Our Expert in India
No results available
Last updated: May 9, 2026
India’s private equity landscape is undergoing its most significant regulatory overhaul in a decade, driven by three concurrent legislative changes that directly affect how foreign capital enters, operates within and exits Indian portfolio companies. Private equity lawyers India‑wide are advising GPs, LPs and general counsel on the March 2026 amendments to Press Note 3 (PN3), which relax the Limited Business Concern (LBC) investment framework, alongside the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026, which rewrites buy‑back mechanics, and the Finance Bill 2026, which introduces new transfer‑pricing thresholds under Section 92CA. Together, these reforms create fresh structuring opportunities but also impose documentation, reporting and compliance obligations that demand immediate attention from every participant in the Indian PE ecosystem.
The convergence of the PN3 LBC easing, the INR 25 crore minimum investment threshold, revised FDI routing options, overhauled buy‑back rules, updated transfer‑pricing provisions and expanded AIF reporting requirements means that virtually every term sheet, subscription agreement and exit plan drafted in 2026 must be re‑examined. Below is an at‑a‑glance snapshot of the six changes that matter most.
Understanding the three regulatory pillars in context is essential before diving into compliance mechanics. Each reform addresses a different pain point that has historically constrained foreign PE investment in India.
Press Note 3 was originally introduced in April 2020 to impose government‑approval requirements on FDI from countries sharing a land border with India. The policy was designed as a national‑security screening mechanism, but its broad drafting caught a significant number of legitimate PE fund structures, particularly those with passive limited partners domiciled in, or having beneficial ownership links to, land‑border countries. The March 2026 amendments, issued by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), respond to sustained industry advocacy by carving out entities that qualify as LBCs, effectively allowing them to bypass the prior‑approval requirement and invest via the automatic FDI route.
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026, introduced in Parliament by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), amends several provisions of the Companies Act, 2013 relating to share buy‑backs. The amendments raise the permissible aggregate buy‑back limit, introduce a solvency‑and‑liquidity test in place of the previous rigid percentage cap, and allow board‑level authorisation for a broader range of buy‑back transactions. For PE‑backed companies, industry observers expect the practical effect to be a more flexible, faster exit mechanic that can be executed without convening an extraordinary general meeting in many cases.
The Finance Bill 2026 amends Section 92CA of the Income Tax Act, 1961, lowering the monetary threshold at which the Assessing Officer must refer an international transaction or specified domestic transaction to the Transfer Pricing Officer (TPO). The Bill also expands the definition of “specified domestic transactions” to capture certain fund‑management fees, carried‑interest allocations and co‑investment arrangements between related parties. Early indications suggest this will increase the number of PE‑related transactions subject to mandatory TP scrutiny.
The March 2026 PN3 amendments are the single most consequential change for private equity lawyers India practitioners have seen since the original Press Note was issued. The core reform introduces the concept of a “Limited Business Concern” (LBC), a defined category of entity that, notwithstanding beneficial ownership links to land‑border countries, may invest through the automatic FDI route provided it satisfies certain ownership, management and control tests.
An entity seeking LBC status must satisfy all of the following conditions and maintain documentary evidence available for verification by the DPIIT or RBI at any time:
The LBC carve‑out fundamentally changes the calculus for fund sponsors with multi‑jurisdiction LP bases. Before March 2026, any PE fund with even a single LP holding citizenship of, or incorporated in, a land‑border country faced the prospect of routing its entire Indian investment through the government‑approval route, a process that could take six months or longer and carried material deal‑certainty risk.
Under the revised framework, a fund that qualifies as an LBC can deploy capital on the automatic route with an indicative timeline of two to four weeks for document verification and RBI reporting. This creates a structuring incentive: GPs are now designing parallel fund vehicles, one qualifying as an LBC (for automatic‑route deployment) and one housing LPs that prevent LBC qualification (which must still seek government approval). Term‑sheet language is evolving accordingly, with subscription agreements now routinely including LBC representation and warranty clauses, ongoing‑compliance covenants and remedies (including forced transfer or redemption) if an LP’s status changes.
A sample LBC representation clause might read: “Each Limited Partner represents and warrants that, as of the date hereof and as of each Capital Call Date, neither it nor any of its Beneficial Owners is a person or entity that would cause the Fund to fail to qualify as a Limited Business Concern under Press Note 3 (2020), as amended.” (Sample language, for guidance only.)
The PN3 amendments introduce a minimum per‑investor commitment of INR 25 crore for investments routed through the automatic FDI path under the LBC framework. This threshold applies at the individual‑investor level, not on an aggregate‑fund basis, which has significant implications for fund economics and LP onboarding.
How the threshold is measured. Each foreign investor (whether an LP in an AIF or a direct co‑investor) must commit at least INR 25 crore to qualify for the streamlined LBC route. Commitments below this amount may still be made, but they will not benefit from the automatic‑route treatment and must be processed through the government‑approval channel.
Worked example. Consider a Cayman‑domiciled feeder fund with three LPs. LP‑A commits INR 30 crore, LP‑B commits INR 25 crore and LP‑C commits INR 20 crore. Under the threshold rule, LP‑A and LP‑B qualify for the automatic route (assuming all other LBC conditions are met). LP‑C’s commitment must either be increased to INR 25 crore, routed through the government‑approval channel, or restructured, for example, by combining LP‑C’s commitment with a follow‑on tranche that brings the aggregate to INR 25 crore before the first capital call.
Term‑sheet adjustments. Fund sponsors are responding by raising minimum cheque sizes in their PPMs, inserting commitment‑floor covenants and building in GP discretion to reject or restructure sub‑threshold commitments. Side‑letter provisions are also being updated to address threshold‑compliance obligations. Practically, this means that emerging managers targeting smaller LP tickets will need to evaluate whether a parallel FPI structure is more cost‑effective than requiring every LP to meet the INR 25 crore floor.
The likely practical effect is a concentration of the LP base among larger institutional investors, with smaller family offices and high‑net‑worth investors migrating to FPI or co‑investment structures that fall outside the PN3 LBC framework entirely.
Private equity lawyers India‑focused must now advise foreign LPs on a more granular route‑selection decision than at any point in the past. The three principal pathways each carry distinct regulatory timelines, compliance burdens and tax consequences.
| Route | Timeline / Approval | Key Compliance Obligations |
|---|---|---|
| Automatic FDI via LBC | 2–4 weeks (document verification) | LBC evidence package, RBI/FEMA single‑master‑form reporting, AIF filings with SEBI |
| FPI / Portfolio route | 4–6 weeks (SEBI registration or amendment) | SEBI FPI registration, investment limits per issuer, quarterly reporting, tax withholding at source |
| Offshore SPV / Cayman LP investment | 3–6 weeks (jurisdictional setup + India entry) | Treaty reliance (DTAA analysis), FATCA/CRS reporting, TP documentation, substance requirements |
Regardless of route, every foreign LP entering an India‑focused PE fund should expect to provide the following at onboarding:
The choice between routes is not merely procedural. Fund‑level versus SPV‑level structuring has downstream implications for withholding tax on dividends, capital‑gains taxation on exit, applicability of the General Anti‑Avoidance Rule (GAAR) and TP exposure. A structured route‑selection analysis, conducted before the first capital call, is now a baseline expectation among institutional LPs.
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 introduces the most significant reforms to India’s share buy‑back regime since the Companies Act, 2013 came into force. For PE sponsors planning exits, these amendments open a genuinely viable alternative to secondary sales and IPOs.
| Exit Route | Indicative Timeline | Pros / Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Buy‑back (board route) | 4–8 weeks (post board approval) | Fast execution, no new investor onboarding; subject to solvency test and tax withholding |
| Secondary sale | 8–16 weeks (buyer identification, DD, SPA) | Market‑rate pricing, broader buyer universe; longer timeline, TP scrutiny on related‑party sales |
| IPO | 6–12 months (SEBI filing to listing) | Highest valuation potential, full exit; longest timeline, lock‑in periods, market risk |
PE sponsors should note that buy‑backs remain subject to income‑tax withholding at the company level under the current regime. Advance planning, including structuring the buy‑back price to reflect fair market value supported by an independent valuation, is critical to minimise the risk of a reassessment by the income‑tax authorities. Additionally, the buy‑back consent clause in the original shareholders’ agreement must be reviewed and, where necessary, amended to align with the new statutory framework.
The Finance Bill 2026 amendments to Section 92CA of the Income Tax Act carry direct consequences for the way PE deals are priced, documented and defended on audit.
Under the revised framework, the monetary threshold at which the Assessing Officer must refer an international transaction or specified domestic transaction to the TPO has been lowered. The expanded scope of “specified domestic transactions” now explicitly captures management fees paid by an AIF to its investment manager, carried‑interest allocations and performance fees flowing between related entities within a fund structure. Industry observers expect this to increase TPO referrals for PE fund structures substantially.
Worked example. A GP entity charges a 2 per cent management fee to an India‑domiciled AIF. Under the prior threshold, this fee might not have triggered a mandatory TPO referral. Under the Finance Bill 2026 amendments, the lower threshold means the transaction is now automatically referred. If the TPO determines that comparable funds charge 1.5 per cent, the difference is treated as an arm’s‑length adjustment, potentially resulting in a significant additional tax liability for the investment manager. Advance preparation of a robust benchmarking study is the most effective defence.
The PN3 LBC changes, combined with SEBI’s ongoing AIF regulatory tightening, mean that fund administrators and compliance officers must update their operational processes. SEBI‑registered AIFs, across Categories I, II and III, face expanded reporting obligations covering investor composition, LBC status and FDI‑route compliance.
The following checklist should be treated as a minimum standard for AIF reporting compliance in the post‑PN3 environment:
The following sample clauses are provided for guidance only and should be adapted to the specific circumstances of each transaction with the advice of qualified PE counsel.
The 2026 regulatory changes demand immediate action from GPs, LPs, fund administrators and general counsel. Three priority steps should be initiated without delay: first, conduct a comprehensive LBC qualification diagnosis across every foreign investor in the fund’s LP base; second, revise subscription documents, PPMs and side letters to incorporate LBC representations, INR 25 crore minimum‑commitment provisions and updated buy‑back consent language; and third, update AIF administration processes, including SEBI filings, RBI reporting and TP documentation protocols, to ensure ongoing compliance. Private equity lawyers India practitioners engage with can provide the deal‑level guidance needed to navigate these reforms with confidence.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Pankaj Singla at Mulberry Law LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 23 minutes ago
posted 46 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message