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NBFC Takeover vs Fresh Registration: Cost, Timeline & RBI Compliance Compared

Every founder who wants to start a lending business in India faces one big choice. Do you buy an NBFC that already has a licence? Or do you build a new one from the ground up?

This choice is not small. It changes how much money you lock in. It changes how long you wait. It changes how much risk you carry in year one. Get it wrong, and you either lose months to paperwork, or you inherit problems you never saw coming.

This blog compares both paths in plain terms. We look at cost. We look at the timeline. We look at RBI rules. By the end, you will know which path fits your plan.

Why This Choice Matters

India has thousands of NBFCs. New ones join the list every year. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) watches this sector closely. NBFCs lend public money, so RBI checks every entry point with care. This is true whether you register fresh or take over an old company.

Many founders think fresh registration is always slow. They think a takeover is always cheap. Neither is fully true. It depends on your capital. It depends on how much you can wait. It depends on how much due diligence work you can handle. Let’s look at both paths, one at a time.

What Is an NBFC Takeover?

An NBFC takeover means you buy a company that already holds a Certificate of Registration (CoR) from RBI. The company already exists. The licence is already issued. You simply step in as the new owner or director.

Think of it like buying a running restaurant instead of building one on empty land. The kitchen is ready. The food licence is ready. You just change the owner, and maybe the menu.

RBI calls this a “change in control.” Under RBI’s rules, any takeover of an NBFC needs RBI’s written approval before it happens. This is true even if the management team stays the same.

What Is Fresh NBFC Registration?

Fresh registration means you start from zero. You form a new company. You raise the required capital. You meet RBI’s rules. Then you apply for a new Certificate of Registration under Section 45-IA of the RBI Act, 1934.

Think of it like building a restaurant on empty land. You choose the design. You build the kitchen. You wait for every approval before you open the doors. RBI checks your business plan, your promoters, and your capital in full detail before it gives you a licence.

Cost Comparison: What Each Path Really Costs

Fresh Registration Costs

The biggest cost in fresh registration is not paperwork. It is capital.

Net Owned Fund (NOF) rule. Since October 1, 2022, any company that applies for a new NBFC licence must show a minimum Net Owned Fund of ₹10 crore. This is up from the old rule of ₹2 crore. This money must sit in the company as paid-up equity and free reserves. It is not a fee. It is real money you must hold and prove with an auditor’s certificate.

Some NBFC types need more. An NBFC-Infrastructure Debt Fund needs at least ₹300 crore. A Housing Finance Company needs at least ₹25 crore. But for a standard lending NBFC — the kind most fintech founders want — ₹10 crore is the number to plan for.

Here is what else you should budget for:

Cost Head Approximate Range
Net Owned Fund (locked-in capital, not a fee) ₹10 crore minimum
Company incorporation (Companies Act, 2013) ₹15,000 – ₹50,000
Legal and consultancy fees for RBI application ₹3 lakh – ₹8 lakh
Compliance setup (policies, KYC/AML systems, board rules ₹2 lakh – ₹5 lakh
Statutory Auditor’s NOF certificate ₹50,000 – ₹1.5 lakh

The paperwork itself is now lighter than before. RBI has cut the document list for Type I applicants down to about 7–8 core papers. This includes the certificate of incorporation, the MoA and AoA, a board resolution, the auditor’s NOF certificate, and fit-and-proper forms for each director. But lighter paperwork does not mean lower capital. The ₹10 crore rule is still the real barrier to entry.

Takeover Costs

In a takeover, you don’t raise fresh capital for RBI in the same way. Instead, you pay a seller for a company that already meets the rule, or is working toward it.

Cost Head Approximate Range
Purchase price of the NBFC shell ₹1.5 crore – ₹5 crore or more (depends on CoR type and how clean the books are)
Due diligence (legal, financial, compliance check) ₹2 lakh – ₹5 lakh
RBI approval processing and stamp duty on share transfer Varies by state and deal size
Post-takeover clean-up work Often underestimated; can run into lakhs if the seller left gaps

A word of caution: a cheap NBFC shell is often cheap for a reason. Old loan defaults, pending customer complaints, or unresolved RBI queries can hide inside a company that looks clean on paper. The purchase price is just the start. The real cost often shows up during due diligence, and after the deal closes.

Timeline Comparison: How Long Each Path Really Takes

Fresh Registration Timeline

  • Company incorporation: 1–2 weeks
  • Preparing the RBI application (business plan, financials, director KYC, fit-and-proper checks): 4–6 weeks
  • RBI review, queries, and follow-up: 6–12 months, sometimes longer
  • Total realistic timeline: 8–14 months

RBI does not rush this process. Every fresh applicant is checked closely for promoter integrity, source of capital, and business plan quality. You file the application through RBI’s COSMOS online portal, but the review after that is slow and detailed.

Takeover Timeline

  • Finding the right NBFC and starting talks: 1–2 months
  • Due diligence (financial, legal, compliance history): 3–6 weeks
  • Share transfer agreement, public notice, and RBI approval for change in control: 2–4 months
  • Total realistic timeline: 4–7 months

A takeover moves faster because the CoR already exists. RBI’s job shifts from “should this company get a licence” to “are the new owners fit to run it.” Still, this is not instant. Delays can happen if paperwork is incomplete, or if follow-up with RBI’s regional office breaks down.

RBI Compliance: Fresh Registration

When you apply fresh, RBI checks you on several points:

  • Promoter and director background. RBI runs a “fit and proper” test. It checks for a clean record, honesty, and real experience in financial services.
  • Source of the Net Owned Fund. The money must be real, traceable, and not moved around to look bigger than it is.
  • Business plan strength, usually mapped out for the next three years.
  • Credit and risk policies, board rules, and internal audit systems.
  • IT systems and cyber safety, which matters even more for digital lenders.

Once RBI approves you, you start with a clean slate. No old loan book. No old customer complaint. No inherited red flag.

RBI Compliance: Takeover

In a takeover, RBI’s approval kicks in at three clear points:

  • Any takeover or change in control of an NBFC needs RBI’s approval first. This applies even if the management stays the same.
  • Any change in shareholding of 26% or more of paid-up equity needs approval. This includes step-by-step increases that add up to 26% over time. Even a group of small investors buying in together can trigger this rule if their combined stake crosses the mark.
  • Any change in management that swaps out more than 30% of directors needs approval. This excludes independent directors and directors who get re-elected on normal rotation.

One useful exception: if shareholding crosses 26% because of a share buyback, or a court-approved cut in capital, you don’t need approval in advance. But you must tell RBI within one month of it happening.

RBI also asks for a public notice at least 30 days before any sale or change in control takes effect. This notice must share the news, name the new owners, and explain the reason for the change. It must run in at least one national newspaper and one local newspaper near the NBFC’s registered office.

To apply for approval, the NBFC must send documents on its letterhead. This includes details on the new directors or shareholders, proof of their source of funds, statements that they have no criminal case or link to any illegal deposit-taking firm, and a banker’s report on them.

Here is the part many founders miss. RBI’s approval only checks if the new owners are fit to run the company. It does not wipe away the NBFC’s past. You take on its loan book, its customer complaints, and its regulatory history the day the deal closes. This is why due diligence before a takeover matters just as much as RBI’s approval.

A Special Case: Takeovers of Listed NBFCs

If the NBFC you want to buy is listed on a stock exchange, things get more complex. SEBI has its own takeover rules, called SAST Regulations. These rules say the buyer must finish an open offer without delay, once it starts. But RBI’s rules say something different. RBI says the target NBFC — not the buyer — must get RBI’s approval first. This creates a real problem. A buyer cannot meet SEBI’s deadline without the target company’s help. And the target company must go get RBI’s approval on its own. This gets even harder in a hostile takeover, where the target refuses to help. If you are eyeing a listed NBFC, plan for this friction from day one.

Documents You Will Actually Need

Founders often underestimate how much paperwork both paths need, just in different ways. Here is a simple checklist for each.

For Fresh Registration:

  • Certificate of incorporation from the Registrar of Companies
  • Memorandum and Articles of Association, stating the plan to do financial business
  • Board resolution confirming the company is not doing any NBFC work yet, and will not take public deposits
  • Statutory Auditor’s certificate confirming the Net Owned Fund amount
  • Fit-and-proper forms and qualification proofs for every director
  • Bankers’ report on the company and its group firms

For a Takeover:

  • Details on the incoming directors and shareholders
  • Proof of where the buyers’ money comes from
  • Statements from new directors or shareholders confirming no criminal case, no link to illegal deposit-taking firms, and no past rejected RBI application
  • A banker’s report on the new directors or shareholders
  • Draft public notice for the newspapers, naming the new owners and the reason for the change
  • A full due diligence file: financial statements, court case search, past RBI letters, and a loan book quality check

Notice the overlap. Both paths need clean paperwork on the people involved. The difference is that fresh registration asks you to prove yourself once. A takeover asks you to prove yourself, and clean up someone else’s paper trail, at the same time.

Common Mistakes Founders Make

After working with founders on both paths, a few mistakes show up again and again.

Underrating the due diligence timeline in a takeover. Founders often plan for three weeks. They end up needing three months once court case searches, loan book checks, and old RBI letters are all reviewed.

Thinking the ₹10 crore NOF can be arranged after applying. RBI wants this capital in place, backed by an auditor’s certificate, before it takes your fresh application seriously.

Ignoring the 26% rule when bringing in several investors. If you plan to add many small investors, and their combined stake crosses 26%, RBI’s approval is still needed. Skipping this check while building your cap table is one of the most common and costly planning errors.

Forgetting to budget for clean-up after a takeover. A takeover price often leaves out the cost of fixing old compliance gaps, updating stale policies, or settling old customer complaints. Add this to your total cost from the start, not as an afterthought.

Treating RBI’s approval as the finish line. In both paths, RBI’s approval is the start of ongoing compliance work, not the end of it. Capital rules, provisioning rules, and reporting duties continue for as long as the NBFC runs.

Side-by-Side Snapshot

Factor Fresh Registration Takeover
Minimum capital ₹10 crore NOF (standard NBFC) Deal-based; no fixed NOF payment upfront
Timeline 8–14 months 4–7 months
RBI checks Full business plan and promoter review Promoter fit-and-proper review, plus change-in-control approval
Compliance history Clean slate Inherited; needs full due diligence
Public notice needed No Yes, 30 days before transfer
Hidden risk Low Higher, if due diligence is weak
Best fit for Long-term builders with patience and fresh capital Founders who want fast entry and can pay for due diligence

Which Path Should You Choose?

If you have time, a clear long-term plan, and ₹10 crore ready, fresh registration gives you a clean base. No old baggage. No hidden risk. You build the compliance culture your own way, right from day one.

If speed matters more than a clean slate, a takeover can save you five to seven months. But that speed only pays off if you spend properly on due diligence. Check the books. Check the court case history. Check the compliance record. Check for any pending RBI queries tied to the target company.

There is one more thing to keep in mind. RBI keeps tightening its watch on both paths. The NOF hike in 2022 was one example. New consumer protection rules for non-bank lenders through 2026 are another. Whichever path you pick, treat RBI compliance as a moving target, not a one-time checklist. What works today may need an update in twelve months.

Final Word

Neither path wins in every case. Fresh registration rewards patience and capital discipline. Takeover rewards speed and sharp due diligence. The founders who win are the ones who plan for real timelines, see the compliance work clearly, and expect no shortcuts. With RBI, there are none.

Need help evaluating an NBFC takeover opportunity or structuring your fresh registration application? Connect with NBFC Advisory — we work with founders through every stage, from due diligence to RBI liaison.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a takeover help me skip the ₹10 crore NOF rule?

Not fully. If the NBFC you buy already meets the NOF rule, you skip raising fresh capital for registration. But you still need enough money for the purchase price, due diligence, and any capital top-up the target company needs to stay within RBI’s rules.

How long does the RBI take to approve a change in control?

There is no fixed rule on timing. In practice, plan for two to four months once you file a complete application. Delays are common if papers are missing, or if talks with the RBI’s regional office slow down.

Does a takeover mean I skip RBI's full checks?

No. RBI runs the same fit-and-proper test on new owners in a takeover as it does on promoters in a fresh application. The only thing you skip is the full business-plan review, since the NBFC’s operations already exist.

What if I split a deal into small parts to avoid the 26% rule?

RBI’s rule covers “step-by-step increases over time.” No single deal has to cross 26% on its own. If the total effect crosses 26%, the approval rule still applies. Trying to dodge this rule without telling RBI risks fines. It can even cost you the CoR.

Is a takeover a good fit for a Housing Finance Company or an Infrastructure Debt Fund?

These types need much higher capital — ₹25 crore and ₹300 crore respectively. A takeover can still work here, but due diligence matters even more, given the scale of money and lending risk involved.

Can foreign investors take part in an NBFC takeover?

Yes, but extra checks apply. Foreign investors must follow FDI rules under FEMA, on top of RBI’s fit-and-proper checks. Their source of funds gets extra scrutiny, and the deal timeline often runs longer as a result.

What happens if RBI rejects my change-in-control application?

The deal cannot go through. Share transfer or management change without RBI’s approval is not valid, and can lead to fines or even cancellation of the CoR. This is why most deal agreements make RBI approval a condition before the sale closes.

Do I need RBI approval to raise fresh funding rounds in my own NBFC, even without a full takeover?

Yes, if the new investors’ combined stake crosses 26% of paid-up equity, or if it results in a management change of more than 30% of directors. Many growth-stage NBFCs trip this rule during a normal funding round, not just during a takeover.

Is fresh registration a better fit for a first-time promoter with no NBFC experience?

Often yes. RBI’s scrutiny is heavy either way, but fresh registration lets a first-time promoter build systems and a track record from day one, without inheriting someone else’s compliance history to explain to the regulator.

How is a takeover different from a merger of two NBFCs?

A takeover changes who owns or controls an existing NBFC. A merger combines two separate legal entities into one, usually through the NCLT process, and needs its own RBI approval on top of company law approvals. The two are related but not the same transaction.