News and developments
Will you still guarantee?
Cross‑border guarantees have long functioned as the quiet scaffolding behind global financing, trade flows, and group‑wide treasury structures. Yet, for years, India’s regulatory approach to guarantees has remained largely unchanged and occasionally ambiguous.
That has now changed.
With the Foreign Exchange Management (Guarantees) Regulations, 2026 (“Guarantee Regulations 2026”), the RBI has effectively re‑engineered India’s guarantee architecture. What was once a narrow, exception‑driven regime is now replaced with a principle‑based law. Additionally, there are disclosure requirements as well under the new regime, which effectively ensure that all cross-border guarantees are getting reported.
What follows is our breakdown of the key shifts and why many familiar structures may need a rethink.
Key provisions under the Draft Directions are set out below.
Earlier, the erstwhile Foreign Exchange Management (Guarantees) Regulations, 2000 (“Guarantee Regulations 2000”) was heavily regulating the guarantees which were particularly outbound and at the same time was also providing certain principle for structured obligation trades (offshore guarantee for onshore capital market transactions). The erstwhile regime restricted the type of transaction which could be guaranteed. Unlike the Guarantee Regulations 2000, the Guarantee Regulations 2026 provide regulations for both inward and outward guarantee but at the same time allow all kinds of guarantee transactions as long as the underlying debt is in compliance with the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (“FEMA”) provisions (if applicable).
For the first time, the regulations carve out full exemptions for certain guarantee categories. Newly exempt transactions include:
A major compliance shift:
This elevates cross‑border guarantee reporting to the same discipline imposed on borrowings and overseas investments.
The Guarantee Regulations 2026 signal RBI’s intention to regulate guarantees via principles rather than prohibitions which is a welcome move. Now market participants can structure credit enhancement in a cross-border transaction efficiently as there is no restriction on guarantees provided on cross border basis.
The new framework marks maturing of India’s approach to cross‑border guarantees - more flexibility, more transparency, and clearer rule‑making.
About Juris Corp
Founded in 2000, Juris Corp is a law firm adding value in Foreign Investments into India, Banking, Securities, Derivatives, Corporate Commercial, Joint Ventures, M&A Private Equity, Real Estate, Dispute Resolution and International Arbitration, Bankruptcy and Restructuring.
Firms’ Objective
Provide unbiased and unmatched legal services in our areas of practice. Be the Preferred Law Firm for our clients and take that relationship forward by becoming more than a legal advisor: Being their business advisors.
Accolades And Recognition
Juris Corp has been consistently ranked in the top tiers over the years in Banking & Finance, Capital Markets, Corporate M&A, Dispute Resolution, Foreign Direct Investment, Real Estate, Private Equity, Securitisation & Structured Finance and Taxation by several institutions.
