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Litigation funding in India occupies a distinctive position: it is neither expressly prohibited nor comprehensively regulated by any single national statute. As commercial courts gain stronger procedural powers under 2026 reforms and high-value disputes in technology, energy and infrastructure multiply, general counsel and CFOs are increasingly evaluating third-party funding as a strategic tool for commercial dispute finance. This guide provides an actionable framework, covering legality, deal structures, risk allocation and funder due diligence, designed for corporate legal teams and funders operating in or entering the Indian market.
This guidance is particularly relevant for entities pursuing or defending claims exceeding INR 50 crore in sectors where documentation is strong and quantum is quantifiable, notably technology IP, energy EPC contracts and infrastructure construction disputes.
Third-party funding India arrangements are currently permitted. India has no dedicated national legislation governing litigation finance. Instead, the area is shaped by general contract law (the Indian Contract Act, 1872), professional conduct rules issued by the Bar Council of India, and evolving judicial and institutional commentary. The legal position is one of permissibility within guardrails, not prohibition.
| Source | What It Controls |
|---|---|
| Indian Contract Act, 1872 | Governs the validity and enforceability of funding agreements; requires lawful consideration, free consent and a lawful object. Agreements must not be opposed to public policy under Sections 23 and 28. |
| Bar Council of India, Rules on Professional Standards | Prohibits advocates from funding litigation on behalf of their own clients or entering into contingency fee arrangements that share in the subject matter of the suit. This means the lawyer acting in the dispute cannot simultaneously be the funder. |
| IBBI Report, “Litigation Funding: A Breakthrough for Avoidance Proceedings under IBC” | Institutional confirmation that existing legal provisions do not prohibit third-party litigation funding; recommends developing a framework for funding of avoidance proceedings under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code. |
| Commercial Courts Act, 2015 (as amended) | Strengthens procedural mechanisms for high-value commercial disputes. The 2026 reforms to commercial courts create faster timelines and stricter case management, both of which make funded litigation more commercially viable. |
India’s historical position on third-party involvement in litigation was influenced by the English doctrines of maintenance and champerty. However, as practitioner analyses from leading Indian firms have noted, these doctrines were never codified into Indian statute and their common-law restraints have been progressively narrowed by judicial interpretation. The analysis published by Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas confirms that lawyers are expressly barred from funding their own clients’ litigation, but separate, non-lawyer third parties face no equivalent statutory bar.
The Woodsford market overview similarly observes that “there are no regulatory laws in India that rigidly prescribe and proscribe what a third-party funder can and cannot do during litigation or arbitration.” Industry observers expect that the combination of institutional endorsement (through the IBBI report) and commercial court reform will accelerate the development of more formal guidelines within the next legislative cycle.
| Period | Event | Relevance for Litigation Funding |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-2020 | Historical common-law treatment of maintenance and champerty doctrines inherited from English law | Created a perceived restraint on third-party interference in litigation; however, these doctrines were never codified and their practical application narrowed over time. |
| 2019–2023 | Law-firm market notes and vendor market entry, practitioner analyses from Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, Woodsford, Kachwaha & Partners; launch of domestic funders such as LegalPay | Demonstrated increasing funder interest and market readiness; provided the first detailed practitioner roadmaps for structuring funding agreements under Indian law. |
| 2024–2026 | IBBI institutional report; Commercial Courts Amendment 2026; growing cross-border arbitration activity | Institutional confirmation of permissibility; faster court timelines improve funding economics; increased demand from technology, energy and infrastructure sectors. |
Litigation finance in India typically takes one of the following forms, each carrying different risk-return profiles for both claimant and funder:
The commercial viability of a litigation funding agreement in India depends on claim quantum, expected duration, enforceability of any award or decree, and the strength of the counterparty’s balance sheet. The table below illustrates typical ranges observed in the Indian market.
| Element | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Funder’s share of recovery (success fee) | 15%–40% of net recovery | Lower end for high-quantum, strong-merits cases; higher end for longer-duration or enforcement-heavy matters. |
| Minimum claim quantum | INR 10–50 crore (varies by funder) | Most institutional funders require a minimum to justify diligence and monitoring costs. |
| Target IRR for funder | 20%–35% annualised | Reflects binary risk (total loss if claim fails) and illiquidity of capital during proceedings. |
| Costs waterfall priority | Legal costs → funder return → claimant balance | Standard non-recourse model; variations negotiable. Claimants should insist on clear waterfall mechanics in the agreement. |
| Typical commitment period | 2–5 years | Reflects Indian court/arbitration timelines. Commercial court reforms may shorten this for specified value claims. |
Arbitration, both domestic and international seated in India, is the preferred vehicle for litigation funding arbitration India transactions. Confidentiality protections, party autonomy in selecting arbitrators, and the enforceability of awards under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 all make arbitration attractive to funders. For practical guidance on preparing funded arbitration matters, see the preparation for and conduct of arbitration hearings guide. Tribunals increasingly accept the presence of third-party funders, although disclosure obligations vary depending on institutional rules and the seat of arbitration.
Funded litigation through Indian civil courts presents additional considerations. Court records are public, which limits confidentiality. Procedural rules around joinder, costs and the assignment of causes of action can complicate funder involvement. The historical shadow of maintenance and champerty, though largely obsolete in practice, still surfaces as an objection in some court proceedings. Practitioners working in international litigation contexts should factor in these procedural differences when advising on forum selection.
| Factor | Arbitration | Civil Courts |
|---|---|---|
| Confidentiality | Typically protected by arbitration rules and party agreement | Court records generally public; limited confidentiality options |
| Disclosure of funding | Institutional rules may require disclosure; manageable | No uniform rule; opposing parties may raise objections |
| Timeline | 12–36 months typical for domestic arbitration | Longer; commercial courts improving but 3–5 years still common |
| Enforcement | Enforceable under Arbitration Act; limited grounds for challenge | Decree execution can be protracted; appeals may delay recovery |
| Funder preference | Strongly preferred | Case-by-case; stronger for commercial court matters |
The primary commercial risk in any funded litigation arrangement is the tension between funder oversight and claimant autonomy. Funders understandably seek governance rights, including veto over settlement, approval of key strategic decisions and regular reporting, to protect their investment. However, excessive funder control can raise ethical questions and, in extreme cases, risk the enforceability of the funding agreement itself. The likely practical effect of well-drafted governance provisions is a balanced framework: the funder is informed and consulted, but the claimant and its lawyers retain ultimate conduct of the proceedings.
Adverse cost orders present another risk. If a funded party loses, the court or tribunal may order costs against it. In certain jurisdictions, funders can be ordered to contribute to adverse costs, though this remains an undeveloped area in Indian law. Parties should address cost exposure explicitly in the funding agreement.
The tax treatment of funder returns in India is complex and fact-specific. Recoveries may attract withholding tax, and the characterisation of the funder’s return, as interest, capital gain or business income, affects the applicable rate. GST implications on funder services should also be reviewed. Industry observers expect that as the market matures, clearer tax guidance will emerge, but until then, specialist tax counsel should be engaged before the funding agreement is signed.
Sharing privileged documents with a funder during the due diligence process risks waiver of legal professional privilege. The safest approach is to structure the funder relationship under a common interest arrangement, limit the scope of shared documents to what is genuinely necessary for the funder’s assessment, and include robust confidentiality obligations in the funding agreement. Where insolvency proceedings intersect with funded claims, a growing area given cross-border insolvency developments under IBC amendments and the IBC Amendment Act 2026’s impact on creditors, privilege management becomes even more critical.
| Risk | Typical Mitigation Clause | GC Checklist Item |
|---|---|---|
| Funder over-control of strategy | Governance framework with defined consultation rights but no unilateral veto on counsel decisions | Review governance schedule; confirm counsel independence is preserved |
| Privilege waiver | Common interest agreement; non-waiver clause; limited disclosure protocol | Obtain privilege advice before sharing any documents with the funder |
| Adverse cost exposure | Funder indemnity for adverse costs; ATE insurance where available | Confirm funder’s position on adverse costs in writing before signing |
| Tax on recoveries | Waterfall mechanics specifying gross/net recovery and withholding obligations | Engage tax counsel; model net recovery scenarios before agreeing to funder’s share |
| Confidentiality breach | Strict NDA with liquidated damages; restrictions on funder’s use of case information | Confirm funder’s internal information-barrier protocols |
Not every commercial dispute is suitable for third-party funding. Funders assess claims against a well-defined set of criteria before committing capital. General counsel should pre-screen potential funded litigation against the same factors to avoid wasted diligence time on both sides.
| Factor | Favours Funding? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Claim quantum exceeds INR 50 crore | Yes | Justifies funder diligence costs and provides sufficient return headroom after fees and expenses. |
| Strong documentary evidence | Yes | Reduces merits risk; funders can model outcomes with greater confidence. |
| Counterparty solvency confirmed | Yes | A favourable judgment is only valuable if the respondent can pay. Enforcement risk is a deal-breaker for most funders. |
| Multiple contested fact issues, limited paper trail | No | Increases merits uncertainty beyond most funders’ risk appetite. |
| Dispute in a regulated sector with public interest dimension | Case-by-case | May attract additional scrutiny; some funders avoid politically sensitive matters. |
The absence of a licensing or registration regime for litigation funders in India means that the burden of diligence falls squarely on the claimant. Before entering into any funding arrangement, corporate legal teams should evaluate the funder across the following dimensions:
The governance framework in the funding agreement should clearly delineate control rights. Industry best practice involves a tiered structure: the funder receives regular case reports and is consulted on material strategic decisions (such as settlement above or below certain thresholds), but does not direct day-to-day conduct of the proceedings. Settlement approval clauses deserve particular attention, the optimal position for the claimant is a “mutual consent” provision that prevents either party from accepting or rejecting a settlement unilaterally.
Every litigation funding agreement should address the following core terms. The table below highlights areas where claimant and funder interests typically diverge, and where negotiation adds the most value.
| Clause | Claimant-Favourable Position | Typical Funder Ask |
|---|---|---|
| Non-recourse confirmation | Absolute non-recourse: claimant owes nothing if the claim fails, regardless of reason | Non-recourse subject to exceptions for material misrepresentation or claimant misconduct |
| Success fee mechanics | Percentage of net recovery (after costs); capped at a stated multiple of funding deployed | Percentage of gross recovery; uncapped or with a high multiple cap |
| Settlement control | Claimant retains sole right to accept or reject settlement offers; funder consulted but cannot veto | Funder consent required for any settlement below a specified threshold |
| Confidentiality and privilege | Strict NDA; common interest agreement; funder agrees not to disclose any privileged material | Right to share information with co-investors or reinsurers (subject to sub-NDA) |
| Termination and step-in rights | Funder can withdraw only for defined cause (e.g., material change in merits); claimant has buyout option | Broad termination right at funder’s discretion after material adverse change |
| Assignment and novation | Funding agreement is non-assignable without claimant’s prior written consent | Funder may assign to affiliated fund vehicles without consent |
Practitioners advising on these agreements should ensure that the governing law and dispute resolution clause within the funding agreement itself is carefully considered, choosing Indian law and Indian-seated arbitration for the funding agreement keeps the arrangement within a familiar enforcement framework. For broader guidance on Indian dispute resolution practice, specialist guidance is available.
Litigation funding in India offers a powerful tool for corporate claimants with strong, high-value commercial claims, particularly in technology, energy and infrastructure disputes where quantum is large and documentary evidence is robust. The legal framework, while lacking a dedicated statute, provides sufficient contractual and regulatory guardrails for well-structured arrangements. Early indications suggest that 2026 commercial court reforms will further improve the economics and predictability of funded disputes.
For general counsel and CFOs considering this route, the recommended immediate actions are:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Amit Mishra at Svarniti Law Offices, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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