The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, introduced in Parliament on 23 March 2026, represents the most consequential overhaul of India’s company and LLP governance framework in over a decade, and joint ventures lawyers India-wide are already advising clients on its far-reaching implications. The Bill tightens directors’ duties, expands related-party disclosure obligations, recalibrates LLP governance standards and intersects with contemporaneous updates to the DPIIT’s consolidated FDI policy. For general counsel, PE deal teams and foreign investors structuring or operating joint ventures in India, the compliance window is narrow and the stakes are high.
This guide delivers an actionable, practitioner-led playbook covering every dimension of the 2026 changes, from regulatory triage and entity-choice analysis to model clauses that can be inserted into JV agreements immediately.
Before engaging with the detailed analysis below, deal teams and in-house counsel should prioritise the following action items to maintain compliance and protect transactional positions under the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026:
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 amends provisions of both the Companies Act, 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008 in a single legislative instrument. Introduced in the Lok Sabha on 23 March 2026, the Bill was referred to the Standing Committee on Finance for review. Industry observers expect the Bill to receive parliamentary approval in the monsoon session, with most provisions taking effect from the date of presidential assent and transitional windows running from notification.
The Bill’s stated objectives include strengthening corporate governance, enhancing transparency in related-party dealings, modernising LLP governance standards to align with global best practices, and reducing the compliance burden for small companies while increasing accountability for larger entities. For JV structures specifically, the Bill introduces changes that touch virtually every phase of the transaction lifecycle, from structuring and negotiation through to ongoing governance and eventual exit.
The Bill empowers the Ministry of Corporate Affairs to prescribe transitional timelines by notification. Based on the Bill text and precedent from earlier amendments, early indications suggest existing JV entities will have 180 days from the date of notification to bring governance documentation, board processes and disclosure registers into compliance. New entities incorporated or registered after the effective date will be expected to comply from inception. Deal teams should note that JV agreements signed before the effective date but completing after it may fall within the transitional window, making compliance covenants essential in every live transaction.
While the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 does not directly amend the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999, its governance and disclosure provisions intersect with the DPIIT’s consolidated FDI policy and RBI’s foreign investment regulations in ways that demand careful attention from JV structuring teams. Concurrently, the DPIIT has been recalibrating FDI limits India-wide through periodic press notes, and the RBI continues to update its Foreign Investment (FI) reporting framework.
The key compliance considerations for foreign JV partners are as follows:
| Compliance Area | What Has Changed / Requires Attention | Immediate Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| FDI sectoral caps and route classification | DPIIT consolidated FDI policy continues to classify sectors by automatic route, government route, or prohibited. Recent press notes have adjusted conditions in defence, insurance and digital media. | Verify that every JV’s sector classification is current; re-file with DPIIT if any sector reclassification affects the existing approval basis. |
| Downstream investment and indirect foreign ownership | The Bill’s widened “related party” and “common control” definitions may capture additional entities as having indirect foreign ownership, triggering downstream investment compliance under FEMA regulations. | Map the entire JV ownership chain and re-assess whether downstream investment norms apply to subsidiaries or affiliates. |
| RBI reporting (Form FC-GPR, FC-TRS, LLP-I/II) | RBI’s Single Master Form framework on the FIRMS portal remains the primary filing mechanism. The Bill’s real-time event-based reporting requirements may create parallel filing obligations with the MCA. | Align MCA and RBI reporting calendars; ensure the compliance team is resourced for dual-track filings. |
| Government-route approvals and conditions | JVs in sectors requiring government-route approval must satisfy enhanced governance and disclosure conditions as a precondition for approval renewal. | Review all existing government-route approval letters for governance conditions that are affected by the Bill’s new requirements. |
The FDI clearance pathway for a new joint venture in India follows a structured sequence that joint ventures lawyers India-based and international counsel should coordinate closely:
India does not have a standalone joint venture statute. JVs are typically structured as either a private limited company under the Companies Act, 2013, or as a limited liability partnership under the LLP Act, 2008. Alternatively, parties may enter into a purely contractual JV arrangement without creating a separate entity. The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 and contemporaneous LLP governance reforms significantly alter the relative advantages and disadvantages of each structure. The comparison table below provides a side-by-side analysis for deal teams assessing JV structuring India options.
| Obligation / Feature | Private Company (Pvt Ltd) | LLP |
|---|---|---|
| Governing statute | Companies Act, 2013 (as amended by the Bill) | LLP Act, 2008 (as amended by the Bill) |
| Financial reporting and audit | Mandatory statutory audit for all companies; annual filings with ROC (Form AOC-4, MGT-7); real-time event-based reporting under the Bill | Audit required if turnover exceeds ₹40 lakh or contribution exceeds ₹25 lakh; the Bill introduces mandatory annual compliance certificates for all LLPs regardless of size |
| Directors’ / partners’ duties and liability | Codified duties of care, loyalty and disclosure under Sections 166–170; nominee directors now carry personal liability for non-disclosure; independent directors required if turnover/capital thresholds met | Partners’ duties governed by LLP agreement and the LLP Act; the Bill introduces a statutory duty-of-care standard for designated partners and mandatory conflict-of-interest registers |
| Related-party disclosures | Strict framework under Sections 188–189; board and shareholder approvals required; compressed timelines under the Bill | Related-party concept less codified under the LLP Act; the Bill introduces a basic disclosure requirement but partner agreements remain the primary governance mechanism |
| FDI eligibility | Eligible for FDI across all permitted sectors; well-established RBI reporting framework | FDI permitted in LLPs operating in sectors eligible for 100% FDI under the automatic route; government-route sectors require specific approval; more limited investor familiarity |
| Tax treatment | Corporate tax rate of 22%–25% (plus surcharge and cess); dividend distribution subject to shareholder taxation | Taxed as partnership at approximately 30% (plus surcharge and cess); no dividend distribution tax, but profit extraction mechanics differ |
| Recommended JV model | Best for 50:50 JVs with PE/VC co-investors, control JVs requiring board governance, and any JV with an anticipated IPO exit | Best for professional-services JVs, bilateral operating JVs in automatic-route sectors, and structures prioritising operational flexibility over governance formality |
An LLP offers operational flexibility, a lighter regulatory footprint and favourable profit-extraction mechanics. The LLP governance 2026 reforms narrow the governance gap with companies, but LLPs remain attractive for bilateral JVs in professional services, technology development and consulting. The principal risk is limited FDI eligibility, only sectors permitting 100% automatic-route FDI are open to LLP investment, and investor-side counsel unfamiliar with LLP structures may resist the format. Deal teams should also note that the Bill’s new compliance-certificate requirement adds a recurring cost and governance obligation that was previously absent.
A private limited company remains the default and most widely accepted JV vehicle in India. It offers universal FDI eligibility across permitted sectors, a well-established governance framework familiar to international investors and PE funds, and a clear path to IPO exits. The trade-off is a heavier compliance burden, now increased further by the Bill’s expanded directors’ duties, real-time reporting and related-party approval requirements. For JVs involving more than two parties, control mechanisms (reserved matters, board composition, veto rights) are more naturally accommodated within a company structure.
The provisions relating to directors’ duties India practitioners should focus on are among the most significant changes in the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026. The amendments affect every JV with a company vehicle and, indirectly, every LLP with designated partners who hold analogous fiduciary positions.
The core changes to directors’ duties under the Bill include:
On related-party disclosures, the Bill widens the definition to capture transactions between the JV entity and any person connected to a director or partner through indirect holdings, family relationships or common-control structures. The practical effect is that arm’s-length transactions between a JV company and a subsidiary of one JV partner may now require prior board approval and disclosure in the financial statements, even where they were previously exempt under the materiality threshold.
The expanded duties have direct consequences for JV exit mechanics. Nominee directors participating in board decisions about tag-along, drag-along or put/call exercises must now demonstrate that they acted in the interests of the company, not merely in the interests of their appointing shareholder. This creates a tension that JV agreements must explicitly address through indemnification provisions, director insurance and clear delineation of reserved-matter voting protocols. Deal teams should anticipate increased scrutiny of exit-related board resolutions during any future dispute or regulatory examination.
The 2026 regulatory changes demand a fundamental refresh of the JV due diligence checklist used by deal teams. The following framework addresses both regulatory and contractual dimensions of due diligence for joint ventures in India.
Every JV agreement, shareholders’ agreement and share-purchase agreement should be reviewed for the following clause categories:
Private equity investors, venture capital funds and strategic acquirers participating in JV structures must recalibrate their approach to deal structuring, valuation and exit planning in light of the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026. The M&A and PE JV impact is most acutely felt in three areas.
First, the expanded related-party disclosure requirements may affect valuations. Buyers conducting acquisition-stage due diligence will flag any non-compliant related-party transactions as potential liabilities, and industry observers expect a corresponding increase in warranty-and-indemnity (W&I) insurance premiums for JV targets with complex inter-party transaction histories.
Second, exit mechanisms, particularly tag-along, drag-along, put and call options, must be reconciled with the new directors’ duties framework. A nominee director who votes to approve a drag-along sale must now demonstrably act in the company’s interest, not merely follow shareholder instructions. This may require restructuring exit-related decision-making to route through independent-director committees or introduce formal fairness-opinion processes.
Third, PE investors should ensure that their fund-level agreements and investment documentation include adequate protection against regulatory-change risk. A well-drafted regulatory-change covenant, referencing the Bill specifically, allows the investor to require compliance at the target level without bearing the cost, and provides a clear contractual trigger for indemnification or exit if the JV entity fails to comply.
For a typical PE co-investment into a 50:50 JV, the recommended approach is to include a schedule to the shareholders’ agreement listing all Bill-related compliance obligations, a certification mechanism requiring annual confirmation from each JV party, and a specific indemnity from the operating partner covering penalties arising from governance non-compliance. For control JVs where the majority partner manages day-to-day operations, the minority investor should negotiate enhanced information rights covering all related-party transaction approvals and director-disclosure filings.
The following model clauses provide a practical starting point for GCs and deal lawyers updating JV agreements to reflect the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026. Each clause should be adapted to the specific transaction and reviewed by specialist joint ventures lawyers India-qualified in corporate and regulatory law.
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 creates a new compliance and governance landscape for every joint venture operating in India. Whether structuring a new inbound JV, renegotiating an existing shareholders’ agreement, or planning a PE-backed exit, the intersection of Companies Act reforms, LLP governance changes, DPIIT policy recalibrations and RBI reporting requirements demands coordinated, specialist advice from experienced joint ventures lawyers India can rely on. Acting early, auditing existing agreements, updating model clauses and embedding compliance covenants before the Bill takes effect, is the most effective risk-mitigation strategy available to GCs and deal teams today.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nidhi Arora at EVA Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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