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If you are exploring how to register an NBFC in India, the process follows a defined statutory path: incorporate a company under the Companies Act 2013, demonstrate Net Owned Funds (NOF) of at least ₹10 crore, prepare a compliant business plan, file your application through RBI’s COSMOS portal, and submit the physical documentation set to your regional RBI office. The Reserve Bank of India reviews applications over a typical 90‑ to 180‑day window before issuing, or declining, a Certificate of Registration (CoR) under Section 45‑IA of the RBI Act, 1934.
This guide walks through every stage in detail, from the legal eligibility criteria and the 50‑50 principal‑business test to the precise COSMOS portal fields, the complete documents checklist, realistic NBFC registration fees in India, and the post‑CoR compliance obligations that follow approval.
Here is what you will learn in this article:
Before diving into the detail, the following seven‑step summary gives you the end‑to‑end picture of the NBFC registration process. Use it as a roadmap and refer to the corresponding sections below for the full explanation of each stage.
Quick stats: Total elapsed time from incorporation to CoR is typically four to nine months. The all‑in NBFC license cost (excluding the NOF capital itself) ranges from approximately ₹5 lakh to ₹15 lakh depending on professional fees, while the NOF deposit of ₹10 crore must be evidenced at the point of application.
Understanding the legal prerequisites is the essential first step. RBI will not accept, let alone process, an application that fails to satisfy the statutory thresholds established under the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934.
Section 45‑IA is the gateway provision. It mandates that no non‑banking financial company shall commence or carry on the business of a non‑banking financial institution without obtaining a CoR from the Reserve Bank and having the minimum NOF as prescribed. The section empowers RBI to grant or refuse registration after satisfying itself that the conditions relating to NOF, management quality and public interest are met. All NBFC registration requirements RBI imposes flow from this foundational statutory authority.
Crucially, Section 45‑IA applies to companies, not partnerships, LLPs or sole proprietorships. The applicant must be incorporated as either a Private Limited Company or a Public Limited Company under the Companies Act, 2013 (or the predecessor Companies Act, 1956, where still subsisting). Section 8 (not‑for‑profit) companies are not eligible for NBFC registration.
RBI uses the “principal business criteria”, commonly called the 50‑50 rule, to determine whether a company falls within the regulatory definition of an NBFC. A company is treated as an NBFC if its financial assets constitute more than 50 per cent of its total assets (net of intangible assets) and its income from financial assets constitutes more than 50 per cent of its gross income. Both limbs must be satisfied simultaneously. If a company meets these thresholds, it must register as an NBFC; if it does not, it falls outside the NBFC regulatory perimeter, regardless of its memorandum objects.
Industry observers note that RBI applies this test not only at the point of initial application but on an ongoing basis. A company that drifts below the 50‑50 threshold may, in theory, be asked to surrender its CoR, while a company that drifts above it without registration faces enforcement action.
RBI evaluates whether the promoters, directors and key management personnel satisfy its “fit and proper” standards. The assessment covers:
Foreign ownership note: Foreign direct investment in NBFCs is permitted up to 100 per cent under the automatic route for several categories (NBFC‑ICC, NBFC‑Factor, etc.), subject to applicable FEMA regulations and the minimum capitalisation norms separately prescribed by RBI. Foreign promoters must still clear the fit‑and‑proper test and supply apostilled/consularised documentation.
The minimum NOF requirement of ₹10 crore for new NBFC registrations has been in force since 1 October 2022, following RBI’s revised Scale Based Regulation (SBR) framework. This is the single most significant capital barrier to entry and the element that draws the most questions from founders asking how to register an NBFC in India.
“Net Owned Fund” is defined under Section 45‑IA read with Section 45‑IC as the aggregate of paid‑up equity capital and free reserves, minus accumulated losses, deferred revenue expenditure and other intangible assets, and further reduced by investments in shares of subsidiaries, companies in the same group, and book value of debentures/bonds/loans/advances made to or deposits with subsidiaries and group companies.
RBI expects the NOF to be funded primarily from equity capital and free reserves, not borrowings. The ₹10 crore must be demonstrably unencumbered at the date of application. To prove this:
“We have examined the books of account and records of [Company Name] as at [Date]. Based on our examination and the information and explanations provided to us, we certify that the Net Owned Fund of the company, computed in accordance with Section 45‑IA of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 read with the applicable RBI Directions, stands at ₹[Amount], which is not less than ₹10,00,00,000 (Rupees Ten Crore). The said amount is unencumbered and free from any charge or lien.”
This wording is indicative, the signing CA should adapt it to the entity’s specific circumstances. RBI may reject an application where the auditor’s certificate is ambiguous or fails to confirm the unencumbered status of the funds.
Meeting the ₹10 crore threshold is not a one‑time exercise. RBI requires NBFCs to maintain the prescribed minimum NOF on a continuing basis. A shortfall triggers supervisory action, including possible cancellation of the CoR. Applicants should factor this into their capital planning from day one, especially where the NOF is only marginally above the threshold at the point of filing.
The COSMOS (Centralised Information Management System) portal is RBI’s mandatory electronic gateway for NBFC registration online. No paper‑only application is accepted; the e‑filing via COSMOS is a prerequisite, followed by a physical submission of signed copies. Below is the detailed walkthrough.
Before logging into COSMOS, assemble the following in final form:
Ensure all financials are consistent across the e‑form, business plan, and auditor’s certificate. RBI scrutinises discrepancies closely, and an inconsistency in the NOF figure between the e‑form and the auditor’s certificate is one of the most common reasons for application queries.
Log in to the RBI COSMOS portal using the company’s registered credentials. Navigate to the “Company Registration” section and select “New Application.” Upload the completed Excel e‑form along with each supporting document. Follow these best practices:
CompanyName_MOA.pdf, CompanyName_NOF_Certificate.pdf). Descriptive file names prevent delays in RBI’s internal document‑matching process.Once all fields are completed and documents uploaded, the portal generates a Company Application Reference Number (CARN). The CARN is the unique tracking identifier for your application throughout the RBI review cycle. Immediately after CARN generation:
Common portal error: Session timeout during payment is a frequently reported issue. If the payment page times out, do not re‑initiate payment immediately. Wait for the portal to update (typically 24 hours) and check whether the payment was debited. If a double debit occurs, raise a ticket through the COSMOS helpdesk citing your CARN.
The COSMOS e‑filing is only half the process. RBI requires the full application set to be submitted in physical (hard‑copy) form to the regional office of the Department of Non‑Banking Supervision (DNBS) that has jurisdiction over the company’s registered office. The physical set should include:
Send the package via registered post with acknowledgement due (RPAD) or deliver it in person. Retain a copy of the full physical set for your records, RBI may request duplicate copies during scrutiny.
The table below consolidates every document RBI expects in the application package. Treat this as your master checklist.
| Category | Document | Format / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate | Certificate of Incorporation (COI) | Certified true copy |
| Corporate | Memorandum of Association (MOA) | Certified true copy; must include financial activity objects |
| Corporate | Articles of Association (AOA) | Certified true copy |
| Corporate | Board resolution authorising NBFC application | Certified extract; signed by Company Secretary or director |
| Financial | Audited financial statements (latest year) | If the company is newly incorporated, provide the audited opening balance sheet |
| Financial | Auditor’s NOF certificate | Dated not more than one month before application date; must confirm ₹10 crore unencumbered |
| Financial | Banker’s certificate / confirmation of balances | From the company’s principal banker |
| Financial | Fixed Deposit Receipts (if applicable) | Certified copies; must be unencumbered |
| Business plan | Five‑year business plan with financial projections | Detailed P&L, balance sheet, capital adequacy and risk framework |
| KYC / Promoters | PAN cards of all directors and promoters (≥ 10% equity) | Self‑attested copies |
| KYC / Promoters | Address proof of all directors and promoters | Aadhaar, passport or utility bill (not older than 3 months) |
| KYC / Promoters | Personal net‑worth statements of promoters | Certified by a CA |
| KYC / Promoters | Detailed CVs of all directors and key management personnel | Include qualifications, prior NBFC/financial sector experience |
| KYC / Promoters | Credit reports of promoters (CIBIL or equivalent) | Current reports; no defaults or adverse remarks |
| Compliance | Certificate of no pending criminal proceedings against directors | Self‑declaration by each director, notarised |
| Compliance | Statutory auditor’s certificate on compliance with Section 45‑IA | Separate from the NOF certificate |
| COSMOS | Printed COSMOS application form (all pages signed) | Generated after e‑filing; include CARN printout and payment receipt |
Sample business plan table of contents: Executive summary → Company overview and shareholding → Proposed NBFC activities → Market analysis → Revenue model → Five‑year projections (P&L, balance sheet) → Capital adequacy and NOF maintenance plan → Risk management framework → Technology infrastructure → Compliance and governance framework → Management team profiles.
Transparency on the NBFC license cost is one of the most requested data points. The table below breaks down the expected expenditure into its constituent components.
| Cost component | Approximate range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| MCA company incorporation (Registrar fees, DSC, DIN) | ₹10,000 – ₹25,000 | Varies by authorised capital; payable at incorporation stage |
| RBI application fee (via COSMOS) | ₹5,000 – ₹50,000 | Prescribed by RBI; confirm current amount on COSMOS at time of filing |
| Chartered accountant fees (NOF certificate, audited accounts) | ₹50,000 – ₹2,00,000 | Depends on complexity and firm |
| Legal / NBFC registration consultant fees | ₹2,00,000 – ₹10,00,000 | End‑to‑end advisory including drafting business plan, COSMOS filing and RBI liaison |
| Miscellaneous (notarisation, courier, stamp paper) | ₹10,000 – ₹30,000 | Incidental costs |
| NOF deposit (capital, not a fee) | ₹10,00,00,000 (₹10 crore minimum) | Not an expenditure, remains the company’s equity; must be maintained continuously |
Total estimated professional costs (excluding NOF capital): ₹3 lakh to ₹15 lakh, depending on whether the promoter handles certain steps in‑house or engages a full‑service NBFC registration consultant.
| Stage | Typical duration |
|---|---|
| Company incorporation (MCA) | 7 – 15 business days |
| NOF arrangement and auditor’s certificate | 1 – 4 weeks (depends on fund availability) |
| Business plan preparation | 2 – 4 weeks |
| COSMOS e‑filing and physical submission | 1 – 3 days |
| RBI scrutiny, queries and approval | 90 – 180 days |
| End‑to‑end (incorporation to CoR) | 4 – 9 months |
The 90‑to‑180‑day RBI window is the biggest variable. Delays typically arise from: (a) incomplete documentation requiring supplementary submissions, (b) adverse findings during the promoter background check, (c) RBI’s internal workload and regional office capacity, and (d) multiple rounds of clarificatory queries. Engaging experienced legal counsel at the outset materially reduces the risk of avoidable delays.
Once the physical application reaches the regional DNBS office, RBI’s review process broadly follows these stages:
Once the CoR is in hand, the registered NBFC must comply with an ongoing regulatory framework that includes:
Industry observers note that the 2026 revisions to RBI’s NBFC regulatory framework have reinforced supervisory expectations around governance quality and digital‑lending practices. Early‑stage compliance planning, ideally built into the business plan submitted with the application, significantly eases the post‑registration transition.
Not every NBFC is alike. The table below highlights three common categories and the key differences that affect registration and ongoing compliance. Founders should select the correct classification before filing their COSMOS application, as the choice impacts NOF requirements, permissible activities and supervisory intensity.
| Entity type | Minimum NOF (typical) | Key regulatory difference / reporting obligations |
|---|---|---|
| NBFC (general, e.g., NBFC‑ICC) | ₹10 crore | Certificate of Registration under Section 45‑IA; periodic returns to RBI; prudential norms per scale‑based classification (Base Layer, Middle Layer, Upper Layer). |
| NBFC‑MFI (Micro Finance Institution) | ₹10 crore (with additional operational requirements) | Specific MFI norms governing lending to low‑income borrowers; qualifying asset criteria; interest rate caps; enhanced fit‑and‑proper scrutiny and social‑performance reporting under MFI circulars. |
| NBFC‑IFC (Infrastructure Finance Company) | ₹300 crore | Specialised infrastructure‑lending classification; minimum 75 per cent of total assets must be deployed in infrastructure loans; distinct capital adequacy and reporting requirements. |
For a broader perspective on structuring regulated financial vehicles, see the related guide on how to start your own investment fund.
Registering an NBFC in India is a structured, multi‑stage process anchored in Section 45‑IA of the RBI Act, 1934. For any founder, CFO or in‑house counsel evaluating how to register an NBFC in India, the practical checklist is:
Given the capital commitment, regulatory rigour and the practical complexity of COSMOS filing, working with an experienced Banking & Finance adviser is strongly recommended. To discuss your NBFC formation plans, find a Banking & Finance lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Debashree Dutta at Vritti Law Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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