RBI Revises Upper-Layer NBFC Rule: Single Rs 1 Lakh Crore Asset Threshold
The RBI has simplified the criterion for an Upper-Layer NBFC: any NBFC with assets of Rs 1 lakh crore or more now qualifies, replacing the earlier multi-factor scoring method under Scale-Based Regulation.
The Reserve Bank of India has revised the way it identifies an Upper-Layer Non-Banking Financial Company (NBFC-UL). Under the new rule, any NBFC with assets of Rs 1 lakh crore or more is classified as an Upper-Layer NBFC, replacing the earlier, more complex scoring method based on size, interconnectedness and other factors.
Under the RBI's Scale-Based Regulation framework, NBFCs are placed in four layers — Base, Middle, Upper and Top — with progressively stricter rules. A company in the Upper Layer faces tighter governance, higher capital and disclosure norms, and must list on a stock exchange within three years of being notified.
The change matters most for large holding companies. In 2024 the RBI had classified the holding company of a major industrial group as an Upper-Layer NBFC, which placed it on a path toward a compulsory public listing. With the new single-threshold rule, whether such a company stays in the Upper Layer now depends purely on whether its qualifying NBFC assets are above Rs 1 lakh crore — if they have fallen below that level, the listing requirement may no longer apply.
For aspirants, the key idea is that the RBI uses Scale-Based Regulation to match the intensity of supervision to the size and systemic importance of an NBFC, protecting financial stability while reducing the compliance burden on smaller players.
Key Points to Remember
- New rule: NBFC with assets of Rs 1 lakh crore or more = Upper-Layer NBFC (NBFC-UL)
- Replaces the earlier multi-parameter scoring methodology
- NBFC-UL must list on a stock exchange within 3 years and follow stricter norms
- Part of the RBI's Scale-Based Regulation (Base, Middle, Upper, Top layers)
- Aim: match supervision to size and systemic importance, ease load on smaller NBFCs
Exam Relevance
Relevant for UPSC Prelims & Banking exams (Economy — RBI regulation of NBFCs, Scale-Based Regulation) and SSC General Awareness.
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