An Indian importer may spend 60 to 90 days negotiating product prices, packaging, freight and payment terms, but a single BIS mismatch can delay the shipment after it reaches the port. The most common problems are not always product failures. They are often caused by an incorrect factory address, an uncovered model number, an expired licence or a brand name that does not match the BIS registration.
BIS certification for importers in India should therefore be treated as a pre-import compliance requirement. It should be checked before the importer confirms mass production, prints packaging, releases the final supplier payment or books the shipment.

For a regulated product, the importer should confirm at least 6 elements before dispatch:
The Bureau of Indian Standards regulates product quality and conformity under the BIS Act, 2016, the BIS Rules and applicable conformity assessment regulations. BIS certification is voluntary for many products, but it becomes mandatory when the Central Government brings a product under a Quality Control Order or another compulsory certification notification.
Once the applicable notification becomes effective, the product cannot ordinarily be manufactured, imported, distributed, sold, stored or displayed for sale without the required BIS licence, registration or certificate of conformity.
This creates a direct responsibility for importers. The importer must not rely only on an assurance from the supplier that the product is BIS certified. The importer should verify whether the approval covers the exact product being purchased.
A valid certificate for one product does not automatically cover:
For example, a supplier may operate 3 factories in China, Vietnam and Malaysia. A licence granted to the Chinese factory does not automatically cover production from the Vietnamese or Malaysian facility.
Similarly, a registration issued for a 45-watt power adapter may not automatically cover a 65-watt or 100-watt model. The applicable model grouping and test coverage must be checked.
| Regulation or framework | Requirement | Important period | Applicable to | Main risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BIS Act, 2016 – Section 17 | Prohibits import and sale of notified products without valid approval | Before import and sale | Importers, manufacturers and sellers | Seizure, prosecution and business disruption |
| Product-specific Quality Control Order | Requires conformity with the notified Indian Standard | From the effective date in the notification | Covered products | Import restriction |
| Scheme II | Requires product testing, model registration and marking | Before market placement | Notified electronics and IT goods | Model or factory mismatch |
| Scheme I and FMCS | Requires foreign factory evaluation and product certification | Before import of notified goods | Foreign manufacturers | Factory inspection failure |
| Scheme II validity framework | Licence may be issued for up to 5 years | Renewal before expiry | Scheme II licensees | Licence expiry |
| Fee default provision | Licence may remain suspended for up to 90 days | After payment default | Existing licensees | Cancellation |
| BIS Act, 2016 – Section 29 | Provides penalties for violations | On contravention | Company and responsible persons | Fine and imprisonment |
The applicable Quality Control Order is critical because it identifies the product, Indian Standard, conformity assessment scheme and implementation date.
An importer should verify the latest notification instead of relying on an old mandatory product list. Products may be added, standards may be revised and implementation dates may be extended or amended.
The applicable BIS scheme depends on the product category, Indian Standard and government notification. Importers should not assume that every electronic product falls under CRS or that every industrial product follows the ISI Mark route.
The classification exercise should consider:
Scheme II commonly applies to notified electronics and information technology products. These products are generally tested in a BIS-recognised laboratory before the application is submitted.
The application is linked to the manufacturer, factory address, model and brand. The registration details should therefore match the product being imported.
A Scheme II application generally involves:
The product should represent the final production model. If the manufacturer changes a transformer, fuse, power supply circuit, enclosure material or other critical component after testing, the change should be reviewed before production.
Scheme I commonly applies to products that require the ISI Standard Mark. Where the manufacturer is located outside India, the application is generally processed through the Foreign Manufacturers Certification Scheme.
FMCS evaluates whether the foreign factory can consistently manufacture products according to the relevant Indian Standard.
The process may include:
A foreign manufacturer should prepare for a factory inspection with functioning production machinery, calibrated testing equipment, trained quality personnel and production records.
Certain machinery, industrial equipment and electrical products may be covered by Scheme X or another product-specific route.
The correct route should be confirmed from the Quality Control Order and BIS guidance. An HS code alone is not sufficient to determine the BIS scheme because technical construction and intended use may affect the classification.
New FMCS applications moved to the online filing route from 1 June 2026. Physical applications were accepted only up to 31 May 2026.
This change means foreign manufacturers must prepare documents in a portal-ready format before starting the application.
The applicant should arrange:
Incomplete or inconsistent online data can create clarification requests. The legal name, factory address and product details should therefore match across all uploaded documents.
For most imported products, the foreign manufacturer is the BIS applicant and licence holder. The Indian importer does not automatically become the applicant merely because it purchases the product.
The approval is generally connected to the manufacturing premises. If a supplier operates 2 factories, the importer should confirm which factory will manufacture the Indian shipment.
The relationship among the following parties should be documented:
A brand owner may use a contract manufacturer, but the application should accurately identify the manufacturer and factory producing the goods.
A foreign manufacturer generally appoints an Authorized Indian Representative to communicate with BIS and support compliance in India.
The AIR should be an Indian resident and should have sufficient authority to obtain information from the foreign manufacturer.
The AIR may need to assist with:
The AIR should not be appointed only as a formality. The Indian entity should understand the product, factory, certification scope and continuing compliance obligations.
Before nomination, the parties should clearly define:
Document requirements vary by product and scheme. A generic checklist should not replace the latest product manual, Quality Control Order and BIS application requirements.
The documents should describe the same legal entity, factory and product. Even small inconsistencies can lead to queries.
For example, the company registration may show one address, the test report may show another address and the product label may use a shortened address. The applicant should explain and document the relationship among these locations.
A Scheme II application commonly requires:
The test report should identify the correct manufacturer, manufacturing premises, product, model and Indian Standard.
An FMCS application commonly requires:
A well-prepared FMCS application may include 20 to 40 separate files, depending on the product and factory structure.
Product testing should start only after the applicable Indian Standard and model grouping have been confirmed.
Testing the wrong sample can delay the project by several weeks. A test report may be technically valid but unusable if it refers to the wrong factory, model, brand or standard.
Before submitting a sample, the manufacturer should freeze:
A typical testing project may involve 3 stages:
Testing periods vary by product. A relatively simple electronics test may require 3 to 6 weeks, while a product involving endurance, safety or performance testing may require 6 to 10 weeks or more.
These are planning estimates and not guaranteed timelines.
The importer should first confirm whether the product is covered by mandatory BIS certification.
The assessment should review the commercial description, technical specification, product function, Indian Standard and Quality Control Order.
A complete assessment may take approximately 2 to 5 working days after receipt of the required technical information.
The output should identify:
The product should be compared with the applicable Indian Standard before formal testing.
The review may identify 5 to 20 technical or documentation gaps, depending on product complexity.
Common gaps include:
Correcting these issues before testing reduces the risk of failure and repeat laboratory fees.
The foreign manufacturer, manufacturing location and AIR should be finalised before the application is prepared.
The parties should confirm legal names, addresses and authorised signatories.
This stage may require 5 to 10 working days where agreements, notarisation or overseas signatures are involved.
Representative production samples are submitted to the appropriate laboratory.
The sample should match the final commercial model. Prototype samples should not be used where the production design is likely to change.
The testing file should include:
The application should be filed after reviewing the test report and supporting documents.
The filing process includes:
From 1 June 2026, new FMCS applications follow the online process.
BIS reviews the application and may issue clarification requests.
Common queries relate to:
A complete response should be submitted within the period communicated by BIS.
FMCS applications generally involve foreign factory inspection.
The inspection may cover:
The factory should conduct an internal readiness audit before the BIS inspection.
The licence is granted after completion of the applicable evaluation, testing, documentation and fee requirements.
Before accepting the licence, the importer should verify:
The product and packaging should carry the correct BIS information.
The importer should not approve shipment merely because the application has been filed. The licence should be granted and active before dispatch of regulated goods.
| Stage | Planning period | Main dependency | Delay risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Product applicability | 2-5 working days | Complete technical information | Wrong standard |
| Technical gap review | 5-15 working days | Product drawings and specifications | Product redesign |
| Sample preparation | 1-3 weeks | Final product configuration | Incorrect sample |
| Laboratory testing | 3-10 weeks | Product and laboratory capacity | Test failure |
| Scheme II filing and review | 4-10 weeks | Complete documents | BIS query |
| FMCS documentation | 3-6 weeks | Factory and AIR records | Missing documents |
| FMCS inspection and grant | Commonly 4-8 months | Inspection and test results | Factory non-conformity |
| Marking review | 2-5 working days | Licence details | Incorrect artwork |
| Renewal preparation | At least 3 months before expiry | Fees and production records | Licence expiry |
Importers should keep an additional internal contingency of 15 to 30 days for failed testing, document corrections or portal queries.
The 2026 Scheme II framework provides specific official fees.
| Fee component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Application fee | ₹1,000 |
| Annual licence fee | ₹1,000 |
| Renewal application fee | ₹1,000 |
| Annual processing fee | ₹25,000 |
| Additional test report | ₹20,000 |
| New model or scope inclusion | ₹30,000 |
| Specified post-licence service request | ₹5,000 |
| Late fee during suspension period | ₹5,000 |
These charges do not include the complete cost of certification.
A complete budget may also include:
For some products, the laboratory and product-modification cost may be higher than the official application fee.
A Scheme II licence may initially be granted for up to 5 years.
It may be renewed for a further period of up to 5 years, subject to the applicable requirements.
The renewal application should be filed at least 3 months before expiry.
A practical compliance calendar should generate reminders at:
The importer should also verify the licence status before every commercial shipment.
Failure to pay the required annual fee and submit the production statement can result in suspension.
The suspension period may continue for up to 90 days. The licence may be restored if the required amount, production statement and late fee are submitted within the permitted period.
If the default is not corrected, the licence may be cancelled.
During suspension, the manufacturer should control:
The product, packaging or both should carry the required Standard Mark and licence details.
The marking should correspond to the licence actually granted.
A pre-printing artwork review should verify at least 8 items:
The importer should also assess Legal Metrology declarations, country of origin, importer details and sector-specific labelling requirements.
Rahul Mehta was responsible for procurement at an electronics company in Noida. His team planned to import 6,000 power adapters for a new consumer electronics product.
The landed value of the shipment was approximately ₹38 lakh. The launch was scheduled for the festive sales period, and the marketing team had already committed nearly ₹6 lakh for digital promotion and marketplace advertising.
The foreign supplier sent a BIS certificate and assured Rahul that the approval covered the shipment. The supplier had manufactured similar adapters for India for more than 2 years.
Rahul requested a detailed verification before approving the final payment.
The review found 4 important differences:
| Verification point | BIS document | Planned shipment |
|---|---|---|
| Factory | Shenzhen Unit 1 | Dongguan Unit 3 |
| Model | PA-45 | PA-45-IN |
| Brand | Supplier brand | Indian importer brand |
| Rated output | 45 watts | 65 watts |
The supplier argued that the factories belonged to the same group and the product design was similar. However, the licence did not cover the Dongguan factory, the Indian brand or the 65-watt model.
Rahul stopped the shipment before container booking. The manufacturer completed the correct testing and application process for the actual product.
The product launch was delayed by approximately 8 weeks, but the importer avoided exposing a ₹38 lakh shipment to customs detention, re-export or corrective compliance action.
Rahul also introduced a new internal rule. The company now completes a 10-point BIS review before releasing the final 20% supplier payment.
The case produced 4 practical lessons:
Many applications are delayed because of document inconsistencies rather than technical failure.
A manufacturer may use its legal name in the incorporation certificate, its trade name in the test report and its brand name in the application. BIS may require clarification before processing the application.
Applications are also delayed when the product design changes after testing.
Common delay reasons include:
A customs authority may question a shipment where the BIS licence is missing, expired or inconsistent with the goods.
The importer may need to provide:
A customs delay can create costs for:
The BIS Act provides powers relating to search and seizure where authorities have reason to believe that a violation has occurred.
Goods, materials and relevant records may be seized for further proceedings.
Contravention of Section 17 may result in imprisonment for up to 2 years, a fine or both.
The minimum fine may be:
The fine may extend to 10 times the value of the goods involved.
For a ₹38 lakh shipment, 10 times the value would be ₹3.8 crore. The final penalty depends on the legal proceedings and facts of the case.
Where an offence is committed by a company, the company and persons responsible for conducting the business may face proceedings under the applicable provisions.
Importers should therefore maintain written records showing that the product, factory, model and brand were verified before shipment.
BIS certification does not replace other registrations.
A product may require 2, 3 or more approvals before it can be imported and sold in India.
For example, a wireless battery-powered electronic product may require:
Other possible approvals include:
Each requirement should be mapped separately.
Before dispatch, the importer should verify:
The review should be completed before final payment, production release or shipment booking.
Green Permits supports importers, brand owners and foreign manufacturers through the complete BIS certification process.
The work begins with product classification and regulatory mapping. This helps prevent the company from testing under the wrong Indian Standard or filing under the wrong scheme.
Support may include:
For products requiring multiple approvals, Green Permits can also prepare a combined compliance roadmap covering BIS, WPC, EPR, Legal Metrology and related environmental requirements.
BIS certification for importers in India is not limited to obtaining a certificate. It is a complete compliance system connected with the manufacturer, factory, product, model, brand and shipment.
The official application fee may be relatively small, but the commercial loss caused by incorrect compliance can be substantial. A factory mismatch or uncovered model can affect an entire shipment.
Early assessment gives the manufacturer sufficient time to complete testing, correct the product, prepare the factory and finalise the label.
The BIS review should be completed before:
Structured documentation and pre-shipment verification can prevent repeat testing, customs delays, product launch disruption and avoidable financial exposure.
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No. BIS certification becomes mandatory when the product is covered by a Quality Control Order, compulsory registration notification or another applicable requirement.
Yes, but the certificate must cover the correct foreign manufacturer, factory, model, brand and Indian Standard.
Scheme II projects may take several weeks after successful testing and complete filing. FMCS projects may take 4 to 8 months because foreign factory inspection and additional testing may be involved.
A Scheme II licence may initially be granted for up to 5 years and renewed for a further period of up to 5 years.