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The latest round of FDI amendments India has seen in years landed in March 2026, when the Union Cabinet approved Press Note 2 and Press Note 3, two instruments that recalibrate the boundary between the automatic route and the government-approval route for inbound investments linked to countries sharing a land border with India. For corporate counsel, PE/VC funds and M&A advisers, the immediate question is whether a live or planned transaction now requires prior DPIIT approval, and if so, what the compliance timeline looks like. This article provides a deal-ready checklist covering beneficial-ownership evidencing, multi-authority clearance sequencing and structuring options designed for practitioners who need to act now.
TL;DR, three immediate actions for deal teams:
The single question every deal team must answer first is: does any entity in the investor’s ownership chain have a beneficial owner who is a citizen of, or is incorporated in, a country sharing a land border with India? If yes, the investment falls on the government-approval route and requires prior clearance from DPIIT, regardless of whether the sector otherwise permits 100% automatic-route FDI. If the answer is no, the standard FDI policy India sectoral caps and route classifications apply as before. The rule of thumb: when in doubt, trace ultimate beneficial ownership upward to the natural-person level and document the analysis before signing.
Press Note 2 2026 amends the Consolidated FDI Policy to introduce a safe-harbour framework for minority, passive investments from entities with an indirect land-border-country nexus. The Cabinet approved these amendments on 10 March 2026, as confirmed in the official PIB press release. The DPIIT subsequently published the formal amended policy text as a PDF notice.
The core change: where a foreign company’s aggregate beneficial ownership attributable to land-border-country nationals or entities does not exceed 10%, and the investment itself is passive (no board seat, no veto right, no operational control), the transaction may proceed on the automatic route subject to post-investment intimation. This carve-out addresses a long-standing pain point for global PE and VC funds whose limited-partner bases include small passive allocations from sovereign wealth funds or institutional investors domiciled in land-border countries. Press Note 2 also clarifies that the 10% threshold is calculated on a look-through basis across the entire chain, not merely at the immediate-investor level.
Additionally, Press Note 2 tightens the definition of “control” by cross-referencing the Companies Act, 2013 and SEBI (Substantial Acquisition of Shares and Takeovers) Regulations, ensuring consistency across corporate and securities-law frameworks. Practitioners should note that the definition explicitly captures negative-control rights, such as veto powers over budgets, key appointments or asset disposals, as triggers for the approval route.
Press Note 3 2026 complements Press Note 2 by overhauling the beneficial-ownership test and streamlining the government-approval procedure. The revised definition of “beneficial owner” is now aligned with the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA) framework, requiring identification of every natural person who, directly or indirectly, holds more than 10% of the shares or voting rights, or exercises significant influence over the entity, at every tier of the holding structure.
On procedure, Press Note 3 formalises a 60-day target for DPIIT to process and dispose of approval applications, counted from the date a complete application is filed. While this is an administrative target rather than a statutory deadline, industry observers expect it to function as a practical benchmark against which deal conditionality and long-stop dates should be calibrated. The Press Note also introduces a standardised application form and mandates that applicants submit a corporate-structure chart certified by a practising company secretary or chartered accountant, together with beneficial-ownership declarations at every ownership tier.
The FDI policy India framework identifies countries sharing a land border with India as: China (including Hong Kong and Macau), Pakistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Afghanistan, Nepal and Bhutan. Any investment where the investor, or any entity in the investor’s chain of ownership, is incorporated in one of these jurisdictions, or where a beneficial owner is a citizen of one, triggers the enhanced scrutiny pathway. This list has remained unchanged since the original April 2020 Press Note 3, and the 2026 amendments do not modify it.
The amendments cast a wide net. The approval requirement applies to direct investors (a Chinese company acquiring shares in an Indian target), indirect investors (a Cayman fund whose GP or majority LP is a Chinese entity) and, subject to the safe-harbour threshold, portfolio investors whose beneficial-ownership chain includes a land-border-country nexus. The only entities fully excluded are investments routed through multilateral development banks and sovereign entities specifically exempted by a separate government notification.
| Investor Type | When Caught by Approval Route | Practical Example |
|---|---|---|
| Direct investor from land-border country | Always, no safe harbour applies | A Shenzhen-incorporated company acquiring 25% of an Indian SaaS firm |
| Indirect investor (chain includes land-border-country entity above 10% BO) | When aggregate BO attributable to land-border-country nationals/entities exceeds 10% | A Singapore holding company whose sole shareholder is a Hong Kong parent |
| Portfolio investor (FPI) with minority BO nexus | When aggregate BO exceeds 10% or investor exercises control rights | A global pension fund with a 12% LP allocation from a Dhaka-based sovereign fund |
| Multilateral development bank / exempted sovereign entity | Not caught, specific government exemption | Asian Development Bank investment in Indian infrastructure SPV |
The 2026 amendments confirm that investments by Indian citizens or entities that are Indian-owned-and-controlled, even if they have received prior FDI from a land-border country, are not subject to the approval route for subsequent downstream investments, provided the original FDI was duly approved. Additionally, the safe harbour under Press Note 2 effectively carves out passive allocations below the 10% threshold, as reported by The Hindu in its coverage of the Finance Ministry’s FEMA notifications.
Under the revised beneficial ownership FDI test, a “beneficial owner” is any natural person who, alone or together with persons acting in concert, holds more than 10% of the shares, voting rights or capital of the investing entity, or who exercises significant influence over its management or policies by any means, including through shareholders’ agreements, voting arrangements, board-nomination rights or financial instruments. This PMLA-aligned definition requires a full look-through to the natural-person level, not merely to the first corporate shareholder. The DPIIT FDI guidance text specifies that the analysis must be performed at each tier of ownership.
Consider a typical PE structure: Fund LP (Cayman) → GP Entity (Delaware) → Holding Company (Singapore) → Indian Target. If a limited partner contributing 15% of the fund’s capital is a Chinese state-owned enterprise, the aggregate beneficial ownership attributable to a land-border country exceeds 10%, and the entire investment requires DPIIT approval, even though the immediate investor is a Singapore entity. Conversely, if that LP’s contribution is 8% and it holds no board seat, veto or nomination right at any level, the safe harbour may apply and the automatic route FDI classification would be available.
Deal teams must pay particular attention to side-letter arrangements, advisory-committee seats and co-investment rights that may, individually, fall short of “control” but that the DPIIT could aggregate to determine significant influence. Industry observers expect the regulator to take a substance-over-form approach, examining whether the land-border-country investor has any practical ability to direct the Indian target’s strategy.
Robust beneficial-ownership evidencing is now the single most important pre-signing workstream for any inbound deal that may have a land-border-country nexus. The following documents should be assembled during preliminary due diligence, before heads of terms are executed:
Where the investor is a widely held listed entity, evidencing beneficial ownership to the natural-person level may be impractical. In such cases, practitioners should rely on stock-exchange filings, substantial-shareholding disclosures and a legal opinion confirming that no single land-border-country beneficial owner crosses the 10% threshold. This approach is consistent with DPIIT FDI guidance and with the analogous PMLA framework, although deal teams should confirm acceptability with the DPIIT on a case-by-case basis.
The safe harbour introduced by Press Note 2 2026 permits investments to proceed on the automatic route FDI pathway where aggregate beneficial ownership attributable to land-border-country nationals or entities is 10% or below and the land-border-country investor holds no control rights. Both conditions must be satisfied simultaneously. The 10% figure is calculated on a look-through basis at each ownership tier, meaning that a 20% stake in a 60%-owned intermediate entity produces a 12% effective interest, above the safe harbour.
Certain sectors remain subject to additional constraints regardless of the safe harbour. Defence, space, atomic energy, broadcasting and print media continue to require government approval for any FDI, irrespective of the investor’s nationality. For sectors such as banking and financial services, telecom and insurance, the FDI policy India framework imposes sectoral caps (e.g., 74% in telecom, 74% in insurance via the automatic route) and requires parallel clearances from sectoral regulators, TRAI, IRDAI or the RBI, in addition to any DPIIT approval triggered by the land-border-country nexus. As noted on the Make in India portal, sector-specific entry routes and caps are detailed in the FDI policy’s sectoral annexures.
| Scenario | Route | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| Investor from non-land-border country, sector on automatic route | Automatic | Standard RBI/FEMA post-investment filings only |
| Investor chain with ≤10% land-border-country BO, no control rights | Automatic (safe harbour) | Post-investment intimation to DPIIT; BO declarations filed |
| Investor chain with >10% land-border-country BO or any control rights | Government approval | Prior DPIIT approval required; 60-day processing target |
| Any investor, defence/space/atomic energy sector | Government approval | DPIIT approval plus sectoral-regulator clearance (MoD, DAE, etc.) |
Before filing a DPIIT application, deal teams should complete the following preparatory steps to avoid reject-and-refile cycles that reset the 60-day clock:
The DPIIT has committed to a 60-day processing target from the date of a complete application, as formalised in Press Note 3 2026. In practice, the clock starts only when DPIIT confirms completeness, not when the application is first submitted. Incomplete applications are returned with a deficiency notice, and the time spent remedying deficiencies does not count towards the 60 days. Deal teams should therefore allow a buffer of 15–20 days for deficiency-notice cycles and plan for a total elapsed time of 75–90 days from first submission to clearance.
Regardless of whether the investment proceeds on the automatic route or the approval route, RBI/FEMA compliance requires post-investment reporting. The key filings, as specified in the RBI’s Foreign Exchange Management (Non-debt Instruments) Rules, include: Form FC-GPR (within 30 days of allotment of shares), Form FC-TRS (for share transfers between a resident and non-resident, within 60 days) and the Annual Return on Foreign Liabilities and Assets (FLA return, by 15 July each year).
Where the Finance Ministry has issued specific FEMA notifications, such as the May 2026 notification easing procedures for firms with up to 10% Chinese stakes, as reported by The Hindu, deal teams must cross-reference the current notification text with the RBI master direction to ensure filings reflect the latest procedural requirements.
| Timeline (Business Days from Signing) | Action | Responsible Authority |
|---|---|---|
| Day 0 | Execute SPA/SHA with DPIIT-approval conditionality | Parties / legal counsel |
| Day 1–5 | Submit complete DPIIT application with all annexures | Applicant → DPIIT |
| Day 5–15 | DPIIT completeness review; deficiency notice (if any) | DPIIT |
| Day 15–75 | DPIIT processing (60-day target from completeness confirmation) | DPIIT, with referral to MHA/sectoral regulator if needed |
| Day 75–80 | DPIIT approval issued; closing conditions satisfied | DPIIT → Parties |
| Day 80–85 | Closing: share allotment/transfer; payment of consideration | Parties |
| Within 30 days of allotment | File Form FC-GPR with AD Bank / RBI | Indian company |
| By 15 July (annually) | File FLA return | Indian company → RBI |
This deal-ready checklist consolidates every critical action into three phases. Use it as a working document from preliminary due diligence through to post-closing regulatory housekeeping.
Where the approval route is triggered, deal teams have several structuring options to manage timeline risk and commercial uncertainty. Each carries trade-offs that should be evaluated on a deal-specific basis:
Three sectors warrant particular attention under the 2026 FDI amendments India framework because they combine high foreign-investor interest with multi-regulator approval chains:
For organisations setting up vehicles in India, including LLPs or subsidiaries, the choice of entity type affects both FDI-route eligibility and labour-code compliance obligations for the Indian operations.
The 2026 FDI amendments India introduced through Press Note 2 and Press Note 3 represent the most significant recalibration of the land-border-country investment framework since 2020. For deal teams, the operational imperative is clear: screen every investor chain against the updated beneficial-ownership test, build realistic DPIIT approval timelines into transaction mechanics and collect documentation early. Practitioners who treat compliance as a closing-stage afterthought risk deal delays, regulatory push-back and, in worst cases, unwinding of completed transactions. A proactive, structured approach to beneficial-ownership evidencing and multi-authority clearance sequencing is now essential for every inbound investment into India with any potential land-border-country nexus.
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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