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cross-border insolvency india

Cross‑border Insolvency in India (2026): a Practical Guide for Foreign Creditors, Lenders and Insolvency Practitioners

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: 22 June 2026

The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Act, 2026 has fundamentally reshaped the landscape of cross‑border insolvency in India, giving foreign creditors, international lenders and insolvency practitioners a statutory framework for recognition, participation and enforcement that simply did not exist before. Where the original IBC offered only the skeletal, and largely unimplemented, provisions of Sections 234 and 235, the 2026 amendments introduce a structured IBC cross‑border framework drawing heavily on the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross‑Border Insolvency. This guide provides the operational playbook that foreign stakeholders need right now: step‑by‑step routes for recognition of foreign insolvency proceedings in India, documentary checklists for filing proofs of claim, enforcement strategies for foreign judgments and arbitral awards, and practical guidance on group insolvency coordination.

It is designed for decision‑makers who need to act, not merely understand the law in the abstract.

Executive Summary: Who This Guide Is For and What It Covers

If you are a foreign financial creditor, international lender, cross‑border recovery team, insolvency professional (IP), or in‑house counsel evaluating your options in relation to an Indian debtor, this guide is built for you. The IBC Amendment Act 2026 creates four immediate operational capabilities that did not previously exist in Indian statute:

  • Access. Foreign representatives can now apply directly to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) for recognition of foreign proceedings, without relying on government‑to‑government letters of request.
  • Recognition. The amendments distinguish between “main” and “non‑main” foreign proceedings, enabling automatic and discretionary relief upon recognition.
  • Relief. Upon recognition, tribunals can grant moratoria, stay actions against the debtor’s assets in India, and appoint Indian insolvency professionals to assist foreign proceedings.
  • Cooperation. Formal cooperation and communication protocols between Indian and foreign courts/IPs are now codified, including provisions for group insolvency coordination.

This guide walks through each capability in practical terms, provides documentary checklists and sample petition headings, and addresses the enforcement routes available for foreign judgments and arbitral awards. Each section below includes action steps, required documents and typical timelines so that foreign creditors can move from analysis to execution.

The IBC Amendment Act 2026: What Changed and Practical Implications for Cross‑Border Insolvency in India

Key Legislative Changes That Matter for Foreign Creditors

The 2026 amendments insert a dedicated chapter into the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016, widely referred to as “Part Z” during the consultation phase, that establishes a self‑contained cross‑border insolvency regime. The key provisions relevant to foreign creditors include:

  • Direct access for foreign representatives. A foreign representative (defined broadly as a person or body authorised in a foreign proceeding to administer the debtor’s reorganisation or liquidation) can apply directly to the NCLT without needing prior government authorisation under Section 234.
  • Recognition of foreign main and non‑main proceedings. The Act adopts the centre‑of‑main‑interests (COMI) test to distinguish between main and non‑main proceedings, closely mirroring the UNCITRAL Model Law framework.
  • Automatic and discretionary relief. Recognition of a foreign main proceeding triggers an automatic moratorium; recognition of a non‑main proceeding opens the door to discretionary interim relief.
  • Group insolvency provisions. New sections allow coordinated proceedings for corporate groups with entities across multiple jurisdictions, including the appointment of a group insolvency coordinator.
  • Cooperation duties. Indian courts and IPs are required to cooperate with their foreign counterparts to the maximum extent permitted by Indian law.

Timeline and Notification Status

The IBC Amendment Act 2026 received Presidential assent and was published in the Gazette of India. The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) has been tasked with notifying the operative dates for individual sections and issuing supporting regulations. Industry observers expect that the cross‑border recognition provisions will be among the first sections notified, given the strong policy imperative and years of consultation. Practitioners should monitor the IBBI website and the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) notification portal for gazette notifications confirming the operative dates of each section.

Practical tip: Do not assume any section is operative until its notification date is confirmed in the Official Gazette. Until notification, foreign creditors must continue to rely on the existing Sections 234 and 235 mechanism and common‑law comity principles.

Comparison Table: Pre‑2026 vs Post‑2026 Cross‑Border Framework

Issue Pre‑2026 (Practical Effect) Post‑2026 (Practical Effect)
Access to Indian tribunals by foreign representatives No direct access; required government‑to‑government Letter of Request under Section 234 (never operationalised via bilateral agreement) Direct application by foreign representative to NCLT; no government intermediary required
Recognition of foreign proceedings No statutory recognition framework; ad hoc reliance on common‑law comity and High Court inherent jurisdiction Statutory recognition with main/non‑main classification based on COMI test
Relief upon recognition Limited, court discretion only, no automatic moratorium Automatic moratorium upon recognition of foreign main proceeding; discretionary relief for non‑main proceedings
Cooperation between courts/IPs No statutory obligation; cooperation dependent on bilateral treaties (largely absent) Mandatory cooperation and communication obligations for Indian courts and IPs
Group insolvency No statutory framework; each group entity treated in isolation Coordinated group insolvency proceedings with appointment of group coordinator
Foreign creditor participation in CIRP Technically permitted but procedurally unclear; documentation standards inconsistent Explicit provisions for foreign creditor claims, voting and committee representation

Recognition of Foreign Insolvency Proceedings in India: Routes and Tests

Statutory Recognition Routes Introduced by the 2026 Act

The recognition of foreign insolvency in India now follows a structured statutory pathway. Under the new chapter, a foreign representative must file an application before the NCLT accompanied by evidence of the foreign proceeding, the appointment of the foreign representative, and a statement identifying the debtor’s assets and creditors in India. The NCLT then determines whether the foreign proceeding qualifies as a “main proceeding” (where the debtor has its COMI) or a “non‑main proceeding” (where the debtor has an establishment). This distinction is critical because it dictates the scope and automaticity of relief:

  • Main proceeding. Recognition triggers an automatic moratorium analogous to the Section 14 moratorium in domestic CIRP, staying all proceedings and enforcement actions against the debtor’s Indian assets.
  • Non‑main proceeding. The NCLT retains discretion to grant appropriate relief, which may include a stay of execution, entrustment of asset administration to the foreign representative, or other protective measures.

How Do Sections 234 and 235 Work?

Even after the 2026 amendments, Sections 234 and 235 of the IBC remain on the statute book and serve as a parallel (though less efficient) mechanism. Section 234 empowers the Central Government to enter into bilateral agreements with foreign countries for the reciprocal recognition of insolvency proceedings. Section 235 enables an Indian IP or liquidator to make an application to the NCLT, which can then issue a “Letter of Request” to a court in a country with which India has a bilateral agreement, seeking assistance in relation to the debtor’s assets.

The practical limitation has always been that no bilateral agreements under Section 234 were executed in the years following the IBC’s 2016 enactment, rendering Section 235 largely inoperative. The likely practical effect of the 2026 amendments is that the new direct‑access recognition route will become the primary channel, with Sections 234/235 serving as a residual mechanism for situations involving countries where specific bilateral arrangements may supplement the statutory framework.

Practical Tests Tribunals Will Apply

Industry observers expect NCLT benches to apply the following filters when adjudicating recognition applications:

  • Public policy. Recognition may be refused if it would be manifestly contrary to Indian public policy.
  • Jurisdiction and COMI. The tribunal must be satisfied that the foreign court had jurisdiction and that the COMI or establishment test is met.
  • Fraud or procedural fairness. Evidence of fraud in obtaining the foreign proceeding or denial of due process to Indian stakeholders will be grounds for refusal.
  • Comity. Consistent with pre‑2026 judicial practice, Indian tribunals will give weight to international comity, particularly where the foreign jurisdiction offers reciprocal recognition.

Procedural Checklist for a Recognition Petition

  1. Certified copy of the order commencing the foreign proceeding
  2. Certificate of appointment of the foreign representative
  3. Statement of the debtor’s known assets in India (with supporting evidence)
  4. List of known Indian creditors (names, addresses, estimated claims)
  5. Affidavit identifying the debtor’s COMI and any Indian establishment
  6. Translated and notarised documents (if originals are not in English)
  7. Authorisation/power of attorney for Indian counsel to act on behalf of the foreign representative

Enforcement and Asset Recovery in India: Practical Routes

Enforcement of Foreign Judgments and Arbitral Awards

The enforcement of foreign judgments in India is governed primarily by Sections 13 and 44A of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908. Foreign judgments from “reciprocating territories” (notified countries such as the United Kingdom, Singapore, Hong Kong and others) can be executed directly as if they were domestic decrees. Judgments from non‑reciprocating territories require a fresh suit on the foreign judgment in an Indian court, which then examines the judgment against the Section 13 grounds (jurisdiction, merits, public policy, fraud, natural justice).

For foreign arbitral awards, the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 provides a streamlined enforcement mechanism for awards under the New York Convention (Part II) or the Geneva Convention (Part III). Enforcement applications are filed before the competent High Court, and the grounds for refusal mirror the New York Convention Article V defences.

Asset Tracing, Provisional Measures and Injunctions

Foreign creditors seeking to protect Indian assets pending recognition or enforcement should consider interim relief options:

  • Mareva‑type injunctions. Indian High Courts have inherent jurisdiction under Section 151 of the CPC and Order XXXIX Rules 1 and 2 to grant injunctions restraining asset dissipation.
  • Section 9 interim measures (arbitration). Where an arbitration agreement exists, parties can seek interim measures from Indian courts under Section 9 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, including attachment of assets and preservation orders.
  • Post‑recognition moratorium. Once a foreign main proceeding is recognised under the 2026 amendments, the automatic moratorium should protect the debtor’s Indian assets from dissipation, reducing the need for separate injunctive proceedings.

Interaction with Indian CIRP and Estate‑Wide Remedies

Where a Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (cross border CIRP) is already underway in India, foreign creditors must coordinate their enforcement efforts with the moratorium imposed under Section 14 of the IBC. During CIRP, no suit or proceeding can be instituted or continued against the corporate debtor, and no asset can be transferred or encumbered without the approval of the resolution professional. Foreign creditors holding pre‑existing attachments or injunctions over Indian assets will find that these are typically suspended during CIRP. The resolution plan approved by the Committee of Creditors (CoC) and sanctioned by the NCLT will bind all stakeholders, including foreign creditors, whether or not they voted.

Remedy When to Use It Typical Timeline / Limitations
Direct execution of reciprocating‑territory judgment Foreign decree from notified reciprocating territory Execution petition to District/High Court; typically 6–18 months depending on contestation
Fresh suit on foreign judgment (non‑reciprocating territory) Judgment from non‑reciprocating country Suit filed in competent Indian court; 2–5 years (subject to backlog and appeals)
Enforcement of New York Convention arbitral award Foreign‑seated arbitral award under New York Convention Application to High Court; typically 12–24 months; limited grounds for refusal
Section 9 interim measures (arbitration) Pre‑award or post‑award asset preservation Urgent application; courts may grant ex parte relief within days
Post‑recognition moratorium (2026 Act) After NCLT recognises foreign main proceeding Automatic upon recognition; stays all enforcement against Indian assets

How Foreign Creditors Can Engage in an Indian Cross‑Border CIRP

Pre‑CIRP Actions: Preservation, Injunctions and Evidence Collection

Before a formal CIRP is initiated, or while a recognition application is pending, foreign creditors should take immediate protective steps. This includes identifying and documenting the debtor’s Indian assets (real property, bank accounts, receivables, intellectual property), obtaining certified copies of underlying contracts and security documents, and engaging Indian counsel to assess interim relief options. Where there is a risk of asset dissipation, creditors should apply urgently for injunctive relief in the competent High Court. Early evidence collection is critical: Indian courts place a high evidentiary burden on foreign claimants, and late or incomplete documentation is among the most common reasons claims face challenge.

Filing Proofs of Claim: Documentation Checklist

Once CIRP is admitted, the resolution professional issues a public notice calling for claims. Foreign creditors must submit proofs of claim within the prescribed timeline. The documentation standards are rigorous, and the following table sets out the core requirements:

Required Document Why Required Typical Exhibit Number
Certified copy of the underlying loan/facility agreement or contract Establishes the legal basis and quantum of the claim Exhibit A‑1
Assignment or novation documents (if claim was acquired) Proves chain of title and standing to claim Exhibit A‑2
Board resolution / corporate authorisation of the foreign creditor Confirms authority of signatory to file the claim Exhibit B‑1
Power of attorney for Indian counsel / authorised representative Enables representation before NCLT and resolution professional Exhibit B‑2
Account statements showing outstanding principal, interest and charges Quantifies the claim as at the insolvency commencement date Exhibit C‑1
Evidence of security interest (charge registration, guarantee documents) Establishes secured creditor status and priority Exhibit D‑1
Correspondence / demand notices evidencing default Supports the existence and maturity of the claim Exhibit E‑1
Translated and apostilled/notarised versions of all foreign‑language documents Required by NCLT for evidentiary admissibility Exhibit F (series)

Representation: Foreign Representatives, Local Counsel and Authorised Signatories

Foreign creditors appearing before the NCLT must be represented by an advocate enrolled with the Bar Council of India. A foreign representative recognised under the 2026 amendments has standing to appear, but in practice will appoint Indian counsel to handle procedural filings and hearings. The creditor recognition process in India requires careful attention to authority documents: the power of attorney must be specific, current and (where executed abroad) apostilled or notarised by the Indian consulate in the relevant jurisdiction. Corporate creditors must also provide board resolutions authorising the specific individual or entity to act on their behalf in the Indian proceedings.

Voting, Committee Formation and Creditor Rights

Foreign creditor rights in India during CIRP are substantively equivalent to those of domestic creditors once a claim is admitted by the resolution professional. Financial creditors with admitted claims form the Committee of Creditors (CoC), which takes all key decisions, including approval of the resolution plan, by a vote of not less than 66% by value of admitted financial debt. Foreign financial creditors holding admitted claims vote on an equal footing. Operational creditors (foreign suppliers, service providers) do not sit on the CoC but may attend meetings and receive payment under the resolution plan in accordance with statutory priority.

Key participation points for foreign creditors include:

  • Claim admission. Challenge any rejection of your claim before the NCLT within the prescribed limitation period.
  • CoC voting. Ensure your voting share is correctly reflected; discrepancies must be raised with the resolution professional immediately.
  • Resolution plan scrutiny. Review the plan for compliance with Section 30(2) of the IBC, including feasibility, statutory priority and treatment of foreign creditor claims.
  • Liquidation waterfall. If CIRP fails and liquidation follows, understand the Section 53 distribution waterfall: secured creditors rank after insolvency resolution process costs and workmen’s dues for the preceding 24 months.

Practical Step‑by‑Step Dossier and Petition Templates

Foreign creditors and their counsel should prepare a comprehensive dossier before approaching the NCLT or the resolution professional. The following table provides a high‑level template structure for the three most common filings:

Document Purpose Sample Template File Name
Recognition Petition (under 2026 Act) Apply to NCLT for recognition of foreign main or non‑main proceeding GLE_Recognition_Petition_Template_v1.docx
Proof of Claim (Form C / prescribed form) Submit claim to resolution professional during CIRP GLE_Proof_of_Claim_Foreign_Creditor_v1.docx
Interim Preservation Application Seek urgent injunctive relief to prevent asset dissipation pending recognition GLE_Interim_Preservation_Application_v1.docx

Sample recognition petition headings:

  1. Title and caption (In the matter of [Foreign Proceeding], Application for Recognition under [Section reference])
  2. Parties (Foreign representative, Corporate debtor, Respondents)
  3. Jurisdiction of this Tribunal
  4. Background to the foreign proceeding
  5. COMI analysis and evidence of establishment in India
  6. Assets and creditors of the debtor in India
  7. Relief sought (recognition as main/non‑main proceeding; moratorium; entrustment of assets)
  8. Grounds and supporting submissions
  9. List of exhibits
  10. Prayer

Group Insolvency in India: Multinational Groups and Coordination Issues

The IBC Amendment Act 2026 introduces dedicated group insolvency provisions that are particularly relevant for multinational corporate groups with Indian subsidiaries or affiliates. Under the new framework, where two or more corporate debtors that are part of the same group are subject to insolvency proceedings (whether in India or abroad), the NCLT may order procedural coordination. This can include the appointment of a group insolvency coordinator, an insolvency professional tasked with facilitating communication between separate proceedings, proposing a group coordination plan and minimising value destruction from duplicative or inconsistent proceedings.

For foreign creditors holding claims against multiple entities within a group, the coordination mechanism offers a “single window” for presenting inter‑company claims, challenging intra‑group transactions, and negotiating unified resolution plans. Early indications suggest that the NCLT will have discretion to consolidate or coordinate proceedings where group members share financial and operational linkages, common management, or intertwined liabilities. Creditors should assess the group structure early and decide whether to pursue coordinated proceedings, which can accelerate resolution, or maintain separate proceedings where strategic interests diverge.

Case Studies and Troubleshooting

The following worked examples illustrate how the cross‑border insolvency framework in India operates in practice:

Scenario A: Foreign Creditor Seeking Recognition of Main Proceedings

A UK‑based insolvency practitioner appointed in English winding‑up proceedings applies to the NCLT for recognition as a foreign main proceeding. The debtor’s registered office and COMI are in London, but it holds significant receivables and a manufacturing unit in Gujarat. The IP files the recognition petition with certified copies of the English court order, evidence of COMI and a list of Indian assets. Upon recognition, the automatic moratorium protects the Gujarat assets. Pitfall to avoid: failing to translate and apostille supporting documents, delays recognition by weeks.

Scenario B: Lender Enforcing a Foreign Arbitral Award

A Singapore‑based lender holds a New York Convention arbitral award against an Indian corporate debtor. The lender files an enforcement petition before the competent Indian High Court under Part II of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. Simultaneously, it applies for Section 9 interim measures to attach the debtor’s bank accounts. Pitfall to avoid: filing the enforcement petition in the wrong High Court (jurisdiction is determined by the location of assets or the debtor’s place of business, not the seat of arbitration).

Scenario C: Pre‑Emptive Preservation Action

A European trade creditor discovers that an Indian debtor is transferring assets to related parties. Before initiating formal insolvency proceedings, the creditor applies to the Indian High Court for a Mareva‑type injunction under Order XXXIX CPC, supported by evidence of asset dissipation. The injunction freezes the debtor’s bank accounts and restrains property transfers. Pitfall to avoid: inadequate evidence of dissipation risk, courts require specific, concrete evidence rather than generalised apprehension.

Quick Reference: Procedural Timelines and Contacts

Step Responsible Forum Typical Timeline
Filing recognition petition NCLT (principal bench or relevant bench) First hearing within 2–4 weeks of filing
Recognition order NCLT Industry observers expect 4–12 weeks from filing (contested matters longer)
Filing proof of claim in CIRP Resolution professional Within 90 days of insolvency commencement date (or as extended by NCLT)
Challenge to claim rejection NCLT Within 14 days of rejection; hearing typically listed within 4–6 weeks
Enforcement of foreign arbitral award Competent High Court 12–24 months (contested); interim relief available on urgent basis
Appeal from NCLT order National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) Appeal to be filed within 30 days; hearing typically within 4–8 weeks
Further appeal (on questions of law) Supreme Court of India Special Leave Petition within 60 days of NCLAT order

Conclusion

The IBC Amendment Act 2026 marks a watershed for cross‑border insolvency in India. For the first time, foreign creditors, international lenders and insolvency practitioners have a statutory pathway for direct access, recognition, relief and cooperation, replacing the ad hoc, treaty‑dependent framework that preceded it. The practical effect will be a more predictable, efficient and internationally aligned system for resolving cross‑border insolvencies involving Indian debtors and assets. However, the new framework demands rigorous preparation: recognition petitions must be supported by comprehensive evidence, proofs of claim must meet Indian documentary standards, and enforcement strategies must account for the interplay between the IBC moratorium and other Indian legal mechanisms.

Foreign stakeholders who invest in early preparation, assembling their dossiers, engaging Indian counsel and monitoring notification dates, will be best positioned to protect and recover their claims in India’s evolving insolvency landscape.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ranjana Roy Gawai at RRG & ASSOCIATES, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI), Cross‑Border Insolvency Resources
  2. Legal 500, Recognition of Cross‑Border Insolvency in India
  3. UNCITRAL, Model Law on Cross‑Border Insolvency
  4. NLU Delhi, Cross Border Insolvency Rules 2020 (Research Paper)

FAQs

What is the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Act, 2026?
The IBC Amendment Act 2026 amends India’s Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 to introduce a dedicated statutory framework for cross‑border insolvency. It provides mechanisms for recognition of foreign proceedings, direct access for foreign representatives to Indian tribunals, automatic and discretionary relief, cooperation duties, and group insolvency coordination, drawing substantially on the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross‑Border Insolvency.
The Act has received Presidential assent and been published in the Gazette of India. However, individual sections are notified on different dates by the Central Government and IBBI. Practitioners should verify operative dates on the IBBI website and the MCA notification portal before relying on any specific provision. Until notification, the existing Sections 234 and 235 mechanism and common‑law comity principles remain the available routes.
Under the 2026 amendments, a foreign representative files a recognition petition directly before the NCLT, supported by certified copies of the foreign court order, evidence of COMI or establishment in India, and a statement of Indian assets and creditors. The NCLT then classifies the proceeding as “main” or “non‑main” and grants corresponding relief.
Foreign creditors must submit a proof of claim in the prescribed form along with certified copies of the underlying agreement, assignment documents (if applicable), board resolutions, power of attorney, account statements, security documents, demand notices and translated/apostilled versions of any foreign‑language documents. See the documentation checklist table above for the full list and exhibit references.
Once a CIRP moratorium is in place under Section 14 of the IBC, no proceeding can be instituted or continued against the corporate debtor. A foreign arbitral award holder must submit a claim to the resolution professional rather than pursue independent enforcement. If no CIRP is pending, enforcement proceeds through the competent High Court under Part II of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996.
The 2026 amendments allow coordinated insolvency proceedings for group entities. Intra‑group claims, debts owed between related entities, will be scrutinised for genuineness and may be subordinated where they arise from preferential or fraudulent transactions. A group insolvency coordinator can propose a coordination plan that addresses intra‑group claims holistically, potentially avoiding the value destruction caused by separate competing proceedings.
Lenders should immediately: (a) engage Indian counsel to assess interim relief options and asset protection; (b) identify and document the debtor’s Indian assets; (c) review loan documentation for acceleration triggers and security enforcement rights; (d) consider Section 9 interim measures or injunctive relief if asset dissipation is suspected; (e) prepare a proof‑of‑claim dossier using the checklist in this guide; and (f) monitor the NCLT docket and MCA filings for any pending insolvency application against the debtor.

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Cross‑border Insolvency in India (2026): a Practical Guide for Foreign Creditors, Lenders and Insolvency Practitioners

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