SARFAESI vs IBC: which route to recover debt?
Secured creditors in India often have two routes to recover stressed debt: SARFAESI and the IBC. They work very differently, and choosing the right one — or understanding how they interact — can make a major difference to recovery.
What is SARFAESI?
The SARFAESI Act lets a secured creditor (such as a bank or ARC) enforce its security interest without going to court — issuing a notice and, if unpaid, taking possession of and selling the secured asset. It is a focused, asset-level enforcement remedy available to secured lenders.
What is the IBC?
The IBC is a collective insolvency process for the whole company. Rather than one creditor enforcing one asset, it brings all creditors together to either resolve the company through a resolution plan or liquidate it in an orderly way — supervised by the NCLT.
The key differences
- Who it serves: SARFAESI is for secured creditors; the IBC is a collective process for all creditors.
- What it targets: SARFAESI enforces a specific secured asset; the IBC addresses the entire company.
- Outcome: SARFAESI aims at asset recovery; the IBC aims at resolution (revival) or orderly liquidation.
- Forum: SARFAESI is largely out-of-court (with DRT for disputes); the IBC runs before the NCLT.
Once a CIRP is admitted, the Section 14 moratorium halts SARFAESI action against the company, and the IBC's overriding effect (Section 238) generally prevails. So a pending SARFAESI enforcement can be paused the moment insolvency is admitted — a critical timing consideration for any secured lender.
Which route to choose?
If the goal is quick enforcement of a specific secured asset and the borrower is otherwise not heading into insolvency, SARFAESI can be faster. If the company is broadly insolvent and a collective resolution or maximised recovery across all assets is the aim, the IBC is the stronger route. Often the decision turns on strategy, timing and the realistic alternative.
Have a question on this?
I act as IRP, RP and Liquidator and provide IP support services across NCLT benches.
Get in touch