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Inter‑Corporate Loans under Companies Act, 2013 – 2025 Amendments & Limits

Inter Corporate Loans (ICLs), including guarantees, securities, and investments, are common tools for managing group finances and liquidity. Governed by Sections 185 & 186 of the Companies Act, 2013, recent amendments (up to 2025) have clarified key limits, exemptions, and compliance requirements. As a Company Secretary, understanding these updates is crucial to ensure legal and governance compliance.

Section 185: Loans to Directors & Related Parties

Section 185 imposes prohibitions and exceptions related to loans or guarantees given to directors or their related persons:

General prohibition: A company cannot advance loans, guarantees, or securities to a director, their relative, or associated firms/body corporate Permitted transactions:

  • Loan may be extended to a managing or whole‑time director as a service condition, or by a special resolution .
  • Can also be issued to related persons with shareholder special resolution and used strictly for principal business activities.

Private company exemption: Section 185 does not apply to private firms where:

  • No other corporate holds investment;
  • Total borrowings < 2× paid‑up capital or ₹50 cr (whichever lower);

No default on borrowings Penalty scope: Expanded to include officers (KMPs, managers) in default category . 

Section 186: Loans, Guarantees & Investments

Section 186 governs broader inter corporate financial support by a company:

Thresholds

A company may lend, guarantee, invest, or provide security up to the higher of:

  • 60% of paid-up share capital + free reserves + securities premium;
  • 100% of free reserves + securities premium.

Exceeding these limits requires a shareholder special resolution

Interest rate must not be lower than the closest RBI G‑sec yield of corresponding tenor .

Exemptions:

  • Loans to employees under approved schemes are not counted as “persons”
  • Complete exemption for transactions by holding companies to wholly‑owned subsidiaries and joint ventures
  • Companies in financial domain (banking, NBFC, housing finance, insurance, infrastructure financing) are exempt .

Compliance obligations:

Board resolution required for any such transaction If borrowing is from a public financial institution, its prior consent is required unless amounts remain within Section 186 limits and no default exists Maintain Form MBP 2 register, file Form MGT 14 within 30 days, and carefully disclose full details in financial statements (amounts, purposes, recipients, funding sources

2025 Amendments & Practical Implications

Although no major thresholds were changed in 2025, here’s what’s crucial:
  • Regulatory consolidation: Recent statutory clarifications have reaffirmed exemptions and procedural clarity for wholly‑owned subsidiaries and employee loans .
  • Expansion of penalties and obligations to KMPs ensures governance adherence throughout the management chain.
  • Reinforcement of conformities to interest and reporting norms, especially for listed entities and those regulated by financial institutions.

Company Secretary—Checklist for Compliance

  • Threshold monitoring: Constantly review total ICLs against Section 186 limits.
  • Board & shareholder approvals: Obtain appropriate resolutions (Board for within limits, special resolution for exceeding).
  • Track exemptions: Apply private‑company and subsidiary exemptions where applicable.
  • Interest compliance: Use benchmarked G‑sec yields per Section 186(3).
  • Maintain registers: Keep Form MBP‑2 updated.
  • Timely filings: File MGT‑14; update MBP‑2; detailed disclosure in financial statements.
  • Coordinate with lenders: Obtain prior consent if under public borrowing.
  • Risk management: Document for audit and governance reviews, especially in cross‑company funding pools.

Final Thoughts

Inter Corporate Loans are a vital management tool—but misuse can conflict with statutory compliance, risk stakeholder interests, and attract penalties. The 2025 clarifications bring greater transparency and enforce responsibility on Company Secretaries to uphold governance standards.
With diligent compliance monitoring, structured approvals, and transparent disclosures, a Company Secretary ensures that ICL strategies stay within legal bounds and support both business objectives and stakeholder trust.

Need Help with ICL Policies?

We offer full services—from drafting internal policies to board/shareholder resolutions, compliance tracking, and audit-ready documentation.

[Contact 8087064602] to streamline your corporate lending and investment frameworks.