Published: March 20, 2026 | Updated: March 20, 2026 | By CA V. Viswanathan, FCA, ACS, CFE, IBBI RV

Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023: Compliance Checklist for Indian Companies

Last updated: 20 March 2026

Featured Answer — What must Indian companies do to comply with the DPDP Act?

The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (DPDP Act) establishes India’s first comprehensive data protection framework. Indian companies must comply with obligations covering lawful consent management, purpose limitation, data minimisation, data fiduciary duties, rights of data principals, and cross-border data transfer restrictions. Non-compliance attracts penalties up to ₹250 crore per instance. The DPDP Rules, 2025 provide the operational framework. This article is a comprehensive compliance checklist and regulatory tracker for Indian companies, particularly in the SaaS, IT, and technology sectors.

Definition: The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (DPDP Act) is India’s primary legislation governing the processing of digital personal data. Enacted on 11 August 2023, the Act applies to the processing of digital personal data within India and to the processing of personal data outside India if it is in connection with offering goods or services to data principals in India. The Act is supplemented by the DPDP Rules, 2025, which provide detailed procedural requirements for compliance.

1. Why This DPDP Act Compliance Tracker Matters

At Virtual Auditor, our company secretarial and compliance practice helps Indian companies navigate the evolving regulatory landscape. The DPDP Act represents a paradigm shift in how Indian businesses handle personal data. With penalties of up to ₹250 crore, non-compliance is not merely a regulatory risk — it is an existential business risk.

This article serves as a comprehensive compliance checklist and regulatory tracker. We cover the Act’s provisions, the DPDP Rules 2025, the Data Protection Board’s role, and practical compliance steps for Indian companies. We update this tracker as new rules, notifications, and guidance are issued.

1.1 Who Must Comply?

The DPDP Act applies to:

1.2 Tracker Organisation

2. Consent Management — The Foundation of DPDP Compliance

2.1 Lawful Bases for Processing

The DPDP Act recognises two primary lawful bases for processing digital personal data:

  1. Consent (Section 6): The data principal gives free, specific, informed, unconditional, and unambiguous consent for processing their data for a specified purpose. Consent must be obtained through a clear and accessible notice.
  2. Certain Legitimate Uses (Section 7): Processing is permitted without consent in specific situations:
    • Where the data principal voluntarily provides data and does not indicate unwillingness to consent.
    • For compliance with a legal obligation (e.g., tax filings, regulatory reporting).
    • For performance of any function under law or in the interest of sovereignty, integrity, and security of India.
    • For medical emergencies involving a threat to life or health.
    • For employment purposes (processing of employee data by employers for onboarding, payroll, and similar functions).
    • For public interest purposes, including mergers, insolvency proceedings, and fraud prevention.

2.2 Consent Notice Requirements

Before or at the time of seeking consent, the data fiduciary must provide a notice to the data principal that includes:

The notice must be in clear, plain language. For digital platforms, the notice must be presented in a user-friendly format, accessible within three clicks or equivalent interactions.

2.3 Consent Manager Framework

The DPDP Rules, 2025 introduce the concept of a Consent Manager — a registered entity that acts as an intermediary between data principals and data fiduciaries to manage consent. Key requirements:

2.4 Withdrawal of Consent

Data principals have the right to withdraw consent at any time. The withdrawal must be as easy as giving consent. Upon withdrawal:

3. Data Fiduciary Obligations — Core Compliance Requirements

3.1 Purpose Limitation & Data Minimisation

Data fiduciaries must adhere to two fundamental principles:

3.2 Data Quality & Accuracy

The data fiduciary must take reasonable steps to ensure that personal data processed is accurate, complete, and not misleading. This is particularly important for:

3.3 Data Retention & Erasure

Personal data must not be retained beyond the period necessary for the stated purpose. Once the purpose is fulfilled and retention is no longer necessary (and no legal obligation requires continued storage), the data must be erased. The DPDP Rules, 2025 require data fiduciaries to:

3.4 Security Safeguards

Data fiduciaries must implement reasonable security safeguards to protect personal data from breaches, unauthorised access, loss, or destruction. The DPDP Rules, 2025 specify:

3.5 Data Breach Notification

In the event of a personal data breach, the data fiduciary must:

  1. Notify the Data Protection Board within 72 hours of becoming aware of the breach.
  2. Notify affected data principals without undue delay, providing details of the nature of the breach, the types of data affected, and remedial actions taken.
  3. Maintain a register of all data breaches, including those that do not meet the notification threshold.
Expert Insight — CA V. Viswanathan:

“The 72-hour breach notification requirement is one of the most challenging operational aspects of the DPDP Act. Most Indian companies do not yet have the incident response infrastructure to detect, assess, and report breaches within this timeframe. At Virtual Auditor, we recommend that companies invest in automated breach detection systems and establish a dedicated data protection incident response team. The cost of preparation is a fraction of the potential ₹250 crore penalty for non-compliance.”

4. Significant Data Fiduciary (SDF) Obligations

4.1 Who Is a Significant Data Fiduciary?

The Central Government may notify certain data fiduciaries as Significant Data Fiduciaries (SDFs) based on:

While the specific thresholds for SDF notification are expected to be defined in subsequent government notifications, it is widely anticipated that major technology companies, large financial institutions, telecom operators, and significant healthcare providers will be among the first to be designated as SDFs.

4.2 Enhanced SDF Obligations

Significant Data Fiduciaries face additional obligations beyond those applicable to all data fiduciaries:

4.3 SDF Compliance Timeline

The DPDP Rules, 2025 provide a phased compliance timeline for SDFs:

Obligation Deadline Remarks
Appointment of DPO Within 3 months of SDF notification India-based, with reporting line to Board of Directors
First Independent Data Audit Within 12 months of SDF notification Annual thereafter
DPIA for existing processing Within 6 months of SDF notification Ongoing for new processing activities
Algorithmic fairness audit Within 12 months of SDF notification Annual thereafter; applicable only to SDFs using AI/ML
First compliance report to DPB Within 12 months of SDF notification Periodic thereafter as prescribed

5. Rights of Data Principals

5.1 Overview of Rights

The DPDP Act grants data principals (individuals whose data is processed) the following rights:

5.2 Duties of Data Principals

Uniquely, the DPDP Act also imposes duties on data principals:

Penalties of up to ₹10,000 may be imposed on data principals who breach these duties.

5.3 Processing Children’s Data

The DPDP Act imposes special protections for children (individuals below 18 years):

6. Cross-Border Data Transfer

6.1 Framework

The DPDP Act adopts a “negative list” approach to cross-border data transfers:

6.2 Practical Implications for SaaS & IT Companies

For SaaS and IT companies, cross-border data transfer is a core business operation:

7. Data Protection Board of India (DPB)

7.1 Structure & Powers

The Data Protection Board of India (DPB) is the adjudicatory body established under the DPDP Act. Key features:

7.2 Penalty Framework

The DPDP Act prescribes significant penalties for non-compliance:

Violation Maximum Penalty
Failure to take reasonable security safeguards leading to a personal data breach ₹250 crore
Failure to notify the DPB and data principals of a personal data breach ₹200 crore
Non-fulfilment of obligations relating to children’s data ₹200 crore
Non-fulfilment of additional obligations by Significant Data Fiduciaries ₹150 crore
Non-compliance with any other provision of the Act ₹50 crore
Breach of duties by data principals (false complaints, impersonation) ₹10,000

Note: These are maximum penalties per instance. The DPB may impose lower penalties based on the nature, gravity, and duration of the non-compliance, the type and purpose of processing, and mitigating actions taken by the data fiduciary.

8. Compliance Checklist for Indian Companies

Use this checklist to assess your organisation’s DPDP Act readiness. At Virtual Auditor’s company secretarial practice, we offer a comprehensive DPDP compliance assessment.

8.1 Governance & Organisation

8.2 Consent & Notice

8.3 Data Inventory & Processing

8.4 Security & Breach Response

8.5 Data Retention & Erasure

8.6 Cross-Border Data Transfer

8.7 Data Principal Rights

Expert Insight — CA V. Viswanathan:

“The DPDP Act compliance journey is not a one-time project — it is an ongoing programme. Companies that treat this as a checkbox exercise will find themselves exposed when the Data Protection Board begins active enforcement. We recommend a phased approach: start with a data inventory and gap assessment, then prioritise consent management and security safeguards. At Virtual Auditor, we have developed a proprietary DPDP compliance framework that integrates seamlessly with existing corporate governance structures.”

9. Impact on SaaS & IT Companies

9.1 Dual Role as Data Fiduciary and Data Processor

SaaS and IT companies often operate in a dual capacity — as data fiduciaries for their own customer data and as data processors for their clients’ data. This dual role creates layered compliance obligations:

9.2 Key Compliance Considerations for SaaS Companies

9.3 Impact on IT Services Companies

Large Indian IT services companies (TCS, Infosys, Wipro, HCL, and similar firms) face unique challenges:

10. DPDP Act Regulatory Timeline — 2023 to 2026

Date Development Significance
11 Aug 2023 DPDP Act enacted India’s first comprehensive data protection law
Jan 2025 Draft DPDP Rules published Operational framework for Act implementation
Mid 2025 DPDP Rules, 2025 notified Final rules covering consent, SDFs, cross-border transfers
Late 2025 Data Protection Board constituted Adjudicatory body begins operations
2026 Phased enforcement begins Compliance obligations become enforceable for notified categories
2026 (Expected) SDF notification for first batch Major tech, BFSI, and telecom companies likely first SDFs

This timeline is updated as new developments occur. Bookmark this page for the latest information.

11. Comparison: DPDP Act vs. GDPR — Key Differences

For companies operating in both India and the EU, understanding the differences between the DPDP Act and the GDPR is critical:

12. How Virtual Auditor Helps with DPDP Compliance

Our company secretarial and compliance team offers end-to-end DPDP Act compliance services:

Key Takeaways — DPDP Act Compliance

  • The DPDP Act applies to all businesses processing digital personal data in India or offering goods/services to Indian data principals.
  • Consent must be free, specific, informed, unconditional, and unambiguous — existing consent mechanisms likely need an overhaul.
  • Data fiduciaries must implement purpose limitation, data minimisation, retention schedules, and robust security safeguards.
  • Significant Data Fiduciaries face enhanced obligations including DPO appointment, annual data audits, DPIAs, and algorithmic fairness reviews.
  • The penalty framework is severe — up to ₹250 crore for security failures leading to data breaches.
  • Cross-border data transfer is permitted by default, but the Central Government can restrict transfers to specific countries.
  • SaaS and IT companies face dual compliance obligations as both data fiduciaries and data processors.
  • The Data Protection Board of India operates as a digital-first adjudicatory body.
  • Companies should adopt a phased compliance approach: data inventory first, then consent management, security, and ongoing monitoring.

13. Frequently Asked Questions — DPDP Act Compliance

Q1. When does the DPDP Act come into force?

The DPDP Act was enacted on 11 August 2023. The operational rules (DPDP Rules, 2025) were notified in mid-2025. Phased enforcement began in 2026, with the Data Protection Board now constituted and operational. Companies should be actively working towards compliance now.

Q2. Does the DPDP Act apply to non-digital data?

No. The DPDP Act applies only to digital personal data — data that is collected in digital form or is digitised after collection. Non-digital records (e.g., paper documents) are not within the Act’s scope unless they are subsequently digitised.

Q3. What is the maximum penalty under the DPDP Act?

The maximum penalty is ₹250 crore per instance, applicable to failures in implementing reasonable security safeguards that lead to a personal data breach. Other violations attract lower maximum penalties, ranging from ₹50 crore to ₹200 crore depending on the nature of the non-compliance.

Q4. Must every company appoint a Data Protection Officer?

No. The mandatory appointment of a Data Protection Officer is required only for Significant Data Fiduciaries (SDFs) as notified by the Central Government. However, we strongly recommend that all companies designate a data protection lead, even if not formally designated as an SDF, to oversee compliance activities.

Q5. Can Indian companies transfer data to the United States or European Union?

Yes. Under the DPDP Act’s negative list approach, cross-border data transfers are permitted to all countries unless specifically restricted by the Central Government. As of March 2026, no countries have been placed on the restricted list. However, companies must also comply with any sectoral restrictions (e.g., RBI data localisation requirements for payment data).

Q6. How does the DPDP Act affect employee data processing?

The DPDP Act permits processing of employee data under the “certain legitimate uses” provision (Section 7), covering purposes such as onboarding, payroll, benefits administration, and statutory compliance. However, employers must still provide a notice to employees describing the data collected and processing purposes. For processing beyond employment purposes (e.g., employee wellness programmes, satisfaction surveys), separate consent may be required.

Q7. What is the role of a Consent Manager?

A Consent Manager is a registered intermediary under the DPDP Rules, 2025 that manages consent on behalf of data principals. Consent Managers maintain interoperable, auditable platforms where data principals can view, grant, modify, or withdraw consent across multiple data fiduciaries. Using a Consent Manager is optional for data fiduciaries but can simplify consent management at scale.

Q8. How can Virtual Auditor help with DPDP Act compliance?

Virtual Auditor provides end-to-end DPDP Act compliance services, including gap assessments, data inventory and mapping, policy development, technical implementation guidance, and ongoing regulatory monitoring. For companies likely to be designated as SDFs, we offer specialised advisory on DPO appointment, DPIAs, and algorithmic fairness audits. Contact us for a complimentary initial consultation.


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