CENTRE ACCORDS ROCs MORE POWERS TO REDUCE THE WORKLOAD OF NCLTs
EFFECTIVE FROM FEBRUARY 16, 2026
The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) has officially empowered
Registrars of Companies (RoCs) with adjudication powers. This move, effective
from February 16, 2026, designates RoCs as Adjudicating Officers under Section
454 of the Companies Act, 2013 and Section 76A of the LLP Act.
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
|
ADJUDICATION POWERS: |
RoCs can now conduct
inquiries and impose monetary penalties on companies and LLPs for statutory
non-compliances. |
|
REDUCED BURDEN ON NCLT: |
The step is aimed at
easing the heavy caseload of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT). |
|
DECRIMINALIZATION OF DEFAULTS |
By shifting adjudication
to RoCs, minor defaults are expected to be handled more efficiently without
escalating to tribunals. |
|
REVISED FRAMEWORK: |
The new notification
supersedes earlier ones (2015 and 2019), creating a more structured
jurisdictional framework for adjudication. |
WHY THIS MATTERS
FOR BUSINESSES:
Faster resolution of compliance issues, fewer delays, and reduced
litigation costs.
FOR REGULATORS:
Streamlined enforcement and better
access through expanded regional directorates.
FOR GOVERNANCE:
Strengthens corporate accountability while promoting ease of doing
business.
NOT APPLICABLE SERIOUS FRAUD OR
CRIMINAL MATTERS
The new MCA notification has clarified the scope of violations that Registrars of Companies (RoCs) can now adjudicate under Section 454 of the Companies Act, 2013. These are generally procedural and compliance-related defaults, not serious fraud or criminal matters.
|
CATEGORY |
EXAMPLES OF VIOLATIONS |
REMARKS |
|
FILING & DISCLOSURE
LAPSES |
Delay in filing annual
returns (MGT-7), financial statements (AOC-4), or other statutory forms |
These are among the most
frequent defaults handled by RoCs |
|
REGISTERED OFFICE
COMPLIANCE |
Not maintaining a registered
office or failing to notify change of address |
Penalties have already
been imposed in past adjudication orders |
|
BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP |
Non-disclosure of
Significant Beneficial Ownership (SBO |
RoCs have issued penalty
orders for lapses in SBO filings |
|
CORPORATE SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY (CSR) |
Failure to spend or
disclose CSR contributions properly |
Treated as a compliance
lapse, not a criminal offence |
|
Board & Governance
Defaults |
Non-appointment of key
managerial personnel (KMP), failure to hold board meetings as required |
These are adjudicated as
monetary penalties |
|
LLP Act Violations |
Delay in filing LLP
returns, non-compliance with LLP agreements |
Covered under Section 76A
of the LLP Act |
WHAT ROCS DO NOT HANDLE
• Fraud, misrepresentation, or
serious offences → These remain under NCLT or special courts.
• Matters requiring judicial interpretation → Still handled by tribunals.
EXAMPLES OF ROC PENALTY ORDERS (2025–2026)
|
DATE & ROC |
COMPANY |
VIOLATION |
PENALTY IMPOSED |
|
14 Oct 2025 – ROC Delhi |
Hexafun
Private Limited (Order ID: PO/ADJ/10-2025/DL/00771) |
Violation of Section 42(10) of the Companies Act,
2013 (related to private placement procedures) |
Monetary penalty under Section 454 adjudication
powers |
|
05 Feb 2025 – ROC Guwahati |
Moonlight Associates Limited |
Failure to file Annual Returns (Section 92) for
multiple years (FY 2014–15 to 2021–22) |
Penalties ranging from ₹90,000 to ₹2,10,000 per
year on the company; ₹60,000 per year on one director |
BREAKDOWN
OF THE MOST COMMON PENALTY RANGES IMPOSED BY REGISTRARS OF COMPANIES (ROCS)
UNDER THEIR ADJUDICATION POWERS:
|
Violation Type |
Section |
Penalty Range (Company) |
Penalty Range (Officers/Directors |
|
Delay in filing Annual Return (MGT-7) |
Sec. 92 |
₹50,000 – ₹2,00,000 |
₹25,000 – ₹50,000 |
|
Delay in filing Financial Statements (AOC-4) |
Sec. 137 |
₹50,000 – ₹2,00,000 |
₹25,000 – ₹50,000 |
|
Registered Office non-compliance |
Sec. 12 |
₹1,00,000 – ₹2,00,000 |
₹25,000 – ₹50,000 |
|
Significant Beneficial Ownership (SBO) lapses |
Sec. 90 |
₹1,00,000 – ₹5,00,000 |
₹25,000 – ₹2,00,000 |
|
CSR non-compliance |
Sec. 135 |
₹50,000 – ₹25,00,000 |
₹25,000 – ₹2,00,000 |
|
Private Placement lapses |
Sec. 42 |
₹10,000 – ₹2,00,000 |
₹10,000 – ₹50,000 |
CONCLUDING THOUGHTS
· In FY 2024–25 alone, over 1,150 adjudication orders
were issued by RoCs across India.
· ROCs now can handle first-level enforcement, aiming to
cut NCLT backlogs.
· Empowering ROCs will likely result in them playing a
bigger role –rather than just administrative work-to dispose off cases faster,
reduce the burden on the NCLT, decriminalize offenses and facilitate ease of
doing business.
· MCA has increased RD offices from 7 to 10 covering Ahmadabad,
Bengaluru and Chandigarh which will make adjudication easier.
· Dual reforms enhance adjudication capacity, reduce
jurisdictional confusion.
YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER – R V SECKAR FCS ,LLB 79047 19295


