MCA

MCA Compliance Calendar 2025: All Important Deadlines

Compliance calendar planning session

If your company is registered in India, MCA compliance isn't optional -- it's a legal obligation. Private limited, one-person company, or public limited entity -- miss an MCA filing deadline and you're looking at hefty penalties, legal notices, and potentially disqualified directors.

Yet every year, thousands of companies pay avoidable fines simply because they lost track of a deadline. Multiple forms, overlapping due dates, frequent regulatory updates. It adds up fast -- especially for growing businesses focused on operations rather than paperwork.

This guide lays out every critical MCA deadline for 2025 in one place so you can plan ahead, avoid penalties, and keep your company in good standing with the Registrar of Companies (ROC).

What Is MCA Compliance and Why Does It Matter?

The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) is the governing body that administers the Companies Act, 2013, the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008, and other related legislation. Every company incorporated under these acts must file periodic returns, financial statements, and disclosures with the MCA through its online portal.

Why does it matter? A few reasons:

The cost of compliance is always less than the cost of non-compliance. A single missed deadline can snowball into penalties that dwarf the filing effort itself.

Key MCA Forms and Deadlines for 2025

Here's every major MCA filing you need to know about in 2025. Bookmark this section -- you'll want to come back to it.

1. AOC-4 -- Financial Statements

Form AOC-4 is used to file a company's financial statements -- including the balance sheet, profit and loss account, directors' report, and auditors' report -- with the ROC.

Deadline

Within 30 days of the Annual General Meeting (AGM). For most companies with an FY ending March 31, this means the AOC-4 is due by October 30, 2025 (assuming AGM is held by September 30).

OPC (One Person Companies) must file within 180 days from the close of the financial year. Companies filing consolidated financial statements must use Form AOC-4 CFS instead.

2. MGT-7 / MGT-7A -- Annual Return

The annual return provides a snapshot of the company's management structure, shareholding pattern, and other key details as of the close of the financial year.

Deadline

Within 60 days of the AGM. For a September 30 AGM, the filing is due by November 29, 2025. Small companies and OPCs can file the simplified MGT-7A form.

3. ADT-1 -- Auditor Appointment

Whenever a company appoints or re-appoints an auditor at its AGM, it must intimate the ROC by filing Form ADT-1.

Deadline

Within 15 days of the AGM. If your AGM is held on September 30, the ADT-1 must be filed by October 15, 2025.

Companies often overlook this one, assuming auditor appointments are purely internal matters. They're not. Failing to file ADT-1 attracts penalties and creates complications during subsequent filings.

4. DIR-3 KYC -- Director KYC

Every individual holding a Director Identification Number (DIN) must complete annual KYC by filing DIR-3 KYC. This applies to all directors -- doesn't matter if the company is active, dormant, or struck off.

Deadline

September 30, 2025 (for the financial year 2024-25). First-time filers or those updating details must use the web form. Repeat filers with no changes can use the DIR-3 KYC web service.

If DIR-3 KYC is not filed by the deadline, the DIN is marked as "Deactivated" on the MCA portal, and a penalty of Rs. 5,000 is levied for reactivation.

5. MSME-1 -- Outstanding Payments to MSMEs

Companies that owe outstanding payments to Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises beyond 45 days must file a half-yearly return disclosing these outstanding amounts.

Deadlines

April 30, 2025 (for the period October 2024 to March 2025) and October 31, 2025 (for the period April 2025 to September 2025).

This one's particularly important given the government's push to protect MSME interests. Non-filing can trigger scrutiny and compound interest obligations under Section 16 of the MSMED Act.

6. DPT-3 -- Return of Deposits

Every company that has accepted deposits or has outstanding receipt of money or loan that is not considered a deposit must file DPT-3 with the ROC annually.

Deadline

June 30, 2025 (for the financial year ending March 31, 2025).

Here's the catch: even companies that haven't accepted public deposits but have received loans from directors or shareholders often need to file DPT-3. This is one of the most commonly overlooked compliance requirements.

7. Annual General Meeting (AGM)

The AGM is the event around which most MCA filings revolve. It's where financial statements get approved, auditors are appointed, and key resolutions are passed.

Deadline

Within 6 months from the end of the financial year. For companies with an FY ending March 31, the AGM must be held by September 30, 2025.

The first AGM of a newly incorporated company must be held within 9 months of the close of its first financial year. Subsequent AGMs must not have a gap of more than 15 months between them.

Penalties for Non-Compliance

The penalties under the Companies Act are designed to be deterrent, and they can accumulate rapidly:

For a company that misses just two filings by 90 days each, the combined penalties can easily cross Rs. 50,000 -- an amount that would have been zero with timely compliance.

Common Mistakes Companies Make

After working with hundreds of Indian businesses, we've seen the same mistakes repeat year after year. Here are the most common ones:

  1. Relying on memory instead of systems: Many founders and CFOs depend on mental notes or spreadsheet reminders. With 7+ forms across staggered deadlines, something inevitably slips through the cracks.
  2. Ignoring DIR-3 KYC: Directors often assume this is a one-time filing. It's not. DIR-3 KYC must be filed every year, and a deactivated DIN can halt all company filings.
  3. Overlooking DPT-3 for shareholder loans: Companies that have received loans from directors or shareholders often don't realize DPT-3 applies to them. The thinking that "we haven't taken public deposits" creates a false sense of exemption.
  4. Delaying the AGM: Some companies push the AGM to the last possible date, leaving almost no buffer for filing AOC-4 and MGT-7 within their respective windows.
  5. Not tracking MSME-1 obligations: Companies with a large vendor base often do not know which of their vendors qualify as MSMEs, leading to missed MSME-1 filings.
  6. Treating compliance as a year-end activity: MCA compliance is not a once-a-year task. With half-yearly, event-based, and annual filings, it demands continuous attention throughout the year.

How OneFinOps Tracks All MCA Deadlines Automatically

OneFinOps was built for Indian businesses that are tired of compliance surprises. Our Compliance Hub takes the guesswork out of MCA compliance by automating deadline tracking from start to finish.

Here's how it works:

Stop tracking deadlines manually

OneFinOps monitors every MCA deadline for your company and sends you reminders before they are due. Claim your 3 months free and never miss a compliance deadline again.

MCA compliance is non-negotiable for every Indian company, but it doesn't have to be painful. With the right tools and a clear calendar, you can file on time, avoid penalties, and focus on what actually matters -- growing your business.

Keep this 2025 compliance calendar handy, set your reminders early, and consider letting OneFinOps handle the tracking so you never have to worry about a missed deadline again.

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