Fri, 10 Jul 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jul 10, 2026 · 12:56
India News Updated Jul 10, 2026

TReDS Mandate to Speed Up MSME Payments, Boost Working Capital Access

The Ministry of MSME has mandated all CPSEs to settle MSME invoices through the Trade Receivables Discounting System (TReDS) to ensure faster payments. This move, announced in the Union Budget 2026-27, aims to improve liquidity and provide collateral-free working capital to small businesses. CPSEs must disclose TReDS usage and obtain auditor certificates to ensure transparency. Invoice discounting through TReDS has grown significantly from Rs 40,000 crore in FY22 to Rs 3.47 lakh crore in FY26.

TReDS settlement mandate to speed up MSME payments, improve access to working capital: Ministry of MSME

New Delhi, July 10

The Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises has mandated all operating Central Public Sector Enterprises to settle invoices of MSME suppliers through the Trade Receivables Discounting System, a move aimed at ensuring faster payments and improving access to collateral-free working capital for small businesses.

The ministry said the notification, issued on June 30, 2026, fulfils a key announcement made in the Union Budget 2026-27 and is expected to address one of the biggest challenges faced by MSMEs--delayed payments.

Under the new framework, all invoices raised by MSMEs on CPSEs will be routed through RBI-authorised TReDS platforms, allowing suppliers to receive financing against approved invoices before the due date.

The ministry said the measure is expected to improve liquidity for lakhs of MSME suppliers by enabling quicker access to working capital without collateral. Financing on TReDS is provided without recourse to the seller, with banks and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) competitively bidding to discount invoices, helping MSMEs receive funds within a short period at competitive interest rates.

The ministry has also introduced measures to improve transparency and accountability. CPSEs will be required to disclose details of MSME invoices routed and settled through TReDS in line with RBI guidelines and obtain a statutory auditor's certificate confirming TReDS registration and compliance during annual audits.

According to the ministry, the mandate is also expected to set a benchmark for timely payment discipline across corporate India by positioning CPSEs as role models for large buyers.

MSMEs remain a key pillar of the Indian economy, with more than 8.70 crore enterprises registered on the Udyam Registration Portal and Udyam Assist Platform, providing employment to over 38 crore people.

The release added that delayed payments have continued to constrain the sector by locking up working capital and affecting business growth.

TReDS, an RBI-regulated electronic platform operational since 2017, facilitates financing and discounting of MSME trade receivables from corporate buyers, government departments and public sector undertakings through competitive bidding by multiple financiers.

According to the ministry, invoice discounting through the platform has increased from Rs 40,000 crore in FY22 to Rs 3.47 lakh crore in FY26, reflecting its growing adoption.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Great step by the government. The statistic about Rs 3.47 lakh crore in FY26 vs Rs 40,000 crore in FY22 shows the platform is gaining traction. However, implementation will be key--many CPSEs are notorious for bureaucratic red tape. Will they truly comply or find loopholes?

Ravi K

This is excellent news for small businesses! Delayed payments have been the biggest killer of MSME dreams. My cousin's workshop almost shut down because a PSU didn't pay for 18 months. If TReDS can ensure collateral-free financing, it will save lakhs of jobs. Cha gaye! 👏

James A

A solid move for India's MSME sector. Transparency through statutory auditor certificates is a positive step. But will this extend beyond CPSEs to private sector giants? Many large corporations also delay payments. The real test is if this becomes the norm across corporate India.

Manish T

Honestly, this should have been done years ago. TReDS has been around since 2017 but adoption was slow because there was no mandate. Now with CPSEs forced to use it, MSME liquidity will improve. But I worry about smaller MSMEs who may not be digitally savvy enough to use the platform. Need awareness campaigns too.

Suresh O

Good policy but will the financing costs be reasonable? Banks and NBFCs bidding competitively is fine in theory, but in practice, they might charge high rates to smaller suppliers. We need transparent pricing on the platform. Also, what about disputes? If CPSE rejects the invoice after financing, who bears the loss? Needs more clarity.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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