BREAKING: DPDP Act goes live with phased implementation over next 18 months

According to the notification issued on 13 November 2025, several foundational provisions of the law, including definitions, duties of the Data Protection Board, penalties, and rule-making powers, come into effect immediately upon publication in the Gazette.

By  Akanksha Nagar| Nov 14, 2025 12:22 PM
According to the notification issued on 13 November 2025, several foundational provisions of the law, including definitions, duties of the Data Protection Board, penalties, and rule-making powers, come into effect immediately upon publication in the Gazette.

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) has officially kicked off the implementation of the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act, 2023, issuing a notification that lays out a clear, phased timeline for the law’s enforcement.

The move sets the stage for India’s long-awaited privacy regime to become fully operational over the next 18 months.

According to the notification issued on 13 November 2025, several foundational provisions of the law, including definitions, duties of the Data Protection Board, penalties, and rule-making powers, come into effect immediately upon publication in the Gazette.

12-Month Deadline

A second set of provisions, including Section 6(9) dealing with consent withdrawal and Section 27(1)(d) relating to data fiduciary obligations, will come into force one year from now. This window gives companies time to build processes around consent revocation and data management protocols.

18-Month Enforcement Phase

The most extensive set of obligations-including core compliance requirements, consent norms, children’s data rules, data fiduciary duties, significant data fiduciary classifications, data transfer rules, and grievance redressal-will become effective 18 months from the notification date.

This includes Sections 3 to 17, Sections 28 to 34, and parts of Section 44, forming the backbone of India’s data protection architecture. The extended timeline signals the government’s recognition that businesses, especially startups and large-scale platforms, need sufficient time to redesign data systems and governance frameworks.

With the countdown now officially underway, companies across sectors, from tech and finance to healthcare, e-commerce, education and mobility, will have to accelerate compliance roadmaps. The staggered rollout also indicates that enforcement will be calibrated, giving the Data Protection Board room to establish operational mechanisms before full-scale penalties kick in.

The notification marks a significant milestone for India’s digital governance framework, finally bringing the DPDP Act out of the legislative books and into implementation mode.

First Published onNov 14, 2025 12:22 PM

SPOTLIGHT

Brand MakersDil Ka Jod Hai, Tootega Nahin

"The raucous, almost deafening, cuss words from the heartland that Piyush Pandey used with gay abandon turned things upside down in the old world order."

Read More

The new face of the browser: Who’s building AI-first browsers, what they do and how they could upend advertising

From OpenAI’s ChatGPT-powered Atlas to Microsoft’s Copilot-enabled Edge, a new generation of AI-first browsers is transforming how people search, surf and interact online — and reshaping the future of digital advertising.