FEMA & RBI · External Commercial Borrowings & RBI Reporting
FLA Return & Single Master Form Filing
The Annual Return on Foreign Liabilities and Assets (FLA Return) is one of the most quietly consequential compliance deadlines on the RBI calendar — mandatory every 15 July for every Indian company, LLP, or eligible entity that has foreign direct investment on its books or holds overseas investment, regardless of whether that investment happened this year, last year, or a decade ago, and regardless of whether the company is active or dormant.
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The Annual Return on Foreign Liabilities and Assets (FLA Return) is one of the most quietly consequential compliance deadlines on the RBI calendar — mandatory every 15 July for every Indian company, LLP, or eligible entity that has foreign direct investment on its books or holds overseas investment, regardless of whether that investment happened this year, last year, or a decade ago, and regardless of whether the company is active or dormant. Filed on RBI's Single Master Form (SMF) via the FIRMS portal, it is a statistical return to RBI's Department of Statistics and Information Management, not a tax filing — but missing it is treated as an FEMA reporting contravention with the same compounding exposure as a missed FC-GPR. At PNPC Global, we have tracked FEMA reporting obligations for cross-border businesses since 1986. Our FLA Return & Single Master Form Filing service exists so this one filing never becomes the reason a funding round stalls or a compounding notice arrives.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
The FLA Return is an annual statistical return filed with the Reserve Bank of India under the provisions of FEMA 1999, capturing an entity's foreign liabilities (foreign investment received into India) and foreign assets (overseas investment made from India) as on 31 March of the reporting financial year, along with select transaction data for the year. It is mandated for every Indian resident company, LLP, and certain other entities (including SEBI-registered Alternative Investment Funds and partnership firms that have made overseas investment) that either received Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) or made Overseas Direct Investment (ODI) — including outstanding investment from any prior year, not only fresh investment received during the current year. The obligation continues every year for as long as the foreign investment or overseas investment remains on the balance sheet, even if there was zero transaction activity in the reporting year itself.
The filing is submitted electronically through RBI's FIRMS (Foreign Investment Reporting and Management System) portal, specifically via the Single Master Form (SMF) — the unified reporting architecture RBI introduced to consolidate what were previously several separate FDI-related returns (including the erstwhile FC-GPR, FC-TRS, and the annual FLA-specific web interface) into one integrated system built around an Entity Master record for each reporting entity. Before any FLA Return, FC-GPR, or FC-TRS can be filed for an entity, that entity's Entity Master must first be registered and verified on the FIRMS portal — a foundational one-time step that a surprising number of companies with foreign shareholding have never completed, which silently blocks every subsequent reporting obligation until it is fixed. The FLA Return itself, once the Entity Master is in place, is filed as a standalone annual submission through the SMF's FLA module — it is not bundled with FC-GPR or FC-TRS filings, which are transaction-triggered rather than annual.
The FLA Return due date is 15 July every year, covering the position as on the preceding 31 March. RBI permits the return to be filed on the basis of unaudited (provisional) financials if the audit is not yet complete by 15 July — provided the entity files a revised FLA Return based on audited figures by 30 September once the audit concludes. This two-stage filing (provisional, then audited) is a detail generic compliance calendars frequently miss, resulting in a return that is filed on time but never reconciled to the final audited numbers — itself a data-quality gap RBI has flagged in recent years as it tightens scrutiny on FLA data accuracy.
Why this filing carries more weight than its low profile suggests: the FLA Return is RBI's primary statistical source for India's external liabilities and assets position, feeding into the country's Balance of Payments and International Investment Position statistics. RBI treats non-filing seriously precisely because of this macro-data role — persistent non-compliance draws direct correspondence from RBI's Department of Statistics and Information Management, and in escalated cases becomes a standalone FEMA contravention referred for compounding, entirely independent of whether the underlying FDI or ODI transaction itself was properly reported at the time. For companies preparing for a funding round, FLA Return compliance is now a standard line item in investor and legal due diligence checklists — an unfiled or inconsistent FLA history is a red flag that experienced investor counsel will always ask about.
When you need FLA Return / SMF filing support
Your company has ever received foreign direct investment (equity, CCPS, CCDs, or other FDI-eligible instruments) from a non-resident investor, at any point in its history — even a single small angel cheque from an NRI or foreign national years ago
Your company or LLP has made an overseas investment (ODI) — a subsidiary, joint venture, or step-down entity abroad, including a UAE Free Zone or Mainland company
You are not certain whether your entity's FIRMS portal Entity Master was ever correctly registered, or whether past FLA Returns were actually filed and accepted rather than merely attempted
Your financial statements are not finalised by 15 July and you need the provisional-return-then-revised-return process handled correctly rather than simply missing the date
You are preparing for a Series A or later funding round, M&A transaction, or investor due diligence, and need your FLA filing history verified and any backlog regularised before the deal timeline is set
Your company holds foreign investment or overseas investment on the balance sheet but had zero fresh transactions in the reporting year — founders often mistakenly assume no transaction means no filing obligation
You have multiple non-resident investors, a multi-round cap table, or a group structure with cross-border holding entities and want the FLA data reconciled correctly across all of them
You have received a query, reminder, or non-compliance communication from RBI's Department of Statistics and Information Management or from your Authorised Dealer bank regarding FLA filing status
When this specific service may not be the right starting point
You have not yet received any foreign investment and are only evaluating whether to accept it — start with Foreign Investment Structuring advisory; FLA obligations arise only once FDI or ODI actually exists on the balance sheet
You need a specific FC-GPR or FC-TRS filed for a transaction that just happened — those are transaction-triggered filings distinct from the annual FLA Return, though PNPC's FC-GPR/FC-TRS & FIRMS Portal Reporting service handles them and we frequently combine both engagements for clients with active-year transactions
You suspect a specific past FDI or ODI transaction itself (not the annual FLA Return) was priced, routed, or reported incorrectly — that is a broader FEMA compliance question our FEMA Compliance Advisory & Review service is scoped to assess
You already know a contravention needs compounding and simply need that application prepared — our FEMA Due Diligence & Compounding Application Support service is the precisely scoped engagement for that
Your entity has never had, and does not currently have, any foreign shareholding or overseas investment — FLA has no application and this service is not relevant
FLA Return & SMF Filing vs related PNPC FEMA/RBI reporting services
| Feature | FLA Return & SMF Filing | FC-GPR/FC-TRS Filing | FEMA Compliance Advisory & Review | ODI Advisory & Reporting |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nature of filing | Annual statistical return — mandatory every year regardless of activity | Transaction-triggered — filed only when a share allotment or transfer happens | Not a filing — a review/assessment engagement | Mix of transaction-triggered (Form FC) and annual (APR) |
| Governing deadline | 15 July annually (provisional), 30 September (revised, if audit completes later) | FC-GPR within 30 days of allotment; FC-TRS within the prescribed window of transfer | No fixed deadline — engaged as needed | Form FC at time of investment; APR by 31 December annually |
| Trigger | Any FDI or ODI outstanding on the balance sheet as on 31 March, even from a prior year | A specific equity allotment or share transfer involving a non-resident | Funding round prep, periodic health check, advisor concern, suspected gap | New overseas subsidiary/JV set-up or existing ODI's annual cycle |
| Portal | FIRMS portal — Single Master Form, FLA module | FIRMS portal — Single Master Form, FC-GPR/FC-TRS module | FIRMS portal review across all modules | FIRMS portal — Form FC and APR modules |
| Precondition | Entity Master must be registered and verified first | Entity Master must be registered and verified first | Reviews whether Entity Master itself is correctly set up | Entity Master must be registered and verified first |
| Consequence of miss | RBI DSIM correspondence; escalates to a standalone FEMA contravention if persistent | Late Submission Fee if eligible, else compounding under Section 15 FEMA | N/A — identifies exposure across all of the above | Affects overseas entity's standing; can block further ODI |
| Typical PNPC engagement | Annual retainer — filed proactively every year, ideally bundled with statutory audit timeline | Per-transaction, filed within days of the triggering event | One-time review, often annual health check for active cross-border entities | Ongoing for entities with live overseas subsidiaries/JVs |
| Best suited for | Every entity with any FDI or ODI history, active or dormant | Companies with a specific completed transaction needing reporting | Companies wanting assurance across their entire FEMA reporting history | Companies with or planning an overseas subsidiary/JV |
These services are frequently engaged together — a company receiving its first FDI round typically needs FC-GPR filing at the transaction and FLA Return filing added to its annual calendar from that point forward. PNPC scopes and quotes based on your specific FDI/ODI history and transaction volume; a short conversation with our FEMA advisory team clarifies which combination applies.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | What Generic Advisors Miss | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Initial Scoping — Establish FLA applicability and filing history | We ask specifically: has the entity ever received foreign investment (even a single small tranche years ago), made any overseas investment, or had a foreign/NRI shareholder at incorporation? Applicability is based on foreign investment or overseas investment being outstanding as on 31 March — not on whether a transaction happened in the current year. Founders frequently assume 'no transaction this year' means 'no filing needed' — it does not. | Day 1–2 |
| 2 | FIRMS Portal & Entity Master Verification | Before any FLA Return can be filed, the entity's Entity Master record must exist and be verified on the FIRMS portal. We check whether it was ever registered, whether the registration is current, and whether the authorised representative's credentials are active. A significant number of companies with foreign shareholding have never completed this foundational step — meaning every FLA Return since incorporation may be technically outstanding. | Day 2–5 |
| 3 | Foreign Liabilities Data Collation | Complete shareholding pattern showing every non-resident investor, the instrument type (equity, CCPS, CCDs, warrants), number of units, face value, and paid-up value as on 31 March. We reconcile this against the statutory register of members and prior FC-GPR/FC-TRS filings — mismatches between the actual cap table and what RBI's records show are a common finding at this stage. | Week 1 |
| 4 | Foreign Assets Data Collation (if applicable) | For entities with overseas investment — subsidiary, joint venture, or step-down structure abroad — we collate the investment value, ownership percentage, and the overseas entity's financials needed for the FLA Return's foreign assets section. UAE step-down structures are common among our client base and are handled by our Dubai office in parallel with the India-side filing. | Week 1, in parallel with Stage 3 |
| 5 | Provisional vs Audited Financials Assessment | If the entity's statutory audit will not be complete before 15 July, RBI permits filing on unaudited/provisional figures — but this creates a mandatory follow-up obligation to file a revised FLA Return on audited figures by 30 September. We flag this explicitly and calendar the revised filing at the same time as the provisional one, rather than leaving it to be remembered separately. | Week 1–2 |
| 6 | SMF Data Entry & Internal Review | The FLA Return requires detailed data across multiple sections — company identification, foreign liability details by investor, foreign asset details by overseas entity, and financial summary figures (paid-up capital, reserves, sales, purchases) that must tie back to the balance sheet. We prepare and internally review the return before submission — a data mismatch flagged by RBI's system after submission costs more time to correct than catching it before filing. | Week 2 |
| 7 | Submission on FIRMS Portal | The completed FLA Return is submitted through the SMF FLA module on the FIRMS portal using the entity's registered credentials. We retain the system-generated acknowledgement as the entity's proof of timely filing — this acknowledgement is precisely what investor due diligence teams and Authorised Dealer banks ask to see. | By 15 July (provisional) or as scoped for the current cycle |
| 8 | Revised Filing on Audited Financials (where applicable) | Once the statutory audit concludes, PNPC files the revised FLA Return reflecting final audited figures, replacing the provisional submission. This step is frequently skipped by entities that file the provisional return and consider the obligation closed — RBI's own guidance treats the revised filing as mandatory where provisional figures were used, not optional. | By 30 September |
| 9 | Backlog Assessment — Where prior years were missed | If our review uncovers FLA Returns that were never filed in prior years, we assess the extent of the backlog, prepare the reasoning and documentation for approaching RBI's Department of Statistics and Information Management, and file the outstanding returns where the portal permits back-filing, escalating to a compounding conversation only where the gap is treated as a substantive contravention rather than a data correction. | As identified — timeline depends on backlog depth |
| 10 | Reconciliation With Other FEMA Filings | We cross-check the FLA Return figures against the entity's FC-GPR, FC-TRS, and (where applicable) Form FC/APR filing history, since RBI's systems increasingly cross-reference these datasets. A shareholding figure in the FLA Return that does not match the cumulative FC-GPR/FC-TRS record is a red flag we resolve before submission, not after a query arrives. | Week 2–3 |
| 11 | Acknowledgement Archival & Compliance Record | The filing acknowledgement, the data submitted, and supporting workpapers (shareholding reconciliation, valuation cross-references) are archived in the entity's permanent compliance file — precisely the documentation an investor's legal counsel requests during due diligence. | Immediately after filing |
| 12 | Annual Compliance Calendar Set-Up | PNPC adds the FLA Return to the entity's standing annual compliance calendar — provisional filing target ahead of 15 July, revised filing target ahead of 30 September, and a data-collation trigger tied to the statutory audit timeline so the return is never a last-minute scramble. | Set up once, reviewed annually |
| 13 | Ongoing Annual Filing — Every Year | For clients on our annual retainer, PNPC proactively initiates FLA data collation each year as the financial year closes, without waiting to be asked, and manages both the provisional and revised filing cycle as a standing part of the engagement. | Every year, for as long as FDI/ODI remains on the balance sheet |
Realistic timeline for a first-time FLA filing with a clean, well-documented FDI/ODI history: 2–3 weeks from data collation to acknowledged submission. Where Entity Master registration or a multi-year backlog needs to be resolved first, add 2–4 weeks. The 15 July and 30 September dates themselves are fixed by RBI and do not move — PNPC's internal timeline is built backward from them.
Certificate of Incorporation and PAN of the reporting entity (company, LLP, or other eligible entity)
Latest Memorandum & Articles of Association or LLP Agreement reflecting current authorised and paid-up capital structure
FIRMS portal login credentials, or confirmation that Entity Master registration has never been completed, so PNPC can initiate it
CIN/LLPIN and registered office details as they appear on MCA records, for consistency with FIRMS portal data
Complete shareholding pattern as on 31 March — every non-resident investor's name, country, instrument type, number of units, face value, and paid-up value
Copies of all FC-GPR filings made for share allotments to non-residents, with FIRMS portal acknowledgement or Unique Identification Number (UIN)
Copies of all FC-TRS filings for any resident-to-non-resident or non-resident-to-resident share transfers during the entity's history
Valuation reports supporting each allotment or transfer price involving a non-resident investor
Statutory Register of Members reflecting current and historical shareholding
Details of each overseas subsidiary, joint venture, or step-down entity — name, country, ownership percentage, and date of investment
Form FC filings (or predecessor Form ODI Part I filings) made at the time of each overseas investment
Latest available financial statements of the overseas entity, or best-available estimates where audited accounts are not yet finalised
Prior Annual Performance Reports (APR) filed for the overseas investment, with acknowledgement
Provisional (unaudited) financial statements as on 31 March, if the statutory audit will not conclude before 15 July
Audited financial statements, once finalised, for the mandatory revised filing by 30 September
Paid-up capital, free reserves, sales, and purchase figures for the reporting year, reconciled to the audited or provisional balance sheet and profit & loss account
Any intercompany transaction data with foreign group entities relevant to the FLA Return's transaction fields
Copies or acknowledgements of all previously filed FLA Returns, if any, for cross-year consistency review
Any correspondence received from RBI's Department of Statistics and Information Management or the Authorised Dealer bank regarding FLA compliance
Confirmation of whether the Entity Master and Business User registration on FIRMS are current and whether the authorised signatory's access is active
Details of any prior FEMA compounding matter that may be relevant to the entity's current reporting status
Board resolution or authorisation letter, where required, empowering PNPC or a designated signatory to file on the entity's behalf
Business User registration or renewal on the FIRMS portal, if the entity's existing user access has lapsed
Internal data reconciliation working papers cross-checking FLA figures against FC-GPR, FC-TRS, and MCA shareholding records
Filing acknowledgement and submission summary retained for the entity's permanent compliance file
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| First FDI/ODI Received | First non-resident share allotment or first overseas investment made | FC-GPR or Form FC filed for the transaction itself; Entity Master registration confirmed or completed on FIRMS; FLA Return added to the entity's annual compliance calendar from that financial year onward. | Entity Master never registered means every future FLA Return, FC-GPR, and FC-TRS filing is technically blocked or improperly routed until corrected — a foundational gap that compounds silently for years. |
| Annual FLA Cycle — Provisional Filing | 31 March financial year end | Foreign liabilities and assets data collated and reconciled against shareholding records and prior filings; provisional FLA Return filed by 15 July on best-available (unaudited) figures if the statutory audit is not yet complete. | Missed 15 July deadline draws RBI DSIM correspondence and, on persistent non-filing, escalates toward treatment as a standalone FEMA reporting contravention. |
| Annual FLA Cycle — Revised Filing | Statutory audit concludes after 15 July | Revised FLA Return filed by 30 September reflecting final audited figures, replacing the provisional submission. | Provisional-only filing left unreconciled creates a data-quality gap in RBI's records that surfaces during investor due diligence or a future RBI data-accuracy review. |
| No Transaction Year | No fresh FDI or ODI activity in the financial year, but prior investment remains outstanding | FLA Return still filed based on the outstanding balance as on 31 March — PNPC confirms applicability every year rather than assuming a quiet year means no obligation. | The single most common cause of an unintentional FLA default: assuming no transaction means no filing. RBI's obligation is based on outstanding balance, not current-year activity. |
| New Funding Round | Fresh equity raise involving a non-resident investor | FC-GPR filed within 30 days of allotment; shareholding pattern and Entity Master updated on FIRMS; that year's FLA Return reflects the new investor and updated cap table. | A funding round completed without the corresponding FLA and FC-GPR trail creates a diligence gap that investor counsel will flag before the round can close cleanly. |
| Overseas Expansion | Indian entity sets up or invests in an overseas subsidiary/JV, including in the UAE | Form FC filed at the time of investment; that year's FLA Return reflects the new foreign asset; Annual Performance Report tracked separately for the 31 December deadline; PNPC's Dubai office coordinates the UAE-side compliance in parallel. | Unreported overseas investment on the FLA Return creates a mismatch between the entity's actual cross-border footprint and its RBI-visible record, complicating future ODI transactions by the same entity. |
| Dormant Entity With Legacy FDI | Company stops active operations but foreign shareholding remains on the books | FLA Return obligation continues regardless of dormancy — PNPC confirms this explicitly with dormant-entity clients, since the assumption that an inactive company has no filing obligations is a frequent and costly misunderstanding. | Multi-year non-filing on a dormant entity discovered at the point of strike-off, revival, or a later transaction can require a compounding application before the entity's FEMA record can be regularised. |
| Multi-Year Backlog Discovered | Internal review, new auditor, or investor due diligence surfaces missed FLA Returns | Backlog scope assessed; back-filing attempted where the FIRMS portal permits it; escalation path to RBI DSIM correspondence or, where treated as a substantive contravention, a compounding application under Section 15 of FEMA. | The longer a backlog remains unaddressed, the more it compounds as an open exposure that can surface at the least convenient moment — mid-funding-round, mid-M&A diligence, or during a bank's periodic KYC refresh. |
| Exit, Transfer, or Restructuring | Non-resident investor exits, share transfer, merger, or entity wind-down | FC-TRS filed for any transfer involving a non-resident; final-year FLA Return reflects the closing position accurately; where the entity ceases to have any FDI/ODI on its books, PNPC confirms and documents the point from which FLA obligation ends. | An exit or restructuring completed without updating the FLA/FIRMS record leaves the entity's RBI-visible foreign investment position inconsistent with reality, creating friction in any subsequent regulatory interaction. |
What is the FLA Return, in plain terms?
It is an annual return every Indian company or LLP with foreign investment received (FDI) or foreign investment made overseas (ODI) must file with the RBI, reporting the value of those foreign liabilities and assets as on 31 March each year. It is filed on RBI's FIRMS portal through the Single Master Form, and it is due by 15 July every year. It is a statistical return, not a tax filing — but RBI treats missing it as a genuine FEMA reporting lapse, not a minor administrative slip.
Who exactly is required to file the FLA Return?
Any Indian resident entity — company, LLP, or certain other eligible entities such as SEBI-registered Alternative Investment Funds and partnership firms making overseas investment — that has received Foreign Direct Investment or made Overseas Direct Investment, and has an outstanding balance of that foreign liability or asset as on 31 March of the reporting year. This includes entities where the foreign investment was received in a prior year and there was no fresh transaction in the current year.
What is the deadline for filing the FLA Return?
The FLA Return is due by 15 July each year, covering the position as on the preceding 31 March. If the entity's statutory audit is not complete by 15 July, RBI permits the return to be filed on provisional (unaudited) figures — but a revised FLA Return based on the final audited financials must then be filed by 30 September.
What happens if the FLA Return is not filed on time?
A missed FLA Return is treated as a contravention of FEMA reporting requirements. In the first instance, RBI's Department of Statistics and Information Management typically issues reminder correspondence. Persistent or unresolved non-filing can escalate to being treated as a standalone FEMA contravention, exposing the entity to the compounding process under Section 15 of FEMA — with a composition amount that depends on the value involved and the period of delay.
What is the FIRMS portal and what is the Single Master Form (SMF)?
FIRMS (Foreign Investment Reporting and Management System) is RBI's online portal for all FDI and ODI-related reporting. The Single Master Form (SMF) is the unified reporting structure within FIRMS that consolidated what were previously several separate returns — including FC-GPR, FC-TRS, and the FLA-specific reporting interface — into one integrated system, built around a foundational Entity Master record for each reporting entity.
What is Entity Master registration and why does it matter for FLA filing?
Entity Master is the foundational profile of a reporting entity on the FIRMS portal — company details, capital structure, and authorised user access — that must exist and be verified before any FLA Return, FC-GPR, or FC-TRS can be filed for that entity. If Entity Master was never registered, or the registration lapsed, the FLA Return cannot be filed until it is corrected.
Our company had no fresh foreign investment transaction this year. Do we still need to file the FLA Return?
Yes, if any foreign investment received in a prior year, or any overseas investment made in a prior year, remains outstanding as on 31 March of the reporting year. The obligation is based on the outstanding balance on the balance sheet, not on whether a new transaction occurred during the year.
What data does the FLA Return actually require?
Broadly: company identification details, the complete non-resident shareholding pattern (investor-wise, instrument-wise, with face value and paid-up value), details of any overseas investment held (subsidiary/JV-wise), and financial summary figures such as paid-up capital, reserves, sales, and purchases for the reporting year, which must reconcile to the entity's balance sheet and profit & loss account.
Can the FLA Return be filed using unaudited financial statements?
Yes. If the statutory audit is not complete by 15 July, RBI permits the FLA Return to be filed on the basis of provisional (unaudited) figures. This is explicitly built into RBI's own guidance for exactly this timing gap, since most Indian companies' financial year ends 31 March while the 15 July deadline often falls before the audit is finalised.
What happens if we file on provisional figures and never file the revised return?
RBI's guidance treats the revised filing on audited figures as a mandatory follow-up where provisional figures were used, not an optional correction. Leaving only the provisional return on file creates a data-quality gap in RBI's records — the return exists, but the underlying figures were never reconciled to the entity's actual audited financial position.
Does a dormant or inactive company still need to file the FLA Return?
Yes, if it still has foreign investment (FDI) or overseas investment (ODI) reflected on its balance sheet, regardless of whether the company is actively trading. Dormancy or lack of operational activity does not remove the FLA Return obligation — only the actual removal of the foreign liability or asset from the books (through transfer, buyback, write-off, or entity closure) does.
We are an LLP with a foreign partner's capital contribution. Does FLA apply to us?
Yes. FLA Return applicability extends to LLPs that have received foreign direct investment (which, for an LLP, takes the form of capital contribution from a non-resident partner under the FEMA framework applicable to LLPs) or that have made overseas investment, on the same basis as companies.
How does the FLA Return relate to FC-GPR and FC-TRS filings?
FC-GPR and FC-TRS are transaction-triggered filings — FC-GPR reports a specific share allotment to a non-resident within 30 days of that allotment, and FC-TRS reports a specific share transfer between resident and non-resident within the prescribed window. The FLA Return is a separate, annual, position-based filing reporting the cumulative outstanding foreign liabilities and assets as on 31 March, regardless of which specific transactions contributed to that position over the years.
What is the Annual Performance Report (APR) and how is it different from the FLA Return?
The APR is a separate annual filing required for Overseas Direct Investment (ODI), due by 31 December each year, reporting the performance and financial position of each overseas subsidiary or joint venture the Indian entity holds. It is filed on FIRMS as part of the Form FC/ODI reporting stream. The FLA Return is broader — it captures both inbound (FDI) and outbound (ODI) positions in a single consolidated statistical return, whereas the APR is specifically about the entity's overseas investments' operating performance.
Can PNPC file a backlog of FLA Returns that were never submitted in prior years?
Yes, in most cases. We first assess how many years were missed and whether the FIRMS portal permits direct back-filing for those periods. Where back-filing is feasible, we complete it directly. Where the gap is treated by RBI as a substantive contravention rather than a straightforward data correction, we assess whether a compounding application under Section 15 of FEMA is the appropriate regularisation path, and scope that separately.
Is there a government fee for filing the FLA Return?
The FLA Return itself does not carry a government filing fee — it is filed directly on RBI's FIRMS portal at no charge. Costs arise only where a compounding application becomes necessary for a lapsed filing, in which case a composition amount is levied by RBI as part of the compounding order, calculated based on the value involved and the period of delay.
How much does PNPC charge for FLA Return / SMF filing?
PNPC quotes a fixed, agreed fee based on the complexity of the entity's shareholding pattern, whether overseas investment is also involved, whether Entity Master registration needs to be set up or corrected, and whether any prior-year backlog exists. Straightforward annual filings for an entity with a clean, existing Entity Master and simple shareholding are quoted at a modest fixed fee; backlog regularisation or complex multi-round cap tables are scoped and quoted separately in writing before work begins.
Can the FLA Return be filed without a Chartered Accountant?
There is no statutory requirement that an FLA Return be filed exclusively through a CA — an authorised representative of the entity with FIRMS portal access can file it directly. In practice, correctly reconciling non-resident shareholding, instrument-wise valuation, and financial summary figures to the audited accounts is technical work most businesses prefer to have handled by a qualified professional, particularly given the reporting's cross-references to FC-GPR/FC-TRS history and the consequences of an inaccurate filing.
What if our company's FDI was priced or reported incorrectly at the time it was received — does FLA filing fix that?
No. The FLA Return reports the position as it stands; it does not correct or regularise an underlying pricing or reporting defect in the original FC-GPR or FC-TRS filing. If our review uncovers such a defect while preparing the FLA Return, we flag it separately and recommend our broader FEMA Compliance Advisory & Review or FEMA Due Diligence & Compounding Application Support service, as appropriate, to address the underlying transaction issue.
Our foreign investor exited and sold all their shares to a resident buyer. Do we still need to file FLA Returns going forward?
Once there is no foreign liability (FDI) or foreign asset (ODI) remaining on the entity's balance sheet as on a subsequent 31 March, the FLA Return obligation for that year does not arise. The FC-TRS for the exit transfer itself must still be filed within its prescribed window, and the final FLA Return covering the year in which the exit occurred should reflect the closing position accurately.
How does PNPC handle FLA filing for clients with a UAE subsidiary or holding structure?
For Indian entities with a UAE Free Zone or Mainland subsidiary, PNPC's Chennai/Bangalore/Hyderabad and Dubai offices coordinate directly — the India-side team handles the FLA Return and Form FC/APR filings on FIRMS, while our Dubai office confirms the UAE entity's financial position and structure details needed to complete the ODI portion of the return accurately, under one engagement rather than two disconnected advisors.
What is the difference between FDI and ODI for FLA reporting purposes?
FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) is investment received by the Indian entity from a non-resident — this is reported as a foreign liability. ODI (Overseas Direct Investment) is investment made by the Indian entity into an entity abroad — this is reported as a foreign asset. The FLA Return captures both sides where applicable: an entity can have only FDI, only ODI, or both simultaneously (for example, a company that received VC funding in India and also set up a UAE subsidiary).
We received investment through Compulsorily Convertible Preference Shares (CCPS) or Compulsorily Convertible Debentures (CCDs). Are these reported in the FLA Return?
Yes. CCPS and CCDs are FDI-eligible instruments under FEMA's Non-Debt Instruments framework, and non-resident holdings of these instruments are reported in the FLA Return's foreign liability section alongside equity shares, with the instrument type specified.
Does the FLA Return need to be filed for every group entity separately, or can a group file once?
Each reporting entity — every separate company or LLP within a group that individually holds FDI or ODI — must file its own FLA Return under its own Entity Master registration. There is no consolidated group-level FLA filing; the return is entity-specific.
What documentation should we retain after filing the FLA Return?
The FIRMS portal's system-generated acknowledgement of submission, the underlying data submitted (shareholding pattern, financial figures), and the reconciliation working papers used to prepare the return. This documentation is precisely what an investor's legal counsel, an Authorised Dealer bank, or RBI itself may request in any future review.
Is the FLA Return the same as the annual return filed with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MGT-7)?
No, they are entirely separate filings with different regulators, purposes, and portals. MGT-7 is the Companies Act annual return filed with the Registrar of Companies under the MCA, covering shareholding, directors, and corporate governance matters generally. The FLA Return is an RBI filing under FEMA, specifically covering foreign liabilities and assets, filed on the FIRMS portal. Both are mandatory and neither substitutes for the other.
What if the FLA Return shows a discrepancy between our records and what was previously reported to RBI?
We treat this as a data reconciliation issue requiring resolution before the current year's return is filed — not something to file over or ignore. Depending on the nature of the discrepancy, resolution may involve a correction request to RBI's Department of Statistics and Information Management, a review of whether an underlying FC-GPR/FC-TRS filing was itself inaccurate, or simply an internal record correction with the discrepancy properly documented and explained.
Can PNPC set up FLA Return filing as part of an annual retainer alongside our statutory audit and other compliance work?
Yes. Many of our clients with FDI or ODI on their books include FLA Return filing (both provisional and revised) as a standing item within our broader annual compliance retainer, timed to align with the statutory audit and MCA/Income-tax filing calendar so the entity's full compliance cycle is managed as one coordinated engagement rather than a series of separate, disconnected tasks.
Our startup raised a small angel round from an NRI relative — does that really trigger FLA obligations?
Yes, if the NRI investment was structured as Foreign Direct Investment under FEMA (which most equity investment by non-resident individuals is), the company has a foreign liability on its books from the date of that allotment, and FLA Return filing becomes an annual obligation from that financial year onward, regardless of the amount involved.
How does RBI use the data collected through FLA Returns?
The FLA Return is India's primary micro-level data source feeding into the country's Balance of Payments statistics and International Investment Position reporting, compiled and published by RBI in coordination with national and international statistical frameworks. This is precisely why RBI treats non-filing as a matter of institutional importance rather than a minor administrative lapse — the aggregate data quality of India's external sector statistics depends on individual entities filing accurately and on time.
What is a Late Submission Fee (LSF) and does it apply to a missed FLA Return?
RBI permits certain delayed FEMA reportable filings to be regularised through payment of a Late Submission Fee, calculated on a prescribed formula, without requiring a full compounding application, where the specific filing and delay fall within LSF-eligible parameters as notified by RBI from time to time. Whether a specific missed FLA Return qualifies for LSF treatment versus requiring formal compounding depends on RBI's current framework and the specifics of the case, and we assess this at the time the gap is identified rather than assuming either path applies by default.
If our company is being acquired or merged, does the FLA Return obligation transfer to the surviving entity?
In a merger or amalgamation, the surviving entity generally assumes the FEMA reporting obligations of the merged entity for the period up to the transaction, and its own FLA Return going forward reflects the combined foreign liability/asset position. In an acquisition where the target company continues as a separate legal entity, the target retains its own independent FLA Return obligation under its own Entity Master.
We use a third-party company secretarial or compliance software platform for MCA filings. Does that also handle FLA Return filing?
Generally no. Most MCA-focused compliance software and company secretarial platforms are built around Companies Act filings (AOC-4, MGT-7, DIR-3 KYC) and do not extend to RBI's FIRMS portal or the FEMA reporting framework, which is a separate regulatory system entirely. FLA Return filing needs to be tracked and executed independently, even if a company uses automated tools for its MCA compliance calendar.
What should we do right now if we are not sure whether our FLA Returns have been filed correctly in past years?
The most reliable first step is a targeted review: confirm Entity Master registration status on FIRMS, pull whatever filing acknowledgements exist, reconstruct the actual shareholding and overseas investment history, and compare that against what should have been filed each year since the entity first had any FDI or ODI. PNPC can run this review as a standalone engagement, independent of taking on the ongoing annual filing, so you have clarity on your actual compliance position before deciding next steps.
PNPC Global vs typical alternatives for FLA Return / SMF filing
| Dimension | Online Filing Portal / DIY | Generic Compliance Vendor | PNPC Global |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entity Master health check | Not performed — assumes it already exists | Sometimes checked, often as an afterthought | Verified first, every engagement — the foundational step before anything else is filed |
| Applicability assessment | Client self-determines, often incorrectly assumes no transaction means no filing | Basic checklist, rarely probes outstanding-balance nuance | Explicitly confirmed every year based on 31 March outstanding position, not current-year activity |
| Provisional-to-revised filing tracking | Frequently missed entirely — only provisional return filed | Sometimes tracked, rarely proactively calendared | Both dates calendared together at the outset; revised filing actively pursued post-audit |
| Reconciliation with FC-GPR/FC-TRS history | Not performed | Rarely performed in depth | Standard part of every FLA engagement — mismatches resolved before, not after, submission |
| UAE / cross-border coordination | Not applicable | Referred to a separate, disconnected advisor | Chennai/Bangalore/Hyderabad and Dubai offices coordinate directly under one engagement |
| Backlog and compounding assessment | Not offered | Referred out, adds delay and a new advisor relationship | Assessed in-house, including whether LSF or compounding is the appropriate path |
| Ongoing annual management | One-off transactional service | Requires re-engagement and re-briefing each year | Standing annual retainer option — proactively initiated without being asked |
| Accountability | None beyond the filing act itself | Limited — vendor relationship, not an advisory one | A named CA contact accountable for the entity's full FEMA compliance position, year after year |
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
FIRMS portal Entity Master verification and, where needed, fresh registration or correction
- 02
Complete foreign liabilities (FDI) and foreign assets (ODI) data collation and reconciliation against shareholding and prior filing records
- 03
Provisional FLA Return preparation and filing ahead of the 15 July deadline
- 04
Revised FLA Return preparation and filing on audited figures by 30 September, where applicable
- 05
Cross-reconciliation against FC-GPR, FC-TRS, and (where applicable) Form FC/APR filing history
- 06
Multi-year backlog assessment and back-filing or compounding-path guidance where prior returns were missed
- 07
Filing acknowledgement archival and a permanent, investor-diligence-ready compliance record
- 08
Coordination with PNPC's Dubai office for clients with UAE subsidiary or holding structures
- 09
Annual compliance calendar set-up covering FLA, APR, and event-based FEMA reporting triggers together
- 10
Direct CA access for questions arising between filings — not a ticket-based support queue
One overlooked RBI deadline should never be the reason a funding round stalls or a compounding notice arrives — talk to PNPC's FEMA advisory team and get your FLA Return filed correctly, on time, every year.