Overview
The GIFT International Financial Services Centre (GIFT IFSC) is India's first International Financial Services Centre, located within the Gujarat International Finance Tec-City (GIFT City) in Gandhinagar district, Gujarat. It functions as a designated Special Economic Zone (SEZ) where financial services are conducted in foreign currency, and is intended to bring offshore financial activity involving Indian entities onshore. The IFSC is regulated by the International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA), a unified regulator established by an Act of Parliament.
Key facts
| Type | International Financial Services Centre; Special Economic Zone |
|---|---|
| Location | GIFT City, Gandhinagar district, Gujarat, India |
| Country | India |
| Operating currency | Foreign currency (predominantly US dollar) |
| Unified regulator | International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA) |
| Parent development | Gujarat International Finance Tec-City (GIFT City) |
Background
GIFT City was conceived as a planned business district to host financial services, technology and allied activities, and was developed by GIFT City Company Limited, a joint venture initially involving the Government of Gujarat and IL&FS, with the Government of Gujarat later consolidating its ownership. The IFSC was carved out within GIFT City as a notified SEZ to enable Indian and foreign financial institutions to undertake cross-border financial transactions from Indian soil under a separate, internationally aligned regulatory regime.
Before the establishment of the IFSC, several offshore-oriented financial activities involving Indian counterparties — such as trading in rupee derivatives, Masala bonds, and external commercial borrowings — were typically routed through jurisdictions like Singapore, Dubai, Mauritius and London. The IFSC was created to provide a domestic alternative with comparable regulatory and tax treatment.
Regulation
Initially, financial activities at the IFSC were regulated sectorally by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) and the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA). Following the enactment of the International Financial Services Centres Authority Act, 2019, regulatory powers over financial products, services and institutions in IFSCs were transferred to the IFSCA, which functions as a unified regulator with its headquarters in GIFT City.
Activities and institutions
The IFSC permits a wide range of cross-border financial activities, including:
- Banking through IFSC Banking Units (IBUs) set up by Indian and foreign banks.
- Operation of international stock exchanges and their clearing corporations, with trading in equity derivatives, commodity derivatives, currency derivatives and depository receipts.
- Listing and trading of debt securities, including foreign-currency-denominated bonds.
- Insurance and reinsurance business through IFSC Insurance Offices.
- Asset management, alternative investment funds, portfolio management and fund administration.
- Aircraft and ship leasing and financing.
- Bullion exchange operations through the India International Bullion Exchange.
- FinTech activities under a dedicated regulatory framework.
Two international exchanges operate from the IFSC — India INX, promoted by BSE, and NSE IX, promoted by the National Stock Exchange of India — along with their associated clearing corporations and depositories.
Significance
GIFT IFSC is significant as the first jurisdiction within India where financial services can be transacted in foreign currency under a unified regulatory framework comparable to established international financial centres. It is positioned as a platform to:
- repatriate offshore financial activity linked to India;
- provide Indian corporates and investors access to global capital and risk-management products from a domestic location;
- support the development of new market segments such as bullion trading, aircraft leasing and global in-house centres for financial services;
- contribute to the broader policy goal of integrating India more deeply with global financial markets.