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rbi payment reforms india

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RBI Payment & NBFC Reforms 2026, What Infrastructure and Project‑finance Lenders Must Know

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

The Reserve Bank of India’s 2026 regulatory package, spanning net‑settlement proposals under the Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 (PSS Act), revised NBFC registration and operational norms, and updated e‑mandate guidance, represents the most consequential set of RBI payment reforms India has seen in over a decade for infrastructure and project‑finance lenders. These changes directly alter settlement windows, escrow release mechanics and the permissible activities of on‑lending NBFCs that sit at the heart of most Indian infrastructure capital structures. For bank and PE credit teams, in‑house counsel and sponsor‑side lawyers, the practical effect is immediate: existing covenant packages, escrow agreements and due‑diligence playbooks drafted before 2026 are likely insufficient to capture the new risks.

This guide provides a clause‑level, transaction‑oriented playbook, including model language, a lender checklist and an implementation roadmap, designed to be used on live deals today.

Executive Summary & Immediate Actions for Lenders

Lenders and their counsel should treat the 2026 RBI payment and NBFC rule changes as a high‑priority documentation and diligence event. The three core areas of impact are summarised below.

  • What changed. The RBI has introduced a proposed net‑settlement framework that modifies onshore netting rules and settlement windows for certain cross‑border flows, including those involving Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs). Separately, the NBFC registration norms 2026 impose revised categories, tightened reporting obligations and new operational conditions for on‑lending entities. Updated e‑mandate guidance also affects recurring payment authorisations relevant to debt‑service mechanics.
  • Immediate contract fixes (risk: HIGH). Every escrow agreement, security trustee deed and facility agreement signed before these reforms should be reviewed for settlement‑timing assumptions, netting permissions and NBFC compliance representations. Clauses that assume gross settlement or fixed‑window crediting may produce covenant breaches under the new framework.
  • Due‑diligence actions (risk: MEDIUM–HIGH). Credit teams must add RBI/PSS Act compliance verification, NBFC re‑registration status checks and counterparty payment‑operations assessments to standard diligence work streams. For deals closing in Q3 or Q4 2026, industry observers expect these items to become conditions precedent in term sheets.

The likely practical effect for most active financings will be a 60‑to‑90‑day amendment cycle. New transactions should incorporate the updated clause templates from the outset. The sections below provide the regulatory detail, model clauses and checklists needed to execute that process.

2026 RBI Payment‑System & NBFC Rule Changes, Concise Regulatory Map

The RBI new rules 2026 affecting lenders derive from multiple regulatory instruments issued under the PSS Act and the RBI Act. Understanding which instrument governs which obligation is the first step in a structured documentation response.

What Changed, Key Regulatory Instruments

The PSS Act provides the overarching legal authority for the regulation of payment systems in India, granting the RBI power to designate, regulate and supervise system operators, participants and settlement mechanisms. The 2026 package exercises that authority in several material ways. The net‑settlement proposal modifies how certain cross‑border payment flows, particularly those involving FPIs and institutional investors, are settled onshore, moving from a predominantly gross‑settlement corridor to a framework that permits multilateral netting within designated clearing windows. In parallel, the revised NBFC registration norms introduce new categories and operational conditions that directly affect NBFCs engaged in on‑lending, including minimum capital and margin requirements, enhanced periodic reporting and restrictions on permissible funding sources.

According to data released by the Press Information Bureau, digital payment transaction volumes in India have grown substantially, underscoring the systemic importance of robust settlement infrastructure for project finance India deal flows.

Regulatory Item Issuing Authority / Legal Basis Immediate Impact on Lenders
Net‑settlement framework (proposed) RBI, under PSS Act, 2007 Changes settlement windows and onshore netting rules for FPI and cross‑border flows; escrow release timing affected
Revised NBFC registration norms RBI, under RBI Act / NBFC Directions New categories, operational conditions and tightened reporting for on‑lending NBFCs; lender representations and covenants must be updated
Updated e‑mandate guidance RBI, under PSS Act, 2007 Recurring payment authorisations for debt‑service collections may require re‑registration or modified mandates
Payment system operator (PSO) compliance updates RBI, under PSS Act, 2007 Escrow banks and trustees operating payment infrastructure must verify continued authorisation status

What to change in documents now:

  • Add a “regulatory change” definition in the facility agreement that captures PSS Act instruments, NBFC Directions and RBI circulars issued after a specified base date.
  • Require the borrower and any NBFC co‑lender to deliver updated RBI compliance certificates as a condition precedent to each drawdown.
  • Insert a “settlement disruption” event into the escrow agreement, triggered by any RBI modification to settlement windows or netting permissions.

Net‑Settlement Proposals, FPIs and Cross‑Border Payment Mechanics

The net settlement mechanism for FPIs is the single most impactful element of the 2026 RBI payment reforms India package for infrastructure and project‑finance lenders with foreign‑capital exposure.

Net Settlement Overview, How It Differs from Current Flow

Under the pre‑2026 framework, cross‑border payments India involving FPIs were predominantly settled on a gross basis through correspondent banking channels. Each payment instruction was processed individually, with crediting to the beneficiary’s onshore account occurring within the standard settlement cycle. The 2026 proposal introduces a multilateral netting mechanism within designated clearing windows operated by RBI‑authorised clearing corporations. Rather than settling each transaction individually, multiple payment obligations between participants are netted to a single receivable or payable per clearing cycle. Early indications suggest this will compress settlement into fewer but larger net positions, changing the timing and quantum of cash arriving in project escrow accounts.

Implications for FPIs, Sponsors and Lenders

For lenders, the shift to net settlement creates three distinct risk categories. First, liquidity timing risk: if the clearing window operates on a T+1 or T+2 cycle for netted positions, the funds available in the escrow account on any given day may differ materially from what gross settlement would have delivered. Second, netting set risk: the composition of the netting set (which obligations are included in each netting cycle) determines whether a particular debt‑service payment is accelerated or delayed relative to other obligations.

Third, FX conversion risk: where cross‑border payments India are denominated in foreign currency and converted onshore, the timing of conversion relative to the netting window can create exchange‑rate exposure that was previously absorbed by the gross settlement corridor.

Settlement Mechanism 2025 (Pre‑Change) 2026 (Proposed)
FPIs, settlement mechanism Standard cross‑border settlement via correspondent banks and current netting limits Proposed net‑settlement framework, changes to settlement windows and onshore netting rules; may require different escrow handling
NBFCs (on‑lending), registration Existing NBFC registration categories, some with higher thresholds Revised NBFC registration norms (2026), new categories and operational conditions for on‑lending; tightened reporting
Escrow release mechanics Time‑based releases tied to project milestones Must account for netting/settlement cycles and onshore settlement cut‑offs; trustee obligations re: settlement reporting

What to change in documents now:

  • Redefine “Settlement Date” in facility and escrow agreements to reference the applicable RBI‑designated clearing window rather than a fixed calendar date.
  • Add a “Liquidity Shortfall Top‑Up” obligation requiring the borrower or sponsor to fund any escrow deficit caused by netting delays within a defined cure period.
  • Require trustee reporting of each netting cycle outcome within one business day of the settlement window close.
  • Include FX conversion timing covenants that fix the conversion date relative to the netting window, rather than the payment instruction date.

NBFC Registration and Operational Updates, What Lenders Must Check

The revised NBFC registration norms 2026 directly affect the structural integrity of on‑lending arrangements commonly used in project finance India transactions.

New Registration Norms Summary

The RBI’s updated framework introduces revised registration categories that distinguish between NBFCs by asset size, funding profile and lending activity type. Entities engaged in on‑lending, where an NBFC borrows from a bank or institutional lender and re‑lends to a project SPV or end‑borrower, face the most significant changes. The new norms impose enhanced minimum capital requirements, restrict certain funding sources (particularly short‑term wholesale borrowing), require more granular periodic reporting to the RBI and introduce operational conditions relating to risk management frameworks and board‑level oversight. Industry observers expect the practical effect to be that several smaller NBFCs currently participating in infrastructure lending consortia will need to re‑register, restructure their balance sheets or exit on‑lending activity altogether.

On‑Lending NBFCs: Structural and Documentation Implications

For lenders who have extended facilities to or through on‑lending NBFCs, the documentation implications are substantial. Existing representations and warranties regarding NBFC regulatory status may no longer be adequate if the entity falls into a new category or is subject to conditions that did not exist at signing. Covenants requiring maintenance of “all necessary licences and approvals” need to be supplemented with specific references to the 2026 registration requirements, including any transitional or conditional registration status.

Entity Type New Obligation (2026) Lender Action Required
On‑lending NBFCs (infrastructure focus) Enhanced capital requirements; restricted wholesale funding; quarterly RBI reporting Obtain updated compliance certificate; add capital‑maintenance covenant; require quarterly reporting pass‑through
NBFCs in lending consortia Re‑registration under revised categories; board‑level risk governance mandate Verify re‑registration status as CP; add governance covenant requiring board risk committee
Payment‑system‑linked NBFCs Dual compliance with PSS Act and NBFC Directions Cross‑check PSO authorisation status; add dual‑compliance representation

What to change in documents now:

  • Expand NBFC regulatory representations to cover the specific 2026 registration category, any conditions attached and the entity’s compliance with transitional provisions.
  • Add a “Regulatory Status Change” event of default or mandatory prepayment trigger if the NBFC’s registration is downgraded, revoked or made subject to new restrictive conditions.
  • Require delivery of each quarterly RBI report (or a compliance officer’s certificate confirming timely filing) as an information covenant.
  • For consortium structures, add cross‑default language that captures regulatory action against any NBFC participant.

Escrow, Settlement Flows and Model Clauses for RBI Payment Reforms India

Lenders should treat the 2026 reforms as requiring a ground‑up review of every escrow agreement and settlement waterfall in their infrastructure portfolio, because escrow settlement India mechanics are directly affected by both the net‑settlement proposals and the NBFC operational changes.

Practical Escrow Mechanics Under New Payment Rules

The core challenge is that most existing escrow agreements assume a settlement flow in which funds arrive in the escrow account on a predictable, gross‑settlement basis. The 2026 net‑settlement framework means that the quantum and timing of credits to the escrow account may vary depending on the netting cycle outcome. Trustees and escrow agents must therefore be given additional powers and obligations, specifically, the ability to identify which credits represent netted positions, to reconcile those positions against expected debt‑service amounts and to trigger liquidity top‑up mechanisms where a shortfall arises.

Model Escrow Clause, Currency, Sweep, Netting and Interruption

The following model clause language addresses the key drafting gaps created by the 2026 changes. This clause should be adapted to the specific deal structure and reviewed by Indian counsel.

“Settlement and Netting. All amounts credited to the Escrow Account shall be reconciled by the Escrow Agent against the applicable RBI‑designated clearing window outcome within one (1) Business Day of each settlement cycle. Where the credited amount reflects a netted position that is less than the Scheduled Debt Service Amount, the Borrower shall fund the Escrow Shortfall Amount within three (3) Business Days of notice from the Escrow Agent (the ‘Netting Cure Period’). Failure to fund the Escrow Shortfall Amount within the Netting Cure Period shall constitute a Settlement Disruption Event.”

“Currency of Settlement. Where cross‑border payments are converted to INR onshore, the applicable conversion rate shall be determined as of the opening of the netting window on the Settlement Date, and any variance exceeding [●]% from the Reference Rate shall entitle the Lender to require an FX Top‑Up Deposit.”

Model Escrow Release and Priority Waterfall

The priority waterfall for project finance escrow releases should be restructured to account for the new settlement cycles. The recommended sequence is:

  1. Verification of netting cycle completion and reconciliation by the Escrow Agent.
  2. Deduction and segregation of the Scheduled Debt Service Amount (principal + interest + fees).
  3. Deduction of any FX Top‑Up Deposit or Escrow Shortfall Amount due.
  4. Transfer of the Maintenance Reserve Amount to the Maintenance Reserve Account.
  5. Release of the Distribution Amount to the Borrower/Sponsor, subject to satisfaction of all distribution conditions (including covenant compliance).
Existing Clause Problem Under 2026 Rules Recommended Redraft
“Funds shall be credited to the Escrow Account on each Payment Date” Net settlement may delay or alter the credited amount; no reconciliation obligation “Funds shall be credited following completion of the applicable RBI netting cycle; the Escrow Agent shall reconcile credited amounts within one Business Day”
“Release upon certification of milestone completion” Does not account for netting shortfalls or settlement cycle timing “Release upon (a) certification of milestone completion AND (b) confirmation by the Escrow Agent that the netting cycle has settled without a Settlement Disruption Event”
“The Borrower represents that it holds all necessary licences” May not capture revised NBFC registration categories or conditional registrations “The Borrower represents that it holds a valid registration under the NBFC Directions as amended in 2026, without conditions that restrict on‑lending activity”

Due‑Diligence Checklist for Infrastructure & Project‑Finance Lenders

Credit teams and external counsel should integrate the following due‑diligence checks into their standard work streams for any infrastructure or project finance India transaction closing in 2026 or later.

1. Regulatory and Compliance (RBI / PSS Act / NBFC)

  • Confirm the borrower’s (and any NBFC co‑lender’s) current RBI registration status under the 2026 revised categories.
  • Obtain copies of the most recent quarterly RBI filings and any correspondence regarding re‑registration or conditional status.
  • Verify that the escrow bank and trustee hold valid PSO authorisation under the PSS Act.

2. Counterparty and Payment Operations

  • Map the end‑to‑end payment flow from FPI or sponsor to project escrow, identifying each settlement system and netting arrangement in the chain.
  • Obtain written confirmation from the correspondent bank or clearing participant regarding the applicable netting window and expected settlement cycle.

3. Escrow and Trustee Mechanics

  • Review the existing escrow agreement for settlement‑timing assumptions and netting permissions; flag any clause that assumes gross settlement.
  • Confirm the trustee’s operational capacity to perform netting‑cycle reconciliation and Settlement Disruption Event reporting.

4. FX and Repatriation Controls

  • Verify the FX conversion mechanism and confirm that the timing of conversion aligns with the netting window.
  • Check repatriation permissions for lender covenants India under FEMA and any RBI liberalised remittance scheme conditions applicable to the deal.

5. Covenant Testing and Monitoring

  • Assess whether existing covenant testing frequency (typically quarterly) is adequate given increased settlement timing risk; consider monthly testing for high‑FPI‑exposure deals.
  • Confirm that information covenants cover delivery of netting‑cycle reports and NBFC quarterly filings.

Covenant Drafting Recommendations & Sample Covenant Bank

The 2026 reforms require lenders to add or modify at least five categories of covenants in infrastructure facility agreements. The sample lender covenants India provisions below are designed for adaptation to specific deal structures.

Covenant Types to Add or Modify

1. Payment Mechanics Covenant. “The Borrower shall ensure that all debt‑service payments are routed through RBI‑authorised payment systems and settled within the applicable clearing window. The Borrower shall notify the Agent of any change to the designated payment system or settlement mechanism within five (5) Business Days.”

2. Escrow Covenant. “The Borrower shall maintain the Escrow Account with an RBI‑authorised escrow bank holding valid PSO authorisation. The Borrower shall not permit any amendment to the Escrow Agreement that modifies netting permissions, settlement‑cycle definitions or the priority waterfall without prior written consent of the Majority Lenders.”

3. On‑Lending Notification Covenant. “Where any portion of the Facility is on‑lent through an NBFC, the Borrower shall deliver to the Agent (a) evidence of the NBFC’s current registration status under the 2026 NBFC Directions within thirty (30) days of each registration renewal, and (b) immediate notice of any regulatory action, restriction or condition imposed on the NBFC by the RBI.”

4. FX Repatriation Covenant. “The Borrower shall ensure that all FX conversions related to cross‑border debt‑service payments are executed at or before the opening of the applicable netting window. Any FX variance exceeding the Permitted FX Threshold shall be funded by an FX Top‑Up Deposit within three (3) Business Days.”

5. RBI/NBFC Compliance Covenant. “The Borrower shall at all times comply with the PSS Act, the NBFC Directions (as amended in 2026) and all applicable RBI circulars. The Borrower shall deliver a Compliance Certificate signed by an authorised officer within fifteen (15) days of each quarter end.”

Clause Area Red Flag Mitigation
Settlement timing Escrow agreement assumes fixed calendar date for crediting Redefine to reference RBI netting window; add reconciliation obligation
NBFC status Representation limited to “all necessary approvals” without specifying 2026 norms Add express reference to 2026 NBFC Directions and registration category
FX conversion No covenant on timing of conversion relative to netting cycle Add FX Repatriation Covenant with conversion‑timing and variance threshold
Trustee reporting No obligation to report netting‑cycle outcomes Add information covenant requiring next‑day reporting of each cycle result
Covenant testing frequency Quarterly testing may miss intra‑quarter settlement disruptions Move to monthly testing for high‑risk deals; add ad hoc testing trigger on Settlement Disruption Event

Implementation Roadmap

Lenders, credit committees and legal operations teams should follow this six‑step process to implement the changes required by the 2026 RBI payment reforms India package:

  1. Portfolio review. Identify all active financings with exposure to FPI settlement flows, on‑lending NBFCs or escrow arrangements governed by pre‑2026 terms.
  2. Flag high‑risk deals. Prioritise transactions where the borrower or co‑lender is an NBFC subject to re‑registration, or where escrow mechanics assume gross settlement.
  3. Initiate contract amendments. Circulate amendment requests incorporating the model clauses and covenant updates set out above; target execution within 60–90 days for active financings.
  4. Trustee and escrow re‑registration checks. Confirm that the escrow bank and trustee hold valid, unconditional PSO authorisation under the PSS Act.
  5. Borrower/NBFC operational readiness. Require each borrower and NBFC participant to deliver a compliance roadmap confirming their ability to meet 2026 reporting, capital and operational requirements.
  6. Monitor regulatory updates. Establish a watching brief for further RBI circulars, NBFC Directions amendments and PSS Act rule changes; schedule the next documentation review for 90 days post‑implementation.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Reserve Bank of India, Payment & Settlement Systems
  2. Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007, RBI FAQs
  3. Press Information Bureau, Digital Payments Statistics
  4. PRS Legislative Research
  5. PwC India, Decoding the RBI’s Payments Vision
  6. TVS Capital, RBI Policy and Reforms Commentary

FAQs

What are the key RBI 2026 payment changes lenders must know?
The RBI’s 2026 package includes net‑settlement proposals for certain cross‑border flows, updates to payment‑system rules under the PSS Act and revised e‑mandate guidance. Lenders should review settlement timing, netting permissions and trustee/escrow roles immediately.
Net settlement centralises settlement windows and may change the timing of FPI crediting and repayment. Credit teams must model liquidity impact and adjust escrow and covenant structures to account for potential intra‑cycle shortfalls.
Yes. The revised NBFC registration norms 2026 may change permitted activities, capital and margin requirements and reporting obligations. Lenders should require updated compliance certificates, add capital‑maintenance covenants and verify re‑registration status as a condition precedent.
Add express language permitting netting, define settlement cut‑offs by reference to the RBI clearing window, require trustee reporting of settlement events within one business day and add FX repatriation protocols with conversion‑timing covenants.
Industry observers expect more frequent testing, monthly rather than quarterly, to become standard for deals with on‑lending NBFCs or significant FPI exposure, because settlement timing risk has materially increased under the new framework.
Model clause language should include escalation steps: immediate notice to the Agent, a liquidity top‑up obligation within a defined cure period, trustee‑directed payments from reserve accounts and defined remedial steps before an event of default is triggered.
The PSS Act is the primary legislation governing the regulation and supervision of payment systems in India. It grants the RBI authority to designate, regulate and supervise payment system operators, participants and settlement mechanisms, and is the legal basis for the 2026 net‑settlement proposals.
RBI circulars and PSS Act materials are published on rbi.org.in. The Press Information Bureau (pib.gov.in) publishes government statistics on digital payment volumes. NBFC rule text is available on RBI and Ministry of Finance portals. PRS Legislative Research (prsindia.org) provides independent legislative summaries.
Immediately for new deals entering documentation. For active financings, the likely practical effect is a 60‑to‑90‑day amendment cycle to align escrow agreements, on‑lending covenants and trustee arrangements with the 2026 framework.
Updated e‑mandate guidance may require re‑registration of existing recurring payment authorisations used for automated debt‑service collections. Lenders should verify that all active e‑mandates comply with the revised rules and build mandate re‑registration into their operational checklist.
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RBI Payment & NBFC Reforms 2026, What Infrastructure and Project‑finance Lenders Must Know

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