BTL 911 - IDPMS and EDPMS
The Banking Tutor’s Lessons
BTL 911 21-06-2026
IDPMS and EDPMS
IDPMS
IDPMS stands for the Import Data Processing and Monitoring
System, an online centralized portal launched by the Reserve Bank of India
(RBI) in October 2016. It was developed in collaboration with Indian Customs to
electronically track, monitor, and reconcile all import transactions entering
India.
The system acts as a digital checkpoint under the Foreign
Exchange Management Act (FEMA) to guarantee that every outward cross-border
remittance sent to a foreign supplier matches an actual physical shipment
entering the country.
How the IDPMS Workflow Works
IDPMS connects the flow of money with the flow of goods using
a secure three-way automated loop:
1. Customs Filing: When an importer brings goods into an
Indian port, their Customs Broker files a Bill of Entry (BoE). This data
(containing the importer's details, value of goods, and the bank’s Authorized
Dealer (AD) Code) is automatically uploaded onto the secure RBI platform via
ICEGATE (Indian Customs Electronic Gateway).
2. Bank Remittance: When the importer transfers money to the
overseas supplier, the company's designated AD Bank records the payment and
creates an Outward Remittance Message (ORM) in the system.
3. Data Matching & Closure: The AD Bank downloads the BoE
data from the RBI server, matches it against the generated ORMs, and performs a
"knock-off" or closure of the entry.
Key Features & Regulatory Guidelines
No Direct Importer Access: Importers cannot log in to the
IDPMS portal directly. All data modification, document submission, and closures
must be routed entirely through your designated AD Bank.
FEMA Timelines: Importers are required to submit their proof
of import (BoE) to their AD bank within strict timelines (typically 30–90 days
from the payment date) to settle the open transaction.
Permissible Adjustments: Banks can close entries involving a
write-off of up to 5% of the invoice value if discrepancies happen due to
freight changes, currency fluctuations, or operational discounts.
Mandatory Registration: In mid-2025, the RBI mandated that
all Indian export-import businesses register directly on the unified IEDPMS
Portal to ensure they have a verified digital trade identity.
2025/2026 Relief for Small Traders (MSMEs)
Per the RBI Circular No. 12, specific relaxations apply to
ease the compliance burden on small businesses:
INR 10 Lakh Self-Declaration: Import transactions valued at ₹10 lakh or less per bill can now be closed by the bank solely
based on a simple self-declaration from the importer confirming payment.
Bulk Submission: Importers can bundle multiple low-value
transactions into a quarterly consolidated declaration rather than settling
bills individually.
No Penal Charges: Banks are strictly prohibited from levying
penal charges for settlement delays on these small-value entries.
Consequences of Non-Compliance: The Caution List
If an importer fails to reconcile their outward remittances
with the required Bills of Entry over an extended period, the IDPMS
automatically flags the account as outstanding.
The Caution List: The RBI will place the non-compliant
company on its Caution List.
Impact: Once caution-listed, your bank may block or restrict
future foreign payments, refuse to process trade documents, and the company may
face scrutiny from the Enforcement Directorate (ED) under FEMA.
Resolution: To remove your name from the caution list, you
must submit the missing BoE data to your AD Bank. Once the bank reconciles and
marks the transaction "closed" in IDPMS, they will recommend your
removal.
EDPMS
The Export Data Processing and Monitoring System (EDPMS) is a
centralized digital platform launched by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to
track, regulate, and monitor export transactions from shipment to final payment
realization. It serves as India's compliance backbone under the Foreign
Exchange Management Act (FEMA), ensuring all foreign exchange earned from
exports is repatriated into the country within the statutory timeline
(typically 9 months).
How the EDPMS Lifecycle Works
The system automates what used to be a heavily fragmented,
paper-based reporting model by connecting three core entities via a real-time
data flow:
[Customs / ICEGATE] ───(Shipping Bill Data)───> [RBI EDPMS Server] <───(Inward Remittance/Closure)─── [AD Category-I Bank]
1. Shipment Generation: When an exporter ships goods, Customs
automatically sends the Shipping Bill details directly to the EDPMS portal. For
software exports, this is done via the SOFTEX form.
2. Open Entry Allocation: The data is mapped to the
exporter's Import Export Code (IEC) and visible to their designated Authorised
Dealer (AD) Category-I bank as an "Open Entry".
3. Payment Realisation: When the foreign buyer sends payment,
the AD bank receives the funds and generates an Inward Remittance Message
(IRM).
4. Reconciliation & Closure: The bank matches the
shipping bill with the payment received. Once reconciled, the bank generates an
electronic Bank Realisation Certificate (eBRC) and changes the status to
Closed.
Key Features & Important Rules
Real-time Tracking: Exporters can securely track the
real-time status of their shipping bills and matching statuses via the ICEGATE
Portal Public Enquiry Tool.
Mandatory for Incentives: An eBRC generated out of EDPMS is
mandatory for exporters to claim GST refunds or duty incentives from the DGFT.
The Caution List Risk: If an export entry remains
"Open" without a valid payment or an official extension for more than
2 years, the system automatically flags the exporter onto the RBI Caution List.
Caution-listed companies face customs delays and a freeze on open bank
facilities.
Recent Regulatory Easing (October 2025 Directive)
To reduce the compliance strain on MSMEs and e-commerce
exporters, the RBI introduced a permanent relaxation framework under A.P. (DIR
Series) Circular No. 12.
Sekhar Pariti
+91 9440641014

