- Business Setup
For Foreign Companies
For Indian Companies
GIFT City
- GCC Setup
- Corporate Services
Taxation Services
Advisory & Regulatory
Accounting Services
- Who We Are
- Contact Us
For foreign businesses operating in India, Foreign Liabilities and Assets (FLA) return filing India is an important annual compliance requirement under FEMA regulations. A missed deadline of 15 July does not come with a warning letter or a grace period. Under the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999, failure to submit the annual FLA return by the due date is treated as a violation from Day One. The penalties start at INR 7,500 per return and potentially escalate to 300% of the transaction amount in serious cases.
Many foreign businesses assume the return applies only when fresh capital comes in. It does not. The RBI uses the annual foreign investment return in India to monitor foreign liabilities and overseas assets held by Indian entities. Any outstanding FDI or ODI as of 31st March is enough to keep the filing obligation alive.
The sections below cover who must file, what the return requires, and what happens when deadlines are missed.
A.P. (Dir Series) Circular No. 45, issued by the RBI on 15th March 2011, is what gives the FLA return its legal standing. The entities covered stretch well beyond companies registered under the Companies Act, 2013. Limited Liability Partnerships, SEBI-registered Alternative Investment Funds or AIFs, partnership firms, and those involved in Public Private Partnerships are all included, provided their balance sheets carry foreign assets or liabilities as of 31st March.
The part that often surprises foreign investors is this: the filing has nothing to do with whether investment happened during the year. It comes down to what is outstanding on the balance sheet at year close. Existing FDI or ODI means an obligation exists, and that obligation does not go away simply because the year was quiet. In other words, RBI looks at the balance sheet position as of 31st March, not at transaction activity during the year. A company with no fresh inflows but with prior FDI still outstanding is as liable to file as one that received capital last month.
The filing obligation covers a wider set of entities than most foreign businesses initially assume.
| Entity Type | Filing Requirement |
|---|---|
| Companies under Companies Act, 2013 | Mandatory if FDI or ODI is outstanding |
| LLPs registered under LLP Act, 2008 | Mandatory if FDI or ODI is outstanding |
| SEBI-registered AIFs | Mandatory (Excel-based format) |
| Partnership firms with FDI or ODI | Mandatory if outstanding investment exists |
| Joint ventures with foreign equity of 10% or more | Mandatory |
| Entities with any ODI amount | Mandatory regardless of FDI position |
An entity is exempt only when no FDI or ODI has existed in the current or any prior year, when only share application money (funds received from investors pending allotment of shares) is pending with no investment outstanding, or when all foreign shareholders have fully exited before 31st March. Shares issued to non-residents on a non-repatriable basis do not constitute foreign investment and are excluded from FLA calculations entirely.
The annual cycle is anchored to India’s financial year, which closes on 31st March.
Entities without audited financials by 15th July are not exempt from filing. They must submit a provisional return and revise it with audited figures by 30th September. Waiting for audit sign-off before initiating the process is the single most common reason Indian investee entities miss the primary deadline. The RBI extended the filing window to 31st July for FY 2024-25 as a one-time concession. That extension was specific to FY 2024-25 and carries no implications for future years. Entities should continue to treat 15th July as the firm annual deadline and plan accordingly.
The FLA return requires data reconciled with audited accounts, spread across several categories.
The return also auto-generates a variation report comparing figures with the prior year’s submission. Inconsistencies between consecutive filings become immediately visible to the RBI, which is why data preparation deserves careful attention before submission.
On valuation: for listed companies, non-resident equity is valued at the closing share price on 31st March. For unlisted companies, the Own Funds at Book Value (OFBV) method applies, in line with IMF Coordinated Direct Investment Survey (CDIS) guidelines.
Market Value = Net Worth x % Non-resident Equity
Where Net Worth = Paid-up Equity + Participating Preference Capital + Reserves and Surplus, minus Accumulated Losses.
Errors in this calculation are among the most common issues in FLA filings for foreign companies in India, particularly in the first year of filing.
The RBI’s Foreign Liabilities and Assets Information Reporting (FLAIR) portal at https://flair.rbi.org.in is the only authorised submission platform. The steps involved are straightforward when followed in sequence.
For SEBI-registered AIFs, the online format is not available on the portal. These entities must complete registration on FLAIR and then request the prescribed Excel-based format by email.
FEMA violations arising from missed or delayed FLA filings carry a structured and serious set of consequences.
| Penalty Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| Late Submission Fee (LSF flat) | INR 7,500 per return |
| Transaction-based Late Submission Fee | INR 7,500 + (0.025% x transaction amount x delay in years) |
| Minimum FEMA penalty | INR 2,00,000 |
| Continued delay | INR 5,000 per day |
| Maximum FEMA penalty | Up to 300% of the amount involved |
The Late Submission Fee route is available only within three years of the due date. Beyond that point, formal penal proceedings under FEMA are initiated and the LSF settlement path closes. For foreign businesses, the financial penalty is only one dimension of the exposure. A history of FEMA violations can invite heightened scrutiny on future remittances, investment approvals, and even routine banking relationships in India.
Certain errors appear repeatedly across FLA filings and are worth flagging directly:
The annual foreign investment return in India demands a level of preparation that cannot be left to the final weeks. Its legal basis under FEMA 1999, the absence of any automatic grace period, and a penalty structure that scales with both delay and transaction size make this a filing that requires year-round financial discipline. For foreign businesses, that means ensuring Indian subsidiaries and joint ventures have the right records, the right personnel, and a clear internal timeline well before the deadline arrives.
Approached methodically, FLA filings for foreign companies in India are entirely manageable. The provisional filing option and the 30 September revision window exist precisely to accommodate real-world audit timelines, and the FLAIR portal process is structured rather than complex. Foreign companies that treat this as a scheduled annual obligation rather than a reactive exercise will find it demands little disruption. Those that do not may face consequences that sit well out of proportion to what is, at its core, a data reporting requirement.