How to file a Section 7 application before the NCLT
A Section 7 application is how a financial creditor — typically a bank, NBFC or lender — triggers the corporate insolvency resolution process (CIRP) against a defaulting company. Here's what it takes and how the process unfolds before the NCLT.
When can a financial creditor file?
Under Section 7 of the IBC, a financial creditor can apply when a financial debt is owed and the company has defaulted. The default must be at least the prescribed threshold — currently ₹1 crore. A financial debt is money borrowed against payment of interest (loans, debentures, etc.), as opposed to an operational debt for goods or services.
What you need to file
- Proof of default — the strongest being a record from an information utility (such as NeSL), supported by loan documents, statements of account and demand notices;
- The application in Form 1 as prescribed under the rules;
- The name of a proposed Interim Resolution Professional (IRP) the creditor wishes to be appointed.
The process before the NCLT
The application is filed before the National Company Law Tribunal. The Tribunal examines whether a default has occurred and whether the application is complete. If satisfied, it admits the application; if there are defects, it may give an opportunity to cure them before rejecting.
On admission, a moratorium under Section 14 begins, the board's powers are suspended, and the IRP takes charge to run the company as a going concern and invite claims. From here, the CIRP timeline starts ticking.
Why applications get delayed or rejected
Common pitfalls include incomplete proof of default, a debt that is genuinely disputed or not a "financial debt," limitation issues, or procedural defects in the form. A clean, well-documented application — with default proof tied to specific figures and dates — moves far faster.
Practical takeaway
Section 7 is a powerful, time-bound recovery tool — but its strength lies in the quality of the default evidence and the precision of the filing. Getting the groundwork right before filing avoids months of avoidable adjournments.
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