
What Happened
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) is prioritizing a major reform — simplifying KYC requirements for Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) and overseas investors.
SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey announced that digital, remote, and simplified onboarding mechanisms are being fast-tracked to make it easier for NRIs to invest in India’s markets.
“NRIs should be able to complete market registration and KYC digitally — without having to travel back to India,” said Pandey at a recent market resilience conference. (Times of India, Oct 2025)
The proposal focuses on:
✅ Allowing remote / non-face-to-face KYC completion
✅ Integrating digital identity verification (Aadhaar, DigiLocker, Video KYC)
✅ Streamlining documentation for Foreign Portfolio Investor (FPI) registration
✅ Enhancing market access while maintaining AML/CFT safeguards
Why It Matters
India’s capital markets have seen a surge in NRI participation – but physical KYC and outdated onboarding methods remain a bottleneck.
For compliance teams, this reform signals a shift toward:
- Fully digital onboarding ecosystems
- Video-based verification (V-CIP) and biometric authentication
- Cross-border due diligence — verifying foreign addresses, identity documents, and beneficial ownership remotely
As with all digital KYC innovation, risk calibration becomes crucial: Remote onboarding raises exposure to impersonation, identity theft, and deepfake-based frauds — making AI-powered verification and layered screening essential.
RBI’s Supporting KYC Relaxations
Earlier in 2025, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) also introduced a major KYC update, allowing banks and regulated entities to:
- Conduct OTP-based e-KYC for low-risk customers
- Use video KYC (V-CIP) for remote onboarding
- Permit banking correspondents to update customer details in the field
📄 RBI Simplifies KYC Rules – Economic Times
📄 RBI Eases KYC Norms – Economic Times
Together, SEBI and RBI are pushing India’s KYC ecosystem toward a unified, paperless compliance architecture — balancing financial inclusion with fraud prevention
What Compliance Teams Should Do
To stay ahead of these shifts, financial institutions, brokerages, and fintechs should:
- Re-evaluate KYC architecture – ensure readiness for fully remote onboarding and document verification.
- Integrate digital identity tools – facial liveness checks, geolocation analysis, and metadata scanning.
- Enhance risk scoring models – especially for NRI, PIO, and overseas entity profiles.
- Strengthen data privacy controls – use encryption and zero-trust frameworks for document sharing.
- Upskill teams – train analysts to detect deepfakes, impersonation, and synthetic identity risks in digital onboarding.
Key Takeaway
This is more than just a procedural reform – it’s the start of a new compliance infrastructure. India’s KYC model is evolving from manual, fragmented verification to intelligence-driven digital due diligence.
The compliance teams that can merge technology, regulatory insight, and human judgment will define the future of onboarding efficiency and integrity.

