TReDS mandatory for CPSEs on MSME invoices, cutting payment delays
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Centre has made it mandatory for all operating Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs) to route the settlement of invoices for goods and services procured from Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) through Trade Receivables Discounting System (TReDS) platforms authorised by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). The notification, issued on 30 June 2026, gives effect to a key announcement of the Union Budget 2026–27 and is aimed at ending chronic payment delays that have long squeezed MSME working capital.
What the Notification Requires
Under the new mandate, every CPSE must route MSME invoice settlements through an RBI-authorised TReDS platform. CPSEs are additionally required to disclose details of invoices routed and settled through TReDS as specified by the RBI. During their annual audit, they must obtain a statutory auditor's certificate confirming TReDS registration and compliance — a provision designed to enforce accountability rather than leave adherence to discretion.
How TReDS Benefits MSME Suppliers
TReDS, operational since 2017, is an RBI-regulated electronic marketplace where banks and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) bid competitively to discount MSME trade receivables. Once a CPSE approves an invoice on the platform, the MSME supplier can convert it into cash well before the payment due date. Crucially, the financing is collateral-free and without recourse to the seller — meaning the MSME bears no liability if the buyer defaults — while competitive bidding among financiers keeps interest rates low.
'By making TReDS the settlement route for all CPSE purchases from MSME, public sector procurement will now work actively for the small supplier: procurement by CPSEs gets captured on TReDS, and timely payment to MSME will be ensured through invoice financing from banks and financial institutions,' the official statement noted.
Why This Matters for India's MSME Sector
MSMEs are the backbone of the Indian economy, with over 8.70 crore enterprises registered on the Udyam portals and a workforce exceeding 38 crore persons. Yet delayed payments from large buyers — including government-linked entities — have historically been one of the sector's most persistent pain points, forcing small suppliers to seek expensive bridge financing or run into liquidity crises. This mandate directly targets that structural vulnerability by guaranteeing a fast, low-cost liquidity window backed by the credibility of a CPSE-approved invoice.
Notably, the move also positions CPSEs as role models for payment discipline, with the government signalling that large corporate buyers across the private sector should follow suit. This is the latest in a series of policy interventions — including the MSME Samadhaan portal and provisions under the MSMED Act — aimed at reducing the payment cycle for small enterprises.
Broader Policy Context
The TReDS mandate flows from the Union Budget 2026–27 announcement and reflects a shift in approach: rather than relying on dispute resolution after delays occur, the government is embedding payment discipline into the procurement process itself. With CPSEs accounting for a significant share of government-linked procurement, routing even a fraction of that volume through TReDS could substantially deepen the platform's liquidity pool and reduce financing costs further for MSME participants.
Implementation details, including timelines for full compliance across all CPSEs, are expected to be communicated through follow-on guidelines. The audit certificate requirement suggests the government intends to monitor adherence closely from the current financial year.