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The pre-packaged insolvency procedure India 2026 framework offers micro, small and medium enterprises a faster, less adversarial alternative to the full Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC). Introduced through the Section 54A pathway, the PPIRP allows an MSME corporate debtor and its financial creditors to negotiate a base resolution plan before approaching the Adjudicating Authority (AA), preserving business value while keeping existing management substantially in place. The procedure has gained renewed practical importance following the IBBI (Pre‑Packaged Insolvency Resolution Process) Regulations updated on 25 February 2026, which clarified filing thresholds, tightened timelines and refined the role of the Resolution Professional.
This guide sets out every step an MSME owner, CFO or turnaround adviser needs to follow, from eligibility assessment through AA approval, with the required documents, statutory deadlines and indicative costs presented in ready‑to‑use tables.
A PPIRP is a hybrid insolvency mechanism under Chapter III‑A of the IBC (Sections 54A–54P). The corporate debtor, which must be an MSME as classified under the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006 (MSMED Act), proposes a base resolution plan to its financial creditors before any formal insolvency application is filed. Once the creditors approve the plan by the requisite voting threshold, the debtor applies to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), which acts as the Adjudicating Authority. If the AA admits the application, a moratorium takes effect and a Resolution Professional (RP) oversees the process to completion within 120 days from the pre‑packaged insolvency commencement date.
Promoters typically favour a pre‑pack when the business is still operationally viable but faces a temporary liquidity crisis, and where management wishes to retain control rather than cede it to a CIRP‑appointed RP. Financial creditors may prefer the PPIRP because it reduces tribunal time, limits reputational damage to the debtor and generally delivers higher recovery rates than a protracted CIRP. If the parties cannot agree on a base resolution plan, or if the AA rejects the application, the process may convert to a full CIRP, making early creditor alignment critical. For a broader comparison of international insolvency frameworks, see our international insolvency guide.
Only a corporate debtor classified as an MSME under the MSMED Act may initiate a PPIRP. The application is made by the debtor itself, not by a financial creditor or operational creditor, distinguishing the mechanism from a standard Section 7 or Section 9 CIRP application. The debtor’s board of directors must pass a resolution authorising the initiation. The debtor must also not be undergoing a CIRP, be subject to a liquidation order, or have completed a PPIRP during the preceding three years.
The PPIRP eligibility for MSMEs requires the corporate debtor to have committed a default of at least ₹10 lakh (the commonly cited minimum default threshold per IBBI guidance). The upper ceiling for PPIRP eligibility has historically been set by government notification, typically ₹1 crore, though the 2026 regulatory updates clarified the application of this range. Applicants should verify the prevailing threshold against the latest IBBI notification at the time of filing.
Key threshold reminder: Verify that your default amount falls between ₹10 lakh and the upper ceiling notified by the Central Government. Evidence this with auditor‑certified statements and bank records showing the exact quantum and date of default.
Persons who are ineligible under Section 29A of the IBC, including undischarged insolvents, wilful defaulters, disqualified directors and persons with certain criminal convictions, cannot be the resolution applicant under a PPIRP. Where the promoter intends to act as the resolution applicant (common in MSME pre‑packs), they must confirm Section 29A compliance at the outset. The IBBI Regulations further require a declaration of eligibility, and the RP must independently verify these declarations before the application reaches the AA.
The following numbered steps take an MSME corporate debtor from initial assessment to post‑approval implementation. A summary timeline table follows the detailed steps.
The promoter and, ideally, an insolvency or turnaround adviser review the debtor’s MSME classification, default quantum, Section 29A eligibility and financial position. This due‑diligence phase confirms whether the PPIRP route is appropriate and identifies any disqualifying factors. The board should simultaneously consider whether the default is likely to worsen if a CIRP is filed instead, framing the commercial rationale for a pre‑pack.
The corporate debtor proposes the name of an insolvency professional (IP) registered with the IBBI to act as Resolution Professional. Under the PPIRP framework, the RP’s role is more supervisory than in a CIRP, the debtor retains management control, but the RP must still verify claims, assess the base resolution plan and report to the AA. The debtor obtains a written consent from the proposed RP before proceeding. It is advisable to engage the RP early so that they can advise on BRP drafting and creditor engagement strategy.
The base resolution plan (BRP) is the centrepiece of the PPIRP. It must be prepared by the corporate debtor in consultation with the RP and financial advisers. A well‑structured BRP typically includes the following components:
The BRP must demonstrate that creditors will receive no less than they would in a liquidation, the so‑called “liquidation value” floor.
Before filing with the AA, the debtor must present the BRP to its financial creditors. An information memorandum containing relevant financial data is shared under confidentiality undertakings. This engagement phase involves detailed negotiations on creditor treatment, haircut levels and repayment timelines. Standstill agreements may be executed to prevent enforcement action while negotiations continue. The debtor should convene formal meetings of financial creditors, keeping detailed minutes and voting records that will later form part of the AA filing.
The financial creditors, representing not less than 66 per cent in value of the financial debt, must approve the BRP before the application is filed. This threshold mirrors the Committee of Creditors (CoC) voting requirement under the CIRP provisions and is a prerequisite mandated by the IBBI Regulations. The approval must be documented through signed voting forms or resolutions. If the 66 per cent threshold is not met, the debtor cannot proceed with the PPIRP and may need to renegotiate the plan or consider a full CIRP instead.
Once creditor approvals are in hand, the debtor, through the proposed RP, files an application with the NCLT bench having jurisdiction. The filing must include the BRP, creditor approvals, board resolution, RP consent, auditor‑certified default statement, MSME registration proof, audited financials, tax returns and the affidavit of verifications (see the full documents table in the next section). The applicable NCLT filing fee must be paid at the time of submission. Notice of the filing is also sent to IBBI.
The AA examines the application for completeness and compliance with the IBC and IBBI Regulations. If admitted, the AA declares a moratorium under Section 54D, which halts all pending and fresh legal proceedings against the debtor and prohibits asset transfers outside the ordinary course of business. The RP formally assumes supervisory functions, verifies creditor claims and files reports with the AA. The AA may approve the BRP, direct modifications, invite competing resolution plans (in certain circumstances), or reject the application.
Upon AA approval of the resolution plan, the debtor and the successful resolution applicant (often the promoter in MSME pre‑packs) implement the plan under RP supervision. All actions must be completed within the 120‑day statutory window from the pre‑packaged insolvency commencement date. If the plan is not approved, or if the AA terminates the PPIRP for non‑compliance, the process may be converted to a full CIRP, with the statutory CIRP timelines then applying separately.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑assessment & appoint RP | Promoter + turnaround adviser | 1–2 weeks |
| Prepare base resolution plan (BRP) | RP + promoter + financial advisers | 2–6 weeks |
| Creditor engagement & approvals (≥66%) | Promoter / RP + financial creditors | 2–8 weeks |
| File PPIRP application with AA (NCLT) | RP / promoter | 1 day (filing) + 1–3 weeks (scheduling) |
| AA admission, moratorium & hearing | Adjudicating Authority (NCLT) | Statutory windows apply (see Timeline section) |
| Implementation of approved plan | RP + resolution applicant | 120 days from commencement date (statutory) |
Assembling the correct dossier is one of the most time‑critical elements of the pre-packaged insolvency procedure. The table below lists the core documents required for both the pre‑filing creditor engagement phase and the formal AA application. Applicants should treat this as a minimum checklist, sector‑specific or tribunal‑specific additions may apply.
| Document | Notes (issuer, format, validity) |
|---|---|
| Board resolution authorising PPIRP initiation | Issued by the Board of Directors; certified copy with minutes attached |
| Auditor‑certified statement of default & quantum | Chartered accountant certificate confirming default ≥ ₹10 lakh; date of first default |
| MSME registration / Udyam certificate | Udyam Registration Number or MSME registration under MSMED Act; proves classification |
| Base Resolution Plan (BRP) | PDF document covering creditor treatment, timelines, funding sources and post‑restructuring governance |
| List of financial creditors + proof of voting | Signed voting forms or resolutions showing ≥66% approval; confidentiality undertakings |
| RP appointment letter & written consent | IP registration number; signed acceptance letter from the proposed Resolution Professional |
| Audited financial statements (last 3 years) | Signed by statutory auditors; include balance sheets, P&L and notes to accounts |
| GST and income tax returns (last 3 years) | Filed returns with acknowledgements; assessment orders if available |
| Bank statements (last 12 months) | For all material accounts; evidence of defaults and cash‑flow patterns |
| Affidavit of information & verifications | Sworn affidavit by promoter / directors; covers accuracy of disclosures and Section 29A compliance |
| Sector‑specific regulatory approvals | If applicable, licences, permits or NOCs from sectoral regulators (e.g., RBI, SEBI, DGCA) |
Ensure every document is current at the date of filing. Stale auditor certificates or expired MSME registrations are among the most common grounds for AA queries and delays in the pre-packaged insolvency procedure.
The statutory completion period for a PPIRP is 120 days from the pre‑packaged insolvency commencement date (the date on which the AA admits the application). This is substantially shorter than the CIRP window, which can extend to 330 days including permitted extensions. The 120‑day clock covers everything from moratorium to plan approval and initial implementation milestones, it does not include the pre‑filing preparation time, which typically adds another five to fourteen weeks.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑pack dossier & BRP drafting | Promoter + RP + advisers | 2–6 weeks |
| Creditor engagement & approval (pre‑filing) | Promoter / RP + financial creditors | 2–8 weeks |
| Filing & AA admission decision | RP / Adjudicating Authority (NCLT) | Filing day → admission usually within 1–3 weeks |
| PPIRP completion (statutory) | RP + resolution applicant | 120 days from commencement date |
| If plan fails → CIRP conversion | Adjudicating Authority order | Additional 180 days typical (CIRP windows apply) |
| Process | Typical statutory window | Practical duration (incl. pre‑filing) | Typical approval threshold |
|---|---|---|---|
| PPIRP | 120 days | 3–6 months | ≥66% of financial creditors (pre‑filing) |
| CIRP | Up to 330 days (with extensions) | 9–18 months | 66% of CoC at resolution plan approval |
The pre‑pack vs CIRP comparison highlights the speed advantage: even including the pre‑filing preparation window, a PPIRP is typically resolved in under six months, whereas a CIRP routinely extends beyond a year. The practical effect is significantly lower erosion of enterprise value and reduced professional costs.
Costs for a PPIRP are generally lower than a CIRP because tribunal time is shorter and the debtor retains management control, reducing RP overheads. The table below provides indicative ranges, actual costs vary by debtor size, complexity of the BRP and counsel seniority.
| Item | Amount (indicative) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Resolution Professional fees | ₹1–5 lakh (small) to ₹10 lakh+ (complex) | Fixed + milestone structure; governed by IBBI Regulations |
| Legal fees (transactional + AA representation) | ₹1–10 lakh+ | Depends on counsel seniority and case complexity |
| Financial adviser / valuation | ₹50,000 – ₹5 lakh | For BRP preparation and independent valuation |
| NCLT filing fees | ₹5,000 – ₹50,000 | Depends on relief sought and tribunal rules |
| Miscellaneous (notices, publication, certifications) | ₹10,000 – ₹1 lakh | Administrative and courier costs |
| Tax / stamp duty | Varies by state | Asset transfers or ownership changes may attract stamp duty; GST applies on professional services; seek tax adviser input |
Industry observers expect that the 2026 regulatory refinements, particularly around streamlined RP fee structures, will marginally reduce overall PPIRP costs for smaller MSMEs.
The Insolvency & Bankruptcy (Amendment) Act, 2026 and the IBBI (PPIRP) Regulations amended up to 25 February 2026 introduced several practical changes that affect how the pre-packaged insolvency procedure India 2026 operates:
Practitioners should consult the IBBI legal framework page for the consolidated regulations and the official Gazette notification of the Amendment Act to confirm the precise effective dates of each change.
The pre-packaged insolvency procedure India 2026 gives MSME promoters and their creditors a structured, time‑bound mechanism to restructure debt and preserve enterprise value without the cost and stigma of a full CIRP. The process hinges on early preparation, securing MSME registration proof, commissioning the default certificate, appointing an RP and drafting a credible base resolution plan, well before the formal filing. With the 2026 IBBI regulatory updates tightening timelines and disclosure requirements, early engagement with experienced insolvency counsel is more important than ever. For practitioners, India‑qualified insolvency specialists listed in the directory can advise on eligibility, plan design and AA strategy tailored to your circumstances.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ranjana Roy Gawai at RRG & ASSOCIATES, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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