World Watch/India/Data & Privacy

Data & Privacy · India

Data & Privacy - India

Comprehensive lawDigital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (DPDP Act), with the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025 notified by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY); supervised by the Data Protection Board of India (DPBI).

India has a comprehensive, GDPR-style personal-data protection law: the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, whose implementing Rules were notified on 13 November 2025. The Act applies to digital personal data and is enforced by a new statutory regulator, the Data Protection Board of India. Provisions are commencing in phases—the Board's establishment is already in force, while the core compliance obligations (consent, notice, breach reporting, data-principal rights) become effective on 13 May 2027.

Comprehensive law in force

The DPDP Act, 2023 received assent in August 2023; MeitY notified the operative Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025 on 13 November 2025 under Section 40 of the Act, bringing the regime into effect on a phased basis.

Supervisory authority

Enforcement rests with the Data Protection Board of India (DPBI), a four-member body headquartered in New Delhi; provisions establishing the Board took effect immediately on 13 November 2025, with appointments via a Search-cum-Selection Committee chaired by the Cabinet Secretary.

Phased commencement

Phase I (13 Nov 2025): Data Protection Board provisions. Phase II (13 Nov 2026): consent-manager registration and obligations. Phase III (13 May 2027): core processing obligations, data-principal rights, government information-call powers, and appeals to the tribunal.

Data fiduciary obligations

Data fiduciaries must process personal data on lawful basis/consent, give notice, ensure data accuracy, implement reasonable security safeguards, report breaches to the DPBI and affected individuals, and erase data once the purpose is served.

Data principal rights & children's data

Individuals (data principals) have rights to information, correction, erasure, and grievance redressal. Section 9 requires verifiable parental/guardian consent before processing the personal data of children (under 18).

Penalties & cross-border transfer

Financial penalties run up to ₹250 crore (e.g. failure to prevent data breaches) and ₹200 crore for breaches of children's-data obligations. Cross-border transfers are permitted subject to Central Government conditions/restrictions (Rule 15), with certain restrictions on Significant Data Fiduciaries.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/23/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →