Authorised Dealer (AD) Bank

An Authorised Dealer (AD) Bank is a bank licensed by the Reserve Bank of India under Section 10(1) of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999, to deal in foreign exchange and foreign securities. Operating mainly as an AD Category-I entity, it is the regulated gateway through which residents and businesses route foreign investment, trade payments and remittances, and report them to the RBI under the Foreign Exchange Management (Authorised Persons) Regulations, 2026.

Definition

In law, the anchor is Section 2(c) of FEMA, 1999, which defines an “authorised person” as an authorised dealer, money changer, offshore banking unit or any other person authorised under Section 10(1) to deal in foreign exchange or foreign securities. An AD Bank is the banking form of that authorisation, a bank that the RBI permits to handle forex. In everyday use, the term means an AD Category-I bank, which may undertake the full range of current and capital account transactions.

Governing Provision

The parent statute is the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999, administered by the Reserve Bank of India. Section 10(1) lets the RBI authorise a person as an authorised dealer, while Sections 10(4) and 10(5) bind that dealer to RBI directions and require a customer declaration before any transaction. The detailed operating framework is now the Foreign Exchange Management (Authorised Persons) Regulations, 2026 (Notification No. FEMA 401/2026-RB, in force 6 May 2026), which replaced an older patchwork of master directions and circulars.

Key Features

The 2026 Regulations classify authorised persons into four classes, with an AD Bank occupying the top class. The markers below distinguish an AD Bank from a money changer or a Category-II entity, and explain why almost every cross-border payment made by an Indian business is routed through one. Each carries a statutory or regulatory anchor that a reviewer can trace back to the Act or the notification.

The defining features are:

NoKey FeaturesDescription
1Reserved for banksAD Category-I authorisation is granted only to RBI-licensed banks and covers all permissible current and capital account transactions under FEMA, 1999.
2Reporting gatewayFDI, ODI and ECB filings reach the RBI through the company’s AD bank on the FIRMS portal, via the Single Master Form.
3Compliance check-postBefore remitting, an AD bank must take a customer declaration under Section 10(5) and clear KYC and AML checks.
4Category ladderBelow it sit AD Category-II (non-trade items plus trade items up to ₹25 lakh each), AD Category-III, and Full-Fledged Money Changers.

Related Terms

Frequently Asked Questions

Is an AD Bank the same as an authorised dealer?

Not quite. “Authorised dealer” is the wider term in Section 2(c) of FEMA, 1999, covering banks, money changers and offshore banking units. An AD Bank is the banking form of that authorisation, usually an AD Category-I bank. Every AD Bank is an authorised dealer, but not every authorised dealer is a bank.

Which law governs Authorised Dealer Banks today?

The Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999, is the parent law, and the RBI authorises AD Banks under Section 10(1). The current operating rules are the Foreign Exchange Management (Authorised Persons) Regulations, 2026, which came into force on 6 May 2026 and replaced the earlier money-changing and remittance directions.

Does every foreign payment go through an AD Bank?

For most cross-border transactions, yes. FEMA (1999) channels foreign exchange through authorised persons, and AD Category-I banks handle the widest range. Foreign investment, overseas investment, and external commercial borrowing filings are submitted to the RBI through your AD bank. Smaller non-trade remittances may also go through an AD Category-II entity.

References

  • Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999
  • Foreign Exchange Management (Authorised Persons) Regulations, 2026:  Notification No. FEMA 401/2026-RB, dated 30 April 2026 (in force 6 May 2026).
  • RBI Master Direction – Money Changing Activities (as amended) and 
  • Master Direction – Reporting under FEMA, 1999 (FED Master Direction No. 18/2015-16).

In This Article

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    Sanjeev Kumar

    Meet Sanjeev Kumar, a distinguished advocate before the Supreme Court of India, High Courts, and National Tribunals. Founding Partner of Juriskps Law Offices, a premier law firm, he specializes in commercial, corporate, tax, arbitration, and IPR matters. His incisive legal insights enrich Setindiabiz’s blog with expert commentary.