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The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Act, 2026, notified by the IBBI on 7 April 2026, has fundamentally altered the landscape for corporate debtors seeking to contest an insolvency petition in India. Mandatory admission where a default is established, a compressed 14‑day adjudication window, and a new group‑insolvency framework mean that the procedural runway once available to debtors has shrunk dramatically. For directors, promoters, general counsel and CFOs, the question is no longer whether to respond but how quickly and effectively a defence can be mounted.
This article delivers a practical, litigation‑grade playbook, covering immediate triage steps, tactical grounds to oppose admission, sample pleading structures, and an escalation matrix from NCLT through NCLAT to the High Courts, designed to give corporate debtors the best chance of resisting or managing an insolvency application under the 2026 regime.
Before the 2026 Amendment, the NCLT exercised broad discretion in deciding whether to admit applications under Sections 7, 9 and 10 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016. Adjudicating authorities routinely examined the merits of the debt, entertained detailed interlocutory applications and, in practice, allowed corporate debtors significant time to respond, negotiate or settle. That era is over.
The Amendment Act, 2026, as outlined in the IBBI legal framework notification dated 7 April 2026, introduces three critical changes that every debtor‑side counsel must internalise:
Industry observers expect these changes to produce a surge in creditor‑initiated petitions and a corresponding need for rapid, document‑heavy debtor responses. The practical effect is that debtors can no longer rely on procedural delay as a de facto defence.
| Pre‑Amendment (IBC 2016–2025) | Amendment 2026 (Key Change) | Practical Debtor Response |
|---|---|---|
| NCLT exercised broad discretion; admission often turned on prima facie view and judicial discretion, with timelines stretching to several months. | Statutory requirement to admit creditor petitions where default is established; 14‑day prescribed window for adjudication. | Prepare a focused prima‑facie evidence bundle immediately (within 48 hours of service), file preliminary objections, and preserve all arbitration evidence. |
| Longer, case‑by‑case timelines; more room for interlocutory evidence and multiple adjournments. | Shorter timelines and mandatory admission emphasis unless a statutory bar is demonstrated. | Use immediate emergency motions, demand expedited directions, and consider injunctive relief where jurisdictional defects exist. |
| Debtor often used time to negotiate, restructure or react commercially. | Mandatory admission reduces runway; emphasis on early, document‑heavy defence from the first hearing. | Prioritise documentation (payment receipts, settlement records, arbitration clause) and instruct forensic accountant and counsel within 24–48 hours. |
The compressed 14‑day admission timeline means the first 48 to 72 hours after service of a Section 7 or Section 9 application are decisive. The following checklist outlines the immediate steps a corporate debtor must take to contest an insolvency petition in India effectively under the new regime.
The following documents should be located, collated and provided to counsel within 48 hours:
The reply affidavit must be signed by an officer authorised by a specific board resolution. A general power of attorney is often challenged by petitioners as insufficient. Best practice is to pass a resolution naming the individual officer, the scope of authority and the specific petition number. The company secretary should certify the resolution and ensure it is annexed to the reply.
Even under the mandatory admission regime, the NCLT retains the obligation to verify that the statutory prerequisites for admission are satisfied. The debtor’s task is to demonstrate, swiftly and with documentary evidence, that one or more of those prerequisites is not met. The following grounds remain effective to oppose an insolvency application post‑amendment. For background on who can file an insolvency petition in India, see our explainer.
This remains the single most effective ground to challenge an insolvency petition, particularly under Section 9 (operational creditors). The debtor must demonstrate, at a prima facie threshold, that a genuine dispute exists regarding the existence or amount of the debt. This is not a full trial, the NCLT examines whether the dispute is real and substantial, not contrived to delay proceedings.
Evidence required: documentary proof of dispute (correspondence, counter‑claims, prior proceedings), independent expert opinion on the quantum, and evidence that the dispute predates the petition.
Sample pleading language: “The Respondent submits that a bona fide dispute exists as to the existence and quantum of the alleged debt, as evidenced by the Respondent’s notice dated [date] disputing the claim in its entirety, and the pending arbitration proceedings initiated under the agreement dated [date].”
Where the underlying contract contains an arbitration clause and the dispute relates to the existence or quantum of the debt (rather than an admitted default), the debtor may apply for the petition to be stayed or the parties referred to arbitration. The interplay between the IBC and the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, remains a nuanced area of law. Industry observers note that NCLT benches have increasingly considered whether the arbitration route is more appropriate where the dispute is genuinely triable.
Evidence required: the arbitration clause, notice invoking arbitration (if already issued), and evidence that the dispute is arbitrable.
If the debtor has paid the debt (in full or to the extent that the outstanding amount falls below the statutory threshold), this is a complete defence to admission. Evidence of set‑off, where the debtor holds counter‑claims against the creditor, can also be deployed, although the NCLT’s willingness to examine set‑off in detail varies by bench.
Evidence required: bank statements showing payment, acknowledgement receipts, settlement agreements, correspondence confirming satisfaction of the debt.
Applications filed beyond the limitation period prescribed under the Limitation Act, 1963, remain liable to dismissal. The debtor should examine whether the debt is time‑barred, whether any acknowledgement of debt has extended the limitation period, and whether the creditor is estopped from pursuing the petition by reason of its own conduct (for example, having accepted part‑payment or agreed to a revised schedule).
Where the petition is filed not to resolve insolvency but to coerce the debtor, for example, to extract a premium on a disputed trade claim or to gain leverage in parallel commercial negotiations, the debtor may oppose admission on grounds of mala fides. The threshold is high: the debtor must produce cogent evidence of improper purpose.
Defects in jurisdiction (wrong NCLT bench), failure to comply with mandatory pre‑filing requirements (such as notice to the debtor under Section 8 for operational creditors), mis‑joinder or non‑joinder of necessary parties, and defective authorisation of the petitioner are all grounds for dismissal or adjournment. These grounds should be raised at the earliest opportunity as preliminary objections.
The reply affidavit should be structured to address the statutory requirements for admission point by point. A recommended structure:
Beyond the main reply affidavit, several procedural motions may be necessary to protect the debtor’s position within the compressed 14‑day window. The following motions should be considered and, where appropriate, filed simultaneously with or in advance of the reply.
Sample affidavit paragraph proving payment:
“I state that the Respondent Company has discharged the alleged debt in full by way of RTGS transfer dated [date], reference number [number], from [Bank Name] Account No. [XXXX] to the Petitioner’s designated account. A copy of the bank statement and the RTGS confirmation are annexed hereto as Annexure R‑3.”
Sample preliminary objection headnote:
“The Respondent raises a preliminary objection to the maintainability of the present petition on the ground that the Petitioner has failed to serve the statutory demand notice under Section 8(1) of the Code upon the Respondent at its registered office, as required by law, and the petition is therefore liable to be dismissed in limine.”
Despite the strongest defence, there are cases where admission cannot be avoided. Once an order of admission is passed and the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) commences, the debtor’s strategy must pivot immediately. The following steps should be executed within hours of the admission order:
On the question of whether a CIRP application can be withdrawn after admission: while the Code does not expressly provide a straightforward withdrawal mechanism, tribunals have, in limited circumstances, permitted withdrawal where all parties consent and robust settlement evidence is produced. Early indications suggest that the 2026 Amendment’s revival focus may make tribunals marginally more receptive to withdrawal applications supported by credible settlement terms, though this remains fact‑specific and requires experienced counsel.
Where admission cannot be resisted at the NCLT, the debtor must immediately assess escalation options. The two primary routes are an appeal to the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) and, in limited circumstances, a constitutional writ before the relevant High Court.
An appeal to the NCLAT against an NCLT admission order should be filed within the prescribed statutory timeframe. Common grounds include:
The likelihood of success increases significantly where the debtor can demonstrate a clear documentary record that was either ignored or inadequately considered by the NCLT. A stay application should be filed simultaneously with the appeal to prevent the CIRP from progressing pending the outcome.
High Court intervention is available primarily where the debtor raises constitutional or jurisdictional challenges, for example, a challenge to the vires of the amendment provisions, an alleged violation of fundamental rights under Articles 14 or 19, or a jurisdictional error that goes to the root of the NCLT’s authority. High Court writs under Article 226 are not a substitute for the statutory appellate route and courts are generally reluctant to interfere with NCLT proceedings in the ordinary course. The practical considerations, cost, timeline and the risk of adverse costs orders, should be weighed carefully before pursuing this route.
The 2026 Amendment has not reduced the personal exposure of directors and promoters, if anything, the emphasis on avoidance transactions and group insolvency has increased scrutiny. The following pre‑litigation checklist should be completed by in‑house counsel and board members as soon as an insolvency petition is anticipated or served:
Not every insolvency petition should be fought to the last hearing. A commercial counsel’s role is to advise on the pragmatic calculus: cost, outcome probability, timing and reputational risk. The following decision framework provides a starting point.
| Factor | Favours Settlement | Favours Contesting |
|---|---|---|
| Strength of defence evidence | Weak documentary record; debt is largely admitted | Strong bona fide dispute; clear arbitration clause; procedural defects in petition |
| Cost vs claim value | Defence costs exceed potential saving; claim is modest | Claim is substantial; admission triggers disproportionate commercial harm |
| Reputational impact | Quiet settlement avoids public CIRP; preserves banking relationships | Admission order will not materially worsen existing market perception |
| Timeline urgency | Settlement can be completed within the 14‑day window | Defence requires multiple hearings; willing to escalate to NCLAT |
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.
The following resources support the tactical playbook set out in this article:
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