Corporate Law · Board & Corporate Governance Advisory
Board Constitution, Independent Director & Audit Committee Advisory
A board that exists only on paper is a liability waiting to surface — at a funding round, a regulatory inspection, or the moment a related-party transaction gets challenged.
Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986
A board that exists only on paper is a liability waiting to surface — at a funding round, a regulatory inspection, or the moment a related-party transaction gets challenged. PNPC Global advises promoters, CFOs, and company secretaries on how to actually constitute a board that works: the right mix of executive, non-executive and independent directors, an audit committee that meets the composition and independence tests under the Companies Act 2013 and (where applicable) SEBI LODR, and a governance structure that survives due diligence instead of collapsing under it. We have guided boards across India and the UAE since 1986 — from first-time private companies preparing for institutional capital to listed and about-to-list companies building SEBI-compliant governance from scratch.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
Board Constitution, Independent Director & Audit Committee Advisory is a corporate governance engagement that helps a company design, appoint, and maintain the board structure required by law and expected by capital markets, lenders, and institutional investors. It covers three interlocking pieces. First, board constitution: determining the right size and composition of the Board of Directors — executive, non-executive, and independent directors — based on the company's classification (private, public, or listed), its paid-up capital, turnover, and borrowings, and its stage of growth. Second, independent director advisory: assessing candidates against the statutory independence criteria under Section 149(6) of the Companies Act 2013 and Regulation 16(1)(b) of the SEBI (Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements) Regulations, 2015, managing the Director Identification Number (DIN), Independent Directors' Databank registration and proficiency self-assessment under the Companies (Appointment and Qualification of Directors) Rules, 2014, and drafting the appointment letter and Board disclosures required under Schedule IV of the Act. Third, audit committee formation: constituting the committee under Section 177 of the Companies Act (and Regulation 18 of SEBI LODR for listed entities) with the correct proportion of independent directors, defining its terms of reference, and setting up the reporting and minute-keeping discipline that regulators and auditors expect to see.
The legal triggers for a mandatory audit committee and independent directors are specific and often missed until a company crosses a threshold unexpectedly. Under Section 177 read with Rule 6 of the Companies (Meetings of Board and its Powers) Rules, 2014, every listed public company and every public company with paid-up share capital of ₹10 crore or more, or turnover of ₹100 crore or more, or aggregate outstanding loans, borrowings, debentures and deposits exceeding ₹50 crore, must constitute an audit committee. Section 149(4) requires every listed public company, and every public company meeting the same thresholds (paid-up capital ₹10 crore+, turnover ₹100 crore+, or aggregate outstanding borrowings/debentures/deposits exceeding ₹50 crore) under Rule 4 of the Companies (Appointment and Qualification of Directors) Rules, 2014, to have at least two independent directors (or one-third of the board, whichever is higher, for listed companies). A company that crosses these thresholds during a financial year and does not act within the prescribed timeline is technically non-compliant from that point — a fact that surfaces in due diligence, secretarial audit (Form MR-3), and annual return disclosures.
Governance advisory of this kind sits at the intersection of company law, securities law (for listed or listing-track companies), and practical board dynamics. It is not a one-time filing exercise. An independent director appointment involves a Board resolution, shareholder approval by special resolution or ordinary resolution as applicable, filing of Form DIR-12 with the Registrar of Companies within 30 days, updating the Independent Directors' Databank profile, and completing the online proficiency self-assessment test within the prescribed period (with limited exemptions for directors of specified experience). An audit committee, once constituted, has an ongoing statutory role — reviewing financial statements before Board approval, overseeing the statutory auditor's work, approving related-party transactions, and reviewing the whistle-blower/vigil mechanism. Getting the composition wrong, or leaving a vacancy unfilled beyond the permitted period, is a compliance gap that a diligence team, a stock exchange, or an MCA inspection will find.
At PNPC Global, this advisory typically begins before a company is legally required to have a formal governance structure — because institutional investors, banks extending large credit facilities, and strategic acquirers routinely expect governance readiness well ahead of the statutory trigger. We help companies decide when to move from a purely promoter-driven board to one with genuine independent oversight, identify and vet independent director candidates against both the statutory disqualification criteria and practical fit, draft the letters of appointment, terms of reference, and committee charters, and build the calendar discipline — meeting cadence, minutes, disclosures — that keeps the structure compliant year after year, not just at the point of appointment.
When this advisory is needed
Your company has crossed, or is approaching, the paid-up capital (₹10 crore+), turnover (₹100 crore+) or borrowings (₹50 crore+) thresholds under Section 149(4)/177 that trigger mandatory independent directors and an audit committee
You are a listed company, or preparing for an IPO or listing, and need a SEBI LODR-compliant board — correct proportion of independent directors, a functioning audit committee under Regulation 18, and Nomination & Remuneration and Stakeholders' Relationship Committees where applicable
An institutional investor, private equity fund, or strategic acquirer has made board composition, an independent director seat, or audit committee oversight a condition of the term sheet or investment agreement
Your existing board is entirely promoter-family or founder-only and you want genuine independent oversight before a funding round, banking facility renewal, or key-client empanelment that expects governance maturity
A related-party transaction, ESOP scheme, or material contract needs Audit Committee approval under Section 177(4) and you do not currently have a validly constituted committee to approve it
You are restructuring the board after a promoter exit, investor board seat negotiation, or a regulatory/secretarial audit finding that flagged a composition gap
You need an independent, dispassionate assessment of whether a proposed director candidate actually meets the statutory independence test under Section 149(6) — not just a favourable personal relationship
When this advisory is not the priority
A private company well below all three thresholds (paid-up capital, turnover, borrowings) with no near-term listing, large-institutional-funding, or major-lender plans — a full independent-director/audit-committee structure is not legally required and can be deferred without risk
A One Person Company or a company with only two directors that has no plans to scale toward the thresholds — the statutory mandate simply does not apply, and imposing full governance machinery adds cost without a corresponding legal or commercial benefit
You need routine annual MCA secretarial filings (AOC-4, MGT-7, DIR-3 KYC) with no governance restructuring question — that is a compliance filing engagement, not a board advisory engagement
You are looking for a nominee or professional director to physically fill a board seat — PNPC advises on criteria, process, and compliance but does not itself act as a nominee director, to avoid conflicts between advisory and directorial roles
Your board composition question is really a shareholder dispute or a hostile removal situation — that calls for corporate litigation and dispute-resolution counsel first, with governance advisory following once the dispute is resolved
You need a one-off legal opinion on a single director's eligibility with no broader governance review — a narrower company-secretarial consultation may be more cost-effective than a full advisory engagement
Board governance mechanisms compared — where board advisory fits among related compliance and assurance functions
| Feature | Board Advisory (this service) | Secretarial Audit (MR-3) | Statutory Financial Audit | Internal Audit | Corporate Governance Framework Design |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary objective | Design and appoint the right board/committee structure and keep it compliant | Independently verify compliance with corporate laws already in place | Express an opinion on true and fair financial statements | Evaluate internal controls and operational processes | Build the overarching governance policy architecture (charters, codes, escalation) |
| Who performs it | CA/CS advisory team (PNPC) | Practising Company Secretary (mandatory for specified companies) | Statutory Auditor (Chartered Accountant) | Internal Auditor (CA/CMA/CS or qualified professional) | CA/CS/governance consultants |
| Statutory basis | Section 149, 177 Companies Act 2013; SEBI LODR Reg. 16, 18 | Section 204 Companies Act 2013; Form MR-3 | Section 139–148 Companies Act 2013 | Section 138 Companies Act 2013 (mandatory for specified classes) | Not a standalone statute — draws on Companies Act, SEBI LODR, and best-practice codes |
| When mandatory | On crossing capital/turnover/borrowing thresholds or listing | Listed companies and companies meeting prescribed paid-up capital/turnover thresholds | Every company, every year — no exemption | Listed companies and companies meeting prescribed size thresholds | Not independently mandatory — usually undertaken voluntarily or investor-driven |
| Typical trigger for engagement | Threshold approaching, funding round, listing preparation, investor condition | Statutory annual requirement once thresholds are met | Statutory annual requirement for every company | Statutory annual requirement once thresholds are met, or voluntary for risk management | Pre-IPO readiness, PE/VC investment, family business institutionalisation |
| Key output | Board/committee composition, appointment letters, charters, compliance calendar | Secretarial Audit Report (MR-3) annexed to Board's Report | Independent Auditor's Report and audited financial statements | Internal Audit Report to Audit Committee/Board | Governance policy manual, committee charters, codes of conduct |
| Frequency | One-time structuring plus ongoing annual review | Annual | Annual (with quarterly limited review for listed entities) | Periodic — typically quarterly or as mandated | One-time build, periodically refreshed |
| PNPC role | Advisor — designs structure, vets candidates, drafts documents | Independent auditor role (via associated CS practice) | Independent auditor role | Outsourced/co-sourced internal auditor | Advisor — designs the policy framework |
These functions are complementary, not substitutes. A company preparing for institutional funding or listing typically needs board advisory (this service) to build the right structure, a governance framework engagement to write the supporting policies, and ongoing secretarial and statutory audit to verify compliance year after year. PNPC frequently runs these as a coordinated programme rather than isolated engagements.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | What Generic Compliance Vendors Miss | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Governance Diagnostic — Assess current board against statutory thresholds and investor expectations | We check actual paid-up capital, turnover, and aggregate borrowings against the Section 149(4)/177 thresholds — not just the last balance sheet figure, but the trajectory over the current financial year, because the obligation can arise mid-year. We also check whether any investment agreement or facility agreement already contractually requires board composition that exceeds the statutory minimum. | Week 1 |
| 2 | Board Composition Design — Determine the right mix of executive, non-executive and independent directors | A generic compliance vendor tells you the minimum number required. We design for the next 18–24 months — factoring in a likely funding round, planned related-party transactions, and sector-specific expectations (e.g., NBFCs and listed companies face additional RBI/SEBI composition rules that a plain Companies Act reading misses). | Week 1–2 |
| 3 | Independent Director Candidate Vetting — Assess candidates against Section 149(6) criteria | We test each candidate against every limb of Section 149(6): no pecuniary relationship with the company or its promoters/directors in the current or two preceding financial years, no relative holding a specified position, not a promoter or related to a promoter, and not holding more than the permitted number of directorships under Section 165 and independent directorships under SEBI LODR Regulation 17A. A candidate who looks independent informally often fails one of these tests on close review. | Week 2–3 |
| 4 | Databank Registration & Proficiency Assessment — Independent Directors' Databank compliance | Every proposed independent director must register on the Independent Directors' Databank maintained under the Companies (Creation and Maintenance of databank of Independent Directors) Rules, 2019, and complete the online proficiency self-assessment test within the prescribed period from registration, unless exempted based on years of relevant experience. We track this deadline — a missed proficiency test can affect the validity of the appointment. | Week 2–4, in parallel with candidate vetting |
| 5 | Board & Shareholder Approval Process — Resolutions, notices, and special/ordinary resolution as applicable | Appointment of an independent director for a listed company or specified class of public company requires approval by ordinary resolution of shareholders (special resolution in specific cases such as a second term); we prepare the explanatory statement under Section 102 disclosing the justification for appointment, which regulators and proxy advisors scrutinise closely for boilerplate language. | Week 3–5 |
| 6 | Letter of Appointment & Schedule IV Disclosures — Formal appointment documentation | Schedule IV to the Companies Act prescribes the Code for Independent Directors and specific disclosures the appointment letter must contain — role, remuneration, expected time commitment, and liability protections. We draft this to match Schedule IV precisely; a generic engagement letter used instead of the Schedule IV-compliant appointment letter is a documented secretarial audit qualification. | Week 4–5 |
| 7 | DIR-12 & MCA Filings — ROC intimation of appointment | Form DIR-12 must be filed with the Registrar of Companies within 30 days of the Board resolution appointing the director, along with the consent to act (Form DIR-2) and disclosure of interest. We file this proactively rather than waiting for the shareholder meeting date, where the timeline permits under the applicable resolution type. | Within 30 days of appointment |
| 8 | Audit Committee Constitution — Committee formation with correct independence ratio | Under Section 177(2), the Audit Committee must consist of a minimum of three directors, with independent directors forming a majority; SEBI LODR Regulation 18 requires a minimum of two-thirds independent directors for listed entities and mandates that the Chairperson be an independent director. We check both thresholds — the Companies Act minimum and the stricter SEBI LODR requirement where applicable — because meeting only the lower bar is a common and easily-missed governance gap for listing-track companies. | Week 5–6 |
| 9 | Terms of Reference & Committee Charter Drafting — Defining the Audit Committee's statutory mandate | Section 177(4) prescribes specific matters the Audit Committee must address — recommendation of auditor appointment and remuneration, review of financial statements before Board approval, approval and subsequent modification of related-party transactions, scrutiny of inter-corporate loans and investments, valuation of undertakings/assets, and evaluation of internal financial controls. A charter that simply says 'oversee financial reporting' without these specific statutory functions is inadequate on review. | Week 6 |
| 10 | Nomination & Remuneration / Stakeholders' Relationship Committee (where applicable) | Listed companies and companies meeting the Section 178 thresholds also require a Nomination & Remuneration Committee and, where relevant, a Stakeholders' Relationship Committee. We assess whether your company's trajectory requires these alongside the Audit Committee, rather than constituting the Audit Committee in isolation and discovering the gap at the next secretarial audit. | Week 6–7, where applicable |
| 11 | Board Meeting Calendar & Minute-Keeping Framework — Ongoing governance discipline | An Audit Committee that is validly constituted but never actually meets, or meets without a quorum of independent directors, fails the substance test even if the paperwork exists. We set the committee meeting calendar (Section 177(5) requires at least 4 meetings a year with a gap not exceeding 120 days), the minute format, and the reporting line to the full Board. | Week 7 |
| 12 | Related-Party Transaction & Whistle-Blower Policy Alignment — Committee's ongoing statutory role | Once constituted, the Audit Committee must actually approve related-party transactions before they are entered into (with limited omnibus-approval exceptions), and oversee the vigil mechanism/whistle-blower policy under Section 177(9)-(10). We align the company's existing RPT approval workflow and whistle-blower policy to route through the new committee correctly — a step most compliance vendors leave to the client to figure out. | Week 7–8 |
| 13 | Annual Review & Continuity Advisory — Independent director tenure, rotation, and re-appointment | Independent directors hold office for a term of up to 5 consecutive years and are eligible for re-appointment for one more term of 5 years by special resolution, after which a cooling-off period of 3 years applies before they can be appointed again (in any capacity, directly or indirectly). We track tenure across all appointed independent directors and flag re-appointment or rotation decisions well ahead of expiry — a lapse here leaves the company without the minimum required independent directors, a compliance gap MCA and SEBI actively monitor. | Ongoing — PNPC on annual retainer |
Realistic timeline for a full board restructuring — from diagnostic to a validly constituted, SEBI/Companies Act-compliant Audit Committee — is typically 6–10 weeks, depending on candidate availability and shareholder meeting scheduling. A narrower engagement (vetting one independent director candidate and drafting the appointment letter) can be completed in 2–3 weeks. Ongoing governance discipline — meeting calendars, minute review, tenure tracking — is best run as an annual retainer rather than a one-time exercise.
Latest audited financial statements — to verify paid-up capital, turnover, and aggregate borrowings against the Section 149(4)/177 thresholds
Current Memorandum and Articles of Association — to check for any board composition or committee provisions that exceed statutory minimums
List of current directors with DIN, category (executive/non-executive/independent), and date of appointment
Latest Annual Return (MGT-7) and Board's Report — to cross-check disclosed board composition against actual functioning composition
Any existing Shareholders' Agreement or Investment Agreement — to identify contractual board/committee composition commitments to investors
Existing committee charters, if any (Audit Committee, Nomination & Remuneration Committee, CSR Committee) — for review and alignment
PAN and DIN (or DIN application details, if not yet allotted)
Detailed CV / professional background — expertise areas relevant to Section 150 and Rule 5 (finance, law, management, sales, marketing, administration, research, corporate governance, technical operations, or other disciplines related to the company's business)
Declaration of independence under Section 149(6) — confirming no pecuniary relationship with the company, its holding, subsidiary, or associate company, or their promoters/directors, in the current or two immediately preceding financial years
Declaration of directorships and committee memberships held in other companies — to confirm compliance with Section 165 (maximum 20 directorships, of which not more than 10 public companies) and SEBI LODR Regulation 17A (maximum 7 listed company directorships, or 3 if serving as a whole-time director in any listed entity)
Independent Directors' Databank registration confirmation, or undertaking to register within the prescribed period
Consent to act as director (Form DIR-2) and disclosure of concern or interest in other entities (Form MBP-1)
Confirmation of no disqualification under Section 164 (non-filing default, insolvency, conviction, etc.)
Board resolution recommending the appointment of independent director(s) and constitution/reconstitution of the Audit Committee
Notice of general meeting with explanatory statement under Section 102 disclosing the justification for appointment
Ordinary or special resolution passed by shareholders, as applicable to the company's classification and the specific appointment scenario
Nomination & Remuneration Committee recommendation, where the company already has an NRC constituted under Section 178
Draft Terms of Reference / Charter covering the specific matters listed under Section 177(4) — auditor recommendation, financial statement review, related-party transaction approval, inter-corporate loan scrutiny, valuation review, internal financial controls evaluation
Confirmation of committee composition — minimum 3 directors with independent directors in the majority (Companies Act); minimum two-thirds independent directors with an independent Chairperson (SEBI LODR Regulation 18, for listed entities)
Draft meeting calendar for the financial year — minimum 4 meetings with gap not exceeding 120 days under Section 177(5)
Quorum rules — two members or one-third of members, whichever is higher, with a minimum of two independent directors present, per Section 177(3) read with applicable rules
Form DIR-12 — intimation of appointment of director, to be filed within 30 days of the Board resolution
Form MGT-14 — filing of certain Board and shareholder resolutions with the Registrar, where applicable (private companies are generally exempt for ordinary business resolutions, but specific resolutions still require filing)
Updated Register of Directors and Key Managerial Personnel, and Register of Contracts/Arrangements in which directors are interested
Updated disclosures for the Annual Return (MGT-7) and Board's Report reflecting the revised board and committee composition
Compliance certificate/report on corporate governance under SEBI LODR Regulation 27, for submission to the stock exchange
Familiarisation programme details for independent directors under Regulation 25(7) — disclosed on the company website
Performance evaluation framework for the Board, its committees, and individual directors under Regulation 17(10) and Schedule II Part D
Related-party transaction policy aligned to the reconstituted Audit Committee's approval authority under Regulation 23
Minutes book for Board and Audit Committee meetings, maintained in the statutory format and entered within 30 days of each meeting
Independent director tenure tracker — appointment date, term expiry, re-appointment eligibility, and cooling-off period tracking
Annual proficiency self-assessment test completion tracker for each independent director on the Databank
Committee action-item log — tracking Audit Committee recommendations to the Board and their closure status
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Threshold Readiness (Voluntary) | Anticipated funding round, bank facility, or strategic partnership | Advisory on when to move ahead of the statutory trigger — many institutional investors and large lenders expect governance maturity before it is legally mandatory. We help design a board that scales rather than one that needs an emergency rebuild at term-sheet stage. | Term sheet or facility approval delayed while the company scrambles to appoint independent directors and constitute an Audit Committee under deal-timeline pressure — with limited negotiating room on candidate quality. |
| Threshold Crossing | Paid-up capital, turnover, or borrowings crosses Section 149(4)/177 limits | We monitor these thresholds against your management accounts through the year, not just at year-end audit, because the statutory obligation can arise mid-year and the appointment window is time-bound from the date the threshold is crossed. | Non-compliance from the date of threshold crossing — flagged in the next secretarial audit (Form MR-3) as a qualification, and a documented gap in due diligence for any future transaction. |
| Candidate Identification & Vetting | Decision to appoint independent director(s) | Independence testing against Section 149(6) in full — pecuniary relationship, relative positions, directorship limits under Section 165 and SEBI LODR Regulation 17A. We also assess practical fit — sector expertise, time availability, and genuine willingness to challenge management. | A director appointed as 'independent' who fails one of the statutory tests is not legally independent — the company's Audit Committee composition becomes invalid retroactively, exposing every committee decision (including RPT approvals) to challenge. |
| Appointment & Constitution | Board and shareholder approval obtained | Schedule IV-compliant appointment letter, Form DIR-12 filed within 30 days, Databank registration and proficiency test tracked, Audit Committee terms of reference drafted to cover every Section 177(4) matter — not a generic charter. | Late DIR-12 filing attracts additional fees; an incomplete or generic Audit Committee charter is a common secretarial audit qualification and weakens the committee's practical authority when a related-party transaction is challenged. |
| Ongoing Committee Functioning (Annual) | Financial year operations | Meeting calendar enforced — minimum 4 Audit Committee meetings with gap not exceeding 120 days, quorum with independent director presence, minutes recorded within 30 days, related-party transactions routed through the committee before execution, whistle-blower mechanism oversight maintained. | A committee that exists on paper but does not meet the statutory cadence, or approves RPTs after the fact rather than before, fails the substance test in a regulatory inspection or secretarial audit — and undermines the governance credibility the structure was built to establish. |
| Tenure & Rotation Management | Independent director term nearing 5-year expiry | We track each independent director's appointment date and flag the re-appointment decision (special resolution, for a second 5-year term) or replacement search well ahead of expiry — typically starting 6 months before the term ends. | A lapsed independent director term without timely re-appointment or replacement leaves the company below the mandatory minimum, invalidating Audit Committee composition until remedied — a gap that surfaces in the next Board's Report disclosure. |
| Listing / IPO Transition | Company moves from private/unlisted public to listed status | Governance requirements tighten materially at listing — SEBI LODR Regulation 17/18 impose stricter independent director ratios, mandatory Nomination & Remuneration and Stakeholders' Relationship Committees, and public disclosure obligations that did not previously apply. We rebuild the governance structure for the listed-entity standard well before the listing date, not after. | A board structured only to the private-company minimum will not meet SEBI LODR requirements at listing — causing last-minute governance remediation that delays the listing timeline and draws regulatory scrutiny during the review process. |
| Restructuring / Board Change Events | Investor exit, promoter change, M&A, or regulatory finding | Reassessment of board and committee composition whenever ownership or control changes materially — an investor's board seat departing, a new controlling shareholder, or a secretarial audit finding that flagged a gap. We treat these as governance-reset events, not just administrative updates. | Failing to reassess composition after a control or ownership change often leaves stale committee memberships, unresolved conflicts of interest, or a board that no longer reflects actual voting control — a red flag in the next transaction's due diligence. |
What exactly does 'Board Constitution, Independent Director & Audit Committee Advisory' cover?
It covers three connected pieces of work: designing the right board composition for your company's size, stage, and regulatory classification; identifying and vetting independent director candidates against the statutory independence tests; and constituting an Audit Committee with the correct composition, terms of reference, and ongoing meeting discipline. PNPC handles the advisory, drafting, and MCA filing work — from the initial diagnostic through to the annual governance calendar that keeps the structure compliant.
When does a company legally need to have independent directors?
Under Section 149(4) of the Companies Act 2013 read with Rule 4 of the Companies (Appointment and Qualification of Directors) Rules, 2014, every listed public company must have at least one-third of its board as independent directors. Every other public company must appoint at least two independent directors if it meets any one of: paid-up share capital of ₹10 crore or more, turnover of ₹100 crore or more, or aggregate outstanding loans, borrowings, debentures and deposits exceeding ₹50 crore. Private companies are generally exempt from this requirement unless a specific investment agreement or sector regulation imposes it contractually.
What is the minimum size and composition of an Audit Committee?
Under Section 177(2) of the Companies Act 2013, an Audit Committee must have a minimum of three directors, with independent directors forming a majority of the committee. The majority of members, including the chairperson, should be persons with the ability to read and understand financial statements. For listed entities, SEBI LODR Regulation 18 imposes a stricter standard: minimum three directors, at least two-thirds of whom must be independent directors, and the chairperson must be an independent director who is present at the Annual General Meeting to answer shareholder queries.
Who qualifies as an 'independent director' under Indian law?
Section 149(6) of the Companies Act 2013 sets out a detailed test. Broadly, an independent director must not be a promoter of the company or its holding, subsidiary, or associate company; must not be related to promoters or directors; must have (or must not have had) no material pecuniary relationship with the company, its holding, subsidiary, or associate company, or their promoters or directors, in the current or two immediately preceding financial years (beyond permitted remuneration and specified transactions); must not have a relative who holds specified employment, KMP, or auditor/consultant positions with the company in the current or two preceding years; and must possess appropriate skills, experience, and knowledge relevant to the company's business.
What is the Independent Directors' Databank and is registration mandatory?
The Databank is an online registry maintained under the Companies (Creation and Maintenance of databank of Independent Directors) Rules, 2019, in which every individual proposing to be appointed as an independent director must register. After registration, the individual must pass an online proficiency self-assessment test within the prescribed period, unless exempted based on cumulative years of experience as a director or key managerial personnel in a listed public company (or other specified categories of exemption). Registration and, where applicable, the proficiency test are mandatory prerequisites to a valid appointment.
How long can an independent director serve, and can the term be renewed?
An independent director may hold office for a term of up to five consecutive years and is eligible for re-appointment for one more term of five years, provided this is approved by the shareholders through a special resolution and disclosed in the Board's Report. After serving two consecutive terms (a maximum of 10 years), the individual becomes ineligible for re-appointment as an independent director in that company for three years — although they can be appointed to a non-independent director role, or as an independent director of an unrelated company, subject to the applicable conditions.
Can a company have more independent directors than the statutory minimum?
Yes. The statutory thresholds are minimums, not caps. Many companies — particularly those preparing for institutional funding, a public listing, or working with sophisticated lenders — voluntarily appoint independent directors and constitute an Audit Committee well before they are legally required to, because institutional counterparties expect governance maturity as a matter of practice, not just legal compliance.
What are the maximum directorships an independent director can hold?
Under Section 165 of the Companies Act 2013, an individual cannot hold directorship in more than 20 companies at the same time, of which not more than 10 can be public companies. For listed entities specifically, SEBI LODR Regulation 17A caps a person's directorships at 7 listed companies, reducing to 3 listed companies if the person is serving as a whole-time director or managing director in any listed entity. Additionally, Regulation 26 restricts the number of committee memberships and chairpersonships a director may hold across listed entities.
What does the Audit Committee actually have to do once it is constituted?
Section 177(4) of the Companies Act 2013 specifies the Audit Committee's mandatory terms of reference: recommending the appointment, remuneration, and terms of appointment of auditors; reviewing and monitoring the auditor's independence and performance; examining financial statements and the auditor's report before they go to the Board; approving (and reviewing modifications to) related-party transactions; scrutinising inter-corporate loans and investments; evaluating the valuation of undertakings or assets where necessary; monitoring the end-use of funds raised through public offers; and evaluating the internal financial controls and risk management systems of the company.
How often must the Audit Committee meet?
Section 177(5) requires the Audit Committee to meet at least four times in a financial year, with a gap of not more than 120 days between two consecutive meetings. For listed entities, SEBI LODR Regulation 18(2) similarly mandates at least four meetings a year with the same 120-day maximum gap. Quorum under the Companies Act rules is either two members or one-third of the members of the committee, whichever is higher, with at least two independent directors present.
What is the difference between the Companies Act Audit Committee requirement and the SEBI LODR requirement?
The Companies Act, 2013 sets the baseline requirement applicable to all companies that cross the specified thresholds — minimum 3 directors, independent directors in the majority. SEBI LODR applies additionally to listed companies and is stricter in several respects: minimum two-thirds independent directors (versus a simple majority), a mandatory independent chairperson who must attend the AGM, and additional disclosure and review obligations including quarterly financial results review and management discussion. A listed company must satisfy both sets of requirements simultaneously — SEBI LODR does not replace the Companies Act obligation, it layers additional requirements on top of it.
Do private companies ever need an Audit Committee?
A private company must constitute an Audit Committee only if it independently meets the Section 177 thresholds — paid-up share capital of ₹10 crore or more, turnover of ₹100 crore or more, or aggregate outstanding loans, borrowings, debentures and deposits exceeding ₹50 crore. Below these thresholds, a private company has no statutory obligation to form an Audit Committee, though it may choose to do so voluntarily — often at an investor's request, or as part of preparing for a future funding round or conversion to a public company.
What happens if a company fails to appoint the required independent directors?
Non-compliance with Section 149(4) is treated as a default under the Companies Act, exposing the company and every officer in default to penalties under Section 172 (the general penalty provision) unless a more specific penalty applies. Beyond the direct penalty exposure, the gap surfaces in the company's secretarial audit report (Form MR-3, if applicable) as a qualification, in the Board's Report disclosures, and — most consequentially in practice — in due diligence for any future funding round, credit facility, or M&A transaction, where a governance gap of this kind is a standard checklist item for institutional counterparties.
Can PNPC recommend or provide independent director candidates?
PNPC advises on the criteria, vets candidates you identify against the statutory independence tests, and can facilitate introductions within our professional network where appropriate, based on the specific expertise your board needs (finance, legal, sector-specific operational experience, governance). We do not ourselves serve as independent or nominee directors for advisory clients, to keep our advisory role free of the conflicts that can arise between an advisory relationship and a fiduciary directorial role.
What is the appointment letter for an independent director required to contain?
Schedule IV to the Companies Act 2013 (the Code for Independent Directors) prescribes that the letter of appointment must set out: the term of appointment; the expectation of the Board from the appointed director, including the Board committees the person is expected to serve on and the expected time commitment; the director's remuneration, including sitting fees and any profit-related commission, along with the formula, if any; provisions for Directors and Officers (D&O) insurance, if any; and other terms and conditions specific to the appointment.
What is a related-party transaction and why does the Audit Committee's approval matter?
A related-party transaction (RPT) is a transaction between the company and a related party as defined under Section 2(76) of the Companies Act 2013 — including directors, key managerial personnel, their relatives, and entities in which they hold significant interest. Section 177(4)(iv) requires the Audit Committee's prior approval for related-party transactions (with a limited omnibus-approval mechanism for repetitive transactions within specified conditions), and Section 188 sets out additional approval requirements including, for material RPTs, shareholder approval with related parties abstaining from voting. Without a validly constituted Audit Committee, this approval step cannot be properly satisfied.
Does the Audit Committee replace the statutory auditor's role?
No. The statutory auditor independently examines the company's financial statements and expresses an opinion on whether they present a true and fair view. The Audit Committee's role is different and complementary: it recommends the auditor's appointment and remuneration, reviews the auditor's independence and the scope of the audit, reviews the financial statements and the auditor's findings before they go to the full Board, and provides a layer of independent-director oversight over the entire financial reporting and audit process. The two functions work together — an effective Audit Committee actually strengthens the value of the statutory audit by ensuring management does not have unchecked influence over the audit relationship.
What is a Nomination & Remuneration Committee and is it needed alongside the Audit Committee?
Under Section 178(1), the same class of companies required to have an Audit Committee (listed companies and public companies meeting the Section 178-linked thresholds) must also constitute a Nomination & Remuneration Committee (NRC), consisting of three or more non-executive directors, of whom not less than one-half must be independent directors. The NRC identifies and recommends candidates for director and senior management appointments, and formulates the policy on remuneration for directors, KMP, and other employees. Where both committees are mandated, PNPC typically advises constituting them together as part of the same governance restructuring exercise.
What is a Stakeholders' Relationship Committee?
Under Section 178(5), any company with more than 1,000 shareholders, debenture-holders, deposit-holders, or other security holders at any point during a financial year must constitute a Stakeholders' Relationship Committee, chaired by a non-executive director, to specifically consider and resolve grievances of security holders. For listed entities, SEBI LODR Regulation 20 imposes an equivalent requirement regardless of the 1,000-holder threshold. This is separate from the Audit Committee and NRC, though it is often reviewed as part of the same overall governance restructuring.
How does board composition affect a company's ability to raise institutional funding?
Institutional investors — venture capital funds, private equity funds, and increasingly even later-stage angel syndicates — routinely include board composition and governance commitments as conditions in the term sheet and definitive investment agreements: a board seat or observer right for the investor, an independent director requirement, and sometimes specific Audit Committee or approval-matrix requirements for related-party transactions and related-party related expenditure. A company that has never had to think about board composition before often finds this becomes a negotiated, and sometimes contentious, term at the closing stage.
Can an existing employee or consultant of the company become an independent director?
Generally, no — not within two financial years of the pecuniary relationship ending. Section 149(6)(c) specifically excludes anyone who has, or had in the current or two immediately preceding financial years, a material pecuniary relationship with the company, its holding, subsidiary, or associate company, or their promoters or directors — beyond permitted remuneration as a director and transactions not exceeding prescribed limits. A former full-time employee or a consultant who provided significant paid services within that lookback window would typically fail the independence test and cannot be validly appointed as an independent director in that period.
What is the resident director requirement and how does it interact with independent director appointments?
Section 149(3) requires every company to have at least one director who has stayed in India for a total period of not less than 182 days in the previous financial year (with a modified test for newly incorporated companies). This resident-director requirement is separate from, and does not have to be satisfied specifically by, an independent director — any director on the board, executive or non-executive, can fulfil it. However, companies with a majority of foreign or NRI directors sometimes need to plan both requirements together to ensure the overall board composition satisfies each rule independently.
What penalties apply if the Audit Committee is not properly constituted or does not function as required?
Failure to constitute an Audit Committee when required, or non-compliance with its composition or functioning requirements under Section 177, exposes the company and every officer in default to penalties under the general penalty provisions of the Companies Act (Section 178(8) specifically addresses NRC/Stakeholders' Committee defaults; Section 177 defaults fall under the general company/officer default framework). Beyond direct penalties, an improperly constituted committee can render its approvals — particularly related-party transaction approvals — vulnerable to challenge, with downstream tax, contractual, and governance consequences.
How is this advisory priced, and is it a one-time or ongoing engagement?
PNPC prices board and Audit Committee advisory as a fixed, scoped engagement — agreed in writing before work begins — covering the diagnostic, candidate vetting, drafting, and filing work for the initial restructuring. Ongoing governance discipline (meeting calendar management, minute review, tenure tracking, annual re-assessment against thresholds) is typically offered as part of an annual governance retainer, similar to how we structure annual compliance retainers for MCA filings. The exact scope and fee are confirmed before engagement begins.
Can a foreign national or NRI serve as an independent director of an Indian company?
Yes. There is no nationality or residency restriction on independent directorship under the Companies Act, provided the individual otherwise satisfies the independence criteria under Section 149(6), obtains a DIN, and completes Databank registration and the proficiency test where applicable. A foreign national or NRI independent director requires the same apostilled/notarised identity and address documentation as any other foreign director, and a Digital Signature Certificate obtained via video-based verification.
What is a 'material pecuniary relationship' under the independence test — is there a monetary threshold?
The Companies Act does not fix a single bright-line rupee threshold for what counts as a 'material' pecuniary relationship for independence purposes — the test under Section 149(6) instead excludes remuneration as a director and transactions not exceeding limits prescribed under the applicable rules, with the broader assessment of materiality made against the specific facts. SEBI's framework for listed entities applies its own materiality thresholds for related-party transaction disclosure purposes, which are sometimes referenced by practitioners as a proxy, but the independence test itself requires a case-specific assessment rather than a mechanical rupee cutoff.
Does an unlisted public company have different requirements from a listed company?
Yes. An unlisted public company's board and Audit Committee obligations are governed purely by the Companies Act 2013 thresholds discussed earlier. A listed company must additionally comply with SEBI LODR, which is generally stricter — higher independent director ratios, an independent Audit Committee chairperson, mandatory Nomination & Remuneration and (where applicable) Stakeholders' Relationship Committees regardless of the Companies Act's separate thresholds, and ongoing quarterly disclosure obligations to the stock exchanges. A company planning to list should design its governance structure to the SEBI LODR standard well before the listing process begins, not retrofit it afterward.
What is the role of the Audit Committee in the internal financial controls (IFC) framework?
Section 177(4)(vii) specifically requires the Audit Committee to evaluate the internal financial controls and risk management systems of the company. This connects directly to the Board's own responsibility under Section 134(5)(e) to state in the Directors' Responsibility Statement that internal financial controls are adequate and operating effectively, and to the statutory auditor's separate reporting obligation on IFC under Section 143(3)(i) (for companies to which it applies). The Audit Committee is the forum where management's IFC self-assessment, internal audit findings, and the statutory auditor's IFC observations are meant to converge before reaching the full Board.
What happens to Audit Committee approvals if the committee's composition is later found to be invalid?
If the Audit Committee's composition is later found not to satisfy the statutory independence or quorum requirements at the time an approval was given — for example, if a director treated as independent is later found to have failed the Section 149(6) test — the validity of decisions taken by that committee, particularly related-party transaction approvals, can be challenged. This is precisely why the independence vetting and documentation at the time of appointment matters: a defensible, contemporaneous record of how each independent director was assessed is the practical protection against this risk.
Is a company secretary required for board and Audit Committee administration?
A Company Secretary is mandatory under Section 203 read with Rule 8/8A of the Companies (Appointment and Remuneration of Managerial Personnel) Rules, 2014, for every listed company, every other public company with paid-up share capital of ₹10 crore or more, and every private company with paid-up share capital of ₹10 crore or more. The Company Secretary is typically the officer responsible for convening meetings, preparing and circulating notices and agendas, and maintaining the minutes book. Where a company does not yet cross the mandatory threshold, PNPC can provide company-secretarial support for board and committee administration as part of the broader governance retainer.
Can the same person serve as both a director and a member of the Audit Committee if they are not independent?
Yes, a non-independent (executive or non-executive, non-independent) director can be a member of the Audit Committee, provided the committee's overall composition still satisfies the statutory majority (Companies Act) or two-thirds (SEBI LODR, for listed entities) independent-director requirement. What is not permitted is for non-independent directors to constitute the majority or, for listed entities, more than one-third of the committee — and the chairperson of the committee, for listed entities, must specifically be an independent director.
How does PNPC coordinate this advisory for a company with both an Indian and a UAE entity?
PNPC has operating offices in Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai. For groups with both an Indian company (subject to the Companies Act and, where listed, SEBI LODR) and a UAE entity (subject to the UAE Commercial Companies Law and, for listed or DIFC/ADGM-registered entities, the relevant exchange or free-zone governance rules), we coordinate board advisory across both jurisdictions under a single engagement — so governance decisions at the group level (shared directors, cross-border related-party transactions, consolidated reporting oversight) are advised on coherently rather than by two disconnected teams.
What is the Code for Independent Directors and where is it found?
The Code for Independent Directors is set out in Schedule IV to the Companies Act 2013. It covers the guidelines of professional conduct expected of independent directors, their role and functions (including duties like satisfying themselves on the integrity of financial information and balancing the interests of stakeholders), their duties, the manner of appointment (including the required content of the letter of appointment), re-appointment, resignation or removal, and separate meetings and evaluation requirements. It functions as both a compliance checklist and a practical guide to what the role is meant to achieve.
Why should we engage PNPC rather than draft the board resolutions and appointment letters ourselves using templates?
Generic templates do not test a candidate's independence against the full Section 149(6) criteria, do not distinguish the Companies Act minimum from the stricter SEBI LODR requirement where it applies, and rarely draft an Audit Committee charter that covers every Section 177(4) matter specifically. We have been engaged repeatedly to remediate governance structures built on template documents — after a secretarial audit flagged a gap, or after a due diligence team found the committee's terms of reference did not match statutory requirements. The remediation cost, in time and professional fees, is consistently higher than getting the structure right at the outset.
What ongoing support does PNPC provide after the board and Audit Committee are constituted?
Under the annual governance retainer, PNPC tracks the Audit Committee's meeting calendar and quorum compliance, reviews minutes for statutory adequacy, monitors independent director tenure and flags re-appointment or rotation decisions ahead of the five-year term expiry, re-checks the company's paid-up capital/turnover/borrowings each year against the Section 149(4)/177 thresholds (in case a company that was previously exempt has since crossed them, or vice versa), and coordinates the related-party transaction approval workflow through the committee. This ongoing discipline is what keeps a governance structure compliant year after year rather than only at the point of initial constitution.
PNPC Board Advisory vs typical alternatives
| What you need | Generic Compliance Vendor / Portal | Standalone Company Secretary | PNPC Global |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assessment of statutory thresholds triggering mandatory governance | Checks last year's balance sheet only | Checks compliance status, may not model forward trajectory | Monitors capital/turnover/borrowings trajectory through the year, flags approaching thresholds proactively |
| Independent director candidate vetting | Not typically offered | Confirms DIN and basic eligibility | Full Section 149(6) test, directorship-limit check under Section 165 and SEBI LODR Reg. 17A, and documented independence rationale |
| Audit Committee charter drafting | Generic template, often missing specific Section 177(4) matters | Companies Act-compliant, may not layer SEBI LODR Regulation 18 where applicable | Full Section 177(4) coverage plus SEBI LODR alignment for listed/listing-track companies, tailored to actual RPT and reporting workflow |
| Coordination with tax, FEMA, and cross-border structuring | Not offered — siloed to secretarial filings | Not typically in scope | Integrated advisory across Companies Act, tax, and — via our Dubai office — UAE governance requirements for cross-border groups |
| Ongoing tenure and compliance monitoring | One-time filing, no ongoing tracking | Depends on individual retainer scope | Annual governance retainer with tenure tracker, meeting calendar enforcement, and threshold re-assessment |
| Investor/diligence readiness | Not addressed | Addressed reactively when raised by counsel | Built proactively — governance structure designed to withstand institutional due diligence, not just satisfy the statutory minimum |
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Governance diagnostic — assessment of current board and committee composition against Companies Act and, where applicable, SEBI LODR thresholds
- 02
Independent director candidate vetting against the full Section 149(6) independence test, with a documented rationale on file
- 03
Databank registration and proficiency self-assessment tracking for every proposed independent director
- 04
Schedule IV-compliant letter of appointment drafting
- 05
Board and shareholder resolution drafting, including Section 102 explanatory statements
- 06
Form DIR-12 and related MCA filings within statutory deadlines
- 07
Audit Committee terms of reference / charter covering every Section 177(4) matter, aligned to SEBI LODR Regulation 18 where applicable
- 08
Nomination & Remuneration Committee and Stakeholders' Relationship Committee advisory where the same thresholds apply
- 09
Annual governance retainer — meeting calendar enforcement, minute review, independent director tenure tracking, and yearly threshold re-assessment
- 10
Coordinated India-UAE governance advisory for cross-border groups via PNPC's Dubai office
Talk to a PNPC CA before your next board meeting, funding round, or listing milestone — governance built proactively costs less, in time and negotiating leverage, than governance built under deal pressure.