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An interim injunction is a court order that preserves the status quo between disputing parties while a civil suit proceeds to trial. Understanding how to obtain an interim injunction in India is essential for any litigant, individual, startup founder, SME or multinational, facing imminent, irreparable harm such as property dispossession, intellectual‑property infringement or breach of a restrictive covenant. The jurisdiction for this relief sits primarily in Order XXXIX, Rules 1 and 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC), supplemented by Section 151 CPC (the court’s inherent powers). The 2026 rollout of e‑Filing 3.
0 and updated Commercial Courts practice directions have shortened listing timelines and changed the way urgent interim relief applications are filed, served and heard across Indian courts.
An interim injunction is a temporary restraint order, prohibitory or mandatory, that a court issues before final adjudication. It does not determine the merits of a dispute. Its purpose is to prevent a party from causing irreparable damage or altering facts on the ground while the suit is pending. In intellectual‑property and commercial disputes, courts may also grant Anton Piller‑style search orders or asset‑freezing relief under their inherent jurisdiction.
Indian courts grant two principal forms of urgent interim relief:
You should consider applying for interim relief whenever the following conditions converge:
Plaintiffs, defendants (by way of cross‑application) and even foreign applicants with a cause of action justiciable in India may seek this relief. The injunction application process in India typically begins alongside, or shortly after, the filing of the main suit, although courts can entertain it at any stage of the proceedings.
Courts evaluate every application for interim injunction against a well‑established three‑part test derived from Order XXXIX CPC and affirmed by the Supreme Court of India across decades of jurisprudence. A fourth, threshold requirement, the applicant’s bona fide conduct, acts as a gatekeeper. An applicant who approaches the court with unclean hands or who has suppressed material facts risks refusal even where the substantive test is otherwise satisfied.
These principles apply equally whether the application is filed under Rule 1 (restraining disposal or waste of property in dispute), Rule 2 (restraining breach of contract or other injury), or under Section 151 CPC where specific rules do not cover the situation.
Any party to a pending suit, plaintiff or defendant, may apply. A defendant seeking injunctive relief against the plaintiff files a cross‑application under the same Order. Foreign applicants whose cause of action arises in India, or who can establish jurisdiction under Sections 16–20 CPC, may equally seek urgent interim relief. Corporate applicants must ensure the application is supported by a board resolution or power of attorney authorising the signatory.
The injunction application process in India follows a predictable sequence, though timelines vary by court, registry workload and whether the matter falls within a Commercial Court or IP division. The table below summarises each step, the responsible actor and realistic 2026 durations, followed by detailed guidance on each stage.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Intake and urgency assessment | Litigant + instructing counsel | Same day – 48 hours |
| Draft application, affidavit and evidence bundle | Counsel (draft) / client (documents) | 1–4 days (urgent) |
| E‑file interim application via Interim Application menu | Counsel / e‑Filing agent | Same day (if documents ready) |
| Registrar ex‑parte listing or urgent‑list hearing | Court registry / Bench | 1–7 days (often 1–3 days in Commercial Courts) |
| If ad‑interim granted: serve order on respondent and return listing | Process server / counsel | 2–7 days for service; inter‑partes hearing within 2–8 weeks |
| Inter‑partes hearing for interim relief | Parties (counsel) and court | 2–8 weeks (shorter in Commercial/IP lists) |
| Enforcement or contempt proceedings | Successful party / applicant | Immediate filing; enforcement hearing within days–weeks |
Identify the imminent act the applicant seeks to restrain. Obtain the primary documents, contracts, title deeds, registration certificates, correspondence, and prepare a concise chronology of events. Determine whether the matter warrants an ex‑parte application (imminent, irreversible harm if notice is given to the respondent) or whether an inter‑partes application on short notice will suffice. Confirm jurisdictional facts: where the cause of action arose, the pecuniary value of the suit and whether the dispute falls under the Commercial Courts Act, 2015.
Draft the interlocutory application under Order XXXIX, Rules 1 and 2 CPC, read with Section 151 CPC where necessary. The application should concisely set out the facts, identify the specific act to be restrained and articulate each limb of the three‑part test. Attach an affidavit sworn by the applicant or an authorised officer. The affidavit must contain facts, not legal argument, arranged in a clear chronology. Each exhibit should be referenced by exhibit number within the affidavit body.
Prepare a short cause‑list note (often one to two pages) summarising the urgency for the Bench’s immediate reference. If the application is ex‑parte, include a separate paragraph explaining why notice to the respondent would defeat the purpose of the relief sought.
Submit the application through the Interim Application menu on the relevant court’s e‑Filing portal (e‑Courts 3.0 or the respective High Court’s electronic filing system). Ensure all PDF documents comply with registry formatting requirements: bookmarked, OCR‑readable, within prescribed file‑size limits, and named according to the court’s filing SOP (typically: “IA_[Case Number]_[Document Type]”). Pay the applicable court fee electronically and retain the transaction receipt. Many registries now require an electronic index of exhibits uploaded as a separate PDF.
After e‑filing, seek urgent listing through the registry. In 2026, several High Courts and Commercial Courts offer virtual urgent‑list slots, which can compress the listing wait to one to three days. At the ex‑parte hearing, counsel presents the cause‑list note, summarises the urgency and takes the Bench through the affidavit and key exhibits. The court may grant an ad‑interim order operative until a specified return date or until further order.
If the court grants an ad‑interim injunction, it will typically require an undertaking from the applicant, often to compensate the respondent for any loss suffered if the injunction is later found to have been wrongly granted. The court may also require a security bond (cash deposit or bank guarantee). Serve the sealed order and the application on the respondent within the time specified in the order, usually two to seven days, through the court’s process server, registered post and, where permitted, electronic service.
At the inter‑partes hearing, the respondent files a reply affidavit and the applicant may file a rejoinder. Cross‑examination at the interim stage is rare but not unknown; courts generally decide on affidavits and documents. Present concise written submissions addressing each element of the interim injunction test in India. If the court confirms the injunction, it remains operative until trial or further order. If the court vacates the ad‑interim order, consider an immediate appeal under Order XLIII, Rule 1(r) CPC.
Once an interim injunction is in force, monitor compliance. If the respondent violates the order, file a contempt petition. If circumstances change, either party may apply for variation, extension or vacatur of the injunction. Enforcement and variation applications are filed through the same Interim Application menu and follow similar registry and listing procedures.
The documents needed for an injunction application must be assembled in a court‑ready format before filing. Missing or poorly prepared documents are the single most common cause of registry rejections and wasted hearing dates. The table below provides a practitioner‑ready checklist.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Interlocutory application (draft) | Drafted by counsel; PDF format; signed by counsel on e‑file; must cite Order XXXIX CPC and specify relief sought. |
| Affidavit in support | Sworn by deponent (client or authorised officer) before Oath Commissioner or Notary. Must contain precise facts, chronology and exhibit references, not legal argument. |
| Evidence bundle / Exhibits | PDF exhibits (contracts, emails, invoices, photographs, bank statements). Bookmarked; exhibit index with sequential exhibit numbers; originals available for inspection. |
| Cause title / plaint extracts | Copy of the main plaint or suit if the IA is filed in a pending matter; proposed plaint if the suit is not yet filed. |
| Power of Attorney / Vakalatnama | Scanned signed Vakalatnama if counsel is instructed; board resolution for corporate applicants. |
| Undertaking / security bond | Specimen undertaking to compensate respondent if injunction is later found wrongful. Details of proposed security (bank guarantee, cash deposit). |
| Process service affidavit | Filed after service is effected, affidavit of process server with postal receipts, tracking details and date of delivery. |
| Prior correspondence / notices | Demand letters, cease‑and‑desist notices, pre‑action correspondence. Important to demonstrate attempts to resolve the dispute before litigation. |
| IP‑specific exhibits (if applicable) | Registration certificates, market‑survey reports, screenshots with timestamps, takedown notices. |
| Court fee payment receipt | Court fee stamp or e‑payment receipt as per the applicable state court fee schedule. |
Format each exhibit as a PDF/A file with page numbers. Prepare a master exhibit index listing every document by exhibit number, description, date and page range. Upload the exhibit index as a standalone PDF in the e‑Filing portal alongside the main application bundle. Keep physical originals of all exhibits available for production if the court requests inspection.
The injunction timeline in India depends on the court tier, the subject matter and the registry’s workload. Commercial Courts and dedicated IP benches consistently deliver faster listing and hearing dates than general civil courts. Virtual urgent lists, now standard in most High Courts, have further compressed initial listing times in 2026.
As a practical benchmark: an ad‑interim (ex‑parte) order in a Commercial Court or High Court IP division can be obtained within one to three days of filing. In a District Court with a congested roster, the same step may take five to seven days. The inter‑partes hearing is typically listed two to eight weeks after the ad‑interim order, depending on the court’s calendar and the respondent’s readiness.
Critical deadlines to track:
Industry observers expect that as e‑Courts Phase III matures through 2026, listing delays in District Courts will continue to narrow, though High Court and Commercial Court timelines are likely to remain the most efficient channels for urgent interim relief.
Transparency on costs helps litigants budget for urgent relief. The table below provides approximate ranges; actual amounts vary by state, court tier and matter complexity. Verify all fees against the applicable state court fee schedule and the e‑Courts portal before filing.
| Item | Typical amount (INR) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee (interim IA in civil suit) | 100 – 5,000+ | Varies by pecuniary jurisdiction and state rules. |
| Advocate fee (urgent/interim hearing) | 15,000 – 1,00,000+ | Wide range by city, counsel seniority and complexity; includes retainer and per‑hearing fee. |
| Process server / service costs | 500 – 5,000 | Higher for multiple respondents or service at addresses outside the court’s jurisdiction. |
| Bank guarantee / security bond | Dependent on value | Court may direct a cash deposit, bank guarantee or surety as a condition of the injunction. |
| e‑Filing / portal transaction charges | 0 – 2,000 | Some courts impose nominal e‑filing transaction fees; check the e‑Courts portal. |
| Affidavit swearing / notarisation | 200 – 2,000 | Per affidavit; varies by Notary / Oath Commissioner fees in the relevant city. |
Third‑party litigation funding is an emerging option for commercial disputes in India; however, regulatory frameworks are still developing, and any funding arrangement should be disclosed to the court where required by local rules.
The 2026 procedural landscape for obtaining an interim injunction in India reflects three significant developments. First, the rollout of e‑Filing 3.0 across District and City Courts, documented in migration SOPs issued by courts including the Chennai City Courts, introduced a dedicated Interim Application menu within the e‑Filing portal, standardised file‑size limits and mandated electronic exhibit indexing. Second, several High Courts issued updated practice directions for virtual urgent lists, enabling counsel to seek listing and argue ex‑parte applications via video conference. Third, the Commercial Courts continue to refine their practice directions to shorten time‑to‑hearing for interim applications, with early indications suggesting that dedicated interim‑relief slots are being allocated in weekly cause lists.
The practical impact for litigants is threefold: faster ad‑interim listings in Commercial and IP divisions; stricter formatting requirements for electronic filings (non‑compliant uploads are rejected by the registry); and greater reliance on electronic service as a valid mode of service alongside traditional process serving.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Pooja Tidke at Parinam Law Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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