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Companies Compliance Facilitation Scheme, 2026

The Companies Compliance Facilitation Scheme, 2026 is a temporary initiative that gives companies a limited window to regularize delayed filings (like annual returns and financial statements) by paying much lower additional fees than normally charged. It also offers easier options for inactive companies to either stay dormant or strike off their registration.

Scheme Period: 15 April – 15 July 2026

Fee Structure at a Glance

Type of FeeAmount Payable Under CCFS-2026
Normal statutory filing feeAs prescribed under the Rules (full amount)
Additional fee (penalty for delay)10% of the total additional fees otherwise due
Dormant company application (MSC-1)50% of the normal fee under the Rules
Strike-off application (STK-2)

25% of the applicable filing fees


Who is Excluded from the Scheme?

  • Companies against which a final notice for striking off under Section 248 (or Section 560 of the Companies Act, 1956) has already been initiated by the Registrar.
  • Companies that have already filed an application for striking off their name.
  • Companies that had already applied for dormant status under Section 455 before this scheme commenced.
  • Companies dissolved pursuant to a scheme of amalgamation.
  • Vanishing companies.

What is CCFS Scheme 2026?
A one-time relief window for companies with pending annual filings — pay just 10% of additional fees and get compliant. The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) has introduced the Companies Compliance Facilitation Scheme, 2026 (CCFS-2026) to provide a one-time opportunity for companies — especially MSMEs, start-ups, OPCs, and producer companies — to clear their pending annual filing backlogs at significantly reduced costs, or to exit the register through dormancy or strike-off at concessional fees.

Background & Why This Scheme Matters?
The Companies Act, 2013 mandates all registered companies to file their Annual Return (MGT-7/MGT-7A) and Financial Statements (AOC-4) with the Registrar of Companies each year. Since 1st July 2018, a penalty of ₹100 per day accrues on delayed filings — with no upper cap — creating an exponentially growing liability for non-compliant companies. With more than 20 lakh active companies on the register, the MCA has acknowledged that many entities — particularly new-age entrepreneurs, small businesses, MSMEs, and one-person companies — have accumulated significant arrears due to genuine operational challenges. In response to widespread stakeholder representations, the government has launched CCFS-2026 as a targeted amnesty-style window to clean up the corporate registry and offer financial relief

Which Forms Are Covered?
The scheme covers all "relevant e-forms" for annual compliance under both the Companies Act, 2013 and the legacy Companies Act, 1956, including: Under Companies Act, 2013: MGT-7, MGT-7A, AOC-4, AOC-4 CFS, AOC-4 NBFC (Ind AS), AOC-4 CFS NBFC (Ind AS), AOC-4 (XBRL), ADT-1, FC-3, FC-4. Under Companies Act, 1956: Form 20B, Form 21A, Form 23AC, Form 23ACA, Form 23AC-XBRL, Form 23ACA-XBRL, Form 66, Form 23B.

Immunity & Protection from Penalties One of the most significant features of CCFS-2026 is the protection it offers from penal proceedings under Sections 92 and 137 of the Companies Act, 2013 (relating to Annual Returns and Financial Statements respectively): If filings are made under the scheme before the adjudicating officer issues a notice, proceedings will be concluded and no penalty will be levied. If filings are made within 30 days of the issuance of such a notice, the same immunity applies. However, where the 30-day window after notice has already expired, or where an adjudication order has already been passed, penalties on officers and the company remain unaffected — only the filing fees benefit from the concessional structure. For forms like ADT-1, FC-3, FC-4, and the 1956-era forms, immunity from prospective penal action is granted provided no prosecution or adjudication proceedings have already been initiated before the filing date under the scheme.

Post-Scheme Action The circular explicitly states that at the conclusion of CCFS-2026, Registrars of Companies will initiate necessary action under the Act against all companies that remain in default. This is a genuine final-opportunity window.

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about CCFS 2026.

CCFS-2026 (Companies Compliance Facilitation Scheme, 2026) is a one-time compliance relief scheme introduced by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs under the Companies Act, 2013. It allows defaulting companies to file pending ROC forms with significantly reduced additional fees for a limited period.
The scheme is open from 15 April 2026 to 15 July 2026. Companies must complete all eligible filings within this window to avail the benefits.
Eligible companies can file overdue forms by paying normal statutory filing fees, and only 10% of the applicable additional (late) fees, providing up to 90% waiver on additional fees.
Common eligible forms include: MGT-7 / MGT-7A (Annual Return), AOC-4 (Financial Statements), ADT-1 (Auditor Appointment), and other specified forms notified by MCA.
The scheme applies to Private Limited Companies, One Person Companies (OPC), Small Companies, Public Limited Companies, and Section 8 Companies (subject to eligibility).
Yes, the scheme is generally not available to companies already struck off, companies that have received final notice for strike-off under Section 248, or companies already dissolved.
Yes, companies that complete pending filings under the scheme may receive immunity from prosecution or penalty proceedings related to delayed filings, subject to conditions prescribed by MCA.
Yes, inactive companies may apply for dormant status under Section 455 by filing MSC-1 at concessional fees as notified under the scheme.
Yes, eligible companies can apply for voluntary strike-off by filing STK-2 at reduced government fees during the scheme period.
If filings are not completed within the scheme period, normal additional fees (₹100 per day without cap) will apply. The company may face penalties, director disqualification, or further regulatory action.