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how to challenge a resolution plan India

How to Challenge an Nclt-approved Resolution Plan in India, Procedure, Grounds, Documents & Timelines (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

When the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) approves a resolution plan under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC), the order is not necessarily the final word. Stakeholders who believe the plan is unlawful, procedurally irregular or materially defective can learn how to challenge a resolution plan in India by filing a statutory appeal to the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) under Section 61(3) of the IBC. The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Act, 2026, passed by Parliament in April 2026 and notified via Gazette notification CG‑DL‑E‑06042026‑271594, has materially tightened the permissible grounds, clarified finality provisions and introduced procedural changes that every creditor, promoter, resolution applicant and insolvency professional must understand before filing.

This guide provides a tribunal‑grade, step-by-step procedure covering eligibility, filing sequence, required documents, the NCLT appeal timeline, costs and interim remedies, all updated for the 2026 amendments.

Overview of the Process and Who It Applies To

A “challenge” to an NCLT-approved resolution plan principally takes the form of an appeal under Section 61(3) of the IBC, filed before the NCLAT. This is the primary statutory remedy. The NCLAT exercises powers under Section 61(4) to either set aside, modify or remit the order back to the NCLT. Alternative routes, such as a review application to the same NCLT bench, a writ petition before a High Court under Article 226/227 of the Constitution, or a Special Leave Petition (SLP) to the Supreme Court, exist only in narrow circumstances and are not substitutes for the statutory appeal.

The persons entitled to file this appeal include financial creditors (including dissenting members of the Committee of Creditors), operational creditors, the corporate debtor (through its authorised representative), the resolution professional, and, in limited circumstances, unsuccessful resolution applicants and promoters or personal guarantors. The IBC Amendment 2026 has further clarified standing requirements and curtailed certain interference grounds, making it essential to assess locus standi before initiating proceedings. For a broader understanding of insolvency proceedings, see the guide on how to file for insolvency in India.

Eligibility and Prerequisites to Challenge a Resolution Plan in India

Who May File the Appeal

Standing to appeal under Section 61(3) is not unrestricted. The following categories of persons may file:

  • Financial creditors (including dissenting creditors). Any financial creditor who voted against the plan, or who alleges that the plan contravenes the provisions of the IBC, may appeal. Dissenting financial creditors who received less than the liquidation value are a frequently seen category of appellants.
  • Operational creditors. An operational creditor may appeal on the ground that the approved plan does not comply with mandatory provisions, for example, if the plan fails to provide the minimum statutory entitlement under Section 30(2)(b).
  • Corporate debtor (through authorised representative). The corporate debtor may challenge the plan through its board (if reinstated) or through the resolution professional acting as authorised representative during the interregnum.
  • Unsuccessful resolution applicants. Standing is narrow. Industry observers expect the 2026 Amendment to further limit interference claims by unsuccessful applicants to cases involving demonstrable fraud or procedural irregularity in the bid process. A general claim of “superior commercial merit” is unlikely to succeed.
  • Promoters and personal guarantors. A promoter’s ability to challenge is confined to allegations of non-compliance with statutory provisions affecting the promoter directly, for example, incorrectly classifying the promoter under Section 29A eligibility criteria.

When NOT to File, Strategic Considerations

Filing an appeal solely to delay implementation carries significant risk. The NCLAT may impose exemplary costs for frivolous or dilatory appeals. Where the objection is purely commercial, disagreement with the haircut percentage, for instance, the “commercial wisdom of the CoC” doctrine, repeatedly affirmed by the Supreme Court, makes success unlikely. The finality of resolution plan 2026 provisions, reinforced by the Amendment, further narrow the window. Counsel should conduct a candid merits assessment before filing.

Immediate procedural prerequisites before filing include: obtaining the certified copy of the NCLT order (which starts the limitation clock), securing certified CoC minutes and voting records from the resolution professional, preserving all relevant communications and evidence, and preparing a draft affidavit of facts setting out each statutory ground of challenge.

Step-by-Step Procedure to Challenge a Resolution Plan in India

The NCLAT procedure for challenging a resolution plan follows a defined sequence. Each step below reflects current practice as updated by the IBC Amendment 2026.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration (from NCLT Approval Date)
Obtain certified NCLT order, CoC minutes & preserve evidence Appellant / Insolvency Professional Day 0–3
Consider urgent interim application (stay of implementation or asset-protection) Appellant + counsel (file at NCLAT/NCLT as applicable) Day 1–7 (rush hearing)
File appeal under Section 61(3) at NCLAT (e‑file + service) Appellant’s counsel Within 30 days of NCLT order (extendable by 15 days on sufficient cause, Section 61(2))
Obtain listing for interim relief hearing NCLAT Registry / parties 1–21 days (depends on urgency demonstrated)
Full hearing (evidence, affidavits, oral submissions) Parties & NCLAT 1–6 months (case dependent)
NCLAT order (decide, remit or set aside) NCLAT 1–6 months; complex matters longer
Further appeals (SC) or execution Parties / Supreme Court Variable, SLP leave required

Step 1, Immediate Actions on Receipt of the NCLT Order (Day 0–3)

Apply to the NCLT Registry for a certified copy of the order approving the resolution plan on the same day it is pronounced. The limitation period for filing an appeal under Section 61(2) runs from the date of the order, not the date of receiving the certified copy, although delay caused by the registry in issuing the certified copy may be considered when computing limitation. Simultaneously, request the resolution professional to provide complete CoC minutes, attendance records, voting data and all versions of the resolution plan (including any modifications between invitation and approval). Preserve all email and written communications with the CoC, the resolution applicant and the NCLT.

Step 2, Pre-Appeal Strategy and Urgent Applications (Day 0–7)

If there is an immediate risk that the successful resolution applicant will begin implementing the plan, transferring assets, changing management, releasing securities, consider filing an urgent interim application before the NCLAT seeking a stay of implementation or an asset-protection order. Although the NCLT itself has limited power to stay its own approval order, the NCLAT can grant interim relief under Section 61(4) read with its inherent powers.

Draft the urgency affidavit with specificity: identify the assets at risk, the irreversible steps the successful resolution applicant may take, and the balance of convenience. Attach documentary evidence (transaction notices, board resolutions, media reports of planned asset sales). Early indications suggest that the NCLAT is granting urgent listing where the appellant demonstrates that implementation would render the appeal infructuous.

Step 3, File the Appeal Under Section 61(3) at NCLAT (Day 1–30)

File the appeal electronically through the NCLAT e‑filing portal. The appeal must be accompanied by:

  1. A certified copy of the impugned NCLT order.
  2. A memorandum of appeal setting out each ground under Section 61(3).
  3. An affidavit of facts sworn by the appellant or an authorised signatory.
  4. A complete index and pagination of the paper-book (documents relied upon).
  5. Proof of service on the respondent (successful resolution applicant, resolution professional and the corporate debtor).
  6. The prescribed filing fee (court-fee stamps or electronic payment).
  7. A Power of Attorney (Vakalatnama) in favour of the advocate-on-record.

The grounds to appeal a resolution plan must track the statutory language. Under Section 61(3) as it stands post-2026 Amendment, the permissible grounds include: (i) the approved plan is in contravention of the provisions of any law for the time being in force; (ii) there has been material irregularity in the exercise of powers by the resolution professional during the corporate insolvency resolution process; (iii) the debts owed to operational creditors have not been provided for as required under Section 30(2)(b); (iv) the plan has been approved by the CoC through fraud or misconduct; and (v) the plan does not comply with any other mandatory requirement under the IBC or rules and regulations made thereunder.

Each ground must be particularised with reference to specific facts and evidence, generic assertions are routinely rejected.

Step 4, Interim Relief and Provisional Measures (Day 1–60)

Once the appeal is admitted, move an application for interim relief if not already filed under Step 2. The NCLAT may grant a stay of the impugned order, impose conditions (such as a bank guarantee or an undertaking not to dissipate assets), or issue limited injunctions short of a full stay. The standard is similar to Order 39 CPC, the appellant must show a prima facie case, balance of convenience and irreparable harm. The NCLAT may also require the appellant to furnish a security bond or deposit.

In practice, a full stay of the resolution plan implementation is rare; more commonly, the NCLAT issues directions to maintain status quo on specific assets or to restrain the successful resolution applicant from making certain irreversible changes (such as land transfers or equity dilution) pending the hearing.

Step 5, Hearing, Testimony and Evidentiary Plan

Prepare the record for the substantive hearing methodically. The paper-book should include: the complete NCLT order, all CoC minutes (including dissent notes), the approved resolution plan and earlier drafts, valuation reports (fair value and liquidation value), the resolution professional’s reports to the NCLT, and any correspondence showing non-compliance or irregularity. Expert evidence, such as a forensic accountant’s report on the valuation or an independent valuer’s competing assessment, can strengthen grounds alleging material irregularity.

The hearing is typically conducted on the basis of affidavits, documents and oral submissions. Cross-examination is uncommon but may be permitted if facts are in serious dispute. Counsel should prepare a written synopsis and a compilation of authorities (relevant Supreme Court and NCLAT precedents) for the bench.

Step 6, Post-Order Remedies: Further Appeals and Execution

If the NCLAT dismisses the appeal, the aggrieved party may file a civil appeal before the Supreme Court under Section 62 of the IBC, or an SLP under Article 136 of the Constitution. A writ petition under Article 226/227 before a High Court is available only where a fundamental right or jurisdictional error is in question, courts have repeatedly discouraged using writ jurisdiction to bypass the statutory appellate mechanism. If the NCLAT sets aside or modifies the resolution plan, the matter is typically remitted to the NCLT for fresh consideration or re-conduct of the relevant stage of the CIRP. For context on insolvency pathways that may follow, see restructuring vs liquidation, insolvency pathways.

Documents Needed to Challenge a Resolution Plan

A well-organised paper-book is critical. Incomplete filings are a common reason for registry defects and delayed admission. The table below lists the documents needed to challenge a resolution plan, with practical notes on sourcing and format.

Document Notes (Who Issues, Format, Validity)
Certified copy of NCLT order approving the resolution plan Issued by NCLT Registry, must be a certified copy; file as the primary annexure
CoC minutes and voting records Sourced from the Resolution Professional / IP; include all meeting minutes, attendance sheets and voting percentages
Resolution plan (approved version) and earlier drafts Compare final approved text with earlier submissions; highlight material deviations or modifications
Proof of standing (creditor ledger, security documents) Bank statements, claim admission orders, security agreements proving the appellant’s creditor status
Valuation reports, audit reports, IPA reports Issued by IBBI-registered valuers / IP / statutory auditors; must be date-stamped and authenticated
Affidavit of facts and list of documents Sworn affidavit by the appellant or authorised signatory; notarised; accompanied by a paginated document index
Cause title, index and Power of Attorney (Vakalatnama) Standard filing documents; PoA signed and accepted by the advocate-on-record
Certified translations (if applicable) English translations of any non-English documents; certified by an authorised translator
Fee receipts / court-fee stamps Include e-filing payment receipts; retain originals for the registry
Communications to/from CoC evidencing non-compliance Emails, letters, meeting notices, printable, timestamped, with metadata preserved where possible

Ensure every document is paginated sequentially. The NCLAT Registry may reject filings with incomplete pagination, missing certifications or unsigned affidavits. Where documents originate from a foreign jurisdiction, apostille or consular certification may be required in addition to translation.

NCLT Appeal Timeline and Key Deadlines

The limitation period for an IBC appeal is tight. Missing the statutory deadline is almost always fatal, condonation of delay is granted only in exceptional circumstances and on “sufficient cause” being shown. The table below sets out the critical deadlines in the process.

Action / Filing Statutory Timeline (Authority) Practical Notes
Appeal to NCLAT under Section 61(3) 30 days from the date of the NCLT order; extendable by a further 15 days on sufficient cause (Section 61(2), IBC) File immediately; do not wait for the certified copy if the order is available on the NCLT e-filing portal
Application for interim relief (stay) No fixed statutory period, urgency standard applies File simultaneously with the appeal or within the first 7 days; demonstrate that implementation will cause irreparable harm
Rejoinder / reply by respondent NCLAT Rules, typically 7–21 days as directed by the bench Respondents must file promptly; failure may result in ex parte interim orders
Implementation of resolution plan (by successful RA) As per plan terms and NCLT order; no universal statutory window Implementation often begins immediately unless stayed, urgency of interim relief is critical
Further appeal to Supreme Court (Section 62 / SLP) 45 days from NCLAT order (Section 62); SLP under Article 136, 90 days (Supreme Court Rules) Use only where a substantial question of law or constitutional issue is involved

A missed limitation period IBC appeal will typically be dismissed. The Supreme Court has held that the 30+15 day window under Section 61(2) is not indefinitely extendable. If the certified copy is delayed by the NCLT Registry, file the appeal with an application for condonation of delay supported by an affidavit explaining the registry delay and exhibiting proof of the application for the certified copy.

For more on the 2026 changes to admission and look-back timelines, refer to the IBC Amendment 2026, practical note.

Cost to Appeal an NCLT Order, Fees and Practical Expenses

Understanding the cost to appeal an NCLT order helps stakeholders budget realistically. The table below summarises typical cost components. Actual amounts vary by case complexity, counsel seniority and whether interlocutory applications multiply the hearing schedule.

Item Typical Amount / Range Notes
NCLAT filing fee (registry) INR 2,000–5,000 E-filing and hard-copy charges vary; refer to the NCLAT fee schedule on the e-filing portal
Certified copy charges (NCLT) INR 500–3,000 Depends on the number of pages and the specific NCLT bench
Advocate / counsel fees (NCLAT appeal) INR 1,00,000–15,00,000+ Range depends on counsel seniority, case complexity and the number of interlocutory hearings
Interim injunction / security bond Variable; undertaking sometimes accepted NCLAT may require a bank guarantee or cash deposit as a condition for stay
Document translation / certification INR 1,000–20,000 For non-English documents or foreign records requiring apostille
Expert / valuer fees INR 50,000–5,00,000+ Forensic accounting, independent valuation or technical expert opinions
Travel / hearing costs Variable For hearings across NCLAT benches (Principal Bench in New Delhi; Chennai bench)

Counsel fees represent the largest cost component. For high-value corporate insolvency matters, where the resolution plan involves assets worth hundreds of crores, senior counsel fees at the NCLAT can exceed INR 15,00,000. Parties should also budget for the possibility of adverse costs if the appeal is dismissed as frivolous.

What Changes in 2026, IBC Amendment and the Finality of Resolution Plans

The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Act, 2026, notified in the Official Gazette on 6 April 2026, introduces several reforms directly relevant to challenging resolution plans. The PIB press brief dated 28 May 2026 summarised the government’s intent as reducing delays, strengthening creditor oversight and improving institutional efficiency.

For practitioners, the key changes affecting the finality of resolution plan 2026 regime include:

  • Narrowed grounds for interference. The 2026 Amendment tightens the permissible grounds under Section 61(3), reinforcing that appellate tribunals should not substitute their commercial judgment for that of the CoC. The likely practical effect will be that appellants must plead with far greater specificity, linking each ground to a concrete statutory violation rather than a generalised fairness complaint.
  • Clarified finality provisions. The Amendment strengthens the binding nature of an approved resolution plan on all stakeholders (including dissenting creditors, guarantors and government authorities), reducing the scope for collateral challenges through separate proceedings or recovery suits.
  • Streamlined timelines. Early indications suggest that the Amendment encourages NCLAT to dispose of appeals against resolution plan approvals within a compressed timeframe, consistent with the IBC’s overarching time-bound philosophy. Bench directions requiring completion of hearings within defined windows are anticipated.
  • Enhanced creditor oversight mechanisms. New provisions strengthen the CoC’s monitoring role during the CIRP, which in turn means that more evidence will be available within the CoC record to support, or defeat, an appeal.
  • Penalty and enforcement provisions. The Amendment introduces or strengthens penalties for non-compliance by resolution applicants post-approval, giving appellants additional tools where implementation deviates from the approved plan terms.

Industry observers expect these changes to produce two practical effects: first, a reduction in the volume of purely tactical or delay-motivated appeals; and second, higher evidentiary standards for the appeals that are filed. Counsel must invest more time in assembling a granular evidence package before filing.

Common Pitfalls When Challenging a Resolution Plan, and How to Avoid Them

Experienced insolvency practitioners repeatedly encounter the same procedural and strategic errors. Avoiding these pitfalls significantly improves the prospects of a successful appeal.

  • Missing the 30-day limitation period. The most common and most fatal error. Apply for the certified copy on Day 0. File even if the certified copy has not yet been received, with a condonation application.
  • Weak or generic pleadings. Failing to tie each ground to a specific sub-clause of Section 61(3) and to particular evidence. Every ground must cross-reference a document in the paper-book.
  • Overreliance on the “commercial wisdom” challenge. Arguments that the CoC made a poor commercial decision are almost always rejected. Focus on legal and procedural violations, not business judgment.
  • Failing to seek interim relief early. If implementation proceeds during the appeal, the NCLAT may decline to interfere even if the appeal succeeds, the plan becomes a fait accompli.
  • Not joining required parties. Failure to implead the successful resolution applicant, the resolution professional or the corporate debtor as respondents can result in the appeal being returned for defects.
  • Inadequate indexing and pagination. The NCLAT Registry is strict. Missing page numbers, unsigned affidavits or unindexed documents cause registry objections and delay admission.
  • Filing in the wrong forum. Attempting to challenge the plan through a High Court writ petition or a civil suit when the statutory appeal under Section 61 is available will result in dismissal for non-exhaustion of remedy.
  • Ignoring the evidence preservation window. CoC minutes, correspondence and valuation data may be archived or destroyed post-implementation. Preserve all evidence within the first 72 hours.
  • Late translations. Delaying the translation and certification of non-English documents causes adjournments and registry returns.
  • Underestimating costs and hearing timelines. Appeals involving multiple interlocutory applications can extend well beyond six months. Budget and resource allocation should reflect realistic timelines.

Conclusion, Preparing an Effective Challenge Under the 2026 Framework

The process of how to challenge a resolution plan in India demands speed, precision and a granular understanding of the statutory grounds as they stand after the IBC Amendment 2026. The 30-day limitation window is unforgiving. The evidence bar has risen. Generic commercial objections will not survive scrutiny under the tightened finality provisions.

Stakeholders contemplating a challenge should: (1) obtain the certified NCLT order and CoC records within the first 72 hours; (2) assess standing and grounds against Section 61(3) as amended; (3) file the appeal and any interim application without delay; and (4) prepare a meticulously indexed paper-book that links every ground to specific evidence. Where foreign elements, complex valuations or multi-party disputes are involved, the engagement of experienced insolvency counsel at the earliest stage is not optional, it is a procedural necessity.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ranit Basu at Bridgehead Law Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI), IBC (Amendment) Act, 2026 (Official PDF)
  2. Official Gazette / eGazette, Central Government Notification
  3. Press Information Bureau (PIB), India’s Insolvency Framework (28 May 2026)
  4. Simpliance, Notification on the IBC (Amendment) Act, 2026
  5. AZB & Partners, IBC 2.0: Major Reforms to Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code
  6. Lakshmikumaran & Sridharan (LKS), IBC Amendment Act, 2026
  7. IBC Laws, President Assents to IBC (Amendment) Act, 2026

FAQs

How can I challenge an NCLT order approving a resolution plan in India?
The primary route is to file an appeal before the NCLAT under Section 61(3) of the IBC. The appeal must be filed within 30 days of the NCLT order (extendable by 15 days on sufficient cause under Section 61(2)). The appellant must set out specific statutory grounds, file a certified copy of the NCLT order, CoC minutes, the resolution plan and supporting evidence. Simultaneously, an application for interim relief (stay of implementation) should be filed if there is a risk of irreversible steps.
Under Section 61(3), the permissible grounds include: contravention of any law; material irregularity in the exercise of powers by the resolution professional; failure to provide operational creditors their minimum statutory entitlement under Section 30(2)(b); approval obtained through fraud or misconduct; and non-compliance with any mandatory IBC requirement. The IBC Amendment 2026 has tightened these grounds, requiring greater specificity in pleadings and a direct nexus to statutory provisions.
Urgent interim applications may be heard within 1–3 weeks of filing if the NCLAT is satisfied that implementation poses irreversible prejudice. The full hearing of the appeal typically takes 1–6 months, depending on the complexity of the matter, the number of parties and the hearing calendar of the bench. Complex multi-party cases may take longer.
The essential documents are: a certified copy of the NCLT approval order, the approved resolution plan, CoC meeting minutes and voting records, proof of the appellant’s standing (creditor admission order, security documents), affidavit of facts, a paginated index, a Power of Attorney for counsel, fee receipts, and any evidence supporting each ground of appeal (valuation reports, correspondence, expert opinions). See the full documents checklist table in this guide.
Yes. A foreign creditor whose claim has been admitted under the IBC framework has standing to appeal under Section 61(3), subject to the same grounds and timelines. Foreign parties should engage local counsel authorised to appear before the NCLAT, ensure all foreign-language documents are translated and certified, and comply with service requirements. If the foreign creditor’s claim was not admitted during the CIRP, standing may be contested.
Late filing beyond the 30+15 day window under Section 61(2) will almost certainly result in dismissal. Condonation of delay is available only on showing “sufficient cause”, for example, a documented delay by the NCLT Registry in issuing the certified copy. The Supreme Court has interpreted this limitation strictly. The best course of action is to file the appeal as early as possible, even with an incomplete paper-book if necessary, and remedy defects subsequently with the permission of the NCLAT. Consult experienced insolvency lawyers immediately upon receipt of an adverse NCLT order.
The principle of finality means that an approved resolution plan is binding on all stakeholders, including the corporate debtor, its creditors, employees, guarantors and government authorities. Post-approval modification is extremely limited, it may be permitted only if the plan itself contains a modification mechanism approved by the CoC, or if the NCLAT or Supreme Court directs modification on appeal. The IBC Amendment 2026 reinforces this finality, making it even harder to seek post-approval amendments outside the statutory appellate framework.

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How to Challenge an Nclt-approved Resolution Plan in India, Procedure, Grounds, Documents & Timelines (2026)

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