRA registration compliance and evaluate whether the engagement letter requires amendments post-enactment.
    Sample resolution: “The Audit Committee has reviewed the status of the statutory auditor’s NFRA registration and confirms that [Audit Firm] is currently registered under the applicable framework. The Committee directs management to monitor any additional registration requirements arising from the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026.”

  3. Update auditor engagement letters.
    Owner: CFO / Legal Team
    Why it matters: Engagement terms may need to reference new NFRA obligations, expanded auditor-reporting requirements and revised independence declarations. Draft supplementary clauses now and hold them in readiness.

  4. Schedule compliance training.
    Owner: Company Secretary / HR
    Why it matters: In-house teams, finance, secretarial, legal, must understand the shift from criminal to civil penalties and the revised filing deadlines. A focused 60-minute briefing covering the Bill’s key provisions is recommended.

  5. Assess CSR threshold impact.
    Owner: CFO / CSR Committee
    Why it matters: Revised thresholds may bring your company within the mandatory CSR net for the first time or increase existing obligations. Model the financial impact based on latest audited figures.

Medium-Term Actions, 90-Day Checklist

  1. Revise LLP partnership agreements.
    Owner: Designated Partners / Legal Counsel
    Why it matters: The LLP Act amendment 2026 introduces new governance and filing obligations. Partnership agreements should be updated to allocate compliance responsibilities, indemnities and penalty-sharing mechanisms among partners.

  2. Update board charters and committee terms of reference.
    Owner: Company Secretary / Board
    Why it matters: Nomination committee, audit committee and CSR committee charters may all require amendments reflecting expanded statutory duties or revised thresholds.

  3. Prepare AGM notice templates under the new framework.
    Owner: Company Secretary
    Why it matters: Updated notice periods, electronic-voting procedures and quorum rules must be reflected in your standard AGM notice template before the next shareholder meeting.

  4. Notify regulators and stakeholders where required.
    Owner: Company Secretary / Compliance Officer
    Why it matters: Some companies, particularly those under NFRA oversight or in regulated sectors, may need to file additional notifications with the MCA or sectoral regulators once the Bill is enacted and notified.

  5. Establish a monitoring calendar for subordinate legislation.
    Owner: Legal Team
    Why it matters: The Bill empowers the Central Government to make rules on several matters. Early indications suggest that detailed procedural rules, particularly around NFRA registration and AGM conduct, will follow through MCA notifications. A monitoring calendar ensures nothing is missed.

Audit Committees, Auditors and NFRA, Step-by-Step Actions

Is Your Auditor Affected?

The Bill expands NFRA’s oversight to auditors of listed companies, prescribed classes of public companies and entities deemed to have significant public interest. If your company falls within any of these categories, the engagement partner and audit firm will be subject to mandatory NFRA registration and enhanced reporting obligations. Companies should verify their classification against the proposed thresholds in the Bill text.

Audit Committee Actions

Audit committees should immediately request written confirmation of NFRA registration status from the statutory auditor, review existing independence attestations for compliance with the tighter conflict-of-interest framework, and evaluate whether the current audit engagement letter requires supplementary clauses addressing expanded NFRA powers.

If Audit Partner Registration Is Required, Immediate Steps

Where the engagement partner is not yet registered with NFRA, the audit committee should set a clear timeline for registration, consider whether an interim arrangement is needed, and document the committee’s oversight actions in the minutes.

Obligation / Change Entities Affected Immediate Action (Owner)
Mandatory NFRA auditor registration and expanded oversight Listed companies and prescribed classes of public companies Audit Committee to confirm auditor’s NFRA registration; request independence confirmations (Audit Committee Chair)
Enhanced auditor-reporting requirements All companies under NFRA jurisdiction CFO to review and update engagement letter terms; flag gaps to Audit Committee (CFO / Legal Team)
Stricter conflict-of-interest and rotation rules All companies engaging statutory auditors Company Secretary to verify rotation schedules and related-party disclosures (Company Secretary)

Decriminalisation Explained, Compliance Risks and Preservation of Corporate Records

The decriminalisation provisions under the companies act represent one of the Bill’s most operationally significant reforms. Several defaults, including late filing of annual returns, errors in statutory registers and minor procedural omissions, are re-categorised from criminal offences to civil defaults attracting monetary penalties imposed by the RoC or regional directors.

Critically, not all offences are decriminalised. Fraud, misrepresentation in prospectuses, deliberate non-disclosure of material information and wilful default in deposit repayment remain criminal offences carrying imprisonment and fines. Companies must therefore distinguish carefully between decriminalised defaults and retained criminal provisions.

Recommended remediation workflow:

  • Step 1, Audit existing defaults. The Company Secretary should compile a register of all outstanding or historic defaults that fall within the decriminalised category.
  • Step 2, Self-cure where possible. File overdue returns, correct register entries and submit belated forms before the Bill’s effective date to minimise exposure under either regime.
  • Step 3, Preserve records. Maintain complete documentation of corrective actions, board resolutions and filing receipts. Even under a civil penalty regime, evidence of good-faith remediation strengthens the company’s position.
  • Step 4, Legal review of pending proceedings. If criminal proceedings are already underway for a default that the Bill proposes to decriminalise, seek legal advice on transitional provisions and compounding options.

LLP Act 2026, Immediate Steps for LLPs and Partners

The LLP Act amendment 2026 introduces governance obligations that bring LLPs closer to the Companies Act compliance model. Designated partners should treat the following actions as priorities:

  • Review and update partnership agreements. New mandatory compliance certificates and partner-disclosure requirements may necessitate amendments to existing LLP agreements, particularly indemnity, penalty-sharing and decision-making clauses.
  • Confirm registrar filing status. Enhanced filing obligations and tighter deadlines for annual returns mean that LLPs with overdue filings should prioritise clearing the backlog now.
  • Assess capital contribution and partner-change rules. The Bill introduces revised provisions governing changes in partnership interests and capital contributions, review current arrangements against the proposed text.
  • Establish a compliance calendar. LLPs that have historically operated with minimal compliance infrastructure should implement a calendar tracking all filing deadlines, partner-disclosure dates and annual compliance-certificate due dates.

For a broader overview of LLP structures and governance in India, see our guide to LLPs in India.

Meeting and AGM Changes, Notices, Minutes and Practical Drafting

Notice Timing and Remote Meetings Update

The Bill codifies the framework for hybrid and fully remote AGMs, updating minimum notice periods and specifying the technological requirements for valid electronic participation. Companies planning AGMs for later in 2026 should prepare dual-format notice templates, one compliant with the existing rules and one reflecting the proposed changes, so that the correct version can be issued promptly once the effective date is notified.

Board Minutes and Special Resolutions

Revised quorum and voting thresholds for certain special resolutions require corresponding updates to board-minute templates. Companies should ensure that minute templates capture the new quorum calculations and record whether attendance was physical, electronic or hybrid.

Sample AGM notice paragraph:

“Notice is hereby given that the [Xth] Annual General Meeting of [Company Name] will be held on [Date] at [Time] at [Venue/Virtual Platform Link] in accordance with the provisions of the Companies Act, 2013 (as proposed to be amended by the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, upon its notification). Members may participate in person or through the electronic voting and remote attendance facility provided by [Platform Name].”

Shareholder Communications and Record Dates

The Bill updates record-date calculation methods for determining shareholder eligibility to vote. Company Secretaries should verify that their registrar and transfer agent’s systems are configured to accommodate the revised timeline and notify shareholders of any changes in the AGM notice.

Quick Compliance Timeline

Timeframe Action Responsible Party
Within 7 days Circulate board briefing note on the Bill’s scope and key provisions Company Secretary / General Counsel
Within 7 days Confirm statutory auditor’s NFRA registration status Audit Committee Chair / CFO
Within 7 days Map all internal policies referencing criminalised provisions Company Secretary
Within 30 days Conduct full compliance gap analysis (clause-mapping document) Company Secretary / Legal Team
Within 30 days Convene audit committee to review auditor independence and NFRA compliance Audit Committee Chair
Within 30 days Draft supplementary engagement-letter clauses for auditor CFO / Legal Team
Within 30 days Schedule compliance training for in-house teams Company Secretary / HR
Within 90 days Revise LLP partnership agreements and compliance calendars Designated Partners / Legal Counsel
Within 90 days Update board charters, committee terms of reference and AGM templates Company Secretary / Board
Within 90 days Establish monitoring calendar for MCA rules and subordinate legislation Legal Team

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ruby Singh Ahuja at Karanjawala & Company Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Where to Read the Bill and Official Sources

Companies monitoring the progress of the companies (amendment) bill 2026 should bookmark these official resources:

  • Full bill text (PDF): Available on the PRS India website and Digital Sansad portal (as introduced on 23 March 2026).
  • Bill summary and status tracker: The PRS India BillTrack page provides a plain-language summary, committee referral status and amendment tracker.
  • MCA notifications: The Ministry of Corporate Affairs portal will publish the official Gazette notification once the Bill receives Presidential assent and the Central Government notifies the effective date.
  • NFRA guidance: The NFRA website will carry any new registration forms, procedural guides or circulars related to the expanded auditor-oversight framework.
  • ICSI practice notes: The Institute of Company Secretaries of India has invited suggestions on the Bill and is expected to publish practice guidance for company secretaries.

The Bill’s effective date has not yet been notified. Companies should monitor the Gazette of India and MCA portal for the official notification, as several provisions will take effect only on the date specified by the Central Government.

Conclusion

The Companies (Amendment) Bill India introduces reforms that touch virtually every compliance function within a company, from the Company Secretary’s filing calendar to the Audit Committee’s oversight of auditor independence and the CFO’s CSR budgeting. While the effective date remains to be notified, the volume and specificity of the proposed changes make early preparation essential. Companies that complete the 7/30/90-day checklist outlined above will be positioned to achieve seamless compliance once the provisions are brought into force, avoiding both regulatory penalties and operational disruption.

For tailored guidance on how the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 affects your specific corporate structure, consult an experienced company law practitioner through our India lawyer directory.

Sources

  1. PRS India, Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 (Full Text PDF)
  2. PRS India, BillTrack Page
  3. Digital Sansad, Companies (Amendment) Bill Document (As Introduced)
  4. Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA)
  5. National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA)
  6. EY Regulatory Alert, Corporate Laws Amendment Bill 2026
  7. Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, Client Alert
  8. ICSI, Solicit Suggestions on the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026
  9. India Briefing, Corporate Laws Amendment Bill 2026

FAQs

What is the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026?
It is a bill introduced in the Lok Sabha on 23 March 2026 that proposes targeted amendments to the Companies Act, 2013 and the LLP Act, 2008. Key areas include decriminalisation of routine defaults, expanded NFRA auditor oversight, revised AGM rules and recalibrated CSR thresholds. Companies should begin compliance gap-analysis immediately.
The principal changes are: re-categorisation of minor criminal offences as civil defaults, mandatory NFRA auditor registration for prescribed entities, updated AGM notice and remote-meeting rules, LLP governance enhancements and revised CSR spending thresholds. See the practical compliance checklist above for step-by-step actions.
Yes, several procedural defaults (late filings, register errors, minor omissions) are proposed to be decriminalised and made subject to monetary penalties instead. However, fraud, misrepresentation and wilful default remain criminal offences. Companies with pending criminal proceedings for decriminalised defaults should seek legal advice on transitional provisions.
Audit committees should immediately confirm the statutory auditor’s NFRA registration status, review independence attestations and evaluate whether the engagement letter requires supplementary clauses. If the engagement partner is unregistered, set a clear timeline for registration and document oversight actions in committee minutes.
The Bill codifies hybrid and fully remote AGMs, updates minimum notice periods and clarifies electronic-voting and record-date rules. Companies should prepare dual-format AGM notice templates, one under existing rules and one reflecting proposed changes, and verify that registrar systems support revised record-date calculations.
The effective date has not yet been notified. Several provisions will commence on a date to be specified by the Central Government via Gazette notification. Companies should monitor the MCA portal and PRS India BillTrack page for updates on Parliamentary passage, Presidential assent and notification.
The full text is available on PRS India and Digital Sansad. The PRS India BillTrack page provides the bill text alongside a plain-language summary, amendment status and committee referral information.

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Companies (amendment) Bill 2026, Practical Compliance Checklist for Indian Companies

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