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Filing a commercial recovery suit in India is the principal route for creditors seeking to recover unpaid debts arising from trade, supply, construction, intellectual‑property licensing and financial‑services contracts. The process is governed primarily by the Commercial Courts Act, 2015 (as amended), the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC) and the Indian Limitation Act, 1963, and it applies to any domestic or foreign claimant whose dispute meets the statutory “specified value” threshold. In 2026, courts across India have intensified their emphasis on pre‑institution mediation and tighter case management hearing (CMH) timetables, compressing timelines and raising the bar for evidence‑bundle preparation.
This guide sets out every step of the commercial recovery suit procedure, from eligibility checks and document assembly through to execution of the decree, so that general counsel, CFOs and commercial creditors can act with confidence.
A commercial recovery suit is a civil claim filed before a Commercial Court or the Commercial Division of a High Court for the recovery of money owed under a commercial transaction. The Commercial Courts Act, 2015 defines “commercial dispute” to include disputes arising from mercantile documents, partnership agreements, technology development, insurance, construction and infrastructure contracts, franchise agreements and more. Where the claim value meets the statutory specified‑value threshold, the suit must be filed as a commercial suit, attracting dedicated procedural rules designed for faster disposal.
Typical claim types include unpaid invoices for goods or services, breach of supply or distribution agreements, recovery under bank guarantees or letters of credit, dishonoured negotiable instruments (when paired with a civil recovery claim) and loan recovery outside the scope of specialised tribunals.
A commercial recovery suit is the appropriate mechanism when the creditor holds a liquidated or ascertainable debt, the specified‑value threshold is met, and the claim does not fall within the exclusive jurisdiction of a specialised tribunal such as the Debt Recovery Tribunal (DRT) or the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT). It is also the standard route where the debtor is a private commercial entity not subject to SARFAESI Act remedies.
Before initiating a full commercial suit, creditors should evaluate whether a summary suit for recovery of money under Order XXXVII CPC offers a faster path, particularly where the claim is based on a bill of exchange, promissory note or written contract for a liquidated sum. Other alternatives include contractual arbitration, proceedings under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) for defaulting corporate debtors, or SARFAESI recovery for secured creditors in the banking and financial‑services sector.
The Commercial Courts Act applies to disputes whose subject matter equals or exceeds the “specified value” prescribed by statute. For Commercial Courts at the district level, state governments have notified varying thresholds, commonly INR 3 lakh or above, depending on the state notification. For the Commercial Division of a High Court, the specified value is typically INR 1 crore and above (subject to the applicable High Court’s ordinary original civil jurisdiction). Creditors must verify the threshold in the relevant state notification before filing. For further guidance on valuation thresholds, see our analysis of the minimum value of a commercial suit.
Under the Indian Limitation Act, 1963, Section 3 read with the Schedule, the standard limitation period for a suit founded on a contract for payment of money is three years from the date the cause of action accrues, typically the date the payment fell due or the date of breach. For promissory notes and bills of exchange, specific limitation entries apply. An acknowledgment of debt under Section 18 of the Limitation Act can restart the clock. Creditors should verify the precise accrual date during initial due diligence, because filing even one day after the limitation period expires will result in the suit being time‑barred.
Section 12A of the Commercial Courts Act mandates that a suit “which does not contemplate any urgent interim relief” must first undergo pre‑institution mediation. In 2026, courts are scrutinising compliance with this requirement more rigorously. Claimants should preserve all documentation, the mediation intake form, the mediation centre’s acknowledgment or certificate, correspondence with the opponent, and any settlement record or non‑participation certificate. Failure to document a genuine mediation attempt may result in the plaint being returned at the registry stage or at the first hearing.
The following numbered procedure traces the commercial recovery suit procedure from pre‑litigation preparation through to enforcement of the decree. The accompanying timeline table summarises each stage, the responsible party and the typical duration.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑institution mediation and demand notice | Claimant / Counsel / Mediation Centre | 7–30 days |
| Draft plaint and interim relief application | Claimant’s Counsel | 3–14 days |
| File plaint at Registry / e‑file | Claimant’s Counsel / Court Registry | 1–7 days |
| Summons issued and served | Court / Process Server | 7–30 days |
| First appearance and Case Management Hearing | Both Parties / Court | 30–45 days after first appearance |
| Written statement and disclosure | Defendant / Both Parties | 30–60 days from CMH order |
| Evidence stage and final hearing | Both Parties / Court | 3–12 months |
| Judgment and decree | Court | 1–3 months after final hearing |
| Execution of decree | Decree‑holder / Execution Court | 14–90 days |
Begin by assembling the factual and financial foundation for the claim. Compile the debt ledger, all relevant invoices, the underlying contract (including schedules and amendments), board minutes authorising litigation, bank statements evidencing non‑payment and any prior correspondence with the debtor. Issue a formal demand notice, commonly known as a legal notice, via registered post, courier and email, clearly stating the amount claimed, the contractual basis and a deadline for payment (typically 15 to 30 days).
Simultaneously, initiate pre‑institution mediation under Section 12A of the Commercial Courts Act by filing an intake form with an authorised mediation centre. Attend (or make a genuine attempt to attend) mediation and obtain a certificate of outcome, whether settlement, non‑settlement or non‑participation by the opponent. Preserve every piece of mediation documentation: in the 2026 practice environment, courts expect concrete proof that ADR was attempted in good faith before the suit was instituted. If the suit requires urgent interim relief (for example, an injunction to prevent asset dissipation), the mediation requirement does not apply, but the plaint should expressly plead the ground of urgency.
The plaint is the cornerstone document. It must set out the cause of action in concise, numbered paragraphs; identify the parties, the contractual relationship, the breach, the amount claimed and interest; and conclude with a precise prayer for relief. For a detailed procedural walkthrough of plaint drafting, see our guide on how to file a commercial suit in India.
Attach all supporting documents as numbered exhibits, the contract, invoices, demand notice with proof of service, bank statements, mediation certificate, and any acknowledgments of liability. Prepare a paginated and indexed exhibit bundle; courts increasingly expect e‑bundles with bookmarks for commercial suits. If interim relief is needed, draft the interim application under Order 39 CPC alongside a supporting affidavit that clearly demonstrates: (a) a prima facie case, (b) the balance of convenience and (c) irreparable injury if interim relief is not granted. Keep the affidavit crisp, attach the most compelling contemporaneous evidence rather than lengthy narrative.
File the plaint at the registry of the appropriate Commercial Court or Commercial Division. Most High Courts and many district courts now accept e‑filing through the eCourts portal; check the local filing rules for the specific court. Pay the court fee, calculated as a percentage of the suit value under the applicable state court fee legislation, and obtain the filing receipt and case number. The registry will scrutinise the plaint for compliance with the Commercial Courts Act rules, including the Statement of Truth (where required) and proper indexation of exhibits.
Once accepted, the court issues summons to the defendant. Service is typically effected through the court’s process server, registered post or courier. If the defendant evades service, the claimant may apply for substituted service (by publication, email, or affixture) under Order V CPC. Service on foreign defendants requires compliance with applicable bilateral treaties or the provisions of Order V Rule 26 CPC.
After service is effected, the court lists the matter for a first appearance. Within 30 to 45 days of the first appearance, the court typically convenes a case management hearing (CMH), the procedural gateway of the commercial suit. At the CMH, the court sets binding timetables for: filing of the written statement, disclosure and inspection of documents, filing of witness affidavits, and dates for the final hearing. The court may also issue directions for referral to mediation or other ADR mechanisms.
For claimants, the CMH is the opportunity to secure early tactical advantages: apply for interim relief, request expedited disclosure of specific documents held by the defendant, and propose a compressed trial timetable. Industry observers expect that in 2026, courts are less willing to grant adjournments and are setting tighter disclosure windows, making it critical to arrive at the CMH fully prepared with a proposed case management schedule.
The defendant must file a written statement within 30 days of service (extendable up to a maximum of 120 days under Section 16 of the Commercial Courts Act, read with the proviso to Order VIII Rule 1 CPC). The claimant may then file a replication. Both parties must disclose all documents they intend to rely upon, typically within the timeframe ordered at the CMH. Witness affidavits replace oral examination‑in‑chief in commercial suits, meaning that the evidence phase is largely documentary. Parties should file affidavits of evidence in compliance with the court’s timetable and ensure that every exhibit is indexed and paginated.
At the final hearing, parties present oral arguments and cross‑examine witnesses (where permitted). The court may reserve judgment or deliver it on the same day in straightforward recovery claims. Once judgment is pronounced in favour of the claimant, a formal decree is drawn up specifying the amount awarded, interest and costs. The court fee schedule and any costs orders in favour of the successful party are incorporated into the decree.
A favourable decree does not, by itself, deliver the money. The decree‑holder must file an execution application under Order XXI CPC before the same court or a court with jurisdiction over the judgment debtor’s assets. Available enforcement mechanisms include attachment of bank accounts, garnishee orders, attachment and sale of movable and immovable property, and in certain circumstances, civil arrest. For cross‑border enforcement, the claimant may need to obtain a certified copy of the decree and pursue recognition proceedings in the relevant foreign jurisdiction. The limitation period for filing an execution application is 12 years from the date the decree becomes enforceable under Article 136 of the Schedule to the Limitation Act.
The following table lists the documents needed to file a commercial recovery suit in India. Preparing these in advance prevents registry rejections and delays at the CMH stage.
| Document | Notes (issuing authority, format, validity) |
|---|---|
| Demand / legal notice | Issued by claimant or counsel; printed and PDF copy; attach proof of service (postal receipt, courier tracking, email read‑receipt). |
| Contract or agreement | Certified copy or original; produce execution pages, schedules and amendments; digital contracts require certified printout with metadata. |
| Invoices and statements of account | Prepared by claimant’s finance team; PDF and spreadsheet showing outstanding amounts, payment history and interest calculations. |
| Bank statements / payment records | Certified copies from the bank (6–12 months); demonstrate non‑payment or partial payment. |
| Power of Attorney / board resolution | Issued by company secretary; certified copy; must be valid at the time of filing; foreign companies require apostille or consular attestation. |
| Affidavit of facts supporting the plaint | Sworn before a Magistrate or Notary; includes an exhibits index; contemporaneous and notarised. |
| List of documents / exhibit index | Prepared by counsel; chronologically numbered; paginated with bookmarks for e‑bundles. |
| Address for service and verification forms | As prescribed by local court rules; signed and dated by the authorised representative. |
| Proof of mediation attempt | Mediation centre certificate, intake form, correspondence, non‑participation certificate; essential in 2026 to satisfy Section 12A. |
| Statutory notices (where applicable) | E.g., notice under the Negotiable Instruments Act or contractual pre‑condition notices; include proof of service. |
| Interim relief documents | Application under Order 39 CPC; supporting affidavit evidencing urgency and irreparable harm; notarised. |
| Board resolution for foreign companies | Apostilled or consularly attested; certified translation into English if the original is in another language. |
| Identity and incorporation documents | Certificate of incorporation, CIN, MOA/AOA, KYC documents; issued by the Registrar of Companies; include power of attorney for counsel. |
Prepare two bundles: a short “case‑starter” bundle for the CMH (plaint, key contract clauses, demand notice, mediation certificate and the prayer schedule) and a full trial bundle for the evidentiary hearing. Paginate sequentially, use numbered exhibit tabs, and, for e‑bundles, add hyperlinked bookmarks. Courts expect indexed bundles filed in advance of each hearing; failure to comply may result in documents being excluded.
The table below summarises the critical deadlines that govern the timeline of a commercial recovery suit in India. Missing any of these, particularly the limitation period, can be fatal to the claim.
| Event / Deadline | Legal Basis | Typical Deadline or Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Limitation for ordinary money‑recovery suits | Indian Limitation Act, Section 3, Schedule entries | 3 years from the date the cause of action accrues (date payment fell due or date of breach) |
| Time to file plaint after demand notice | No separate statutory limit (subject to overall limitation) | Aim within 30–90 days of last demand to demonstrate diligence |
| Service of summons | CPC, Order V; local court rules | 7–30 days; substituted service requires court order |
| Filing of written statement | Commercial Courts Act, Section 16; CPC, Order VIII Rule 1 | 30 days from service; maximum extension 120 days |
| Case Management Hearing | Commercial Courts practice directions | Within 30–45 days of first appearance |
| Urgent interim injunction hearing | CPC, Order 39; court discretion | Ex parte listing possible within days; inter partes within 2–4 weeks |
| Trial and evidence timetable | CMH order | Disclosure and witness affidavits: 30–90 day windows; final hearing: 3–12 months |
| Execution of decree (limitation) | Limitation Act, Article 136 | 12 years from the date the decree is enforceable |
The likely practical effect of the 2026 tightening of case management timetables is that courts are compressing the period from filing to final hearing. Early indications suggest that courts in major commercial seats such as Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru are setting final hearing dates within 12 to 18 months of the CMH for medium‑complexity claims, significantly shorter than the historical norm. Creditors who arrive at the CMH with a fully prepared evidence bundle and a proposed timetable are best placed to benefit from this shift.
The following table sets out the principal cost items associated with filing a commercial recovery suit in India. Court fee amounts are governed by state‑specific legislation and must be verified against the applicable state’s court fee schedule before filing.
| Item | Indicative Amount / Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court fee (value‑based) | Percentage slab of suit value (varies by state) | Calculated under the applicable State Court Fees Act; verify via eCourts fee calculator or state gazette. |
| Filing and registry charges | INR 500 – INR 5,000 | Varies by court and filing mode (e‑filing vs. physical). |
| Advocate fees (retainer + appearances) | INR 50,000 – INR 15,00,000+ | Depends on claim value, complexity and seniority of counsel. |
| Process server and service costs | INR 1,000 – INR 10,000 per defendant | Higher for substituted service or service on foreign defendants. |
| Pre‑institution mediation / ADR fees | INR 10,000 – INR 2,00,000 | Institutional rates vary by dispute value and mediator panel. |
| Certified document costs (ROC, banks) | INR 100 – INR 5,000 per document | Varies by issuing authority and urgency of certification. |
| GST on legal services | 18% | Applicable on advocate fees and mediation services; verify current notifications from the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs. |
Two practice‑level shifts are shaping the commercial recovery suit procedure in 2026. First, courts across multiple High Court commercial divisions are enforcing the pre‑institution mediation requirement under Section 12A with greater rigour, returning plaints where the claimant cannot produce a mediation certificate or adequate proof of a genuine mediation attempt. Second, case management hearing timetables have tightened: courts are setting shorter disclosure periods, limiting adjournments and, in some jurisdictions, requiring parties to file a joint proposed timetable before the CMH. For a deeper analysis of these practice‑direction changes, see our guide to the Commercial Courts Amendment 2026.
To align with this environment, creditors should:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Neil Hildreth at Channel 1 Law Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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