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Last updated: 14 May 2026
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026, introduced in the Lok Sabha in March 2026, represents the most consequential overhaul of India’s corporate laws amendment framework for M&A in over a decade. By simultaneously amending the Companies Act 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership Act 2008, the Bill restructures NCLT approval routes for schemes of arrangement and cross-border mergers, introduces foreign-currency capital provisions for IFSC-registered entities, and tightens LLP governance requirements that directly affect deal structuring. Paired with Budget 2026 tax measures that alter rollover relief and the treatment of restructuring-related stamp duties, these changes demand immediate attention from every deal team with live or pipeline cross-border M&A India transactions.
This article provides a practical, clause-level dealmaker’s checklist, covering approvals, timelines, structuring options and sample contract language, so that general counsel, PE sponsors, CFOs and external advisers can act decisively.
Deal teams with transactions at any stage, from indicative term sheet through to post-completion integration, should treat the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 as a live risk that requires a structured response within the next 90 days. The Bill’s provisions will, once notified, change statutory filing routes, NCLT bench allocation rules, LLP conversion mechanics and the regulatory sequencing that underpins most cross-border M&A India timelines.
Five immediate actions:
If you have a live deal approaching signing, the single most important step is to instruct local Indian counsel to run a regulatory-route diagnostic against the Bill’s provisions within the next seven days. The cost of retrofitting a transaction structure after signing is orders of magnitude higher than early screening.
The Bill amends two primary statutes, the Companies Act 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership Act 2008, while introducing consequential changes to NCLT procedures and IFSC-related capital rules. Industry observers expect MCA to issue implementing rules in phases, but the legislative framework itself is now settled. Below is a structured summary of every change that materially affects cross-border M&A India transactions.
The centralisation of scheme applications before the transferee-company bench is the single most operationally significant change for deal teams. Under the pre-2026 regime, multi-jurisdiction schemes often required parallel applications before different NCLT benches, one for each company involved. The likely practical effect will be a reduction in aggregate hearing timelines and filing costs, but it also means that the transferee company’s registered office jurisdiction becomes a critical structuring consideration at the outset of any transaction.
Deal teams should note that NCLT practice directions may be updated to reflect the new bench allocation rules. Monitoring the NCLT website for revised practice directions is essential until formal notification.
The insertion of Section 43A enables IFSC-registered companies to maintain share capital in foreign currency without requiring RBI conversion. For cross-border M&A India deals structured through GIFT City, this eliminates a layer of exchange-control complexity. PE sponsors and sovereign wealth funds that have established or are considering IFSC holding structures should assess whether this provision changes the cost-benefit analysis of their preferred deal architecture.
The parallel amendments to the Limited Liability Partnership Act 2008 tighten governance requirements for LLPs with foreign partners or those operating in regulated sectors. The LLP Act amendment introduces mandatory audit thresholds, enhanced filing obligations and restrictions on the use of LLPs as vehicles for certain categories of foreign direct investment. These changes make LLPs less attractive as acquisition or hold-co vehicles in many cross-border contexts, a shift that requires immediate structuring review.
The corporate laws amendment India M&A landscape involves multiple overlapping regulatory gates. The following decision framework maps each approval route, its trigger, the relevant authority and the practical timeline that deal teams should build into their project plans.
NCLT approval remains mandatory for all schemes of arrangement, compromises with creditors, and mergers or amalgamations that do not qualify for the fast-track route under Section 233. Under the 2026 changes:
Estimated timeline: Industry observers expect the single-bench regime to reduce total NCLT processing time to approximately 16–24 weeks from filing to sanction order, compared with 24–36 weeks under the pre-2026 dual-bench practice. However, contested schemes or those requiring creditor-class meetings may extend beyond this range.
The Competition Commission of India requires pre-closing notification for combinations that exceed prescribed asset or turnover thresholds. Deal teams must screen every transaction against CCI thresholds early in the process. The CCI has issued updated guidance on deal-value thresholds and the treatment of interconnected transactions, available on the CCI website.
Transactions involving foreign acquirers must comply with India’s FDI policy administered by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT). FDI approvals India fall into two categories:
Estimated timeline: Automatic-route filings are typically processed within 2–4 weeks. Government-route approvals may take 8–12 weeks, and occasionally longer for sensitive sectors.
Where the target is a listed company, the SEBI (Substantial Acquisition of Shares and Takeovers) Regulations 2011 apply. Acquirers crossing the 25% threshold (or acquiring shares from an existing controlling shareholder) must make a mandatory open offer. SEBI filings, stock exchange notifications and independent valuation reports must be coordinated alongside NCLT or CCI timelines.
| Transaction / Issue | Pre-2026 Position | Post-2026 Practical Implication (Deal Team Action) |
|---|---|---|
| Cross-border merger approval (NCLT) | Most cross-border mergers required NCLT applications under Sections 230–232; bench and central filings varied by jurisdiction. | Single-bench process before transferee-company jurisdiction. Action: Confirm transferee registered office; prepare consolidated NCLT pack and run creditor/scheme notices earlier. |
| LLP vehicle treatment | LLP frameworks were less flexible for foreign capital and scheme options; fewer governance requirements. | LLP Act amendment tightens IFSC/foreign investor rules. Action: Re-evaluate LLP usage; consider conversion to company or use SPV for capital raises. |
| Competition filings (CCI) | Standard asset/turnover thresholds applied under Section 5 of the Competition Act. | CCI guidance adjusts deal-value thresholds and interconnected-transaction treatment. Action: Run early screening; prepare commitments to reduce clearance delay. |
| IFSC capital structuring | IFSC entities required INR-denominated share capital with RBI conversion mechanics. | New Section 43A permits foreign-currency capital. Action: Reassess GIFT City holding structures for inbound PE/SWF investments. |
| Fast-track mergers (Section 233) | Limited eligibility, small companies and certain holding-subsidiary combinations only. | Expanded eligibility criteria. Action: Check whether your transaction qualifies; if so, bypass full NCLT hearing and reduce timeline by 8–12 weeks. |
The corporate laws amendment India M&A changes do not merely add regulatory steps, they alter the relative attractiveness of different deal structures. This section provides a step-by-step practical playbook covering pre-deal screening, documentation, regulatory mitigation and remedy design.
Every share purchase agreement, scheme document and cross-border merger filing prepared under the 2026 framework should include updated provisions addressing the new regulatory landscape. Key drafting areas include:
| Structure | Key Advantages Post-2026 | Key Risks / Limitations | Best Suited For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Share acquisition | No NCLT approval required; simpler execution; target retains licences and contracts. | Successor liability; stamp duty on share transfers; SEBI open-offer obligation if target is listed. | Private company targets; clean due diligence; PE bolt-on acquisitions. |
| Asset acquisition (slump sale) | Cherry-pick assets; avoid successor liability for excluded liabilities. | Requires individual asset and contract transfers; potential GST implications; employee transfer complexities. | Carve-outs; distressed acquisitions; specific asset portfolios. |
| Scheme of arrangement / merger | Tax-neutral (if structured correctly); automatic transfer of contracts, licences and employees by operation of law. | NCLT approval required (16–24 weeks); creditor/shareholder meeting obligations; enhanced disclosure under 2026 regime. | Full corporate integrations; listed-company mergers; group reorganisations. |
| Cross-border merger | Now has clearer procedural framework under 2026 amendments; enables direct combination with foreign entity. | Dual-jurisdiction compliance; RBI/FEMA approvals; valuation report requirements. | Strategic combinations between Indian and foreign companies; global group simplifications. |
The following sample clause language is provided for illustrative purposes only. Each clause must be adapted to the specific transaction and reviewed by qualified Indian counsel.
Sample 1, Regulatory Condition Precedent (SPA)
“Completion shall be conditional upon the receipt of: (a) a sanction order from the National Company Law Tribunal having jurisdiction over the Transferee Company, in form and substance satisfactory to the Buyer (acting reasonably); (b) approval from the Competition Commission of India (or expiry of the applicable review period without objection); and (c) such FDI approvals as may be required under the Consolidated FDI Policy and applicable FEMA regulations.”
Sample 2, Long-Stop Date and Break Fee
“If the Conditions Precedent set out in Clause [X] have not been satisfied or waived on or before the date falling [12] months after the date of this Agreement (the ‘Long-Stop Date’), either Party may terminate this Agreement by written notice. Upon such termination, the Seller shall pay to the Buyer a break fee equal to [1–2]% of the Enterprise Value if the failure to satisfy the Conditions is attributable to a regulatory refusal.”
Sample 3, NCLT Filing Obligation
“The Transferee Company shall, within [14] Business Days of the date of this Agreement, file a scheme application under Sections 230–232 of the Companies Act 2013 (as amended by the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026) before the relevant NCLT bench, and shall use all reasonable endeavours to prosecute such application diligently.”
Sample 4, Interim Period Undertakings
“During the period between the date of this Agreement and Completion, the Target shall not, without the prior written consent of the Buyer: (i) declare or pay any dividend; (ii) issue any shares or convertible instruments; (iii) enter into any transaction with a Related Party exceeding INR [X] crore; or (iv) take any action that would reasonably be expected to require an additional filing with or approval from NCLT, CCI, SEBI or any other Governmental Authority.”
Sample 5, Escrow Mechanism for Regulatory Risk
“An amount equal to [10]% of the Purchase Price shall be deposited into an escrow account held by the Escrow Agent pending receipt of all required regulatory approvals. Upon satisfaction of the final Regulatory Condition Precedent, the escrow amount shall be released to the Seller within [5] Business Days.”
This section provides a filing-by-filing action checklist for each major regulatory gate in a cross-border M&A India transaction. The timelines reflect estimates based on published practice and authoritative practitioner commentary; actual processing times may vary.
Sample aggregate timeline for a cross-border scheme of arrangement:
| Phase | Weeks (Indicative) | Parallel Workstreams |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-filing preparation and due diligence | Weeks 1–4 | CCI pre-notification analysis; FDI route confirmation; valuation reports |
| NCLT filing and admission | Weeks 5–8 | CCI Form I/II filing; SEBI / stock exchange notifications (if listed) |
| Creditor/shareholder meetings and hearings | Weeks 9–18 | CCI Phase I review; FDI automatic-route reporting |
| NCLT sanction order | Weeks 19–24 | CCI clearance (if Phase I); government-route FDI approval (if required) |
| Post-sanction filings and completion | Weeks 25–28 | ROC filings; stamp duty payment; integration steps |
Budget 2026 introduced several measures that directly affect deal economics for cross-border M&A India transactions. Deal teams should incorporate these into their financial models before signing.
Budget 2026 M&A tax provisions address the income-tax treatment of earnout payments and contingent consideration. Industry observers expect these provisions to clarify the characterisation of earnout receipts as capital gains rather than business income in most structured transactions, provided certain conditions around payment timing and linkage to business performance are met. Deal teams should ensure that earnout mechanics in SPAs are drafted to comply with these conditions.
Several Budget 2026 provisions contain transitional rules with specific effective dates. Transactions that complete before the notified effective date may be governed by the pre-2026 tax regime, while those completing after will be subject to the new rules. This creates a critical timing decision point: deal teams must assess whether accelerating or deferring completion produces a better tax outcome. Qualified tax counsel should model both scenarios before finalising the transaction timeline.
The layered regulatory framework created by the corporate laws amendment demands a disciplined approach to risk allocation between buyers and sellers. The following negotiation priorities and model language help counsel protect their clients during the transition period.
| Issue | Buyer Priority | Seller Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory risk allocation | Broad condition precedent with walk-away right if any approval is refused | Narrow conditions; reverse break fee if buyer fails to obtain approvals within its control |
| Long-stop date | Shorter (9–12 months) with extension only by mutual consent | Longer (12–18 months) with automatic extension if approvals pending |
| Interim period control | Strict undertakings; prior consent for material actions | Ordinary-course carve-out; consent not to be unreasonably withheld |
| Break fee | Seller pays 1–2% if deal fails due to target-side regulatory issues | Buyer pays reverse break fee of equivalent amount if buyer cannot obtain FDI or CCI clearance |
In addition to the sample clauses provided in Section 4, counsel should consider including:
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 fundamentally alters the regulatory architecture for cross-border M&A India transactions. Deal teams that adapt their processes, documentation and timelines now will secure a significant execution advantage over those that wait for implementing rules. The following five steps should be treated as non-negotiable:
This article is provided for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 is subject to further implementing rules and notifications by the MCA. Deal teams should obtain specific legal advice from qualified Indian counsel before taking action on any transaction. Developments should be monitored via the Ministry of Corporate Affairs and NCLT websites.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kaushalya Venkataraman at Quadra Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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