India’s Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act
ICNL’s collection of resources related to the FCRA and its impact on civil society
In recent years, India has enacted a number of regulatory measures constricting funding for domestic non-profit organizations, the most well-known of which is the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA).
The FCRA was originally enacted in 1976, and significantly revised in 2010. It creates registration requirements and spending restrictions on Indian nonprofit organizations receiving foreign donations. The most recent 2020 amendments of the FCRA brought in additional restrictions, banning subgranting among FCRA-registered organizations, setting a severe cap on administrative spending, and further centralizing control of FCRA funding with the State Bank of Delhi and the Ministry of Home Affairs. (Further amendments are being considered as of mid-2026 as well.)
The FCRA represents a securitized approach to foreign funding that is out of step with international standards. It obstructed humanitarian relief efforts in India during COVID-19 and other disasters.
Moreover, these restrictions on cross-border philanthropy have decreased employment in the social sector and obstructed service delivery to communities and beneficiaries. The FCRA’s significant economic and human impact continues to increase as more civil society organizations’ FCRA licenses are cancelled.
For more information, please contact asia@icnl.org.
Latest Resource
India’s FCRA Amendment Bill, 2026: What Civil Society and Donors Need to Know
As of mid-2026, India’s Parliament is considering amendments to the FCRA that could significantly expand government authority over foreign contributions and certain assets held by foreign-funded civil society organizations. This policy brief breaks down the potential impact on civil society.
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More from ICNL
ICNL Resources on the FCRA
India’s FCRA Amendment Bill, 2026: What Civil Society and Donors Need to Know
Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Findings on India
Freedom of Association and India’s FCRA: An Analysis of India’s FCRA Supreme Court Judgment
The Regulatory Regime Debilitating India’s Nonprofit Sector
Foreign Funding Barriers Hinder COVID Relief Efforts in India
India’s 2020 FCRA Amendments Impact on Association
Other FCRA Resources
FCRA Legislation, Rules & Bills
• The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (2010)
• Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Rules, 2011
• The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Act, 2020
• Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act Rules, 2025
• The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2026
Analysis of the 2010 FCRA
• AccountAble Handbook FCRA 2010 (AccountAble)
• UNSR Statement urging India to repeal FCRA for restricting NGO access to foreign funding (with legal analysis of the 2010 act)
Analysis of the 2020 Amendments
• Summary of key changes to the FCRA in 2020 (Centre for the Advancement of Philanthropy, Mumbai)
• Summary of the FCRA 2020 Amendments and Recommendations for Grantmakers (Council on Foundations)
• Briefing paper on the 2020 amendments (International Commission of Jurists)