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Last updated: 14 May 2026
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, introduced in Lok Sabha on 23 March 2026, represents the most consequential overhaul of India’s corporate laws amendment framework since the Jan Vishwas decriminalisation drive of 2023. Amending both the Companies Act, 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008, the Bill recalibrates compliance thresholds, decriminalises dozens of minor offences, relaxes LLP filing obligations and reshapes the procedural landscape for mergers, private equity transactions and foreign investment approvals. For general counsel, transaction lawyers, PE fund managers and foreign investor legal teams, the practical consequences touch every phase of the deal lifecycle, from due diligence questionnaires to representations and warranties, from closing conditions to post-acquisition compliance calendars.
The corporate laws 2026 India amendments create six immediate action items for in-house counsel and investors. Before diving into the detailed analysis below, practitioners should begin executing on these priorities:
Industry observers expect these amendments to reduce routine compliance costs for smaller entities by a significant margin while simultaneously tightening accountability for material misconduct, a calibrated approach that should encourage both domestic entrepreneurship and foreign investment.
The Bill touches five broad categories of reform across the Companies Act, 2013 and the LLP Act, 2008. Understanding each category is essential for assessing the impact on M&A India transactions, fund structures and day-to-day companies act compliance India obligations.
| Reform category | Key provisions | Practical effect |
|---|---|---|
| Companies Act governance & thresholds | Expanded small company definition; revised thresholds for board and audit committee obligations; streamlined annual filing requirements | More private companies qualify for compliance relief; reduced cost and administrative burden for eligible entities |
| Decriminalisation of offences | Conversion of specified minor and procedural defaults from criminal offences to civil penalties adjudicated by MCA officers | Directors face compounding penalties rather than prosecution for technical non-compliances; serious fraud offences remain criminal |
| LLP Act changes | Relaxed filing for LLP agreement amendments; new conversion pathways for specified trusts and other entities into LLPs; simplified partner registration | Faster structuring and restructuring for PE-backed vehicles, AIFs and joint ventures using LLP format |
| Delegation & Central Government powers | Enhanced powers for the Central Government to prescribe thresholds, forms and procedural matters by notification rather than statutory amendment | Future changes can be implemented more quickly, counsel must monitor MCA notifications continuously |
| Fast-track mergers & approvals | Revised eligibility thresholds for fast-track merger processes; clarified NCLT timelines; procedural streamlining | Smaller and mid-market M&A transactions may qualify for accelerated court-free merger routes |
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 was introduced in Lok Sabha on 23 March 2026, as recorded in the PRS India bill tracker. The Bill amends the Companies Act, 2013 (Act No. 18 of 2013) and the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008 (Act No. 6 of 2009). The eGazette publication dated 23 March 2026 contains the full text of the Bill as introduced. Practitioners should note that many provisions are structured with staggered commencement, they take effect on dates the Central Government appoints by notification in the Official Gazette. This means that even after presidential assent, certain sections may not be operative for weeks or months.
The likely practical effect will be a phased rollout, with governance threshold changes and decriminalisation provisions expected to be notified first, followed by LLP conversion and merger process amendments.
The companies act amendment provisions are the more voluminous portion, addressing governance, reporting and enforcement across public, private and small companies. The LLP Act changes, while fewer in number, carry outsized significance for private equity and fund structures because they open new conversion pathways and reduce the procedural friction that has historically made LLPs less attractive for complex investment vehicles.
Not every entity faces the same level of disruption. The table below maps entity types to the most relevant changes and the immediate actions required. This answers a frequently asked question from practitioners: which entities need to act now?
| Entity type | Key changes (examples) | Immediate action required |
|---|---|---|
| Public companies & large unlisted companies | Changes to compliance thresholds and reporting; decriminalisation of minor defaults; revised fast-track merger eligibility; enhanced Central Government notification powers | Review board committee charters; update compliance calendar; assess merger route eligibility for pending transactions |
| Private companies (expanded small company definition) | Expanded eligibility for small company compliance relief, likely raising the paid-up capital and turnover thresholds; reduced audit committee and board meeting obligations for qualifying entities | Re-evaluate whether the entity now qualifies as a small company; adjust audit, filing and board processes accordingly |
| LLPs & AIF-LLPs | Relaxed filing for LLP agreement amendments; new conversion rules permitting specified trusts to convert into LLPs; simplified partner registration and change notifications | Review existing LLP agreements for compliance; prepare conversion feasibility analysis; assess tax implications of trust-to-LLP conversion |
| Foreign-owned subsidiaries & JVs | Interaction with FDI screening (Press Note 3 and successor instruments); potential IFSC-specific reliefs; streamlined filing requirements for Indian subsidiaries of foreign parents | Map FDI approval requirements against new thresholds; update shareholder agreements; coordinate with RBI counsel on FEMA compliance |
Early indications suggest that the expanded small company definition alone could bring tens of thousands of additional private companies into the simplified compliance regime, a significant reduction in the regulatory burden across India’s SME sector.
This is where the corporate laws amendment India provisions have the most immediate, high-value consequences for transaction practitioners. The impact on M&A India deal workflows spans every phase from preliminary due diligence through to post-close integration.
Due diligence questionnaires and document request lists need updating. Specifically, counsel should now interrogate the following areas with greater precision:
A practical DD addendum checklist for counsel should include: (i) a copy of the target’s compliance calendar post-amendment; (ii) a mapping of all prior defaults against the decriminalisation schedule; (iii) confirmation of small company status under the new thresholds; and (iv) a legal opinion on fast-track merger eligibility.
The decriminalisation provisions have a direct effect on how R&Ws are drafted and negotiated. Key considerations include:
For a detailed analysis of how disclosure letters function in M&A transactions, including best practices for structuring disclosures against warranties, refer to our dedicated guide.
At closing and beyond, the amendments affect several practical workflows:
R&W narrowing for decriminalised offences:
“The Company is in compliance in all material respects with the provisions of the Companies Act, 2013 (as amended by the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Act, 2026), provided that references to ‘compliance’ in this Clause shall, with respect to any offence reclassified as a civil default under the 2026 Amendment, be construed as compliance with the applicable civil penalty regime and any adjudication orders issued thereunder, rather than the criminal provisions that applied prior to the effective date of such reclassification.”
LLP conversion covenant:
“The Designated Partners shall, within [●] Business Days following the Effective Date, initiate and diligently pursue the conversion of the Target Trust into a Limited Liability Partnership in accordance with the conversion provisions introduced by the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Act, 2026, and shall deliver to the Investor a certificate of conversion issued by the Registrar of Companies within [●] Business Days of such conversion becoming effective.”
The LLP Act changes introduced by the Bill are among the most consequential for the private equity India regulatory update landscape. Three core reforms deserve particular attention from fund managers and AIF trustees.
Relaxed filing for LLP agreement amendments. Under the existing regime, any amendment to an LLP agreement, including changes to profit-sharing ratios, partner admission or management rights, required filing with the Registrar within 30 days. The Bill relaxes this requirement for specified categories of amendments, reducing the administrative burden on LLPs that frequently adjust commercial terms. For a comprehensive overview of LLP structuring, compliance and partner obligations in India, refer to our foundational guide.
Conversion pathways for specified trusts. Perhaps the most structurally significant reform is the provision allowing specified trusts, including certain AIF trust structures, to convert into LLPs. This opens a new route for fund managers who wish to migrate from a trust-based vehicle to an LLP format for governance, liability or tax reasons.
Simplified partner registration. The Bill streamlines the process for registering new partners and notifying changes in designated partners, reducing the documentation burden and shortening the timeline for partner onboarding.
Consider a scenario in which an AIF holds its portfolio investments through an SPV structured as a private company. Converting that SPV to an LLP under the new provisions would require the fund manager to:
Foreign acquirers and investors must overlay the corporate laws amendment India framework with the existing foreign direct investment regime. The Bill does not directly amend FEMA or Press Note 3, but it changes the corporate law substrate on which FDI screening operates.
Three areas require immediate attention from foreign investor legal teams:
For a detailed analysis of how Press Note 3 restrictions and their recent relaxation interact with FDI structuring, see our guide on Press Note 3 and FDI easing in India. Foreign acquirers planning cross-border joint ventures under India’s liberalised FDI regime should also review the structuring and control compliance considerations in our dedicated guide.
The decriminalisation companies act provisions are the reform most likely to affect day-to-day governance risk. The Bill reclassifies a range of minor and procedural offences, including certain defaults in filing annual returns, failures to hold board meetings within prescribed intervals, and technical non-compliances with share allotment procedures, from criminal offences to civil penalties.
| Category | Before the amendment | After the amendment |
|---|---|---|
| Minor filing defaults | Criminal offence; potential imprisonment and fine for directors | Civil penalty adjudicated by MCA adjudicating officer; compounding possible |
| Technical share allotment non-compliance | Criminal offence; directors personally liable | Civil penalty; company primarily liable with director liability limited to specified defaults |
| Serious fraud and misrepresentation | Criminal offence; SFIO investigation; imprisonment up to 10 years | Unchanged, remains a criminal offence with full prosecution powers |
| NFRA-related audit defaults | Criminal offence for specified audit failures | Mixed, some reclassified to civil; material audit fraud remains criminal |
Impact on D&O insurance and disclosure letters. Directors’ and officers’ liability policies typically distinguish between criminal and civil proceedings in their coverage triggers and exclusion clauses. The reclassification of offences may bring certain defaults within coverage that were previously excluded (or vice versa). Board secretaries should circulate the decriminalisation schedule to D&O insurers and request written confirmation of how the policy responds to reclassified defaults. For an in-depth look at how disclosure letters interact with warranty regimes in this evolving landscape, see our analysis of why disclosure letters are crucial in M&A deals.
Practical mitigation steps for boards:
Entities navigating distressed situations should also consider the interaction between these provisions and the IBC Amendment Act 2026 and its impact on creditors, particularly where director disqualifications overlap with insolvency proceedings.
The following timeline provides a structured approach to implementing the corporate laws amendment India reforms across an organisation or portfolio.
Within 30 days:
Within 60 days:
Within 90 days:
| Area | Companies Act changes | LLP Act changes |
|---|---|---|
| Filing & reporting | Expanded small company relief; revised thresholds; streamlined annual filings; greater Central Government notification powers | Relaxed filing for LLP agreement amendments; simplified conversion rules for trusts to LLPs; streamlined partner registration |
| Enforcement & penalties | Decriminalisation of listed minor offences; civil penalty regime for technical defaults; serious fraud remains criminal | Similar reliefs for procedural defaults; clarified partner liabilities; adjudication by Registrar rather than criminal courts |
| M&A impact | Changes to R&Ws and disclosure letters; revised fast-track merger thresholds and NCLT timelines; updated approval processes | Easier restructuring and conversions for AIF/SPV vehicles; new mechanics for interest transfers; impact on waterfall documentation |
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 is not merely a technical clean-up exercise, it is a structural recalibration of India’s corporate governance and compliance architecture. For transaction counsel, PE fund managers, LLP partners and foreign investor legal teams, the amendments demand immediate attention across deal documentation, fund structuring, compliance workflows and governance frameworks. The corporate laws amendment India reforms reward those who move early: updating templates now, auditing compliance positions today and restructuring vehicles proactively will provide a measurable competitive advantage when the staggered notifications bring each provision into force.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shailendra Komatreddy at TLH, Advocates & Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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