# Business Restructuring in India: When Promoters Should Restructure Debt, Equity, or Operations

A practical India-first guide for promoters and CFOs on when and how to restructure debt, equity, or operations, covering OTS, IBC, SARFAESI, NCLT process, and how to choose between restructuring and fresh capital.

Published: Apr 4, 2026
Authors: Sunita Maheshwari
Read time: 22 min read

## TL;DR for Indian Promoters

If your debt-service coverage ratio has fallen below **1.0x**, your lenders are already watching. If you have missed an EMI or received a notice under **SARFAESI**, you are in the early stages of a formal credit stress event. Business restructuring in India is not a last resort. It is a set of structured tools that promoters, CFOs, and boards can use to stabilise a business before the situation reaches the **Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC)**.

The three restructuring levers available to most mid-market Indian businesses are **debt restructuring** (renegotiating terms with lenders, settling at a discount through one-time settlement, or converting debt to equity), **equity restructuring** (changing the cap table through promoter buyout, minority exit, or ESOP rationalisation), and **operational restructuring** (cutting costs, divesting non-core assets, or pivoting the business model). Each lever solves a different problem. Choosing the wrong one, or doing all three at once without a plan, usually makes the situation worse.

The most important takeaway: **act before your account is classified as an NPA**. Once a lender classifies your account as a non-performing asset, the negotiation dynamics shift significantly. Banks move from relationship managers to recovery teams, and the window for a commercially negotiated settlement narrows. A promoter who acts at the first sign of financial stress has far more leverage than one who waits until the lender files a SARFAESI notice or refers the matter to the NCLT.

## What restructuring actually means in India

Restructuring is a word that gets used loosely. In the Indian regulatory and banking context, it has a specific meaning. The **Reserve Bank of India (RBI)** defines a restructured account as one where the bank has, for economic or legal reasons relating to the borrower's financial difficulty, granted concessions that it would not otherwise consider. That definition covers a wide range of outcomes, from extending loan tenure to waiving penal interest to accepting a reduced principal through a one-time settlement.

For promoters, the practical meaning is simpler. Restructuring is the process of changing the financial architecture of a business so that the business can survive and eventually grow again. That architecture includes three layers: how much debt the business carries and on what terms, who owns the equity and in what proportions, and how the operations are configured to generate cash. A distressed business usually has a problem in at least one of these layers. The restructuring process diagnoses which layer is broken and applies the right intervention.

**Debt restructuring** addresses over-leverage or unaffordable repayment schedules. It does not necessarily reduce the principal owed, though in some OTS situations it can. More often it changes the timing, interest rate, or security structure of existing obligations.

**Equity restructuring** addresses misaligned ownership. This happens when the cap table no longer reflects who is adding value, when a minority investor wants to exit, when promoter family disputes are creating governance problems, or when an ESOP pool needs to be rationalised after a down round or leadership change.

**Operational restructuring** addresses the underlying business model. If the revenue model is broken, no amount of debt renegotiation will fix the company. Operational restructuring includes cost rationalisation, headcount changes, product line pruning, factory rationalisation, and in some cases a full pivot to a different market or customer segment.

The distinction matters because Indian promoters often try to solve an operational problem with a debt solution. They raise more capital or renegotiate repayment terms, but the root cause, which is a business model that does not generate enough cash, is never addressed. That approach buys time but does not solve the problem. A good restructuring process starts with an honest diagnosis of which layer is broken.

## Warning signs that restructuring is overdue

Most promoters who end up in formal insolvency proceedings say the same thing in retrospect: the warning signs were visible at least **12 to 18 months** before the crisis point. The problem is that early warning signs are easy to rationalise. A missed payment becomes a timing mismatch. A working capital squeeze becomes a receivables problem. A covenant breach becomes a technicality.

The following signals should be treated as a call to action, not a call to wait.

**Financial warning signs:**
- **Debt-service coverage ratio below 1.2x** for two consecutive quarters. At this level, the business is generating just enough cash to service debt, with no margin for error.
- **Working capital cycle extending beyond 90 days** without a corresponding increase in revenue. This usually means receivables are being stretched or inventory is piling up.
- **Cash and bank balance covering less than 30 days of operating expenses.** This is a liquidity warning, not just a profitability warning.
- **Net worth eroding** because of consecutive years of losses. Once net worth turns negative, most lenders are contractually required to classify the account differently.
- **Promoter personal guarantees being invoked** by one lender, which typically triggers cross-default clauses with other lenders.

**Operational warning signs:**
- Key customers representing more than **30% of revenue** reducing orders or moving to competitors.
- Gross margins declining for three or more consecutive quarters without a clear cyclical explanation.
- Senior management attrition accelerating, particularly in finance, operations, or sales leadership.
- Debtors aging beyond **120 days** on a significant portion of receivables, suggesting quality issues rather than timing issues.

**Regulatory and legal warning signs:**
- Receipt of a **Section 13(2) SARFAESI notice**, which is the formal demand notice under the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Securities Interest Act.
- A **Section 7 or Section 9 IBC petition** filed by a financial or operational creditor.
- **Income tax attachment** notices or GST department enforcement actions.
- **Invocation of bank guarantees** by a significant counterparty.

Any one of these signals justifies a structured review. Two or more signals appearing within the same quarter is a restructuring trigger.

## Debt restructuring: OTS, RBI frameworks, and what banks will accept

Debt restructuring in India operates within a layered regulatory framework. The relevant instruments are the **RBI's Prudential Framework for Resolution of Stressed Assets** (June 2019 circular), the **SARFAESI Act 2002**, the **IBC 2016**, and lender-specific internal policies. Understanding which framework applies to your situation determines what options are available and how much time you have.

**One-Time Settlement (OTS)** is the most commonly used debt resolution tool for mid-market businesses. In an OTS, the borrower proposes to repay a lump sum that is less than the total outstanding principal, in exchange for the lender writing off the remainder and releasing the security. Banks are generally willing to accept OTS when the alternative is a long-drawn SARFAESI or IBC proceeding with uncertain recovery. The **settlement amount is typically between 40% and 85% of principal outstanding**, depending on the security coverage, the age of the NPA, and the borrower's ability to demonstrate liquidity.

The OTS process has specific dynamics that promoters need to understand. First, the proposal must come with a credible source of funds. A bank will not engage seriously with an OTS offer that is contingent on future revenues. The funds, whether from a promoter infusion, asset sale, or investor, must be available within a defined timeline, usually **60 to 90 days** from sanction. Second, OTS negotiations happen at the branch or regional level for smaller accounts and at the head office or board committee level for larger ones. The decision-making process is bureaucratic, and having a professional advisor navigate it makes a significant difference. Third, if the company has **multiple lenders under a consortium arrangement**, OTS terms must be agreed across the consortium, which introduces additional complexity.

**Restructuring under the RBI Prudential Framework** is a different instrument from OTS. It applies to accounts that are still standard (not yet classified as NPA) or that have been classified as NPA within a defined period. Under this framework, lenders can implement a **Resolution Plan (RP)** that changes the repayment schedule, interest rate, or principal amount. The framework requires lenders holding at least **75% of the debt by value and 60% by number** to agree on a resolution plan before it can be implemented. For mid-market promoters, this means that getting one large lender on board is necessary but not sufficient. The smaller lenders in a consortium also need to agree.

**SARFAESI** is not a restructuring tool. It is an enforcement tool. When a lender invokes SARFAESI, it is signalling that it has moved from restructuring mode to recovery mode. A Section 13(2) notice gives the borrower **60 days** to repay or provide an acceptable resolution. If no resolution is reached, the lender can take possession of secured assets under Section 13(4). The critical window for a debt restructuring negotiation is before the Section 13(4) action. After that, the conversation becomes much harder.

**Interest on NPA accounts** stops accruing in the P&L of the bank but continues to accumulate on the borrower's books. This means the longer a restructuring is delayed, the larger the total outstanding grows, and the harder it becomes to reach an OTS at a level the borrower can fund.

The practical sequence for a promoter in debt stress: engage lenders proactively before NPA classification, propose a credible restructuring plan with independent financial projections, and, if OTS is the preferred route, assemble the settlement funds before beginning formal negotiations. Lenders respond to demonstrated commitment, not to promises.

## Equity restructuring: promoter buyout, minority exit, and ESOP unwinding

Equity restructuring is often the least understood of the three restructuring types, and it is frequently the one that should happen first. The cap table problems that emerge during a financial stress period, which include promoter family disputes, minority investor disputes, and ESOP pools that no longer reflect the current value of the business, can block every other restructuring option if they are not resolved.

**Promoter buyout** is the scenario where the primary promoter acquires the stake held by a co-promoter, family member, or early investor who wants to exit. This is common in family businesses where a second-generation split has occurred, or in founder-led companies where an early co-founder has departed but still holds a significant equity stake. The challenge in a financially stressed company is valuation. The departing party often wants to be bought out at a value that reflects the company's peak, while the remaining promoter is working with a business valued at a significant discount to that peak. A structured buyout in this situation requires either a third-party valuation under the **SEBI (ICDR) Regulations** or **Companies Act 2013** frameworks (depending on whether the company is listed or unlisted), or a negotiated settlement at a price that both parties can agree to. Independent valuation often provides the neutral ground that makes these negotiations possible.

**Minority investor exit** is the scenario where a **private equity or venture capital fund** that invested in an earlier round wants to exit but the business is not in a position for a full IPO or strategic sale. This is increasingly common in the Indian mid-market, where PE funds invested in the 2015 to 2020 period are now beyond their typical **seven to ten year fund lifecycle**. When a fund needs to exit and the primary exit route is unavailable, secondary sale to another financial investor, a structured buyback by the promoter, or a negotiated drag-along mechanism are the available options. Each of these requires careful structuring to avoid creating additional financial burden on the company during a period of stress.

**ESOP unwinding** is the scenario where an employee stock option pool that was granted during a growth period needs to be rationalised because the business has significantly declined in value. Employees holding ESOPs at a grant price above the current fair market value have options that are underwater, and the ESOP scheme may be creating retention problems rather than solving them. Under the **Companies Act 2013 and SEBI (Share Based Employee Benefits and Sweat Equity) Regulations 2021**, companies have defined processes for modifying or cancelling ESOP grants, but these require board approval, sometimes shareholder approval, and careful communication with affected employees.

The equity restructuring process in India almost always requires a **Registered Valuer** (under the IBBI framework) for any transaction involving unlisted company shares, and may require **NCLT approval** if the restructuring involves a merger, demerger, or reduction of capital under **Sections 230 to 232 of the Companies Act 2013**. For listed companies, SEBI's takeover regulations and disclosure requirements add another layer of process.

| Equity situation | Typical instrument | Regulatory requirement | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Promoter buying out co-promoter | Share purchase agreement at fair value | Registered Valuer report under Companies Act | 30 to 90 days |
| PE fund seeking exit in stressed company | Secondary sale or structured buyback | SEBI ICDR / Companies Act buyback provisions | 60 to 180 days |
| Underwater ESOP pool rationalisation | ESOP modification or cancellation | Board and shareholder approval; SEBI SBEB Regs for listed cos | 45 to 90 days |
| Demerger of non-core business | NCLT-approved scheme of arrangement | Sections 230 to 232, Companies Act 2013 | 9 to 18 months |

## Operational restructuring: cost rationalisation, divestment, and pivots

Operational restructuring is the hardest of the three because it requires changing the way the business actually works, not just how it is financed or owned. It is also the most consequential. A company can survive an imperfect debt restructuring if the underlying business generates cash. A company cannot survive a well-structured cap table if the business model is fundamentally broken.

**Cost rationalisation** is the most immediate lever. The goal is not to cut costs for its own sake, but to align the cost structure with the revenue reality of the business. The common mistake is to cut indiscriminately. A promoter who cuts sales team salaries to reduce overhead often finds that revenue declines faster than costs. The correct approach is to identify costs that can be cut without impairing revenue-generating capacity, costs that can be deferred through renegotiation with vendors or landlords, and costs that are contractually fixed and must be managed through other means.

In Indian mid-market businesses, **the three largest cost lines outside of raw materials are typically payroll, rent, and finance costs**. Payroll rationalisation usually involves a combination of headcount reduction, variable pay restructuring, and in some cases temporary salary deferrals with board approval. Rent renegotiation is particularly relevant post-pandemic, as commercial landlords are more receptive to lease modifications than they were before 2020. Finance cost reduction is a direct outcome of the debt restructuring process.

**Divestment of non-core assets** is often the fastest route to raising cash without taking on new debt. Many Indian mid-market companies accumulated assets during growth periods, including real estate, investments in group companies, surplus machinery, and brand extensions that are not central to the core business. Selling these assets can fund an OTS, reduce debt, or provide working capital while the core business is being stabilised. The challenge is that distress sales typically realise **20% to 40% below fair market value**, so the decision to divest must account for that discount.

**Business pivot** is the most complex operational intervention. A pivot is appropriate when the core market or customer segment has fundamentally changed and the current business model cannot generate sustainable margins in the new environment. The Indian examples are numerous: textile manufacturers who needed to pivot from commodity yarn to value-added fabrics, travel companies that needed to restructure entirely after 2020, and retail chains that needed to shift from physical-first to omnichannel models. A successful pivot requires a clear view of where the margin will come from in the new model, not just a broad aspiration to "transform the business."

The operational restructuring process should ideally be led by an independent professional, whether an interim CFO, a turnaround specialist, or a restructuring advisory firm. The reason is that promoters are often too close to the business to make the objective decisions that operational restructuring requires. An independent advisor can also provide credibility with lenders, who need to believe that the operational changes are real and not just cosmetic.

## Debt restructuring vs. fresh capital raise: how to choose

This is the decision that most promoters in financial stress get wrong. The instinct is to raise fresh capital first, because raising capital feels like growth and restructuring feels like defeat. The reality is that the sequence matters enormously, and choosing the wrong order can destroy the outcome.

**Raise fresh capital first** when: the business model is fundamentally sound, the financial stress is primarily caused by a temporary revenue disruption, the existing debt is at market terms and the debt quantum is manageable relative to normalised EBITDA, and there is a clear path to profitability within the capital raise runway. In this scenario, bringing in a new investor or a debt provider resolves the liquidity problem without requiring the company to acknowledge a structural issue.

**Restructure debt first** when: the existing debt burden is too high relative to the company's earning capacity at any realistic revenue level, when the debt carries terms that are materially worse than market (unusually high interest rates, excessive collateral requirements, or very short tenors), or when the business has already lost lender confidence. A new investor almost never wants to put capital into a company where the existing debt structure will consume most of the returns. They will insist on debt restructuring as a precondition for investment anyway.

The practical test is the **debt-to-EBITDA ratio**. If the business is carrying more than **4x to 5x EBITDA in debt** under any realistic scenario for the next 12 months, fresh capital raised at equity will be immediately diluted by the debt overhang. Investors will price this in, and the promoter will end up with less equity than expected for the capital raised. In that scenario, restructuring debt first to a manageable level, even if it takes longer, produces a better outcome for everyone.

| Decision factor | Restructure first | Raise capital first |
|---|---|---|
| Debt-to-EBITDA | Above 4x at current earnings | Below 3x at current earnings |
| Business model | Needs fixing at root | Sound, temporary disruption |
| Lender posture | In recovery mode | Still in relationship mode |
| Timeline available | Less than 6 months | 6 to 18 months runway |
| Investor appetite | Low without restructuring | Available at reasonable valuation |
| Promoter equity | At risk from dilution | Can absorb dilution |

The most effective outcome is usually a **combination**: negotiate a preliminary debt restructuring framework with lenders (even a standstill agreement), use that framework to demonstrate to investors that the capital structure will be cleaned up, and then close the capital raise with a final restructuring executed simultaneously. This sequencing is what Indian restructuring advisors refer to as a **simultaneous close**, and it is the preferred structure for distressed transactions where both debt and equity need to be addressed.

## The role of an advisor vs. going it alone

The question of whether to hire an advisor or handle restructuring internally is not primarily about cost. It is about what the outcome is worth. A promoter who loses an additional **20% of equity** because they negotiated a capital raise without restructuring the debt first has paid far more than any advisory fee. A company that misses a restructuring window because the promoter was managing lender negotiations while simultaneously running the business often ends up in IBC, which is the most expensive and time-consuming outcome of all.

**What an advisor actually does in a restructuring** is not just write reports. A competent restructuring advisor manages the information flow between the company and its lenders, builds credibility by presenting independently verified financial projections, negotiates on behalf of the promoter without the emotional weight that a promoter carries in these conversations, and maps the regulatory path so that no procedural step derails the transaction. In a consortium lending situation, the advisor also manages the dynamics between lenders who have different priorities and risk appetites.

**The cases where promoters successfully restructure without an advisor** are typically simpler ones: single-lender relationships, relatively small debt quantum, strong existing relationship with the relationship manager, and a clear and credible resolution proposal. If any of these conditions are absent, the probability of a successful unassisted restructuring drops significantly.

**Conflicts of interest** are worth understanding. Statutory auditors and the company's own legal counsel have a limited ability to take adversarial positions on behalf of the company in a lender negotiation, because their professional relationships often extend to the lender's side as well. A dedicated restructuring advisor has no such constraint.

The fee structure for restructuring advisors in India typically includes a **retainer component** (ranging from Rs. 2 lakh to Rs. 20 lakh per month depending on deal complexity) plus a **success fee** linked to the resolution outcome. The success fee is usually calculated as a percentage of the debt resolved or capital raised, and it aligns the advisor's incentives with the promoter's outcome. Some advisors also charge on a fixed-fee basis for defined deliverables such as a restructuring information memorandum or a lender presentation.

## Timeline and regulatory process in India

One of the most common misconceptions about business restructuring in India is that it is a quick process. It is not. Even a straightforward OTS with a single lender takes **three to six months** from first conversation to final settlement. A multi-lender consortium restructuring under the RBI Prudential Framework takes **six to twelve months** or more. An NCLT-approved scheme of arrangement under the Companies Act takes **nine to eighteen months**. IBC proceedings, from admission to resolution, have an **outer limit of 330 days** under the current law, but in practice many cases extend significantly beyond that.

The timeline matters because every month of unresolved financial stress has a real cost: management attention is diverted from operations, customer and vendor confidence erodes, good employees leave, and the financial position continues to deteriorate. Starting the restructuring process earlier not only provides more options but also reduces the total cost of the restructuring itself.

**Key milestones in a typical debt restructuring process:**

**Month 1 to 2:** Initial assessment, preparation of restructuring information memorandum (IM), independent financial projection, and asset valuation. The IM is the document that presents the business, its current financial position, and the proposed resolution to lenders.

**Month 2 to 3:** Lender engagement. Initial meetings with lead bank, followed by consortium meetings. Sharing of IM and financial projections. Lenders typically commission their own **techno-economic viability (TEV) study** at this stage, which is an independent assessment by a bank-appointed consultant.

**Month 3 to 6:** Negotiation of resolution plan terms. This includes debate over the principal haircut (in OTS), the repayment schedule (in restructuring), the security package, and the promoter contribution requirement. In a multi-lender situation, this phase is the most complex because different lenders have different internal policies.

**Month 6 to 9:** Formal approval and documentation. The resolution plan is approved by the requisite majority of lenders, legal documentation is executed, and the restructuring is implemented. For OTS, funds must be transferred within the agreed window.

**Post-restructuring:** Monitoring period. Most restructuring plans include quarterly reporting to lenders and specific covenants (DSCR minimums, leverage ratios, promoter contribution requirements) for a defined monitoring period.

The regulatory calendar also matters. Bank internal approvals often slow down significantly in the fourth quarter (January to March) as banks close their books. RBI's annual inspection cycle creates additional pressure on bank decision-making in certain months. Experienced restructuring advisors schedule key approvals to avoid these bottlenecks.

## IBC and NCLT: when insolvency proceedings become relevant

The **Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016** is the most significant reform in Indian credit law in decades. It was designed to provide a time-bound process for resolution of corporate insolvency, and it has fundamentally changed the bargaining dynamics between borrowers and lenders. Understanding IBC is essential even if a promoter never intends to use it, because lenders use the threat of IBC proceedings as leverage in restructuring negotiations.

**When IBC becomes relevant** is a specific question. A creditor can file an application before the NCLT under **Section 7 (financial creditor)** or **Section 9 (operational creditor)** when the default exceeds **Rs. 1 crore** and is established beyond dispute. The default threshold was raised from Rs. 1 lakh to Rs. 1 crore by the government in March 2020 and has remained at that level. Once an application is admitted by the NCLT, the **Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP)** begins, and the promoter loses operational control of the business. A **Resolution Professional (RP)** appointed by the NCLT takes over management, and a **Committee of Creditors (CoC)** is formed to evaluate resolution plans.

**The CIRP process has a statutory timeline of 180 days**, extendable by 90 days in special circumstances and further extended to a maximum of **330 days** (including litigation time). If no resolution plan is approved within this window, the company goes into liquidation. The liquidation outcome is almost always worse for promoters and for lenders than a negotiated pre-IBC restructuring.

**What promoters often misunderstand about IBC:** The code is not only a tool for creditors. Promoters can file a voluntary insolvency application under **Section 10** if they believe an orderly CIRP process is preferable to the alternatives. More importantly, promoters can submit resolution plans under the CIRP, subject to certain restrictions. However, **Section 29A of IBC** disqualifies certain categories of persons, including persons whose accounts are classified as NPA for more than one year, from submitting resolution plans. This means a promoter whose account has been NPA for more than a year cannot bid for their own company in the CIRP process without first clearing the NPA status.

**The pre-packaged insolvency resolution process (PPIRP)**, introduced through the IBC (Amendment) Act 2021, is specifically designed for MSMEs. It allows promoters to propose a base resolution plan before the CIRP begins, reducing the disruption to business operations. The PPIRP is a meaningful tool for smaller companies that want the protection of a formal insolvency framework without the full disruption of CIRP.

**The strategic calculus for promoters:** IBC is a last resort, not a first option. But knowing the IBC timeline and outcome distribution (roughly **45% of admitted cases result in resolution, 48% in liquidation**, based on IBBI data through 2025) informs every pre-IBC negotiation. A lender who knows that liquidation recovers less than 20 paise on the rupee is more willing to negotiate a structured OTS that delivers 50 paise. The IBC framework, paradoxically, gives promoters more pre-IBC leverage than they had before 2016, because the alternative for lenders is now more transparent and often worse.

## Restructuring types compared

Choosing the right restructuring type requires matching the instrument to the actual problem. The following comparison is designed to help promoters and CFOs identify the most relevant starting point.

| Restructuring type | Best used when | Primary outcome | Typical timeline | Key risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OTS (One-Time Settlement) | Account is NPA or near-NPA, promoter can source lump sum | Debt extinguished at discount, security released | 3 to 6 months | Funding risk if lump sum not available |
| RBI Prudential Framework restructuring | Standard account under stress, multiple lenders, business is viable | Revised repayment terms, possible rate reduction | 6 to 12 months | Requires 75% lender consensus |
| Equity promoter buyout | Co-promoter or family dispute blocking decisions | Clean cap table, single decision-maker | 1 to 3 months | Valuation disagreement |
| PE/VC minority exit | Fund lifecycle forcing exit, no IPO path | Secondary sale or structured buyback | 3 to 6 months | Pricing gap between fund expectation and market |
| ESOP rationalisation | Underwater options creating retention problems | Revised or cancelled ESOP scheme | 1 to 2 months | Employee morale impact |
| Asset divestment | Non-core assets available, cash needed urgently | Liquidity injection without new debt | 2 to 6 months | Distress discount on sale price |
| Operational cost rationalisation | Cost base misaligned with revenue reality | Improved EBITDA margin | 1 to 3 months | Revenue impact if cuts are too deep |
| Scheme of arrangement (NCLT) | Complex multi-party restructuring, demerger needed | Court-approved restructuring with binding effect | 9 to 18 months | Regulatory and litigation delays |
| IBC / CIRP | All other options exhausted, creditor files petition | Resolution plan or liquidation | 12 to 30 months | Loss of promoter control |
| PPIRP (MSMEs) | MSME needing IBC protection without full CIRP | Pre-packaged plan with lower disruption | 4 to 6 months | Limited to MSMEs, less tested |

**How to read this table:** Start with the column "Best used when" and match it to your current situation. If multiple rows match, the column "Key risk" will help you prioritise. The goal is to find the instrument with the highest probability of a commercially acceptable outcome given your current financial position, timeline, and the posture of your creditors.

A restructuring process rarely uses just one instrument. A typical mid-market restructuring might combine an OTS on the term loan with an extended working capital facility, a minority investor exit via secondary sale, and a cost rationalisation program running simultaneously. The sequencing of these interventions matters as much as the interventions themselves. Debt resolution before equity restructuring. Equity clarity before new investor engagement. Operational stability before a strategic pivot. That sequence is not arbitrary. It reflects the order in which stakeholder confidence needs to be rebuilt.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### What is the minimum default threshold for a creditor to file an IBC petition against my company?

As of April 2026, a financial creditor can file under Section 7 of the IBC and an operational creditor can file under Section 9 when the default amount exceeds **Rs. 1 crore**. This threshold was raised from Rs. 1 lakh in March 2020. However, even defaults below this threshold can trigger SARFAESI enforcement by secured lenders, so the Rs. 1 crore threshold does not provide complete protection.

### Can a promoter submit a resolution plan for their own company during CIRP?

Only under certain conditions. **Section 29A of the IBC** disqualifies persons whose accounts are classified as NPA for more than one year from submitting a resolution plan. If the promoter's account has not been NPA for more than one year, or if the NPA has been cleared, the promoter may be eligible. This is a complex eligibility question and should be assessed by an IBC specialist before any assumptions are made.

### What is the difference between OTS and a debt restructuring under the RBI Prudential Framework?

An **OTS** extinguishes the debt permanently at a discounted amount. Once the settlement amount is paid, the lender releases all security and the borrower has no further obligation. A **restructuring under the RBI Prudential Framework** modifies the terms of the existing debt (tenure, rate, principal schedule) but does not reduce or extinguish the total obligation. OTS is appropriate when the debt is unserviceable at any realistic repayment schedule. Restructuring is appropriate when the debt is serviceable if the terms are made less onerous.

### How much of a haircut should I expect in an OTS negotiation?

There is no fixed formula, but the settlement amount in Indian bank OTS transactions typically ranges from **40% to 85% of the principal outstanding**, depending on the security coverage ratio, the age of the NPA, the bank's provisioning position, and the borrower's demonstrated ability to fund the settlement. A secured account with good collateral coverage will have less room for a haircut than an unsecured or under-secured account. The bank's internal provisioning level also matters: a fully provisioned NPA is easier to settle at a discount than a recently slipped account.

### Does a debt restructuring hurt my credit rating permanently?

A restructured account is flagged in the **Credit Information Bureau (India) Limited, or CIBIL**, records and in the **RBI's Central Repository of Information on Large Credits (CRILC)** for companies with aggregate credit exposure above Rs. 5 crore. This flag typically remains for **seven years** from the date of restructuring. The practical impact depends on the type of credit you are seeking after restructuring. Working capital from existing lenders in a restructured consortium is usually available if the resolution plan is performing. New lenders or capital market access will be more difficult during the flagging period.

### What is the PPIRP and is my company eligible?

The **Pre-Packaged Insolvency Resolution Process (PPIRP)** was introduced under the IBC (Amendment) Act 2021 specifically for **MSMEs** with a default of at least Rs. 10 lakh. It allows the promoter to submit a base resolution plan before CIRP begins, so that business disruption is minimised. The NCLT approves the plan if the CoC accepts it. Eligibility requires the company to qualify as an MSME under the MSMED Act 2006, which means turnover below Rs. 250 crore and investment below Rs. 50 crore for a medium enterprise.

### When should I involve an advisor in a restructuring process?

The right time to involve an advisor is **before the situation becomes an emergency**. If your DSCR has fallen below 1.2x, if you have received an informal enquiry from your bank's stressed assets team, or if a co-promoter is seeking to exit, those are the right triggers. An advisor engaged early can help you present the situation proactively to lenders, which is far more effective than responding to a SARFAESI notice. The cost of early advice is significantly lower than the cost of late intervention.

### Can I restructure my company's debt without telling all my lenders?

No. Under the **RBI Prudential Framework for Resolution of Stressed Assets**, any resolution plan must be agreed by lenders holding at least **75% of the outstanding credit facilities by value and 60% by number**. Attempting to restructure with only some lenders while concealing the stress from others is a breach of standard loan covenants and could accelerate cross-default clauses across the entire lending syndicate.

### What happens to my personal guarantees if my company undergoes IBC proceedings?

**Personal guarantees do not form part of the corporate insolvency process**. Even if a resolution plan is approved in the CIRP that gives the lender a haircut on the corporate debt, the lender retains full rights against the personal guarantor for the original guaranteed amount. The IBC 2016 has a separate framework for **personal insolvency** under Part III, and lenders have increasingly invoked personal guarantee provisions after corporate resolution plans provide less than full recovery.

### Is a scheme of arrangement under the Companies Act different from IBC?

Yes. A **scheme of arrangement under Sections 230 to 232 of the Companies Act 2013** is a court-approved restructuring mechanism that does not require the company to be insolvent. It can be used for mergers, demergers, debt-to-equity conversions, and capital reductions. It is a consensual process: shareholders and creditors vote on the scheme, and the NCLT approves it. IBC, by contrast, is a creditor-initiated insolvency process that can proceed even if the promoter objects. The Companies Act scheme is generally preferred when the company is not yet in insolvency and all major stakeholders are willing to cooperate.

### What does a restructuring information memorandum contain?

A **Restructuring Information Memorandum (IM)** is the core document used to present the company's situation and proposed resolution to lenders and investors. It typically includes a business overview, historical financial statements, a root cause analysis of the financial stress, independently prepared financial projections for the next three to five years, a proposed resolution plan with specific terms, a security analysis showing asset values, and details of the promoter's commitment to the resolution. The quality of the IM significantly influences lender willingness to engage. A poorly prepared IM signals that the promoter is not serious about the resolution.

### How does a promoter protect their equity during a restructuring?

Equity dilution in a restructuring is often unavoidable, but its magnitude depends on how the restructuring is structured. The key protective levers are: negotiating debt resolution before bringing in new equity investors (so the equity story is cleaner), avoiding debt-to-equity conversion except where the business generates sufficient future value to support it, ensuring that any ESOP or employee equity scheme is correctly structured so it does not create unexpected dilution, and maintaining governance clarity so that new investors do not demand excessive board control as a precondition for investment. The promoter's negotiating position is strongest when the business has a clear operational turnaround story and when the debt resolution is advanced rather than theoretical.
