Compounding of Contraventions under FEMA

Compounding under FEMA is the voluntary settlement of a foreign-exchange contravention, in which a person admits a breach under Section 13 of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 and applies under Section 15 to pay a monetary sum instead of facing adjudication or prosecution. Governed by the Foreign Exchange (Compounding Proceedings) Rules, 2024, and the Reserve Bank’s Directions dated 1 October 2024, it allows businesses to regularise inadvertent FEMA breaches and close the matter.

Definition

In legal terms, a contravention under Section 13 of FEMA, 1999, is any breach of the Act or of a rule, regulation, notification, direction, or order issued under it. Compounding is the process by which the contravener admits the breach, and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), as the compounding authority, settles it for a quantified amount. It is a consensual, civil proceeding in which the applicant is not prosecuted, and once the sum is paid, the contravention is treated as closed.

Governing Provision

The right to compound flows from Section 15 of FEMA, 1999, which lets any contravention under Section 13 be compounded on application. The procedure is set out in the Foreign Exchange (Compounding Proceedings) Rules, 2024, notified on 12 September 2024, superseding the 2000 Rules, read with the RBI’s Directions dated 1 October 2024 (amended in April 2025). The Reserve Bank is the compounding authority for most contraventions, while the Directorate of Enforcement handles dealings under Section 3(a).

Key Features

The 2024 framework rationalised the fee, the disposal timeline and officer-wise limits to make compounding faster and largely paperless, and the April 2025 amendments capped certain minor non-reporting penalties. An application carries a fixed fee, must be disposed of within a set period, and the compounded amount becomes payable promptly once ordered. The points below capture the load-bearing rules a business should know before applying.

NoKey FeatureParticulars
1Application feeA non-refundable ₹10,000 plus GST, filed online through the RBI’s PRAVAAH portal or physically with the Reserve Bank or Directorate of Enforcement.
2TimelinesThe authority must pass an order within 180 days of a complete application; the compounded amount is payable within 15 days of that order.
3Three-year barA similar contravention within three years of an earlier compounding cannot be compounded again and faces adjudication.
4ExclusionsUnder Rule 9, compounding is unavailable where the amount is unquantifiable, Section 37A applies, or money-laundering or national-security concerns arise.

Related Terms

  • Late Submission Fee (FEMA)
  • FLA Return
  • FEMA Section 13
  • Compounding of Offences

Frequently Asked Questions

Is FEMA compounding the same as a Late Submission Fee (LSF)?

No. A Late Submission Fee only regularises a delay in filing a specific FEMA report and does not constitute an admission of wrongdoing. Compounding under Section 15 settles an actual contravention under Section 13; the applicant admits the breach, and the Reserve Bank fixes the amount on a case-by-case basis after a hearing.

Does compounding under FEMA require admitting the contravention?

Yes. Compounding is voluntary: the applicant unequivocally admits the contravention and seeks to settle it. The Reserve Bank then quantifies the sum and passes a compounding order. Once it is paid within 15 days, the contravention is treated as closed, and no prosecution follows under FEMA, 1999.

Where is compounding under FEMA defined?

The power is in Section 15 of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999, which allows a Section 13 contravention to be compounded on application. The detailed procedure is set out in the Foreign Exchange (Compounding Proceedings) Rules, 2024, and the RBI’s Directions dated 1 October 2024, as amended in April 2025.

References

  • Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999
  • Foreign Exchange (Compounding Proceedings) Rules, 2024
  • RBI, Directions: Compounding of Contraventions under FEMA, 1999: A.P. (DIR Series) Circular No. 17/2024-25 dated 1 October 2024.
  • RBI amendment circulars dated 22 and 24 April 2025: A.P. (DIR Series) Circular No. 02/2025-26.

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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.