
Hot on the heels of the First Amendment of 2026, which tightened the beneficial ownership architecture for investments from land-bordering countries; the Ministry of Finance has notified a Second Amendment to the FEMA (Non-debt Instruments) Rules, 2019 on 2 May 2026 (“FEMA NDI Rules”). Where the First Amendment was about gatekeeping, the Second is about opening the gate: it operationalises the long-awaited 100% FDI regime for the Indian insurance sector under Serial Number F.8 of Schedule I.
Read together, the two amendments tell a consistent policy story – liberalise capital flows, but tighten the screen on who's actually behind the cheque.
What Changed: The Second Amendment substitutes the entire F.8 entry. Three calibrated buckets now exist:

The earlier 74% sectoral cap is gone for private insurers and intermediaries. LIC remains ring-fenced at 20%, consistent with the LIC Act, 1956.
Reading it alongside the First Amendment, DPIIT [2] Press Notes and IRDAI: This notification does not exist in isolation. It is the gazette plumbing for a policy track that began with Parliament passing the Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha (Amendment of Insurance Laws) Bill, 2025 in December 2025, followed by DPIIT's Press Note on 100% FDI in insurance earlier in 2026. Until 2 May, the FEMA NDI Rules, the operative instrument for actually receiving foreign capital still reflected the older 74% cap. That gap is now closed.
Equally, the First Amendment of 2026 (S.O. 2174(E)) continues to apply on top: any investor whose beneficial ownership traces to a land-bordering country still needs Government Route approval, automatic-route notwithstanding. The 100% headline is therefore meaningful only for investors who clear the First Amendment's beneficial-ownership filter. For Chinese, Pakistani or Hong Kong-controlled capital, the route remains effectively shut.
Strategic implications: M&A, deal structuring, exits: A few practical levers open up:
Open Issues to Watch
The Takeaway
The Second Amendment is short, barely a page of operative text, but it rewires a sector that has waited two decades for full opening. Coupled with the First Amendment's beneficial-ownership filter, the policy posture is now clear: deeper capital, sharper scrutiny.
Existing structures built around 74% should be revisited. New entrants should plan for IRDAI verification, the 2015 Rules overlay, and the resident-officer requirement. And anyone doing diligence on inbound capital, particularly through multi-jurisdictional holding companies will spend the next few quarters re-running beneficial ownership trees against the May 2026 framework.
The FEMA NDI Rules, 2019 have now been amended seventeen times — sixteen of those listed in the Note appended to S.O. 2186(E), with this Second Amendment of 2026 being the seventeenth. Reference: S.O. 2186(E), Gazette of India (Extraordinary), Part II, Section 3, Sub-section (ii), No. 2099, dated 2 May 2026; CG-DL-E-02052026-272206; F. No. 1/5/EM/2019; signed by Alok Tiwari, Joint Secretary, Department of Economic Affairs
[1] Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India.
[2] Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade.