FEMA Due Diligence
FEMA Due Diligence
Whenever a company raises foreign funding, restructures ownership, buys shares from a non-resident, sets up an overseas subsidiary, or goes through an audit or acquisition, FEMA becomes a checkpoint. FEMA due diligence examines whether every cross-border transaction, filing, and document aligns with RBI rules — before it turns into a compliance problem.
It protects buyers, investors, founders, and advisors from hidden FEMA exposures that may delay deals or trigger compounding.
What FEMA due diligence covers
Review of FDI received since incorporation
Check FC-GPR, FC-TRS, EMF, SMF, FLA and other filings
Pricing and valuation compliance
Sectoral cap, approval vs automatic route review
ODI, ECB, and overseas JV/subsidiary compliance
Share transfer history and foreign exits
Bank KYC, FIRCs, and reporting timelines
FEMA contraventions, gaps, or missing documentation
Why it matters
Required during funding, mergers, acquisitions, and audits
Helps avoid penalties, delays, or investor objections
Increases transaction confidence and transparency
Supports bankers, legal teams, and due diligence checklists
Makes the company future-round ready
How we help
Collect and review FEMA-linked documents and filings
Identify non-compliance, risks, and irregularities
Prepare a clear compliance report with action items
Assist in regularising past gaps and delayed reporting
Coordinate with banks, investors, and legal teams
Advisory on restructuring or upcoming transactions
Documents usually required
Incorporation documents, capital structure, cap table
FIRCs, KYC reports, SWIFT copies, bank advice
Valuation certificates and board approvals
Past FEMA forms and RBI acknowledgments
Share purchase agreements, transfer records
Financial statements and statutory registers
Our approach
Understand deal or compliance objective
Review documents, filings, and timelines
Flag gaps, risks, and potential violations
Recommend corrective actions with priorities
Support filings, clarifications, or compounding if required
Frequently Asked Questions
During fundraising, M&A, audits, promoter exits, restructuring, or before issuing shares to a foreign investor.
Yes. Many companies discover missed filings only during diligence.
Usually yes, through delayed reporting or compounding, depending on the issue.
Often a combination, but firms experienced in FEMA filings and bank coordination are preferred.
Ideally yes, to confirm pricing, timelines, and filings.