FEMA Penalties for Indian Founders: What Happens If You Don't Comply
Meera Krishnan
April 13, 2026
Indian founders who have formed a US entity - a Delaware C-Corp or Wyoming LLC - are operating under two compliance regimes simultaneously. The US side gets most of the attention: EIN registration, state filings, annual reports. The India side, governed by the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) 1999 and enforced by the Reserve Bank of India, is where we see founders get into serious trouble. Not because the rules are impossible to follow, but because nobody told them the rules existed.
This article is for Indian residents who have remitted money to form or invest in a US entity, and need to understand exactly what FEMA requires, what happens when those requirements are missed, and how to fix a violation before it compounds - literally.
Answer Capsule: Under FEMA Section 13, penalties for non-compliance range from ₹7,500 plus 0.025% per year of delay for late ODI filings, to up to three times the transaction value for material violations. Continuing violations attract an additional ₹5,000 per day. Criminal prosecution is possible for undisclosed foreign assets exceeding ₹1 crore. Most violations can be resolved through the RBI’s compounding mechanism before they escalate.
What Is FEMA and Why Does It Apply to You?
FEMA, the Foreign Exchange Management Act 1999, governs every cross-border financial transaction involving an Indian resident. If you are an Indian resident - meaning you spend more than 182 days in India in a financial year - FEMA applies to you regardless of whether you hold a US entity, a foreign bank account, or shares in a foreign company.
The RBI administers FEMA through its Overseas Investment Division. The Enforcement Directorate (ED) handles prosecution in serious cases. The key distinction: FEMA is primarily civil in nature. Unlike its predecessor FERA, you are not presumed guilty. But that civil classification does not mean the penalties are light.
Under FEMA Section 6(3)(a), the RBI has the authority to regulate overseas investments by Indian residents. The Master Direction on Overseas Investment, issued on August 22, 2022 (RBI/2022-23/90 A.P. DIR Series Circular No. 12), sets the current framework for how Indian residents can invest in, form, or hold equity in foreign entities.
For Indian founders specifically, the most relevant compliance obligations are:
- ODI (Overseas Direct Investment) reporting - required when you invest in a foreign entity where you hold 10% or more equity, or have management control
- Annual Performance Report (APR) - filed every year to report the performance of your overseas investment
- FLA Return (Foreign Liabilities and Assets) - annual survey filed with RBI if you have received foreign investment or hold foreign assets
- LRS (Liberalised Remittance Scheme) compliance - for the original remittance used to fund the US entity
Each of these has specific deadlines and specific penalties for missing them.
What Are the Penalty Amounts Under FEMA Section 13?
Under FEMA Section 13, the penalty structure works in three tiers, and knowing which tier applies to your situation is the first step in understanding your exposure.
Tier 1 - Quantifiable violations: If the amount involved can be determined, the penalty is up to three times the sum involved in the contravention. This means if you made a $50,000 remittance without proper ODI filing, the maximum penalty is three times $50,000 - approximately ₹1.25 crore at current exchange rates. The adjudicating authority sets the actual penalty within this ceiling based on the nature and severity of the violation.
Tier 2 - Non-quantifiable violations: Where the amount cannot be determined, the penalty is up to ₹2 lakh per violation. This applies to procedural breaches like failing to maintain records, not updating an AD bank about changes in the overseas entity, or not obtaining required approvals.
Tier 3 - Continuing violations: Where the violation persists beyond the first day of contravention, an additional penalty of up to ₹5,000 per day applies for every day the violation continues after the first. A missed APR that should have been filed on December 31 two years ago is not a one-time violation - it is a continuing violation accumulating ₹5,000 per day.
The 2025 relief cap: In April 2025, the RBI introduced a ₹2 lakh ceiling on penalties for specific technical contraventions - primarily delayed reporting under LRS and delayed export reporting. This was a significant relief for small business owners and freelancers with minor procedural lapses. However, this cap does not apply to ODI violations, APR non-filing, or material contraventions involving unauthorized transactions.
In our experience handling compounding applications for 200+ Indian founders, the most common FEMA violation is not some complex structured transaction - it is simply missing the APR deadline, often because the founder did not know the form existed.
What Are the Specific ODI Filing Penalties?
ODI compliance has its own Late Submission Fee (LSF) framework, separate from the general FEMA Section 13 penalty structure. This is the framework your AD bank will reference when you go to regularize a delayed filing.
The Late Submission Fee for ODI-related forms is:
- Flat fee: ₹7,500 per form per reporting date missed
- Variable fee: 0.025% of the amount involved per year of delay, calculated from the date the filing was due to the date you actually submit
Example: You remitted $30,000 to form a Delaware LLC in March 2023. You were required to file Form ODI (now called Form OI-1 under the 2022 Master Direction) within 30 days of remittance. You are reading this in April 2026 - that is approximately three years of delay. The variable component alone is 0.025% × $30,000 × 3 years = $22.50, which sounds small but the ₹7,500 flat fee per missed reporting date adds up quickly when you have multiple filings outstanding.
The more significant exposure is the APR. Under RBI guidelines, the APR must be filed by December 31 each year for the financial year ended March 31. Missing three consecutive APRs - which we see regularly from founders who incorporated 3-4 years ago and have been running their US entity without any India-side compliance - puts you in a continuing violation situation that requires a compounding application rather than just payment of the LSF.
What Is the APR Deadline and What Happens If You Miss It?
The Annual Performance Report (APR) is the most commonly missed FEMA obligation for Indian founders with US entities. The filing deadline is December 31 every year, covering the performance of the overseas entity for the financial year ended March 31 of the same calendar year.
What this means in practice: By December 31, 2025, you needed to file the APR for your US entity’s performance during April 2024 to March 2025. If your US entity follows a calendar year (January-December), you report the audited accounts for January 2024 to December 2024 within the same window.
The APR requires:
- Audited financial statements of the overseas entity (or self-certified accounts if below a certain threshold)
- Details of the business activity, shareholding, and any remittances made during the year
- Information on dividend receipts, if any
- Certification from the Indian entity’s statutory auditor or CA
Your AD bank submits the APR through the RBI’s FIRMS portal. You cannot submit it directly - you go through the authorized dealer bank that processed your original ODI remittance.
If you miss the December 31 deadline, the LSF structure above applies. If you fail to file for multiple years, the RBI can issue a show-cause notice. At that point, the matter shifts from a voluntary regularization (where you pay the LSF and move on) to a formal adjudication proceeding. Formal adjudication means the penalty is determined by an adjudicating officer and can go up to three times the investment amount.
The RBI circular says every missed APR triggers a separate violation. Your AD bank will ask for all outstanding APRs before they will process any new remittance or report for your entity. If you want to send more funds to your US entity, close it, or sell your shares, you must first regularize all outstanding APRs.
What Is the FLA Return and When Is It Due?
The Foreign Liabilities and Assets (FLA) Return is an annual survey administered by the RBI’s Statistics Department. It applies to Indian companies and LLPs that have received foreign direct investment or have made overseas direct investments. If you are an Indian company (Pvt Ltd or LLP) that owns shares in a US entity, the FLA Return applies to you.
Deadline: July 15 every year, covering the financial year ended March 31.
So by July 15, 2026, you must file the FLA Return for FY 2025-26 (April 2025 to March 2026).
Unlike the APR, which is filed through your AD bank via FIRMS, the FLA Return is filed directly on the RBI’s online portal at flair.rbi.org.in. Your statutory auditor or the company’s authorized signatory files it.
The penalty for non-filing or late filing of the FLA Return is up to ₹2 lakh under FEMA Section 13, since the amount is generally not quantifiable. However, the RBI has been increasingly strict about FLA compliance, and we have seen show-cause notices issued to Indian companies that have missed the return for two or more consecutive years.
One point that competitors’ articles consistently miss: the FLA Return and the APR are separate filings. Founders who are aware of the APR often assume they are covered. They are not. If your Indian entity (the investing entity) is a company or LLP, both filings are mandatory.
What Is the Compounding Process and When Should You Use It?
Compounding under FEMA is the voluntary settlement mechanism that allows you to acknowledge a contravention and pay a determined penalty to close the matter without litigation. The authority to compound FEMA violations is vested in the RBI under Section 15 of FEMA, read with the Compounding of Contraventions under FEMA, 1999 Rules.
The 2025 amendments to the compounding framework (FEMA Compounding Rules 2024, notified in late 2024 and effective from early 2025) introduced several changes:
- Cases involving contraventions up to ₹1 crore are now compounded by the RBI’s Regional Offices, not the Central Office in Mumbai. This significantly reduces processing time.
- A simplified procedure is available for technical contraventions and first-time violations.
- Sensitive contraventions - those involving suspected money laundering, terrorist financing, or transactions with sanctioned entities - remain non-compoundable and are referred to the ED.
The compounding process, step by step:
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Prepare the application. The compounding application is filed with the RBI’s Regional Office under whose jurisdiction your AD bank operates. The application must include a detailed factual statement of the contravention, the amount involved, why the contravention occurred, and the steps taken to ensure it does not recur.
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Calculate the estimated penalty. The RBI has published indicative penalty matrices. For ODI and APR violations, the starting point is the LSF calculation. For more serious violations, the penalty is computed based on the amount involved, duration of the contravention, and mitigating factors.
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File through your CA or legal advisor. While you can file directly, in practice compounding applications require detailed financial documentation and regulatory drafting. An experienced FEMA CA significantly increases the chance of a favorable outcome.
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Attend the personal hearing. The RBI will schedule a personal hearing before issuing the compounding order. You or your authorized representative must appear.
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Receive the compounding order and pay. The RBI issues a compounding order stating the penalty amount. You have a defined period to pay. Once paid, the matter is closed. The compounding order is published on the RBI website.
Timeline: Straightforward compounding applications take 4-6 months. Complex cases or those with large amounts involved can take 9-12 months.
The key insight from our experience: approach compounding proactively. Founders who come to us after receiving a show-cause notice from the ED face a much harder process than founders who identify the gap themselves and file a voluntary compounding application. Voluntary disclosure is treated as a significant mitigating factor.
Can You Face Arrest or Criminal Prosecution for FEMA Violations?
Yes, but the bar is high and the circumstances are specific.
Under FEMA Section 13(1C), criminal prosecution and imprisonment of up to five years applies only where a person is found to have acquired foreign exchange, foreign securities, or immovable property situated outside India of aggregate value exceeding ₹1 crore, in violation of FEMA provisions. This targets cases of undisclosed offshore wealth, not routine reporting delays.
Under FEMA Section 14(3) and 14(4), an arrest warrant can be issued in two situations: first, where a defaulter fails to pay a penalty that has been levied and the payment deadline has passed; second, where the adjudicating authority believes the defaulter is likely to abscond or leave the jurisdiction. An arrest warrant under Section 14 is a consequence of not paying an imposed penalty, not a first-response enforcement tool.
The ED investigates sensitive contraventions - those involving money laundering, hawala transactions, or transactions in violation of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA). For Indian founders with US entities running legitimate businesses, criminal exposure exists only if you have undisclosed foreign accounts or investments above ₹1 crore that you have not reported.
Documents Required to Regularize ODI/APR Violations
If you are going to file a compounding application or submit overdue APRs, your AD bank and the RBI will require:
For overdue ODI filings (Form OI-1):
- Copy of the original remittance SWIFT message or bank debit advice
- Incorporation certificate of the US entity
- Cap table or shareholder register showing your ownership percentage
- Form OI-1 (completed and signed)
- CA certificate on the nature and purpose of investment
- LSF calculation as per RBI formula
For overdue APR filings:
- Audited financial statements of the US entity for each missed year (or self-certified accounts with CA certification if turnover is below the threshold)
- Form APR (completed for each year)
- Evidence of any dividends received or remittances made during each year
- AD bank’s FIRMS credentials (they handle the actual submission)
For FLA Return:
- Audited accounts of the Indian entity
- List of all overseas investments and liabilities as of March 31
- Registration details from the RBI’s FIRMS portal
For compounding applications:
- All of the above, plus a factual statement of contravention drafted by your CA
- Board resolution (if the applicant is a company) authorizing the filing
- Demand draft or NEFT payment details for the compounding fee (₹5,000 application fee, non-refundable)
How ZenoLedger Handles This
We have filed compounding applications, regularized delayed APRs, and guided founders through the complete ODI reporting process for clients ranging from first-time US entity owners to founders who had been running their Delaware C-Corps for five years without any India-side compliance in place.
The most important thing we tell every new client: the RBI’s enforcement posture has become considerably more proactive since 2022. The FIRMS portal now has automated flags for entities with outstanding APRs. If your AD bank notices the gap before you do, it creates complications for future transactions.
If you have a US entity and have not filed your APR, have not reported your original investment under ODI, or are unsure whether your compliance is current, the right time to fix this is before you receive any communication from the RBI.
Book a free consultation with our compliance team to review your ODI and APR filing status. We will identify any gaps, calculate your LSF exposure, and recommend the fastest path to regularization.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the penalty for violating FEMA regulations in India? Under FEMA Section 13, penalties go up to three times the transaction value for quantifiable violations, or up to ₹2 lakh where the amount cannot be determined. Continuing violations add up to ₹5,000 per day. For specific reporting delays like ODI and APR, the Late Submission Fee is ₹7,500 flat plus 0.025% of the amount per year of delay.
Is FEMA enforced in India? Yes. The RBI enforces FEMA for civil contraventions, including overseas investment reporting violations. The Enforcement Directorate handles criminal cases, typically involving undisclosed foreign assets above ₹1 crore or money laundering. Since 2022, the RBI has significantly increased the use of show-cause notices for missed ODI and APR filings.
What is a FEMA violation? Any breach of FEMA 1999, its rules, regulations, notifications, or conditions attached to RBI authorizations constitutes a violation. For Indian founders with US entities, the most common violations are: not filing Form OI-1 after remittance, missing the APR deadline of December 31, not filing the FLA Return by July 15, and remitting amounts outside the permitted LRS framework.
What are ODI compliances for Indian founders? ODI (Overseas Direct Investment) compliance includes: filing Form OI-1 within 30 days of each remittance to the foreign entity, filing the Annual Performance Report by December 31 every year, reporting any change in shareholding, business activity, or directors, and repatriating dividends within 60 days of declaration.
What is the ODI limit under RBI rules? Under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme, Indian residents can remit up to $250,000 per financial year without specific RBI approval. For larger investments, you need a different route - through the Automatic Route under ODI (where investment does not exceed the net worth of the Indian entity in a financial year) or through the Approval Route for investments beyond that.
Can I voluntarily disclose and regularize past violations? Yes. The compounding mechanism under FEMA Section 15 allows voluntary settlement. Approaching the RBI proactively - before receiving a show-cause notice - is treated as a mitigating factor and generally results in lower penalties. Most straightforward ODI/APR regularizations are resolved within 4-6 months through compounding.
What is the difference between ODI and OPI? ODI (Overseas Direct Investment) applies where the Indian investor holds 10% or more equity in the foreign entity, or has management control regardless of equity percentage. OPI (Overseas Portfolio Investment) applies to equity holdings below 10% without management control. The compliance obligations are different: ODI requires APR filing; OPI does not have the same annual reporting requirement but has its own limits and conditions.
What happens if I close my US entity without completing FEMA compliance? You cannot close the loop on your India-side compliance without completing all outstanding APRs and obtaining a No Objection or liquidation confirmation from your AD bank. If you receive liquidation proceeds from the US entity and remit them to India without completing the ODI winding-up process, you may face a fresh contravention for unauthorized capital account receipt. The correct sequence is: complete all APRs, file a disinvestment report through your AD bank, and then repatriate the proceeds.
Meera Krishnan is a cross-border compliance consultant with 8 years specializing in FEMA, ODI, and LRS regulations for Indian founders with overseas entities. Former RBI compliance officer. She advises ZenoLedger clients on India-side regulatory requirements for US entity operations.
Related reading: How to File Form ODI for Your US Entity | Annual Performance Report Filing Guide