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Corporate Law · MCA & ROC Filings

Event-Based Filings (ADT-1, DPT-3, MGT-7, AOC-4)

Not every MCA filing waits for the financial year-end.

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Not every MCA filing waits for the financial year-end. The moment your company appoints an auditor, takes a director loan, creates a charge on a bank facility, allots shares, or changes a director, the Companies Act 2013 starts a clock — and most of these clocks run to 15, 30, or 60 days, not months. Miss one and the penalty is not a modest late fee; it can run into ₹1 lakh or more per default, per officer, with no ceiling on daily additional fees. At PNPC Global, we have tracked event-based compliance for companies across India and the UAE since 1986. We do not wait for you to remember a form number — we identify the trigger the moment it happens and file before the window closes.

What it costs

Govt. feesGovernment & statutory fees as applicable to your case
Professional feeFixed professional fee — confirmed in writing before we start

No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.

What Event-Based Filings (ADT-1, DPT-3, MGT-7, AOC-4) is

Event-based filings are MCA/ROC forms that a company must file not because of the calendar, but because a specific corporate event has occurred. This is distinct from annual filings such as AOC-4 (financial statements) and MGT-7 (annual return), which are due once a year regardless of whether anything eventful happened. Event-based filings are triggered by actions the company takes or facts that change: appointing or replacing an auditor (ADT-1), accepting deposits or director loans that must be reported (DPT-3), creating, modifying, or satisfying a charge on company assets (CHG-1/CHG-4/CHG-9), a director's appointment, resignation, or change in designation (DIR-12), allotment of new shares (PAS-3), a change in registered office (INC-22), amendment of the Memorandum or Articles of Association (MGT-14), or an increase in authorised share capital (SH-7). Each of these forms has its own statutory trigger date and its own filing deadline — most measured in days, not months.

The common thread across all event-based filings is that the clock starts the day the event occurs — the Board resolution date, the date of appointment, the date a charge is created, or the date shares are allotted — not the date someone in the company remembers to file. This makes event-based compliance fundamentally different from annual compliance in risk profile: annual filings appear on every compliance calendar because everyone knows the financial year ends on 31 March; event-based filings are missed precisely because they arise unpredictably, often in the middle of unrelated business activity (a bank sanctioning a loan, a director resigning mid-year, an investor's cheque clearing).

Some forms named alongside 'event-based filings' in common usage — AOC-4 and MGT-7 in particular — are actually annual filings tied to the Annual General Meeting, not standalone events. We are precise about this distinction with clients: AOC-4 and MGT-7 are covered under PNPC's annual compliance retainer, while ADT-1 (auditor appointment, which can occur at incorporation or mid-year on auditor change), DPT-3 (deposit and loan return, filed annually by 30 June but triggered by the underlying receipt of a loan/deposit during the year), and the full universe of charge, director, share allotment, and constitutional-document filings are the true event-based category this service manages. Getting the classification right matters because event-based forms typically carry shorter windows and steeper per-day penalties than annual forms, and a company that treats them as 'something to get to at year-end' accumulates additional fees for every day of delay.

From a governance standpoint, event-based filings serve a specific public-record purpose: they keep the MCA master data — your list of directors, your registered office, your share capital, your charges on assets — accurate and current for banks, investors, tax authorities, and any third party checking your company on the MCA portal. A stale or incomplete public record is a red flag in due diligence, a bank loan application, or a tender bid — even when the underlying business is healthy. PNPC treats event-based filing not as paperwork but as the mechanism that keeps your company's legal identity synchronised with its actual operations at all times.

When an event-based filing is triggered

A new auditor is appointed, or the existing auditor resigns, is removed, or is not reappointed at the AGM — ADT-1 or ADT-3 is triggered

The company accepts a loan from a director, an inter-corporate loan, or any receipt that must be reported under the Deposit Rules — contributes to the annual DPT-3 return

A bank or NBFC sanctions a loan secured against company assets, or an existing charge is modified, released, or fully repaid — CHG-1, CHG-4, or CHG-9 is triggered

A director is appointed, resigns, is removed, or changes designation (e.g. from Additional Director to Director) — DIR-12 is triggered

New shares are allotted to existing or new shareholders — including a funding round, ESOP exercise, or rights issue — PAS-3 is triggered

The registered office address changes — within the same city, to another city in the same state, or across states — INC-22 (and additional forms for inter-state moves) is triggered

Shareholders pass a special resolution amending the Memorandum or Articles of Association, or altering the objects clause — MGT-14 is triggered

Authorised share capital is increased ahead of a fresh share issuance — SH-7 is triggered

A statutory auditor's report contains a qualification, reservation, or adverse remark that the Board wishes to explain — additional disclosure requirements apply

The company enters into a related-party transaction requiring shareholder approval under Section 188 — MGT-14 filing of the special resolution may be triggered

What this service does not cover

Routine annual filings with no underlying event — AOC-4 and MGT-7 filed after every AGM are covered under PNPC's Annual Compliance retainer, not this event-based service, though PNPC coordinates both under one calendar

Income-tax return filing (ITR-6) and tax audit — these are Income-tax Act obligations tracked separately, though PNPC often bundles them with MCA compliance for the same client

GST returns and TDS returns — recurring monthly/quarterly tax filings with no MCA nexus

LLP event-based filings (Form 4 for partner changes, Form 3 for LLP agreement changes) — LLPs follow a parallel but distinct filing regime under the LLP Act 2008; see PNPC's LLP compliance service

Companies undergoing winding-up, strike-off, or NCLT proceedings — these follow a dedicated closure process, not the standard event-based filing framework

Structure Comparison

Common event-based MCA filings — trigger, form, and deadline

EventFormGoverning ProvisionFiling Deadline
Auditor appointed (at incorporation or AGM)ADT-1Section 139, Companies Act 2013Within 15 days of appointment
Auditor resigns before term completionADT-3Section 140(2), Companies Act 2013Within 30 days of resignation
Director appointed, resigns, or is removedDIR-12Section 170, Companies Act 2013Within 30 days of the event
Charge created on company assets (loan/facility secured)CHG-1Section 77, Companies Act 2013Within 30 days of creation (Registrar may condone up to 60 days with additional fee, and a further period up to 120 days with ad valorem fee; beyond 120 days requires Central Government/Regional Director approval under Section 87)
Charge modified (terms of existing charge changed)CHG-1Section 79, Companies Act 2013Within 30 days of modification
Charge satisfied (loan fully repaid, charge released)CHG-4Section 82, Companies Act 2013Within 30 days of satisfaction
Shares allotted (funding round, ESOP exercise, rights issue)PAS-3Section 39 read with Section 42, Companies Act 2013Within 15 days of allotment
Registered office changed within same state/RoC jurisdictionINC-22Section 12, Companies Act 2013Within 15/30 days of the resolution, as applicable
Registered office changed to a different stateINC-23, INC-28Section 13, Companies Act 2013As per Regional Director order timeline; INC-22 follow-up within 30 days
MoA/AoA amended by special resolutionMGT-14Section 117, Companies Act 2013Within 30 days of passing the resolution
Authorised share capital increasedSH-7Section 61 and 64, Companies Act 2013Within 30 days of passing the resolution
Deposits/loans from directors and others (annual return of outstanding balances)DPT-3Rule 16, Companies (Acceptance of Deposits) Rules 2014By 30 June each year, reporting balances as at 31 March
Return of allotment for private placementPAS-3 with PAS-4/PAS-5 recordsSection 42, Companies Act 2013Within 15 days of allotment; funds must be kept in a separate bank account until allotment
Change in name of the companyINC-24, INC-25Section 13, Companies Act 2013As per Regional Director/RoC approval sequence

This table lists the most frequently triggered event-based forms for a Private Limited Company. Additional forms apply for specific events not listed here — mergers, reduction of capital, buy-back, related-party transactions requiring MGT-14, and CSR-related disclosures. PNPC identifies every applicable trigger for your company's specific facts during the compliance review.

How it works
#Stage & What PNPC DoesWhat In-House Teams and Portals MissTimeline
1Event Identification — Recognising the trigger the moment it occursMost compliance failures are not filing failures — they are recognition failures. A company takes a director loan and does not realise it feeds into DPT-3. A bank sanctions a working capital facility and nobody connects it to CHG-1. PNPC's engagement includes a standing brief to clients: tell us before you sign, not after — so the filing clock is tracked from day one, not discovered after it has expired.Ongoing — as events occur
2Board Resolution Drafting — The filing starts with a properly worded resolutionEvery event-based filing traces back to a Board or shareholder resolution. A resolution that omits the effective date, the exact terms of a charge, or the number and class of shares allotted creates downstream filing errors that MCA queries or rejects. PNPC drafts the resolution and the filing together, so they are consistent from the outset.Same day as the event, ideally
3Auditor Appointment (ADT-1) — Within 15 daysADT-1 must be filed within 15 days of the auditor's appointment by the Board (at incorporation) or by shareholders (at the AGM for a full 5-year term — annual AGM ratification of the auditor's appointment was abolished by the Companies (Amendment) Act 2017, so no yearly ratification vote is required once the 5-year appointment is made). A missed ADT-1 does not invalidate the appointment but attracts additional fee under Section 403 read with the Companies (Registration Offices and Fees) Rules, scaling per day of delay. PNPC files ADT-1 as a standing part of every audit engagement.Within 15 days of appointment
4Director Change (DIR-12) — Within 30 daysDIR-12 is required for appointment, resignation, removal, or any change in a director's designation. A resigning director should also independently file Form DIR-11 with MCA to record their own resignation on public record — a step companies frequently forget to advise the outgoing director about. PNPC coordinates both filings so the company and the director's personal MCA record are consistent.Within 30 days of the Board's knowledge of the event
5Charge Creation (CHG-1) — Within 30 days of the charge dateWhenever a company borrows against its assets — a term loan, working capital facility, or equipment finance — the lender's charge must be registered with MCA within 30 days. Miss this window and the Registrar can still condone registration up to 120 days from creation (a further 30 days on additional fee, then a further 60 days on ad valorem fee), but beyond 120 days, Central Government approval under Section 87 is required and the charge risks being void against the liquidator and other creditors if the company is later wound up. PNPC coordinates directly with the client's bank/lender relationship team to get the charge instrument on Day 1 and file within the window.Within 30 days of charge creation — critical deadline
6Charge Satisfaction (CHG-4) — Within 30 days of full repaymentWhen a loan is fully repaid, the charge must be formally satisfied on the MCA register via CHG-4 — otherwise the charge continues to show as 'open' on the public record indefinitely, creating confusion (and sometimes objections) in later transactions, bank refinancing, or due diligence. This step is very commonly forgotten because there is no lender pressing for it once the loan is closed. PNPC tracks loan closure dates and initiates CHG-4 proactively.Within 30 days of satisfaction
7Share Allotment (PAS-3) — Within 15 days of allotmentWhether the allotment is to a new investor, an existing shareholder exercising a right, or an employee exercising ESOP options, PAS-3 (Return of Allotment) must be filed within 15 days. For allotments to persons resident outside India, this is in addition to — not instead of — the FEMA filing (FC-GPR) with RBI. PNPC files both where applicable, coordinated so the share certificate, statutory register, PAS-3, and FC-GPR are internally consistent.Within 15 days of allotment
8Registered Office / Constitutional Changes — INC-22, MGT-14, SH-7 as applicableChanging the registered office, amending the AoA (e.g. to add investor-friendly clauses before a funding round), or increasing authorised capital ahead of a share issue are all planned events — but the filing deadlines are just as strict as unplanned ones. PNPC sequences these filings correctly: for example, SH-7 (capital increase) must be filed and effective before PAS-3 (allotment) can validly proceed if the new allotment exceeds existing authorised capital.Within 15–30 days of the relevant resolution
9DPT-3 Annual Return — By 30 June, but tracked through the yearAlthough DPT-3 is filed once a year, the underlying data — every loan, deposit, or advance received from a director, shareholder, or related party — must be tracked as it happens through the year to avoid a scramble at year-end. PNPC maintains a running log of every reportable receipt and prepares DPT-3 well ahead of the 30 June deadline.Data tracked through the year; filed by 30 June
10MCA Query Handling — Responding within the STP/non-STP windowSome event-based forms are processed on a Straight-Through-Processing (STP) basis; others are routed for RoC examination and can attract a Resubmission (RSUB) query. A query not answered within the stipulated window (typically 15 days) can cause the form to be treated as invalid, restarting the entire filing process — and the clock on the original deadline does not pause. PNPC monitors the MCA portal for every filed form until it is marked 'approved'.As queries arise — typically within 15 days of an RSUB notice
11Cross-Filing Consistency Check — Reconciling event-based filings with the annual returnEvery event-based filing during the year must be correctly reflected in the next MGT-7 (annual return) — director changes, charge status, and shareholding pattern all roll up into the annual filing. PNPC reconciles the year's event-based filings against the draft MGT-7 before submission, catching mismatches before they become a public-record discrepancy.At year-end, before MGT-7 filing
12Record Retention & Audit Trail — Every resolution and filing acknowledgment archivedMCA filings, Board resolutions, and receipt acknowledgments (SRNs) must be retrievable for years — for due diligence, RoC inspection, or a future investor's document request. PNPC maintains a structured filing archive for every client, indexed by event type and date, available on request.Ongoing, retained for the life of the company
13Proactive Advisory — Before the event, not afterThe highest-value moment for CA involvement is before a Board resolution is signed — when the terms of a charge, the pricing of an allotment, or the wording of a resignation letter can still be shaped to avoid a filing problem later. PNPC's retainer clients are encouraged to loop us in before signing, not after — this alone prevents the majority of event-based filing defaults we see in first-time engagements.Before every material corporate action

Event-based filing timelines are measured in calendar days from the date of the underlying event or resolution — not from when the company 'gets around to it'. Because triggers can occur at any time in the year, PNPC treats event-based compliance as a continuous engagement rather than a once-a-year exercise.

Document Checklist
For Auditor Appointment / Resignation (ADT-1 / ADT-3)

Board resolution (or shareholder resolution for AGM appointment) appointing the auditor, with the auditor's written consent and a certificate under Section 139(1) confirming eligibility

Copy of the intimation letter to the outgoing auditor, where applicable

PAN and membership number of the appointed auditor / audit firm's FRN (Firm Registration Number)

For resignation — the auditor's resignation letter addressed to the company and, where filed by the auditor, the reasons stated in Form ADT-3

For Director Change (DIR-12)

Board resolution or ordinary/special resolution (as applicable) approving the appointment, resignation, or removal

Consent to act as director — Form DIR-2 — for a new appointment

DIN of the incoming/outgoing director, and DIR-8 declaration confirming no disqualification under Section 164

Resignation letter from the outgoing director, and evidence of the Board's acknowledgment

For removal — notice under Section 169 and evidence that the director was given a reasonable opportunity to be heard

For Charge Creation / Modification / Satisfaction (CHG-1 / CHG-4 / CHG-9)

Loan sanction letter and the charge/hypothecation/mortgage instrument executed with the lender

Board resolution authorising the borrowing and the creation of the charge, specifying amount and assets charged

Certified copy of the instrument creating or modifying the charge, and particulars of the charge-holder

For satisfaction — the lender's no-dues certificate or letter confirming the loan is fully repaid and the charge is released

For Share Allotment (PAS-3)

Board/shareholder resolution approving the issue and allotment of shares, and the private placement offer letter (PAS-4) where applicable

List of allottees with names, addresses, PAN, number and class of shares allotted, and consideration received

Bank statement evidencing receipt of subscription money into the company's account (and, for private placement, evidence it was held in a separate bank account until allotment)

Valuation report where shares are issued at a premium or to a non-resident investor, and FC-GPR filing evidence for allotments to persons resident outside India

Updated Register of Members and share certificates issued within 60 days of allotment

For Registered Office / Constitutional Amendments (INC-22 / MGT-14 / SH-7)

Special or ordinary resolution as required, along with the explanatory statement circulated to shareholders

Proof of the new registered office address — utility bill within 2 months and NOC from the property owner, for INC-22

Certified copy of the altered Memorandum or Articles of Association reflecting the amendment, for MGT-14

Board resolution and altered capital clause of the MoA, for SH-7 (increase in authorised capital)

For DPT-3 (Deposits & Loans Return)

Complete list of outstanding loans/advances from directors, shareholders, or related parties as at 31 March

Loan agreements or Board resolutions authorising each such receipt during the year

Auditor's certificate confirming the figures reported in DPT-3 reconcile with the audited financial statements

Confirmation that the receipts do not fall within the definition of 'deposit' requiring separate compliance under the Deposit Rules, or, if they do, evidence of that compliance

Standing Documents PNPC Maintains for Every Retainer Client

Digital Signature Certificates (DSC) of all directors — validity tracked and renewal initiated before expiry

Company's DIN/CIN master data and current authorised signatory list

A running compliance log of every event-based filing made during the financial year, cross-referenced to the SRN (Service Request Number) issued by MCA

Copies of all Board and shareholder resolutions passed during the year, maintained in the statutory Minutes Book

Ongoing obligations
Trigger EventForm(s) RequiredPNPC's RoleRisk If Ignored
Auditor appointed at incorporation or AGMADT-1File within 15 days as a standing part of every audit engagement; verify auditor eligibility certificate under Section 139Additional fee accrues per day of delay under Section 403 and the fee rules; a pattern of persistent default is a governance red flag for regulators, banks, and investors
Auditor resigns mid-termADT-3 (by auditor) + Board follow-upCoordinate the resignation, casual vacancy filling by the Board within 30 days, and — since the vacancy arises from resignation — shareholder approval of the Board's appointee at a general meeting convened within 3 months, per Section 139(8)Casual vacancy left unfilled beyond 30 days leaves the company without a statutory auditor, jeopardising the year's audit timeline
Director appointed / resigns / removedDIR-12 (+ DIR-11 by the individual director on resignation)Draft the resolution, verify DIN status and Section 164 eligibility, file DIR-12 within 30 daysAdditional fee accrues per day; an unfiled resignation leaves the individual listed as a director on public record, exposing them to ongoing statutory obligations they believe they have exited
Bank/NBFC loan secured by company assetsCHG-1Obtain the charge instrument from the lender promptly, draft the Board resolution, file within 30 days of charge creationBeyond 120 days, registration requires Central Government approval; an unregistered charge can be void against the liquidator and other creditors on winding-up, materially weakening the lender's security — and complicating future refinancing
Loan fully repaid, charge to be releasedCHG-4Obtain the lender's satisfaction letter and file within 30 days of repaymentAn 'open' charge lingering on the public MCA record after repayment creates confusion in due diligence and can delay a subsequent charge registration or asset sale
Shares allotted — funding round, ESOP exercise, rights issuePAS-3 (+ FC-GPR with RBI for non-resident allottees)Verify authorised capital headroom, draft the allotment resolution, file PAS-3 within 15 days, coordinate FEMA filing where applicableAdditional fee per day; for foreign allotments, a missed FC-GPR triggers FEMA compounding proceedings independent of the MCA penalty
Registered office relocatedINC-22 (+ INC-23/INC-28 for inter-state moves)Verify new address proof, draft the resolution, file within the prescribed window; coordinate GST/other registration address updates in parallelStatutory notices sent to the old registered address are still deemed valid service; a stale address on the public record is a due-diligence and correspondence risk
MoA/AoA amended (objects clause, investor rights clauses, name change)MGT-14 (+ INC-24/25 for name changes)Draft the special resolution and explanatory statement, file within 30 days of the resolutionAn amendment not filed with MCA has no effect against third parties; investors relying on an unfiled AoA amendment discover at closing that the clause is not enforceable
Authorised capital increased ahead of new share issueSH-7Draft the resolution altering the capital clause, file within 30 days, sequence before the corresponding PAS-3Allotment beyond the existing authorised capital is void; a company that allots first and files SH-7 later has made an invalid allotment that must be corrected
Director/shareholder loans or deposits received during the yearDPT-3 (annual, by 30 June)Maintain a running log through the year; reconcile against audited financials; file by 30 June every yearAdditional fee per day, same uncapped structure as AOC-4/MGT-7; unreported related-party loans are also a red flag in investor and lender due diligence
Frequently asked
What exactly is an 'event-based filing' — how is it different from an annual filing?

An annual filing is due once a year regardless of what happened in the company — AOC-4 (financial statements) and MGT-7 (annual return) are the classic examples, tied to the AGM date. An event-based filing is triggered by something the company does or that happens to it — appointing an auditor, taking a loan secured by company assets, allotting shares, changing a director, or amending the Articles. The deadline for an event-based filing runs from the date of that specific event, not from the financial year-end, and the windows are usually much shorter — 15 or 30 days rather than months.

Practitioner noteThe confusion between the two categories is one of the most common compliance gaps we see. A company assumes 'we already have a CA doing our annual filing' and does not realise that a mid-year charge registration or director change needs to be filed within 30 days of the event — not bundled into the annual cycle.
The service name mentions ADT-1, DPT-3, MGT-7, and AOC-4 together — are all four really 'event-based'?

Not precisely, and we are explicit about this distinction with clients. ADT-1 (auditor appointment) is a genuine event-based filing — it fires whenever an auditor is appointed, whether at incorporation or mid-term. DPT-3 (deposits and loans return) is filed once a year by 30 June, but the underlying obligation is driven by events — every loan or deposit received during the year — so it sits between the two categories and needs event-level tracking even though the filing itself is annual. MGT-7 (annual return) and AOC-4 (financial statements) are, strictly speaking, annual filings tied to the AGM, not standalone events — PNPC manages these under the Annual Compliance retainer, coordinated with event-based filings so nothing falls through the gap between the two services.

Practitioner noteWe would rather explain this nuance upfront than let a client assume MGT-7 is covered by an 'event-based' engagement and discover the gap in October. Ask us for the exact scope split in writing before engaging.
What happens if we miss the 15-day deadline for ADT-1?

The auditor's appointment itself remains valid even if ADT-1 is filed late — the form is a notification to the Registrar, not a condition of the appointment's validity. However, additional filing fees accrue under the Companies (Registration Offices and Fees) Rules for every day of delay, and the company should not treat late ADT-1 filing as a routine matter, since repeated defaults draw regulatory attention. PNPC files ADT-1 within the 15-day window as a standard part of every audit engagement, precisely to avoid this becoming an issue.

Practitioner noteWe have seen companies file ADT-1 a year late, having simply forgotten. The additional fee for a year's delay is materially higher than the professional fee for timely filing would have been.
Why does a bank loan trigger an MCA filing? What is CHG-1?

When a company borrows money and gives the lender security over its assets — a mortgage on property, a hypothecation of receivables or inventory, a pledge of shares — that security interest is called a 'charge'. Section 77 of the Companies Act 2013 requires every charge to be registered with the Registrar of Companies within 30 days of its creation, using Form CHG-1. This creates a public record so that anyone dealing with the company — another lender, an investor, a buyer of company assets — can see what is already pledged. Without registration, the charge can be void against the liquidator and other creditors if the company is later wound up, even though it remains enforceable between the company and the lender directly.

Practitioner noteBanks are usually diligent about their own security documentation but do not always chase the company to register the charge with MCA within 30 days — that obligation rests with the company. We coordinate directly with the client's bank relationship manager to get the charge instrument the same week it is executed.
What if we miss the 30-day window for registering a charge — is there any way to fix it?

Yes, within limits. Under Section 77 and the Companies (Registration of Charges) Rules, the Registrar can condone a delay in charge registration in two further stages beyond the original 30-day window: first, an additional 30 days (i.e. within 60 days of creation) on payment of additional fee, and then a further period up to 120 days from creation on payment of ad valorem fee — no separate application to the Central Government is needed for either of these condonation stages under the current provisions. Beyond that 120-day outer limit, registration requires an application to the Central Government (delegated to the Regional Director) under Section 87, involving a formal condonation process, additional documentation, and materially more time and cost.

Practitioner noteWe treat the 30-day window as the only deadline that matters operationally. Relying on the condonation window as a backup plan is a risk — it adds weeks of delay and cost, and there is no guarantee of approval for facts that suggest genuine negligence rather than an isolated oversight.
We fully repaid a business loan two years ago but never filed CHG-4 — does this matter?

Yes, it matters more than most companies realise. An unfiled CHG-4 means the charge still shows as 'open' on the MCA public register even though it has been repaid. This creates friction in several scenarios: a new lender's due diligence flags an existing charge that appears unresolved; a buyer in an asset sale or M&A due diligence process raises it as an open item; and in some cases, the original lender's compliance team is slow to respond to a satisfaction request years after the loan closed, making the eventual filing harder to complete. PNPC can assist with tracing historical loan closures and coordinating with the original lender to obtain the satisfaction confirmation needed to file CHG-4, however old the underlying loan.

Practitioner noteWe routinely find one or two 'open' charges in the MCA record of companies we onboard that were repaid years earlier and simply never closed out. It is a quick fix once the lender's no-dues letter is in hand — the harder part is often just getting that letter from a bank years after the relationship ended.
A director resigned six months ago but MCA still shows them as a director. What went wrong?

Two separate filings are needed when a director resigns: DIR-12 filed by the company (within 30 days of the Board's knowledge of the resignation) and DIR-11 filed independently by the resigning director themselves. If the company files DIR-12 but the individual never files their own DIR-11, or if neither is filed, MCA's public record continues to show the person as an active director — which can affect their DIN status on other engagements and their apparent liability exposure for the company's ongoing defaults. PNPC advises both the company and, where engaged, the individual director on completing both filings.

Practitioner noteWe always advise a resigning director to also file their own DIR-11 rather than relying solely on the company. It is a small extra step that protects the individual's own record independently of what the company subsequently does.
We allotted shares to a new investor last month. What filings does that trigger?

PAS-3 (Return of Allotment) must be filed with MCA within 15 days of the allotment date, listing the allottees, the number and class of shares, and the consideration received. If the allotment was to a person resident outside India, it also constitutes Foreign Direct Investment under FEMA, and Form FC-GPR must be filed on the RBI's FIRMS portal within 30 days of allotment — a separate filing with a separate regulator. If the allotment takes the paid-up capital beyond the currently authorised capital, Form SH-7 (increase in authorised capital) must be filed and effective before the allotment is valid. PNPC sequences and files all three where applicable.

Practitioner noteThe most common sequencing error we see is a company allotting shares first and only then discovering the authorised capital was insufficient — which technically makes the allotment invalid until corrected. We check authorised capital headroom before every allotment resolution is finalised, not after.
What is DPT-3 and does every company need to file it, even with no deposits?

DPT-3 is the annual return of deposits and other specified receipts — including loans from directors, inter-corporate loans, and certain advances — that a company must file by 30 June each year, reporting the position as at the preceding 31 March. Many companies assume DPT-3 applies only if they have accepted 'deposits' in the strict sense (from the public), but the form also captures amounts that are excluded from the definition of deposit — most commonly, loans from directors — which is why nearly every operating company has at least one reportable line item. Companies with genuinely no outstanding balances of any reportable category may still need to file a return depending on current MCA guidance and their auditor's assessment; PNPC evaluates DPT-3 applicability for every client each year rather than assuming it does not apply.

Practitioner noteDirector loans are extremely common in early-stage and family-owned companies — a founder covering a short-term cash gap personally. We have seen this go unreported in DPT-3 for years simply because nobody connected 'my personal transfer to the company account' with a statutory filing obligation.
Our company changed its registered office from Chennai to Bangalore — same state or different?

Tamil Nadu and Karnataka are different states, so a move from Chennai to Bangalore is an inter-state change of registered office — the more complex category. It requires a special resolution, an application to the Regional Director for approval (since it also changes the jurisdictional RoC), and only after that approval is obtained can the final INC-22 be filed to record the new address. A move within the same state (e.g. Chennai to another address in Tamil Nadu, potentially involving a jurisdiction change from one RoC to another within the state, or simply a local address change) follows a comparatively simpler process depending on whether the RoC jurisdiction itself changes.

Practitioner noteInter-state registered office changes are one of the filings people most underestimate in complexity. Budget for a multi-week timeline, not a same-week filing, when moving across state lines — the Regional Director approval step is the bottleneck, not the MCA form itself.
What is MGT-14 and when do we need to file it?

MGT-14 is the filing that records certain Board and shareholder resolutions with the Registrar — most commonly special resolutions altering the Memorandum or Articles of Association, approving related-party transactions above prescribed thresholds under Section 188, or approving other matters the Companies Act specifically requires to be filed. It must be filed within 30 days of the resolution being passed. Ordinary Board resolutions for routine matters generally do not require MGT-14 filing — only the specific categories listed under Section 117(3) and related provisions.

Practitioner noteWe maintain a standing checklist of which resolution types require MGT-14 so that clients do not have to make that determination themselves each time — a wrong call in either direction (filing when unnecessary, or skipping when required) creates its own cleanup work.
Can PNPC take over event-based filing for a company that already has an in-house accounts team?

Yes, and this is a common engagement pattern. Many companies have an in-house accounts or finance team capable of bookkeeping and day-to-day operations but without dedicated company-secretarial expertise to track event-based MCA triggers. PNPC can run purely as the event-based compliance layer — reviewing every Board resolution before it is finalised, tracking the resulting filing deadlines, and handling the MCA submissions — while the in-house team continues to manage accounting. We coordinate directly with the finance team rather than duplicating their work.

Practitioner noteThe most effective version of this arrangement is one where we are looped in before a resolution is signed, not after. Reviewing a resolution in draft lets us flag missing details (charge amount, allotment price, effective dates) that are expensive to correct once already passed and filed.
What is the practical difference between a company handling this in-house versus engaging PNPC?

An in-house team without dedicated company-secretarial training typically discovers an event-based obligation only when someone happens to remember it, or when a bank, investor, or auditor asks about it during an unrelated process. PNPC's engagement inverts that sequence: we ask to be told about material corporate actions before they happen, we draft the resolution and the filing together so they are consistent, and we track every trigger against its specific deadline rather than relying on memory. The difference shows up most clearly in fee accumulation — clients who engage us proactively very rarely accrue additional MCA fees for event-based defaults; clients who come to us after a gap typically have one or more to clear first.

Practitioner noteWe are not precious about who prepares the underlying documents — some clients want us to draft every resolution, others want us to review resolutions their lawyers or company secretary prepare. Either way works, as long as we see it before filing.
Does PNPC handle event-based filings for companies with foreign directors or NRI shareholders?

Yes. Foreign directors and NRI shareholders trigger the same MCA event-based obligations as any other director or shareholder change, plus additional layers: DIN and DSC procurement for a new foreign director involves apostille and notarisation of identity documents; share allotment to a non-resident triggers FC-GPR with RBI in addition to PAS-3 with MCA; and a foreign director's resignation or removal follows the same DIR-12/DIR-11 process but with cross-border document coordination. PNPC's Dubai office coordinates directly with UAE-resident directors and shareholders so document apostille, DSC video verification, and filing timelines are managed without the individual needing to travel.

Practitioner noteFor clients with both an Indian company and a UAE entity, we track event-based obligations on both sides under one calendar — a director change or capital event on one side often has a mirror implication on the other that is easy to miss if the two entities are advised by separate, uncoordinated firms.
Is there a single 'penalty amount' you can quote for a missed event-based filing?

No — and any firm that quotes a single flat number without knowing your specific form and delay period is guessing. Penalties vary by form: ADT-1, DIR-12, CHG-1, CHG-4, PAS-3, MGT-14, and SH-7 each fall under different fee schedules in the Companies (Registration Offices and Fees) Rules, with additional fee typically scaling by the number of days delayed and, for some categories, by the company's authorised share capital slab. For charge-related filings, there is also the separate and more serious consequence of the charge being void against creditors if registration is delayed beyond the condonation window. PNPC calculates the precise, current additional fee applicable to your specific form and delay before quoting any figure.

Practitioner noteWe are deliberately cautious about quoting exact penalty figures without seeing the specific form and delay period — the fee rules have several slabs and have been revised over time. Ask us for the current calculation on your specific facts rather than relying on a generic number from an old article.
How does PNPC price event-based filing services — per filing, or as part of a retainer?

Most PNPC clients engage event-based filing as part of a broader compliance retainer that also covers annual filings, GST, and TDS — this gives us visibility into the full picture of the company's activity and reduces the chance that an event is missed because it fell outside a narrowly scoped engagement. For companies that prefer a standalone arrangement, we also quote per-filing fees for specific one-off events (a single director change, a single charge registration). The exact structure and fee are confirmed in writing before any engagement begins.

Practitioner noteWe generally recommend the retainer model over per-filing pricing for active companies — a startup raising funds, hiring, and taking on debt in the same year will trigger several event-based filings, and the retainer removes any incentive (on either side) to under-report events to save a per-filing fee.
What documents does PNPC need from us to file a director change?

For an appointment: the incoming director's DIN (or PAN and identity documents if a fresh DIN application is needed), their written consent to act as director (Form DIR-2), a declaration of non-disqualification (Form DIR-8), and the Board or shareholder resolution approving the appointment. For a resignation: the outgoing director's resignation letter, evidence the Board has acknowledged it, and — separately — the director's own DIR-11 filing. For removal: the Section 169 notice and evidence the director was given an opportunity to be heard before the resolution was passed.

Practitioner noteThe single most common delay we see is a missing or incomplete DIR-8 declaration — directors sometimes assume a verbal confirmation of no disqualification is sufficient. It is not; the declaration must be a signed document in the prescribed format.
Our company has never filed a single event-based form beyond incorporation. Is that normal for a small company?

It depends entirely on what has actually happened in the company. A very small company with the same two founding directors since incorporation, no external loans, no share issuances since the founding round, and no address changes may genuinely have had no event-based triggers — in which case, no event-based filings would be expected. But if any of the following happened without a corresponding filing — a director changed, a bank loan was taken, a friend or family member's loan was recorded as received, shares were issued to a new person, or the office moved — there is likely a gap. PNPC runs a quick diagnostic review against the company's actual history (bank statements, Board minutes if any exist, shareholder register) to identify any gap before it surfaces in a bank, investor, or tax review.

Practitioner noteWe offer this diagnostic review to nearly every new retainer client in the first month of engagement — it is far easier to find and fix a two-year-old gap quietly than to discover it during an investor's due diligence request.
Can event-based filing defaults lead to director disqualification, like missed annual filings can?

Director disqualification under Section 164(2) is specifically tied to three consecutive years of default in filing annual returns (MGT-7) or financial statements (AOC-4) — not, on its own text, to event-based filings like ADT-1 or DIR-12. However, event-based defaults compound risk in other ways: an unregistered charge can be void against creditors on winding-up; an unfiled PAS-3 can leave a share allotment on uncertain footing; and a pattern of persistent event-based non-compliance is itself a red flag that regulators, banks, and investors treat as a proxy for weak governance, even where it does not trigger disqualification directly.

Practitioner noteWe do not want to overstate the disqualification risk for event-based forms specifically — that consequence is reserved for the annual filing defaults. But we equally do not want to understate the real commercial risk: a messy event-based filing history is one of the first things a sophisticated investor's legal counsel flags in due diligence, and it takes real time to clean up under deal pressure.
What is the STP versus non-STP distinction on the MCA portal, and why does it matter for event-based forms?

Some MCA forms are processed on a Straight-Through-Processing (STP) basis — approved automatically on submission if the data passes system checks — while others are routed to an RoC officer for manual examination (non-STP) and can attract a query (Resubmission, or 'RSUB') requiring the company to correct and resubmit within a stipulated window, typically 15 days. Whether a specific form is STP or non-STP, and how strict the RoC's review tends to be, varies by form type and can also depend on the jurisdictional RoC office. A form stuck in RSUB status is not yet 'filed' for compliance purposes until it is finally approved, so the underlying deadline risk continues until resolution.

Practitioner noteWe monitor every submitted form on the MCA portal until it shows 'Approved' status — not just until it shows 'Submitted'. The gap between those two statuses is where filings quietly go stale if nobody is watching.
Does PNPC also handle LLP event-based filings, or only companies?

LLPs follow a parallel but distinct event-based filing regime under the LLP Act 2008 and LLP Rules — Form 4 for changes in partners or designated partners, Form 3 for changes to the LLP Agreement, Form 8 and Form 11 for the LLP's own annual filings. These are governed by different sections and forms than the Companies Act filings covered in this service, though the underlying discipline — track the trigger, file within the window — is the same. PNPC handles LLP compliance as a related but separately scoped service; ask us to confirm which regime applies to your entity type.

Practitioner noteWe occasionally see a company that converted from an LLP still using LLP terminology and deadlines out of habit — a fast way to miss a Companies Act deadline that runs on a different clock than the LLP forms the team is used to.
If we're about to raise a funding round, what event-based filings should we prepare for in advance?

A funding round typically triggers several event-based filings in sequence: SH-7 if authorised capital needs to increase to accommodate the new allotment; PAS-3 within 15 days of the actual share allotment; FC-GPR with RBI within 30 days for any non-resident investor; MGT-14 if the Articles are amended to add investor rights (liquidation preference, anti-dilution, board seats); and potentially DIR-12 if the investor's term sheet includes a board observer or director appointment right. PNPC prepares this sequence in advance of the term sheet closing, so the filings happen in the correct order and within the correct windows once the round actually closes — rather than being figured out under closing-week pressure.

Practitioner noteThe single biggest planning error we see is treating the closing date as the moment to start thinking about filings. By the time term sheet signing happens, we want the SH-7 and AoA amendment groundwork already understood, so that only the final numbers need to be dropped into a pre-planned filing sequence.
What is a casual vacancy in the office of auditor, and how quickly must it be filled?

A casual vacancy arises when an auditor's office falls vacant mid-term — most commonly through resignation, death, or disqualification — other than by the expiry of the auditor's term. Under Section 139(8), the Board must fill a casual vacancy within 30 days, except where it arises from the auditor's resignation, in which case the appointment must also be approved by shareholders in a general meeting convened within 3 months of the Board's recommendation. Until the vacancy is filled and the new auditor's ADT-1 is filed, the company is effectively without a statutory auditor, which can affect the timeline for any pending financial statement work.

Practitioner noteWe treat an auditor resignation as an urgent event, not a routine one — the compounding effect of losing 30 days on filling the vacancy plus the subsequent shareholder approval timeline can meaningfully compress the runway to the AGM deadline later in the year.
Do event-based filings apply differently to a One Person Company (OPC) or a Section 8 Company?

The core event-based framework — ADT-1, DIR-12, CHG-1/CHG-4, PAS-3 where relevant, MGT-14 — applies to OPCs and Section 8 Companies as well, since they are incorporated under the same Companies Act 2013. Some practical differences exist: an OPC has only one member and typically one or two directors, so director-change events are simpler in scope but the sole member's nominee appointment (Form INC-3) is its own distinct event-based filing unique to the OPC structure. A Section 8 Company (non-profit) generally does not allot shares for consideration in the way a for-profit company does, so PAS-3 triggers are rare, but charge registration and director changes follow the standard rules.

Practitioner noteOPC nominee changes are a filing we see missed even more often than standard director changes — the nominee is easy to forget precisely because they have no active role in day-to-day operations until the sole member's incapacity or death actually occurs.
How does PNPC ensure nothing is missed when our team forgets to mention an event happened?

No compliance process can catch an event nobody discloses, which is why PNPC's engagement structure is built around two complementary safeguards rather than relying on disclosure alone. First, we conduct periodic reviews of bank statements and the Register of Members/Directors as part of the annual audit and compliance cycle, which surfaces most undisclosed events (new loans, share transfers, address changes) even without being told directly. Second, we set an explicit expectation at the start of every engagement: material actions — borrowing, hiring senior staff with equity, changing the board, moving offices — should be flagged to us before they happen, and we repeat this reminder at each periodic check-in rather than assuming it was understood once.

Practitioner noteThe bank statement review is, in practice, our most reliable catch-all. An unexplained credit that turns out to be a director's personal loan to the company, or an unexplained payment to a new charge-holder, surfaces reliably there even when nobody remembered to mention it.
What is Form CHG-9 and how is it different from CHG-1?

CHG-1 is used to register the creation or modification of a charge for most categories of borrowing. CHG-9 is the specific form used for the creation or modification of a charge relating to debentures (including any rectification), a narrower category than CHG-1's general scope. For most operating companies taking a standard bank loan or working capital facility, CHG-1 is the applicable form; CHG-9 becomes relevant only if the company has issued secured debentures.

Practitioner noteDebenture-related charge filings are relatively rare for the small and mid-sized private companies that make up most of our client base — we flag CHG-9 applicability specifically when a debenture instrument is involved, rather than defaulting to it.
We are a UAE-based promoter with an Indian subsidiary. How does PNPC coordinate event-based filings across both jurisdictions?

For clients with an Indian company and a UAE entity under common ownership, PNPC's Chennai/Bangalore/Hyderabad and Dubai offices operate as one coordinated team. India-side event-based filings — director changes, charge registrations, share allotments, FC-GPR for FDI — are tracked and filed by the India team. UAE-side events — changes to the UAE entity's licence, shareholders, or manager, and any UAE Corporate Tax or VAT implications of intercompany transactions — are handled by the Dubai team. Where an event on one side has an implication on the other (for example, an Indian share allotment to the UAE parent entity, or a UAE entity extending a loan to the Indian subsidiary that must appear in DPT-3), we manage it as a single coordinated filing exercise rather than two disconnected engagements.

Practitioner noteIntercompany loans between an Indian subsidiary and its UAE parent are a recurring source of DPT-3 and FEMA (External Commercial Borrowing / FEMA overseas investment rules) filing obligations that clients rarely anticipate until we walk through the specific transaction with them.
Is there a grace period for any of these filings, or are the deadlines absolutely fixed?

The stated statutory deadlines (15 days, 30 days, etc.) are fixed by law, but the practical consequence of missing them varies by form. Most forms allow late filing with an escalating additional fee rather than an outright bar — DIR-12, ADT-1, PAS-3, and MGT-14 fall in this category. Charge registration (CHG-1) is the notable exception with a harder outer boundary: Registrar-level condonation is available up to 120 days from creation with escalating additional/ad valorem fee, but beyond that, formal Central Government approval is required, and the underlying charge's enforceability against third parties can be affected in the interim. Treat every deadline as effectively fixed in your planning — the 'additional fee' safety net exists for genuine emergencies, not as a routine buffer.

Practitioner noteWe explicitly discourage clients from treating the additional-fee window as a normal part of the process. It exists to absorb genuine unforeseen delays, not to substitute for timely filing as a matter of course — and the fee, while calculable, is real money that timely filing avoids entirely.
Can PNPC help us clear a backlog of missed event-based filings from before we engaged you?

Yes. This is one of our more common engagement starting points — a company realises during a bank loan application, investor due diligence, or a routine MCA search that several event-based filings from prior years were never made. PNPC's process is to first reconstruct the full history of triggering events from bank statements, old Board minutes, and the share/director registers, then sequence the backlog filings correctly (some forms depend on others being filed first), and quantify the total additional fee exposure upfront so there are no surprises mid-process.

Practitioner noteThe reconstruction step is usually the slowest part — piecing together what actually happened three or four years ago from incomplete records takes longer than the filings themselves once the facts are established. Companies that keep even basic Board minutes make this process meaningfully faster and cheaper.
What is the consequence of an incorrect (rather than late) event-based filing?

An incorrect filing — wrong allotment date, wrong charge amount, wrong director details — can be as problematic as a late one, sometimes more so, because it creates an inaccurate public record that a third party may rely on. Correcting it typically requires a rectification filing (where the specific form supports one) or, in some cases, an application to the Regional Director or NCLT for rectification of the register, which is a materially more involved process than a straightforward late filing. PNPC's practice of reviewing the underlying resolution before filing exists specifically to prevent this category of error, which is harder and more expensive to fix after the fact than a delay is.

Practitioner noteWe have handled rectification applications for clients who self-filed incorrect charge amounts or allotment details through a portal that did not review the underlying transaction documents before submission. It is a meaningfully more expensive and slower fix than getting the original filing right.
Does PNPC file event-based forms only for MCA, or also equivalent triggers under GST, FEMA, and other laws?

This service is scoped to MCA/Companies Act event-based filings specifically, but PNPC's broader engagement model recognises that a single corporate event often triggers obligations under multiple laws simultaneously — a share allotment to a foreign investor triggers PAS-3 (MCA) and FC-GPR (FEMA/RBI); a registered office change can require a GST registration amendment in parallel; a new employee milestone can trigger PF/ESI registration thresholds. PNPC's retainer clients get this cross-law view as part of the engagement, so a single event is mapped to every filing it triggers — not just the MCA one — even though this specific service description centres on the Companies Act forms.

Practitioner noteWe have seen companies file PAS-3 correctly and completely miss the parallel FC-GPR requirement, because the two filings sit with different regulators and are easy to treat as unrelated tasks by teams that are not looking at the full picture.
How quickly can PNPC onboard our company and take over event-based filing responsibility?

For a company with a reasonably current MCA record and no significant backlog, PNPC can typically complete onboarding — reviewing the existing Register of Directors and Members, DIN/DSC status of all directors, and any pending or recent events — within 1–2 weeks, after which we assume standing responsibility for tracking and filing new triggers as they arise. For a company with a compliance backlog, onboarding includes the diagnostic and reconstruction phase described elsewhere, which takes longer depending on the number of years and events involved.

Practitioner noteWe ask every new client for read access to their MCA master data and recent bank statements as the very first onboarding step — it is the fastest way for us to independently verify the current state rather than relying solely on the client's own recollection of what has and has not been filed.
Why should we choose PNPC over a company secretary (CS) firm that only does MCA filings?

A standalone CS firm can competently file forms once instructed, but event-based compliance fails most often at the recognition stage — knowing that an event has occurred and requires a filing — not at the mechanical filing stage. PNPC, as a practising CA firm handling audit, tax, and accounting for the same client, sees the bank statements, the loan agreements, the share allotment consideration, and the Board minutes as a natural part of other engagements — which means we are structurally positioned to catch triggers a filing-only CS firm, working from instructions alone, would only learn about if specifically told. We also draft the underlying resolutions and coordinate the accounting and tax consequences (TDS on director remuneration changes, FEMA on foreign allotments) alongside the filing itself.

Practitioner noteThis is not a criticism of CS firms generally — many are excellent at what they are instructed to do. The distinction is about visibility: a CA firm already inside your books sees the trigger events as they happen; a filing-only engagement depends entirely on being told.
Why PNPC Global
What You NeedPortal / Filing-Only ServicePNPC Global
Recognising that an event needs filingDepends entirely on the client remembering to askIdentified proactively through audit, bookkeeping, and periodic bank statement review
Resolution draftingClient provides their own resolution as-isDrafted or reviewed by PNPC before filing, to prevent downstream errors
Charge registration coordination with lendersClient chases the bank for the charge instrumentPNPC coordinates directly with the client's bank relationship team
Sequencing of dependent filings (e.g. SH-7 before PAS-3)Filed in whatever order instructions arriveSequenced correctly by PNPC based on statutory dependency
Cross-border events (FC-GPR, foreign director documents)Often out of scope — referred elsewhereHandled in-house, coordinated with PNPC's Dubai office
MCA query (RSUB) monitoringMonitored only if the client happens to check the portalTracked by PNPC until the form shows 'Approved' status
Reconciliation with annual MGT-7Treated as a separate, disconnected exerciseReconciled by PNPC before the annual return is finalised
Historical backlog cleanupNot typically offered as a structured serviceFull diagnostic, reconstruction, and sequenced regularisation available

What the PNPC package includes

  1. 01

    Standing review of Board and shareholder resolutions before filing, to catch errors that create downstream correction work

  2. 02

    ADT-1 filing within 15 days of every auditor appointment, as a default part of the audit engagement

  3. 03

    DIR-12 filing for every director appointment, resignation, or removal, with DIR-8 eligibility verification

  4. 04

    CHG-1 coordination directly with the client's bank or lender to file within the 30-day window

  5. 05

    CHG-4 tracking of loan closures to file charge satisfaction proactively, not on request

  6. 06

    PAS-3 filing for every share allotment, sequenced with SH-7 (capital increase) and FC-GPR (FEMA) where applicable

  7. 07

    INC-22, MGT-14, and SH-7 filings for registered office, constitutional, and capital changes

  8. 08

    Annual DPT-3 preparation from a running log of director/related-party receipts tracked through the year

  9. 09

    MCA portal monitoring of every submitted form until it reaches 'Approved' status, including RSUB query responses

  10. 10

    Reconciliation of the year's event-based filings against the annual MGT-7 before submission

  11. 11

    Historical backlog diagnostic and reconstruction for companies with missed prior-year filings

  12. 12

    Coordinated India-UAE event tracking for clients with entities in both jurisdictions

Speak with a PNPC Chartered Accountant before your next Board resolution is signed. We will tell you exactly which MCA filings it triggers, by when, and what it will cost — in writing, before any engagement begins.

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