
A practical guide to the Companies Act updates 2026 — covering key MCA changes, director obligations, filing deadlines, and penalties that every Private Limited Company and LLP must know.
If your company is registered under the Companies Act, FY 2026–27 is not business as usual.
The Ministry of Corporate Affairs has introduced several significant updates to compliance requirements under the new company law 2026 framework. These changes affect Private Limited Companies, LLPs, and SMEs across India — from how you file annual returns, to how your accounting software must function, to what you are legally required to disclose about your payments to MSME vendors.
Many SME owners discover these changes only after receiving an MCA notice. Others face DIN deactivation or penalties of ₹100 per day. These costs can add up quickly.
This blog covers every key MCA compliance update for FY 2026–27 that SMEs and directors in Faridabad, Delhi NCR, and across India need to act on — with deadlines, penalties, and practical steps.
IMPORTANT NOTE
MCA compliance failures are not always penalised immediately — but they accumulate silently. A missed DIR-3 KYC deactivates your DIN. A late AOC-4 filing triggers ₹100 per day with no cap. These are not warnings — they are automatic consequences.
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Key Companies Act Updates 2026: MCA At a Glance
The table below summarises the most important MCA compliance updates for FY 2026–27 and their impact level for SMEs and directors.
| Compliance Area | Key Change | Impact Level |
| Annual Filings | Stricter timelines; late fees increased | High |
| Director KYC | DIR-3 KYC mandatory annually for all directors | High |
| CSR Compliance | Enhanced reporting obligations for eligible companies | Medium |
| MSME Payments | 45-day payment rule; disclosure in financial statements | High |
| Audit Trail | Accounting software must maintain edit logs | High |
| Board Meetings | Digital participation norms updated | Medium |
| Beneficial Ownership | BEN-2 filing requirements tightened | Medium |
| Strike-Off Risk | MCA accelerating action on non-compliant companies | High |
| DPT-3 Filing | Annual return of deposits / outstanding receipts due by 30 June 2026 | High |
Each of these areas is covered in detail below, with the specific obligations, deadlines, and consequences you need to know.
1. MCA annual ROC Filings: Tighter Timelines & Higher Late Fees
The two most important annual filings for Private Limited Companies — AOC-4 (financial statements) and MGT-7A (annual return) — continue to carry some of the steepest per-day penalties in corporate compliance.
What has changed in MCA in FY 2026–27:
- Late filing fees have been revised upward — ₹100 per day applies from the first day of delay, with no ceiling. Additionally, MCA is increasing scrutiny of delayed filings.
- MCA is actively processing strike-off notices for companies with multiple years of non-filing
- Provisional strike-off lists are being published more frequently, giving less recovery time
Key deadlines for Private Limited Companies:
- AOC-4 (Financial Statements): Within 30 days of AGM — typically by 30 October
- MGT-7A (Annual Return): Within 60 days of AGM — typically by 29 November
- AGM itself: Must be held within 6 months of financial year end — by 30 September
COMMON MISTAKE
Many SMEs assume ROC filings can be delayed without immediate consequence. The ₹100 per day penalty has no cap — a filing delayed by 200 days costs ₹20,000 in penalties alone, before any other consequences. And once a company is struck off, restoration is a lengthy and expensive process.
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2. DPT-3: Annual Return of Deposits (Due Date: 30 June 2026)
Every company (except Government companies and certain exempt categories) is required to file Form DPT-3 with the MCA every year to report outstanding money received as loans, advances, or other amounts that are not treated as deposits.
Due date for FY 2025–26 reporting: 30 June 2026
Who should file?
- Private Limited Companies
- One Person Companies (where applicable)
- Companies with outstanding loans or other specified receipts
Why it matters
- Non-filing may attract penalties under the Companies Act.
- MCA may raise compliance queries during inspections or future filings.
- Companies should review their outstanding borrowings and other reportable amounts well before the due date.
QUICK TIP
Do not assume DPT-3 applies only to companies accepting public deposits. Many companies with outstanding loans from directors, shareholders, banks, or other specified transactions may still have DPT-3 filing obligations. Review your books before 30 June 2026 to determine applicability.
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3. Director KYC (DIR-3 KYC): Mandatory for Every Director, Every Year
Every director who has been allotted a Director Identification Number (DIN) must complete DIR-3 KYC annually. This is not optional — and it is not a one-time exercise.
What you need to know:
- DIR-3 KYC must be filed by 30 September each year
- Non-filing deactivates your DIN — you cannot sign any company documents, board resolutions, or filings with an inactive DIN
- Reactivation requires filing DIR-3 KYC with a ₹5,000 late fee
- Directors of multiple companies must file once — but the deactivation affects all companies simultaneously. Furthermore, directors should verify their DIN status well before the deadline.
For SMEs with working directors who also sign cheques, contracts, and regulatory filings, a deactivated DIN can operationally cripple the business — not just create a compliance gap.
DEADLINE
DIR-3 KYC deadline: 30 September 2026. Miss it and your DIN is deactivated from 1 October. Reactivation costs ₹5,000 and requires additional documentation. File early — not on the last day.
→ Get Help: Director Compliance & Advisory Services
4. Audit Trail Requirement: Your Accounting Software Must Now Keep Edit Logs
This is one of the most underestimated changes from the Companies Act updates 2026. Every company that uses accounting software — including Tally, Zoho Books, QuickBooks, or any custom software — must ensure the software maintains a complete audit trail of every transaction edit.
What this means in practice:
- Every change made to a financial entry must be logged with a timestamp and user identity
- The audit trail must be enabled and cannot be disabled at any point during the financial year
- If the software does not support audit trail functionality, the auditor is required to qualify the audit report
- A qualified audit report triggers MCA scrutiny and can affect the company’s compliance standing
For SMEs using older versions of accounting software or manual data entry workarounds, this requirement creates significant risk that most owners are not aware of. As a result, many businesses may need to upgrade their accounting systems.
QUICK TIP
Check with your accounting software provider immediately whether audit trail functionality is enabled in your current version. For Tally users: audit trail is available from TallyPrime Release 2.1 onwards. If your version does not support it, upgrading or switching software before your FY 2026–27 audit is essential.
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5. MSME Payment Disclosure: A New Obligation in Financial Statements
Under Section 43B(h) of the Income Tax Act read with MSME Development Act provisions, companies that purchase goods or services from MSME suppliers must now pay them within 45 days of invoice if a written agreement exists, or within 15 days if no agreement exists.
The MCA compliance obligation goes further:
Companies must disclose outstanding MSME payments in their financial statements. Additionally, amounts unpaid beyond the prescribed period are disallowed as a deduction. As a result, delayed MSME payments can directly increase taxable income. Furthermore, auditors and ROC authorities review these disclosures closely.
For SMEs that are both buyers from MSMEs and sellers to larger companies, understanding which side of the obligation applies to them — and how to track it — is critical.
CPC INSIGHT
Many SME owners are unaware that delayed payments to MSME vendors are now a tax disallowance — not just a compliance gap. If your accounts payable process does not track vendor MSME registration status and payment timelines, this change will affect both your compliance standing and your tax liability.
→ Get Support: Accounting & Financial Reporting Services
6. Beneficial Ownership (BEN-2): Tighter Reporting Requirements
Companies with significant beneficial owners — individuals who ultimately own or control 10% or more of shares or voting rights — must file Form BEN-2 within 30 days of any change in beneficial ownership.
Key MCA updates in FY 2026–27:
- MCA is cross-referencing BEN-2 data with shareholding patterns in annual returns — discrepancies are flagged automatically
- The penalty for non-filing is ₹25,000 plus ₹1,000 per day for continuing default
- Foreign-held SMEs and companies with complex shareholding structures face higher scrutiny. Moreover, companies with complex ownership structures face greater scrutiny.
- Directors are personally liable for BEN-2 compliance failures
REMINDER
If your company has had any change in ownership, share transfer, or investor entry in FY 2026–27, verify whether BEN-2 filing is triggered. The 30-day window from the event date is strict — and penalties are significant.
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7. CSR Compliance: Enhanced Reporting for Eligible Companies
Companies meeting the CSR threshold — net worth above ₹500 crore, turnover above ₹1,000 crore, or net profit above ₹5 crore — face enhanced CSR reporting obligations under the Companies Act updates 2026.
Key changes:
- CSR activities must now be reported with greater granularity in the Annual Report
- Unspent CSR funds must be transferred to a specified fund within 6 months of financial year end
- Third-party impact assessments are now mandatory for CSR projects above ₹1 crore
- Non-compliance results in penalties for both the company and responsible officers
For SMEs approaching the CSR threshold, now is the right time to establish a CSR policy and reporting framework — rather than scrambling when the obligation kicks in.
8. MCA Strike-Off Action: The Risk SMEs Are Underestimating
The Ministry of Corporate Affairs has significantly accelerated strike-off proceedings against companies that have:
- Not filed annual returns (AOC-4 or MGT-7) for two or more consecutive years
- Not conducted an Annual General Meeting
- Failed to maintain a registered office with a valid address
- Directors whose DINs are deactivated due to non-KYC compliance
Once a company appears on the provisional strike-off list, directors have a limited window — typically 30 days — to file objections and regularise compliance. Therefore, businesses should address compliance gaps before receiving notices. After that, restoration requires a High Court application, which is time-consuming and expensive.
COMMON MISTAKE
Dormant companies that are not formally struck off or converted to dormant status under the Companies Act continue to attract compliance obligations and penalties. Ignoring a company you are no longer actively using does not make the compliance obligations disappear — it makes them compound.
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Penalties for Non-Compliance: FY 2026–27 Reference MCA Table
Use this table as a reference for the key filing obligations, their deadlines, and the penalties for missing them. All penalties below apply under the Companies Act as updated for FY 2026–27.
| Filing / Obligation | Deadline | Penalty for Non-Compliance |
| DIR-3 KYC | 30 September annually | DIN deactivation + ₹5,000 fee |
| AOC-4 (Financials) | 30 October (Pvt Ltd) | ₹100 per day; no cap |
| MGT-7A (Annual Return) | 60 days from AGM | ₹100 per day; no cap |
| BEN-2 (Beneficial Owner) | 30 days from trigger event | ₹25,000 + ₹1,000/day continuing |
| MSME Payment Disclosure | Financial statement filing date | Qualifies as non-compliance; ROC scrutiny |
| Audit Trail Software | Ongoing from FY 2026–27 | Auditor qualification; MCA notice |
| DPT-3 | 30 June 2026 | Penalty under the Companies Act for non-compliance |
KEY TAKEAWAY
Penalties under the Companies Act do not require a court order to begin accumulating. They are automatic from the date of default. The only way to stop them is to file — and the only way to avoid them is to file on time.
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What If You Have Pending MCA Filings?
Do not wait for a notice. The Companies Act updates 2026 apply from FY 2026–27 — which has already started. Here is a practical action list:
- Verify your DIN status on the MCA portal — and file DIR-3 KYC before 30 September 2026
- Check your accounting software — confirm audit trail is enabled and functioning
- Map your MSME vendors — identify which suppliers are registered MSMEs and review payment timelines
- Review your beneficial ownership structure — flag any changes that may trigger BEN-2
- Set a compliance calendar for AOC-4 and MGT-7A — work backward from your AGM date
- If you have dormant or inactive companies, consult an expert on strike-off or dormant status options
- If you have received any MCA notice, act within the deadline — do not ignore it
ADVISORY
If your company has pending filings from FY 2024–25 or earlier, MCA has periodically offered condonation schemes that reduce late fees. Waiting longer does not reduce liability — it increases it. An expert review of your company’s MCA status can identify gaps and the most cost-effective path to regularisation.
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RELATED READING
- New SME Accounting Books Checklist for 2026
- Say Goodbye to Income Tax Act 1961: Key Changes Effective April 2026
- March 2026 MCA & ROC Filings: Everything Businesses Must Know
MCA Notice or ROC Filing Due? Don’t Handle It Alone.
CPC Services has managed corporate compliance for businesses across Faridabad and Delhi NCR since 1987. From ROC filings and director KYC to MCA notice response and advisory, we handle it end-to-end — so you can focus on running your business.
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At CPC Services, we track MCA circulars, ROC updates, and Companies Act amendments so our clients do not have to. If your business is based in Faridabad, Delhi NCR, or anywhere in India and you are unsure whether your corporate filings are current and complete, a compliance review with our team takes less time than responding to an MCA notice.