Opposition seeks rollback of new FCRA Rules, flags impact on civil society


FCRA Amendment Rules 2026 — UPSC Study Note

1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2010 FCRA enacted (replacing FCRA 1976); primary law governing foreign donations to Indian associations
2011 Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Rules, 2011 notified under the 2010 Act
2015 Retrospective amendment to redefine "political party" — affected Rajiv Gandhi Foundation and others
2020 FCRA Amendment Act, 2020 passed (September, four days after tabling, without stakeholder consultation); introduced SBI-only FCRA account, Aadhaar mandating, 20% admin-expense cap, ban on sub-granting [S2]
2020 FCRA Amendment Rules, 2020 also notified alongside
2022 Multiple high-profile NGOs (Amnesty International India, Missionaries of Charity) had FCRA licences cancelled or suspended
2026 FCRA Amendment Rules, 2026 notified (June 22); introduce five-category registration, state-wise fees, social media disclosure [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

Parent Act: Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 2010 (FCRA 2010) Administering Ministry: Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) Nodal Division: Foreigners Division, MHA Original FCRA: 1976 (replaced by 2010 Act)

Five mandatory registration categories under 2026 Rules: [S1] 1. Social 2. Economic 3. Educational 4. Cultural 5. Religious

Key provisions of 2026 Amendment Rules: - NGOs must register under one or more of the five categories, with separate activity lists for each [S1] - Mandatory disclosure: websites, social media accounts, publications, geographical scope [S1] - Separate registration fee for each category and each State/UT of operation [S1] - "Key functionary" definition expanded to include directors, partners, trustees, karta of HUFs, and management decision-makers [S1] - Foreign nationals as key functionaries: ordinarily ineligible for FCRA registration (exceptions granted by Central Government; Persons of Indian Origin exempted) [S1] - Renewal condition: NGO must demonstrate spending of at least ₹10 lakh in foreign contributions on approved activities in the previous two financial years [S1]

Penalty structure under 2026 Rules: [S1] | Violation | Penalty | |-----------|---------| | Administrative expense excess | ₹1 lakh or 5% of excess (whichever higher) | | Speculative investment | ₹1 lakh or 30% of amount invested (whichever higher) | | Diversion/misuse of funds | ₹1 lakh or 30% of amount involved (whichever higher) |

Key provisions of FCRA Amendment Act, 2020 (for comparison): [S2] - Admin expense cap reduced: 50% → 20% of total foreign contribution - Foreign funds to be received only in FCRA-designated account at SBI, New Delhi - Aadhaar made mandatory for all office-bearers - Sub-granting (transfer to another entity) prohibited


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Governance / Ethical

Social

Economic

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. FCRA 2010 replaced the earlier Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 1976. [S2]
  2. FCRA is administered by the Ministry of Home Affairs, not Ministry of External Affairs. [S2]
  3. Under FCRA Amendment Act, 2020, administrative expense cap was reduced from 50% to 20%. [S2]
  4. SBI New Delhi is the only designated bank for the primary FCRA account (post-2020 amendment). [S2]
  5. Aadhaar was made mandatory for all office-bearers of FCRA-registered organisations under the 2020 amendment. [S2]
  6. Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Rules, 2026 were notified on June 22, 2026. [S1]
  7. The 2026 Rules prescribe five registration categories: social, economic, educational, cultural, religious. [S1]
  8. Under 2026 Rules, NGOs with foreign nationals as key functionaries are ordinarily ineligible for FCRA registration. [S1]
  9. Penalty for speculative investment under 2026 Rules: ₹1 lakh or 30% of the amount invested, whichever is higher. [S1]
  10. Renewal condition under 2026 Rules: minimum spend of ₹10 lakh in foreign contributions in the previous two financial years. [S1]
  11. The Supreme Court upheld FCRA 2020 amendments in Noel Harper v. Union of India (2022), ruling foreign-source fund regulation does not abridge fundamental rights.
  12. Transfer of foreign contribution to another entity (sub-granting) was prohibited by the FCRA 2020 amendment. [S2]
  13. The "key functionary" definition under 2026 Rules includes karta of Hindu Undivided Families (HUF). [S1]
  14. Congress wrote to PM Modi; CPI(M)'s John Brittas wrote to Home Minister Amit Shah against the 2026 Rules. [S3]
  15. Organisations must pay separate fees for each registration category and each State/UT under the 2026 Rules. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-II (Governance, Constitution, Polity, Social Justice) Syllabus Headings: - Role of NGOs, SHGs, various groups and associations, and their role in good governance - Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation - Constitutional provisions, significant provisions involving citizens

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Rules, 2026 have been criticised as undermining civil society rather than regulating it. Analyse the constitutional and governance implications of these amendments." (GS-II, 250 words) 2. "Critically examine the evolution of FCRA from 2010 to 2026. Has successive tightening of the regulatory framework served the twin goals of transparency and development effectiveness?" (GS-II, 250 words) 3. "The relationship between the State and civil society in India has become increasingly adversarial. In light of recent FCRA amendments, suggest a balanced regulatory framework that ensures accountability without stifling legitimate developmental work." (GS-II / GS-IV, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
FCRA 2020 Amendment Act The direct legislative predecessor; most MCQs on FCRA test 2020 provisions
Noel Harper v. Union of India (2022) SC ruling upholding FCRA 2020; likely precedent for 2026 rules
Article 19 — Freedom of Association Constitutional basis of all challenges to FCRA restrictions
NGO Sector in India — Scale & Role Prelims/Mains context: employment, service delivery, advocacy
Civil Society and Democracy (GS-II syllabus) Conceptual grounding for why FCRA matters to governance discourse
Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) Overlapping regulatory regime for financial transparency of organisations
Sedition Law & National Security Laws Broader pattern of laws critiqued for chilling civic freedoms
Foreign Policy & Soft Power Diplomatic dimension — FCRA cancellations affecting India's international civil society partnerships

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Ministry confusion: FCRA is administered by MHA (Foreigners Division), not MEA or Ministry of Finance — a frequent trap.
  2. FCRA 1976 vs. 2010: The current operative law is FCRA 2010; FCRA 1976 was repealed. Do not attribute 2010 provisions to 1976 Act.
  3. Admin expense cap: It is now 20% (post-2020), not 50% — the old figure is commonly quoted incorrectly.
  4. Five categories in 2026 Rules are for registration/activity classification, not types of foreign contributions — do not conflate with FEMA categories.
  5. SC ruling in Noel Harper (2022): Upheld FCRA 2020 — aspirants sometimes incorrectly state the SC struck down FCRA amendments.
  6. SBI branch specificity: The mandatory FCRA account must be at SBI's New Delhi Main Branch (not any SBI branch) — a commonly tested precision point.

11. Sources