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Understanding how to file a commercial suit in India is now more important than ever, following the 2026 amendments to the Commercial Courts framework that have made pre‑institution mediation mandatory for most commercial claims and tightened case management timelines. This guide walks creditors, in‑house counsel, private equity funds, developers and SMEs through every stage of the commercial suit procedure in India, from the initial mediation attempt and plaint filing through to judgment, decree and enforcement of a commercial decree. Whether you are pursuing a recovery claim, seeking an injunction or considering a summary suit, the procedural sequence, documents needed and deadlines set out below reflect the law as it stands in 2026.
A commercial suit is a civil action heard by a designated Commercial Court or the Commercial Division of a High Court, established under the Commercial Courts Act, 2015 (as amended). The Act created a specialist track for disputes arising from commercial transactions, defined broadly to include mercantile dealings, partnership agreements, intellectual‑property exploitation, construction and infrastructure contracts, insurance, admiralty matters, technology licensing and franchising, among others.
The procedure differs from an ordinary civil suit in several critical ways. Pleadings follow a stricter timetable. Case management hearings are front‑loaded. Discovery and inspection are governed by tighter rules. The court’s objective, reinforced by the 2026 amendments, is to resolve commercial disputes expeditiously, typically within twelve to eighteen months for straightforward claims.
Typical reliefs sought in a commercial suit include recovery of money owed under contracts, specific performance, declaratory relief, permanent and interim injunctions, and attachment before judgment. Parties ranging from individual sole traders to multinational corporations may file, provided the claim meets the jurisdictional and pecuniary thresholds described below.
An ordinary civil suit proceeds under the general provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC) before a regular civil court. A commercial suit, by contrast, is heard by a court constituted specifically under the Commercial Courts Act, follows compressed timelines for written statements and case management, now requires pre‑institution mediation under the 2026 regime, and restricts adjournments. The summary suit procedure under Order XXXVII of the CPC is also available for qualifying commercial claims, allowing claimants to obtain judgment without a full trial where the defendant cannot demonstrate a triable defence.
The Commercial Courts Act establishes two tiers of specialist forum. The Commercial Division sits within each High Court exercising ordinary original civil jurisdiction and hears high‑value disputes. Commercial Courts are constituted at district level to hear claims below the High Court’s original‑side pecuniary threshold. Territorial jurisdiction follows the usual CPC rules: the suit is generally filed where the defendant resides or carries on business, or where the cause of action, wholly or in part, arose.
The minimum value threshold for a commercial suit is the “specified value” prescribed under the Act. Under the 2026 regime, the specified value stands at ₹3,00,000 (three lakh rupees) for Commercial Courts at district level, following the 2018 amendment that lowered the threshold from the original ₹1 crore. Claims at or above the High Court’s original‑side pecuniary limit (which varies by state, for example, ₹2 crore in Delhi) are heard by the Commercial Division of the High Court.
Worked example: A supplier based in Mumbai files a recovery claim for ₹1,00,00,000 (one crore rupees) against a buyer whose registered office is in Delhi. Because the cause of action arose partly in Delhi (where the buyer received and failed to pay for goods), the supplier may file in the Commercial Court at district level in Delhi. Since the claim exceeds ₹3 lakh, it qualifies as a commercial dispute of the specified value. Because it is below Delhi High Court’s original‑side pecuniary threshold for the Commercial Division, it would ordinarily be heard by the district‑level Commercial Court.
Before filing, the claimant’s counsel should confirm: (a) the dispute falls within the statutory definition of a “commercial dispute” under Section 2(1)(c) of the Act; (b) the specified‑value threshold is met; (c) territorial jurisdiction is established by evidence of the defendant’s address or the place where the cause of action arose; and (d) limitation has not expired. For contractual claims, the standard limitation period under the Limitation Act, 1963 is three years from the date the cause of action accrued.
The commercial suit procedure in India now follows a defined sequence. The table below summarises each step, who is responsible, and the typical duration. Detailed guidance for each stage follows.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Pre‑institution mediation | Claimant (counsel) / Mediation centre | 2–8 weeks (shorter by consent; may be skipped for urgent relief) |
| 2. File plaint at Registry | Claimant (counsel) | 1–7 days after mediation attempt completed |
| 3. Summons issued and served | Court Registry / Process server | 7–30 days (domestic); longer for substituted or overseas service |
| 4. Written statement filed | Defendant (counsel) | 30–120 days (court‑managed; strict adherence expected post‑2026) |
| 5. Case management hearing & disclosure | Court (case management judge) | First CM hearing within approx. 4 weeks of completion of pleadings |
| 6. Evidence & final hearing | Parties / Court | 3–12 months (varies by complexity) |
| 7. Judgment & decree | Court | 1–6 months after final hearing |
| 8. Execution / enforcement | Successful claimant / Executing court | 1–6 months (garnishee / attachment times vary) |
Under the 2026 regime, the claimant must attempt commercial courts pre‑institution mediation before filing the plaint, unless the claim seeks urgent interim relief such as an injunction or attachment before judgment. The claimant files a mediation application (Form‑1 under the Commercial Court Rules and Forms) with an authority or mediation centre designated by the court. The application should be accompanied by copies of the underlying contract, payment records, the demand notice and a brief statement of the dispute.
Mediation typically takes two to six weeks. If settlement is reached, a settlement agreement is recorded and can be enforced as a decree. If mediation fails, the mediator issues a non‑settlement report and the claimant obtains (or prepares) an affidavit of mediation attempt, confirming that a good‑faith mediation was undertaken, the dates of sessions, and the outcome. This affidavit must be filed with the plaint.
Where the claimant contemplates urgent relief, for example, an order to prevent the defendant from dissipating assets, the Act permits the suit to be filed without first completing mediation. In such cases, the court may direct the parties to attempt mediation after the urgent application has been heard.
The plaint is the claimant’s formal statement of case. It must comply with the requirements of Order VII of the CPC and any additional requirements under the Commercial Court Rules. Key contents include: (a) names, descriptions and addresses of the parties; (b) the facts constituting the cause of action and when it arose; (c) the specified value of the claim with a valuation statement; (d) the reliefs sought; (e) a list of documents relied upon (filed as exhibits); and (f) a verification signed by the claimant or an authorised officer.
Court fees are calculated on the value of the claim under the relevant state’s Court Fees Act. The claimant files the plaint, either physically at the court registry or via the eCourts e‑filing portal, together with the court fee receipt, the affidavit of mediation attempt, the power of attorney or board resolution (for corporate claimants), and all supporting documents. Upon acceptance, the registry assigns a case number.
Once the plaint is accepted, the court registry issues summons to the defendant. Service is ordinarily effected through the court’s process server or by registered post. For defendants located abroad, service may be through the Ministry of External Affairs or diplomatic channels, which extends the timeline significantly. If the defendant cannot be traced, the claimant may apply for substituted service by publication or other means.
The defendant must appear on the date fixed. Failure to appear after proper service may result in the court proceeding ex parte, meaning the case will be heard on the claimant’s evidence alone.
The defendant must file a written statement within 30 days of service of summons. The court has discretion to extend this period but not, as a rule, beyond 120 days from the date of service, consistent with the strict case management ethos of the commercial suit procedure. The written statement must contain the defendant’s response to each paragraph of the plaint, admissions or denials of documents, and any counterclaim.
Following completion of pleadings, the court convenes a case management hearing. National Judicial Academy practice guidance suggests the first case management hearing should take place within approximately four weeks after the parties have filed their respective affidavits of documents. At this hearing, the court fixes a timetable for discovery, inspection, evidence and final arguments, and may refer issues to a court‑appointed commissioner or expert.
Evidence is ordinarily led by affidavit. Each party files an affidavit of evidence‑in‑chief, and opposing counsel conducts cross‑examination in court. Documentary evidence, contracts, invoices, correspondence, bank statements, is proved through the relevant witness’s affidavit and marked as exhibits.
At any stage before or during the hearing, a party may apply for interim relief. Common interim applications in a commercial suit include:
Applications for urgent relief are typically heard within days of filing, though practice varies by court.
After hearing final arguments, the court pronounces judgment and draws up a decree. If the decree is for payment of money, the successful claimant may apply for execution under Order XXI of the CPC. Enforcement mechanisms include garnishee orders (directing third parties holding the debtor’s funds to pay the decree‑holder), attachment and sale of immovable property, and arrest and detention in civil prison as a last resort.
For enforcement of a commercial decree against assets located outside India, the decree‑holder must pursue recognition and enforcement proceedings in the relevant foreign jurisdiction, subject to any applicable bilateral treaty or reciprocal arrangement.
Where the claim is founded on a written contract, a bill of exchange, a hundi or a promissory note, the claimant may consider filing a summary suit under Order XXXVII CPC. This accelerated procedure requires the defendant to obtain leave to defend, meaning the burden shifts to the defendant to demonstrate a triable issue. Summary suits are particularly effective for straightforward debt‑recovery claims.
Alternatively, where the debtor is a corporate person and the claim exceeds the threshold under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016, creditors may consider initiating the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) before the National Company Law Tribunal. The choice between a commercial suit, a summary suit, arbitration and CIRP depends on claim value, the nature of the debtor, the availability of assets and the urgency of relief.
Assembling the correct documents before filing is essential. Missing or defective documents are among the most common causes of delay. The table below lists every document typically required at each stage of the process.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Mediation application (Form‑1 under Commercial Court Rules) | Prepared by claimant; attach contract copies, payment records, demand notice. Scanned PDF for e‑filing. |
| Affidavit of mediation attempt | Sworn affidavit by authorised signatory / counsel confirming dates, participants and outcome of mediation. |
| Plaint (signed and verified) | Prepared by counsel; includes claim valuation, reliefs sought, cause of action narrative, list of documents and verification by authorised officer. |
| Power of Attorney / Board resolution | For corporate claimants, notarised power of attorney or certified board resolution authorising the filing. |
| Contract / agreement(s) in dispute | Certified true copies; index disputed clauses in a schedule. |
| Invoices, payment records, bank statements | Proof of the amount claimed; redact confidential third‑party data where necessary. |
| Correspondence, demand notices, termination notices | Evidence of pre‑suit demand and attempts to resolve, critical for demonstrating mediation bona fides. |
| Witness affidavits and document list | Affidavits proving facts; exhibits numbered sequentially. |
| Court fee receipt / fee calculation sheet | Court fees vary by state and claim value; include challan or online payment proof. |
| Jurisdictional evidence | Company registration certificate, address proof, jurisdiction clause in contract. |
| Process service evidence | Process server affidavit (if applicable for pre‑suit notices served). |
| Interim relief supporting documents | Title documents (for injunctions), bank account details (for attachment orders), valuation reports. |
| Certified translations | For any foreign‑language documents, certified / notarised translation with translator affidavit. |
| E‑filing registration details | Claimant’s eCourts portal user ID and firm details (for electronic filing). |
Industry observers recommend compiling all documents into an indexed, paginated bundle before the mediation stage itself, so that the same bundle can be carried forward into the plaint filing without delay.
Strict adherence to deadlines is a hallmark of the commercial courts regime. The table below consolidates the key deadlines and limitation periods that parties must observe.
| Item | Standard Period |
|---|---|
| Pre‑institution mediation attempt | No fixed statutory maximum; typical mediation centres complete the process in 2–6 weeks. Parties may agree a shorter window in writing. Urgent‑relief cases may file without completing mediation. |
| Filing plaint after mediation | Immediately after mediation attempt concludes, no statutory delay, but prompt filing preserves evidence and limitation. |
| Written statement | 30 days from service of summons; court may extend up to 120 days. Post‑2026 practice emphasises strict enforcement of these timelines. |
| First case management hearing | Approximately 4 weeks after affidavits of documents are complete (per NJA practice guidance). |
| Limitation, contractual claims | 3 years from cause of action (Limitation Act, 1963). Verify the specific article applicable to your claim type. |
| Limitation, negotiable instruments | 3 years from the date the instrument falls due. |
| Interim relief application | File with the plaint or immediately upon filing where urgent; no fixed deadline, but delay weakens the application. |
| Appeal from decree | 30–90 days depending on appeal type and applicable High Court rules. Verify with the specific appellate forum. |
The overall commercial suit timeline, from mediation through to decree, ranges from approximately 12 to 24 months for a contested matter of moderate complexity. Simpler recovery claims pursued via summary suit may conclude significantly faster, sometimes within 6 to 9 months.
Understanding the cost structure helps claimants budget realistically and avoid surprises. Court fees represent the single largest upfront expenditure and vary by state.
| Item | Typical Amount / Estimate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court fee (value‑based) | Varies by state and claim value | Calculated as a percentage slab of the claim. For a claim of ₹1,00,00,000 (₹1 crore), fees in many states fall in the range of ₹5,00,000–₹7,50,000, verify with the specific state’s Court Fees Act and registry. |
| E‑filing / registry charges | ₹500–₹5,000 | Varies by eCourts portal and local registry practice. |
| Mediation centre fees | ₹10,000–₹2,00,000+ | Court‑annexed mediation centres charge nominal fees; private mediators charge higher rates based on claim value and session count. |
| Process service / notarisation / translation | ₹2,000–₹50,000 | Depends on number of parties and whether foreign service is required. |
| Advocate fees (litigation) | ₹50,000–₹50,00,000+ | Ranges from small‑claim matters to complex multi‑crore disputes. Typically structured as a retainer plus per‑hearing or milestone fees. |
| Interim relief application fees | As per registry rules | Additional court fee and stamp duty for attachment / injunction applications. |
| Execution / enforcement costs | Variable | Costs for attachment, auction, marshal fees and travel. Budget separately. |
Tax note: Amounts recovered under a commercial decree may carry tax implications, including GST on certain settlement payments, withholding tax obligations and stamp duty on settlement agreements. Parties should consult a tax adviser before structuring any recovery or settlement.
The 2026 amendments to the Commercial Courts framework bring three principal changes that directly affect how to file a commercial suit in India:
The likely practical effect of these changes will be to front‑load preparation. Counsel should compile the full documentary bundle, contracts, invoices, correspondence, demand notices, before the mediation application, so that the same materials feed seamlessly into the plaint if mediation fails.
The commercial suit procedure in India, as updated for 2026, follows a clear sequence: pre‑institution mediation, plaint filing with supporting documents and mediation affidavit, service of summons, written statement, case management, evidence, hearing, judgment and execution. The 2026 amendments require genuine mediation before filing and reward disciplined, front‑loaded case preparation. Claimants should assemble a complete documentary bundle before initiating mediation, verify jurisdiction and limitation carefully, calculate court fees accurately, and consider whether a summary suit or alternative remedy may be more efficient.
For parties navigating this process, whether as domestic creditors, foreign investors or SMEs, engaging experienced commercial litigation counsel early is the single most effective way to avoid procedural missteps and accelerate recovery. A searchable directory of qualified commercial practitioners across India is available via the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Procedural rules, court fees and practice directions vary by state and court. Readers should obtain jurisdiction‑specific legal advice before taking action.
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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