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Last reviewed: 12 July 2026
Understanding how to invest in Indian government securities in 2026 requires navigating a multi‑regulator onboarding process that touches the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), at least one Indian custodian bank, and a central securities depository. The process applies to any non‑resident entity or fund, sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, asset managers, endowments, and dedicated investment vehicles, that wishes to purchase dated government securities, Treasury Bills, State Development Loans, or floating‑rate bonds issued by the Government of India.
Following the 6 June 2026 policy package announced by the Ministry of Finance and the RBI to broaden foreign participation in the G‑Sec market, the procedural landscape has shifted: the Fully Accessible Route (FAR) now covers a wider set of instruments, FPI category requirements have been simplified, and custodial settlement flows have been clarified. This guide walks through every step of the G‑Sec investment process, from route selection and FPI registration through to post‑trade settlement and tax reporting, so that fund operations teams and in‑house counsel can build a realistic project plan.
Government securities (G‑Secs) are debt instruments issued by the central or state governments of India. They include dated fixed‑rate bonds, Treasury Bills (91‑day, 182‑day, and 364‑day), floating‑rate bonds, and State Development Loans (SDLs). G‑Secs are issued and settled through RBI’s infrastructure, principally the Negotiated Dealing System–Order Matching (NDS‑OM) platform operated by the Clearing Corporation of India Ltd (CCIL).
Foreign investors can access this market through several routes, each governed by different regulations under the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA) and the SEBI (Foreign Portfolio Investors) Regulations. The route you choose determines your registration obligations, investment limits, and settlement mechanics.
| Route | Who can use it | Key advantage |
|---|---|---|
| FPI, General Route | SEBI‑registered Foreign Portfolio Investors (funds, banks, insurance companies, pension funds, sovereign wealth funds) | Access to a broad range of debt and equity instruments, subject to aggregate and single‑issuer limits set by RBI |
| Fully Accessible Route (FAR) | All FPIs, no separate registration beyond FPI status required | No investment ceiling on specified G‑Sec ISINs; no aggregate cap constraints for designated securities |
| Voluntary Retention Route (VRR) | FPIs willing to commit to a minimum retention period | Dedicated limits outside the general FPI cap; favourable for longer‑duration allocations |
| NRI / OCI route | Non‑Resident Indians and Overseas Citizens of India on NRE / NRO accounts | Simplified retail access via RBI Retail Direct or authorised banks; smaller ticket sizes possible |
For institutional investors seeking material allocations into Indian G‑Secs, the FPI registration route combined with FAR‑eligible ISINs is the principal pathway. The remainder of this guide focuses on that process, with relevant notes for NRI investors where the procedure diverges.
Before initiating FPI registration, an applicant entity must satisfy several regulatory preconditions imposed by SEBI, RBI, and FEMA. Getting these right at the outset avoids delays later in the onboarding timeline.
Under the SEBI (Foreign Portfolio Investors) Regulations, applicants are classified into two categories. Category I covers government and government‑related entities (central banks, sovereign wealth funds, multilateral organisations) and regulated entities such as banks, insurance companies, and pension funds. Category II covers all other eligible foreign investors, including regulated funds, corporate bodies, family offices, and individuals meeting net‑worth thresholds. The category determines the fee payable to SEBI and the level of documentation scrutiny.
Applicants from jurisdictions that are not FATF‑compliant, or entities whose beneficial‑ownership structures cannot be adequately disclosed, may face additional scrutiny or outright ineligibility. Confirm the latest SEBI circulars on eligibility conditions before preparing an application.
The following numbered steps map the complete onboarding and trading sequence for a foreign investor entering the Indian G‑Sec market through the FPI route. Each step identifies the responsible party and the typical working‑day duration.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration (working days) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Decide route and investment mandate | Investor / CIO / Legal counsel | 1–5 days |
| 2. Appoint custodian and open Indian bank account | Investor ops / Custodian / Bank | 7–21 days |
| 3. Submit SEBI FPI registration application | Applicant via DDP (custodian) | 15–30 days (routine); up to 45 days (complex structures) |
| 4. Complete depository / demat onboarding | Custodian / NSDL or CDSL | 7–21 days (often runs parallel to Step 3) |
| 5. RBI / FEMA reporting setup and limit allocation | Custodian / RBI / Investor | 3–10 days |
| 6. Place bids in primary auction or trade on NDS‑OM | Investor (instructions) / Custodian (execution) | Auction to settlement: T+1 for dated securities |
| 7. Post‑trade settlement, tax withholding, and reporting | Custodian / CCIL / Investor | T+1 settlement; ongoing reporting |
Before any paperwork is filed, the investor’s portfolio management team and legal counsel should determine which access route, General, FAR, or VRR, aligns with the fund’s mandate, duration target, and allocation size. Under the FAR, there is no aggregate foreign‑investment ceiling on designated G‑Sec ISINs, making it the preferred route for large sovereign or pension‑fund allocations. The General Route remains subject to aggregate limits set by RBI and reviewed periodically. This decision drives everything downstream: the ISINs available, the settlement flow, and the reporting obligations.
The FPI must engage a SEBI‑registered custodian in India. Major global custodians maintain Indian branches or sub‑custodial arrangements with domestic banks that are authorised to act as depository participants and DDPs. The custodian appointment involves executing a custody agreement and a power of attorney authorising the custodian to settle trades, hold securities, and file regulatory reports on the FPI’s behalf. Simultaneously, the investor opens a rupee‑denominated bank account at the custodian bank or another authorised dealer bank. This account will receive inbound foreign‑exchange remittances (converted to INR) and route settlement funds. Expect 7–21 working days for account opening, depending on the bank’s internal KYC and compliance timelines.
The application is filed through the DDP, in most cases, the custodian itself. The submission includes the completed SEBI application form, constitutive documents, board resolutions, KYC/AML documentation, beneficial‑ownership declarations, and the applicable registration fee per the SEBI fee schedule. SEBI aims to process straightforward Category I applications within approximately 15–30 working days. Category II applications or those involving complex multi‑layered structures may take longer. The DDP conducts a preliminary review before forwarding the application to SEBI; incomplete submissions are the single most common cause of delay. Once SEBI grants registration, a unique FPI registration number is issued, which is required for all subsequent trading and reporting.
With the custodian acting as depository participant, the FPI opens a beneficial‑owner demat account at NSDL or CDSL. This account will hold the G‑Sec ISINs purchased. The depository assigns a unique client ID and maps it to the FPI’s registration number. Settlement participant codes are configured so that CCIL and the depository can process delivery‑versus‑payment (DvP) settlement. This step can often run in parallel with the SEBI application (Step 3), shortening the overall onboarding window.
For investments under the General Route, the custodian must register the FPI’s intended debt investment with RBI and ensure that aggregate foreign‑investment limits are not breached. RBI monitors utilisation of the overall debt limit on a near‑real‑time basis. For FAR investments, no aggregate limit applies to the designated ISINs, but reporting of capital inflows and outflows under FEMA remains mandatory. The custodian typically files the required declarations and reporting forms, including the LEC (Liberalised Exchange Control) returns, on the FPI’s behalf. Allow 3–10 working days for the custodian’s compliance team to complete the reporting setup.
FPIs can acquire G‑Secs in two ways. In the primary market, RBI conducts auctions, typically on a weekly schedule for dated securities and Treasury Bills. The FPI instructs its custodian to submit competitive or non‑competitive bids (where permitted under the auction notification). In the secondary market, the FPI trades through the NDS‑OM platform. Trades on NDS‑OM are settled through CCIL on a delivery‑versus‑payment basis. For listed G‑Secs, exchange‑based trading on NSE or BSE is also available, though institutional volumes remain concentrated on NDS‑OM. The FPI issues settlement instructions to the custodian, specifying the ISIN, quantity, price (or yield), and settlement date.
Settlement for dated government securities occurs on a T+1 basis (trade date plus one working day). Treasury Bills follow the same T+1 convention. CCIL acts as the central counterparty, guaranteeing settlement and netting obligations. On settlement date, the custodian’s account at RBI is debited (for purchases) and the G‑Sec ISINs are credited to the FPI’s demat account. Tax deduction at source (TDS) on interest income is applied by the issuer or paying agent in accordance with the Income Tax Act and any applicable double‑taxation avoidance agreement (DTAA). The FPI must provide a valid Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) and any required treaty‑benefit forms to claim reduced withholding rates.
Ongoing compliance includes periodic reporting to SEBI and RBI through the custodian, and monitoring of investment limits under the General Route. For an overview of withholding tax in India for foreign payments, see our detailed explainer.
The documents needed for FPI registration and G‑Sec market access span four categories: entity‑level constitutive documents, SEBI application forms, KYC/AML evidence, and custodial and tax documentation. Incomplete or incorrectly legalised documents are the most frequent cause of registration delays.
| Document | Notes (issuer, format, validity) |
|---|---|
| Constitutive documents (charter, trust deed, partnership agreement, or equivalent) | Issued by the applicant. Certified copy; must be apostilled or legalised for use in India if originating from outside India. English translation required if the original is in another language. |
| Board resolution / authorised signatory list | Issued by the applicant on entity letterhead. Must be notarised and apostilled where required by the custodian or DDP. |
| Certificate of incorporation or registration | Issued by the company registry (or equivalent authority) in the home jurisdiction. Certified copy in PDF and physical format. |
| SEBI FPI application form (prescribed format) | Filed through the DDP using SEBI’s prescribed template. Include all mandated annexures and schedules. |
| Beneficial‑ownership declaration / FATF‑compliant AML documents | Issued by the applicant. Must identify all natural persons holding or controlling 25 % or more (or applicable threshold). Include CRS and FATCA self‑certifications. |
| KYC documents for authorised persons (passport copies, address proof) | Passport copies of authorised signatories. Address proof not older than 3 months (utility bill, bank statement). |
| Custodian agreement and power of attorney | Standard form provided by the custodian; commercial terms are negotiable. Must be executed by authorised signatories of both parties. |
| Indian bank account opening forms (SNRR or designated account) | Issued by the Indian bank. Requires full KYC submission and a settlement‑instruction mandate. |
| FEMA declarations (RBI / FEMA compliance forms) | Filed through the custodian. Include capital‑account declarations and LEC return authorisation. |
| Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) | Issued by the tax authority of the applicant’s home jurisdiction. Required to claim treaty benefits. Must be for the current or immediately preceding financial year. |
| Audited financial statements | Required for certain Category II applicants. Provide the most recent 2–3 fiscal years. Must be audited by a recognised external auditor. |
Industry observers expect that document‑legalisation requirements, particularly apostille and notarisation, remain the most time‑consuming pre‑application task, often adding 2–4 weeks to the overall timeline when the applicant’s home jurisdiction has slow apostille turnaround.
The end‑to‑end timeline from initial decision to first trade depends on three variables: the speed of document preparation and legalisation, the custodian’s internal onboarding SLA, and SEBI’s processing queue for FPI applications.
Optimistic scenario (all documents ready, straightforward structure): 30–45 working days from custodian engagement to first settlement.
Realistic scenario (document legalisation required, Category II applicant): 45–75 working days.
Key bottlenecks to manage:
For investors targeting a specific auction date or benchmark issuance, it is advisable to begin the onboarding process at least 10–12 weeks in advance. Investors interested in the broader RBI new banking rules 2026 should also factor in any new compliance requirements that affect account opening or reporting.
The costs of entering India’s G‑Sec market fall into regulatory fees, operational charges, and tax obligations. The table below summarises the principal line items. Exact amounts should be confirmed with the custodian and SEBI’s current fee schedule before filing.
| Item | Typical amount / basis | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| SEBI FPI registration fee | Varies by category, refer to the prevailing SEBI fee schedule | Payable at the time of application. Category I fees are generally lower than Category II. |
| Custodian onboarding and custody fee | Negotiable, typically a fixed retainer plus basis‑point charge on AUM | Covers safekeeping, settlement, and regulatory reporting. Obtain competitive quotes via RFP. |
| Transaction / brokerage fees | Per trade, quoted in basis points or flat per transaction | Charged by the trading member or broker executing the NDS‑OM or exchange trade. |
| Depository charges (NSDL / CDSL) | Per ISIN or per transaction, per depository tariff schedule | Account maintenance and transaction fees apply. Confirm with the depository participant. |
| CCIL settlement charges | Per settlement leg, per CCIL published schedule | Applicable for NDS‑OM and auction settlements cleared through CCIL. |
| Bank account and FX charges | Fixed account charges plus per‑remittance costs | Includes INR conversion spread and outward‑remittance fees for repatriation. |
| Legal and compliance advisory | Retainer or hourly, market rates | One‑time onboarding advisory plus ongoing compliance retainer. Use the lawyer directory to identify specialists. |
| Withholding tax (WHT) on interest income | Domestic rate under the Income Tax Act, reduced where a DTAA applies | TRC and prescribed treaty forms must be filed before settlement to claim the reduced rate. Consult withholding tax guidance for foreign payments. |
| Capital gains tax | Rates depend on holding period and applicable DTAA | Short‑term and long‑term rates differ. Professional tax advice is essential. |
It is worth noting that stamp duty on G‑Sec transfers was rationalised under the Indian Stamp Act framework. The custodian will typically collect and remit stamp duty as part of the settlement process. For a broader comparison of registration costs in India, see our guide on trademark registration costs in India, which illustrates the fee‑schedule approach used by Indian regulators.
On 6 June 2026, the Government of India announced a package of reforms aimed at deepening foreign participation in the G‑Sec market. The reforms, communicated through the Press Information Bureau and subsequent RBI and SEBI circulars, introduce several changes that directly affect the step‑by‑step onboarding process outlined above.
The likely practical effect of these 2026 reforms is a shorter onboarding cycle for well‑prepared institutional applicants (Category I) investing through the FAR, with industry observers expecting the end‑to‑end timeline to compress by 1–2 weeks for straightforward structures.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Abhishek Nath Tripathi at Sarthak Advocates & Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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