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Understanding how to file a claim in CIRP of a company is the single most time-sensitive step any creditor faces once a Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process is admitted against a debtor. With the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Act, 2026 now in force since 6 April 2026, the verification framework and procedural timelines governing claim submissions have tightened, making it critical for banks, operational creditors, workmen and in-house counsel to get every element right the first time. This guide consolidates the complete workflow, from selecting the correct IBBI claim form (Form C, CA, D, E or F) to assembling admissible proof of debt, navigating the Resolution Professional’s verification process and tracking your claim through NCLT timelines.
Every procedural step cited below is grounded in the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (as amended), the IBBI (Insolvency Resolution Process for Corporate Persons) Regulations, 2016 and official IBBI guidance.
If you have just received or seen the public announcement by the Interim Resolution Professional (IRP), here is your immediate action plan:
The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Act, 2026, which came into force on 6 April 2026 as notified in the Gazette of India, introduced several changes that directly affect how creditors file and defend claims in CIRP. Industry observers expect these amendments to tighten the window for creditors who delay filing and to increase the standard of documentary proof that Resolution Professionals demand during verification.
For creditors, the practical consequence is straightforward: the margin for error when filing a claim in CIRP of a company has narrowed. Claims that arrive late, use the wrong form, or lack sufficient evidence face a higher risk of rejection or partial admission, outcomes that can materially reduce recovery. Creditors and their advisers should treat the 2026 amendments as a prompt to audit their claim-filing workflows immediately. Those already navigating an active CIRP may wish to consult an insolvency lawyer experienced with the IBC Amendment framework for case-specific advice.
The IBBI prescribes specific CIRP claim forms under the CIRP Regulations, each mapped to a particular creditor category. Using the wrong form is one of the most common reasons for verification delays. The table below summarises which form to use and when.
| Form | Who Files | Key Fields & When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Form C | Financial creditors (banks, NBFCs, bondholders, allottees of real estate projects) | Submission of claim by a financial creditor in CIRP. Requires details of the financial debt, the date it was disbursed, amount claimed (principal + interest as at the insolvency commencement date), security details if any, and supporting documents. |
| Form B | Operational creditors (suppliers, vendors, service providers) | Submission of claim by an operational creditor. Requires particulars of the operational debt, relevant invoices, contracts, purchase orders and proof of delivery or service completion. |
| Form D | Workmen and employees | Claim by workmen or employees for unpaid wages, salaries, provident fund contributions, gratuity or other dues. Requires employment records, salary slips and employer confirmation where available. |
| Form E | Authorised representative of workmen/employees (filing on behalf of a class) | Used when an authorised representative submits a consolidated claim on behalf of a class of workmen or employees under Section 21(6A) of the IBC. |
| Form F | Other creditors (including creditors other than financial or operational creditors) | Catch-all form for any creditor who does not fall neatly into the FC, OC or workmen category, for example, statutory authorities or contingent creditors filing claims during CIRP. |
| Form CA | Creditors filing claims with the liquidator (post-CIRP, in liquidation) | Form CA is the submission of claim to the liquidator under the IBBI (Liquidation Process) Regulations. It is not the correct form during CIRP, a common mistake. |
Form C IBBI requires the financial creditor to provide: (a) particulars of the corporate debtor; (b) the total amount of the financial debt as on the insolvency commencement date (ICD); (c) details of any security held; (d) a statement of account from the date of disbursal to the ICD; and (e) evidence of the financial debt, typically a loan agreement, sanction letter, board resolution authorising the lending and a running-account statement. A common mistake is failing to bifurcate principal from interest or omitting the precise date of the ICD, which gives the RP grounds to seek clarification and delays verification.
The operational creditor claim form (Form B) requires similar particulars but focuses on goods supplied or services rendered. Operational creditors must attach copies of invoices, delivery challans, goods receipt notes (GRNs), purchase orders and the underlying contract. Where the debt arises from multiple invoices, a consolidated statement, indexed by invoice number, date and amount, significantly accelerates verification.
Form D captures unpaid wages, salary arrears, provident fund contributions, gratuity and bonus. Workmen and employees should attach their appointment letters, salary slips, provident fund statements and any correspondence from the employer acknowledging the dues. In practice, the RP typically cross-references Form D claims against the corporate debtor’s internal payroll records.
Form E enables a single authorised representative to file on behalf of multiple workmen or employees, consolidating what might otherwise be hundreds of individual Form D submissions. Form F serves as the residual category for creditors who do not fit the FC, OC or workmen categories, government authorities claiming statutory dues, for instance, or parties with contingent or disputed claims.
All CIRP forms IBBI can be downloaded from the official IBBI claims and corporate processes page.
Filing the correct form is necessary but not sufficient. The proof of claim under CIRP is what determines whether your claim is admitted, partially admitted or rejected. Resolution Professionals apply a document-first approach: if the evidence is incomplete, the claim is either marked “to be verified” or rejected outright pending supplementary filings.
| Document | Purpose | Creditor Type |
|---|---|---|
| Loan/facility agreement (executed copy) | Establishes the existence and terms of the financial debt | Financial creditor |
| Sanction letter & disbursement proof | Confirms quantum disbursed and date | Financial creditor |
| Statement of account (from disbursal to ICD) | Proves outstanding principal and accrued interest | Financial creditor |
| Security/charge documents (if secured) | Proves nature and priority of security interest | Financial creditor (secured) |
| Board resolution authorising the credit facility | Establishes corporate authority | Financial creditor |
| Invoices (with PO references) | Proves goods supplied or services rendered | Operational creditor |
| Delivery challans / GRNs / proof of receipt | Confirms delivery accepted by corporate debtor | Operational creditor |
| Underlying supply contract / service agreement | Establishes contractual relationship and rates | Operational creditor |
| Email trail / correspondence acknowledging debt | Supplementary proof of acknowledgement | All creditor types |
| Salary slips, appointment letter, PF statement | Proves employment relationship and arrears | Workmen / employees |
Practical tip on redaction: Where commercial confidentiality is a concern, for example, pricing schedules within supply agreements, creditors may redact commercially sensitive terms provided the redaction does not obscure the existence, quantum or nature of the debt itself. Index and paginate your filing bundle clearly (e.g., Tab A, loan agreement; Tab B, statement of account) to facilitate the RP’s review.
The claim process follows a chronological workflow governed by the IBC and the CIRP Regulations. Understanding each stage, and the timelines embedded in them, is essential to preserving your rights.
| Creditor Type | Form Typically Used | Filing Window / Key Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Financial creditor (secured or unsecured) | Form C | Within 14 days of IRP appointment (Regulation 12(1)). Late claims may be filed up to the 90th day from the ICD (Regulation 12(2)), but early filing is critical for CoC participation. |
| Operational creditor (vendor / supplier) | Form B | Same 14-day initial window. Operational creditors do not sit on the CoC but must file to be recognised in the resolution plan distribution. |
| Workmen / employees | Form D (individual) or Form E (via authorised representative) | Same timeline. Workmen’s dues enjoy priority under Section 53 of the IBC, filing early is essential to preserve that priority in any liquidation scenario. |
| Other creditors | Form F | Within the available CIRP window; evidence of the contingent or disputed claim must be robust. |
The IBBI maintains a claims portal where creditors can check whether their claim has been received by the RP, verified, admitted or flagged for further documentation. Navigate to the IBBI corporate processes page, locate the relevant corporate debtor by name or CIN, and review the status entries. For NCLT claim status, particularly where you have filed an application challenging partial admission or rejection, use the NCLT website or the e-filing portal to track your application by case number. If you are new to the insolvency filing process in India, a detailed walk-through of NCLT e-filing procedures is available separately.
Not every claim sails through verification. The RP has the authority, and indeed the obligation, to reject or partially admit claims where the evidence is insufficient or the debt categorisation is contested.
Where a claim is rejected or only partially admitted, the creditor may file an application before the NCLT under Section 60(5) of the IBC seeking directions. The NCLT typically lists such applications on an expedited basis given the time-bound nature of CIRP (the process must conclude within 180 days, extendable to 330 days from the ICD under Section 12 of the IBC). An appeal against the NCLT’s order lies to the NCLAT under Section 61. Creditors pursuing this route should engage insolvency counsel experienced before the tribunal, the GLE lawyer directory can assist in identifying specialists.
Missing the initial 14-day window under Regulation 12(1) does not automatically extinguish your claim, but it does create practical difficulties. The RP may still accept claims filed after 14 days but before the conclusion of CIRP, subject to verification. However, a late-filing creditor risks being excluded from the initial CoC constitution and early voting on the resolution plan, which can materially affect outcomes.
If a creditor needs to amend or revise a previously filed claim, for example, to correct the quantum or update the statement of account, the amendment should be submitted to the RP in writing with a covering explanation and updated supporting documents. The RP will re-verify the amended claim. Creditors navigating a pre-packaged insolvency procedure should note that the claim-filing mechanics differ from standard CIRP and warrant separate analysis.
Use this checklist before submitting your claim to ensure completeness. Every item marked below has been the basis for at least one rejection or partial admission in recent NCLT practice.
“I, [Name], [Designation], duly authorised by [Creditor Entity Name] vide board resolution dated [Date], do hereby declare that the particulars set out in this claim form and the supporting documents annexed hereto are true and correct to the best of my knowledge, information and belief. No part of the claim has been satisfied or adjusted otherwise than as stated herein. I understand that any misrepresentation may render me liable under the provisions of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016.”
For additional context on winding-up and closure procedures following a failed CIRP, see the guide on how to close a private limited company in India.
Knowing how to file a claim in CIRP of a company is not merely a procedural exercise, it is the foundation of every creditor’s recovery strategy under the IBC. With the 2026 Amendment in force, creditors face tighter verification standards and less room for incomplete or late filings. The recommended course of action is clear: identify your creditor category, select the correct CIRP claim form, assemble a complete proof-of-debt bundle, file within 14 days of the IRP’s appointment and actively track your claim through both the IBBI portal and, where necessary, the NCLT. Where claims are disputed or rejected, escalation to the NCLT should be immediate.
Creditors seeking specialist representation can explore related commercial litigation options or consult the GLE lawyer directory to connect with qualified insolvency practitioners in India.
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.
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