What is an IEPF Nodal Officer?
Under the Investor Education and Protection Fund Authority (Accounting, Audit, Transfer and Refund) Rules 2016, every company that has transferred shares or unpaid dividends to IEPF is required to designate a Nodal Officer to handle investor refund claims. The Nodal Officer is typically the Company Secretary of the company.
When you file Form IEPF-5 online at the IEPF Authority's portal (iepf.gov.in), you are essentially filing a claim for the return of your shares or dividends that were transferred to the government fund. The IEPF Authority does not verify your claim entirely on its own — it forwards the verification request to the company's Nodal Officer.
The Nodal Officer's job is to:
- Verify that the claimant is indeed the registered shareholder (or legal heir) for the specified folio
- Confirm that the shares/dividends were in fact transferred to IEPF from that specific folio
- Check the documents submitted — PAN, Aadhaar, share certificate details, indemnity bond, etc.
- Submit Form SH-8 (the verification and discharge form) to the IEPF Authority confirming the claim
Without the Nodal Officer's verification, the IEPF Authority cannot release the shares or funds to you. This is why knowing who the Nodal Officer is — and how to contact them — is critical to the success of your IEPF-5 claim.
Why the Nodal Officer Step Is So Often the Bottleneck
Most investors who struggle with IEPF claims assume the problem is with the online Form IEPF-5 filing. In reality, most delays happen at the Nodal Officer verification stage. Here is why:
Large companies receive hundreds or thousands of IEPF-5 verification requests. The Company Secretary's office in a large corporation handles many legal and compliance matters — IEPF verification is one among many responsibilities, and it gets queued.
There is no publicly mandated SLA for how quickly a company must respond to an IEPF verification request (the rules require the authority to forward requests and companies to cooperate, but the enforcement mechanism for speed is weak). In practice, delays of 30–90 days between the IEPF Authority forwarding your request and the Nodal Officer responding are common.
Additionally, if there are discrepancies in your documents — name mismatch, missing affidavit, incorrect folio number — the Nodal Officer may reject the verification and the clock resets. The investor then has to re-file or submit corrected documents.
Working through a Company Secretary who is familiar with the IEPF process can reduce Nodal Officer friction significantly, because documentation errors are caught before submission.
How to Find the IEPF Nodal Officer for Your Company
There is no single national directory of IEPF Nodal Officers that is centrally maintained and always current. You have to find the right person through multiple methods:
Method 1 — Company Website
Every listed company is required under SEBI LODR (Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements) Regulations to maintain an investor relations section on its website. This section typically includes the IEPF Nodal Officer's name, designation, and contact email. Go to the company's official website, look for "Investor Relations" or "Investors" in the navigation, and search for "IEPF" on that page.
Method 2 — Annual Report
The company's Annual Report — published each financial year — includes an IEPF disclosure section under the Corporate Governance chapter. This will name the Nodal Officer and provide their contact details. Annual reports are publicly available on BSE (bseindia.com), NSE (nseindia.com), or the company's own investor relations page.
Method 3 — MCA Portal
At mca.gov.in, search for the company under "MCA Services" → "Company/LLP Search". The company's filing history, including IEPF-related disclosures, may include Nodal Officer details. This is particularly useful for delisted or older companies where the website may not be current.
Method 4 — RTA Contact
The Registrar and Transfer Agent (KFintech, MUFG Intime, Bigshare, etc.) for the company usually has the Nodal Officer's contact details on record, since RTAs coordinate with companies on IEPF-related share transfers. Calling the company's RTA helpline with your folio number and requesting the IEPF Nodal Officer contact is often a quicker route than navigating large corporate websites.
Method 5 — SEBI SCORES Portal
SEBI's SCORES portal (scores.sebi.gov.in) has a company search function that includes registered company contact details. These are not always updated for IEPF specifically, but the investor relations contact can direct you to the Nodal Officer.
IEPF Nodal Officer Directory — Major Indian Companies
The table below lists the Nodal Officer designation and contact information for major Indian companies, sourced from their latest annual reports and investor relations pages. Always verify the current Nodal Officer's name on the official company website before submitting documents — individuals change, but the designation and contact address remain standard.
| Company |
RTA |
Nodal Officer |
Contact Address |
Investor Email |
| Reliance Industries Ltd |
MUFG Intime |
Company Secretary |
Maker Chambers IV, 222 Nariman Point, Mumbai 400 021 |
investor.relations@ril.com |
| Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) |
MUFG Intime |
Company Secretary |
TCS House, Raveline Street, Fort, Mumbai 400 001 |
investor.relations@tcs.com |
| HDFC Bank Ltd |
MUFG Intime |
Company Secretary |
HDFC Bank House, Senapati Bapat Marg, Lower Parel, Mumbai 400 013 |
investor.relations@hdfcbank.com |
| Infosys Ltd |
KFintech |
Company Secretary |
Electronics City, Hosur Road, Bengaluru 560 100 |
investors@infosys.com |
| Wipro Ltd |
KFintech |
Company Secretary |
Doddakannelli, Sarjapur Road, Bengaluru 560 035 |
iepf.nodalofficer@wipro.com |
| State Bank of India (SBI) |
MUFG Intime |
Company Secretary |
State Bank Bhavan, Madame Cama Road, Mumbai 400 021 |
sharesbi@sbi.co.in |
| NTPC Ltd |
KFintech |
Company Secretary |
NTPC Bhawan, Core-7, SCOPE Complex, Lodhi Road, New Delhi 110 003 |
secretarial@ntpc.co.in |
| ONGC Ltd |
KFintech |
Company Secretary |
ONGC Bhawan, Vasant Kunj, New Delhi 110 070 |
shares.ongcl@ongc.co.in |
| ITC Ltd |
MUFG Intime |
Company Secretary |
Virginia House, 37 Jawaharlal Nehru Road, Kolkata 700 071 |
iepf@itc.in |
| Coal India Ltd |
KFintech |
Company Secretary |
Coal Bhawan, Premises No. 04, New Town, Rajarhat, Kolkata 700 156 |
coalindia@coalindia.in |
| L&T (Larsen & Toubro) |
MUFG Intime |
Company Secretary |
L&T House, Ballard Estate, Mumbai 400 001 |
iepf@larsentoubro.com |
| Tata Motors Ltd |
Computershare India |
Company Secretary |
Bombay House, 24 Homi Mody Street, Hutatma Chowk, Mumbai 400 001 |
inv_rel@tatamotors.com |
| Tata Steel Ltd |
Computershare India |
Company Secretary |
Bombay House, 24 Homi Mody Street, Fort, Mumbai 400 001 |
cosec@tatasteel.com |
| Power Grid Corporation |
KFintech |
Company Secretary |
"Saudamini", Plot No. 2, Sector-29, Gurugram 122 001 |
iepf.nodal@powergrid.in |
| Bajaj Finance Ltd |
KFintech |
Company Secretary |
Akurdi, Pune 411 035 |
investor.service@bajajfinserv.in |
Note: Contact details are sourced from publicly available annual reports and investor relations pages. The Nodal Officer's name changes with executive transitions. Verify the current incumbent on the company's official website before dispatching physical documents.
Common Nodal Officer Problems and How to Handle Them
Problem 1 — Nodal Officer Not Responding
After you file Form IEPF-5 online, the IEPF Authority forwards your verification request to the company. Wait 30 working days. If you have not heard back, take these steps:
- Log in to the IEPF portal and check the claim status. If it shows "Forwarded to Company," the ball is with the Nodal Officer.
- Write directly to the company's Company Secretary / Nodal Officer at the registered office by speed post, referencing your IEPF-5 claim number, folio number, and date of filing. Request a status update within 15 working days.
- If no response in 60+ days total: file a grievance at iepf.gov.in under "Investor Grievances" and file simultaneously on SEBI SCORES (scores.sebi.gov.in). Mention specific dates and correspondence reference numbers.
Problem 2 — Nodal Officer Rejects the Claim
Rejection happens. Common reasons:
- Name mismatch between the claimant's documents and the folio record
- Incorrect folio number or ISIN in the claim
- Indemnity bond not on the correct denomination stamp paper
- Missing affidavit or advance stamped receipt
- Claimant is not the registered holder and has not provided adequate legal heir documentation
When a rejection happens, the IEPF Authority typically returns the matter to you with a rejection reason. Fix the underlying issue and re-file the claim. A Company Secretary reviewing documents before submission can catch most of these issues in advance.
Problem 3 — Company Has Merged or Been Renamed
If the company you held shares in has since merged into another company, been delisted, or renamed: the surviving entity's Company Secretary becomes the Nodal Officer for IEPF matters related to the absorbed company. Trace the merger through MCA records (mca.gov.in) and approach the surviving company's CS office.
Problem 4 — Company Is Wound Up or Defunct
If the company no longer exists (wound up or struck off under MCA), the IEPF Authority directly handles the claim verification. Contact iepf.gov.in → Contact Us section and explain the company's defunct status in your grievance.
Documents the Nodal Officer Will Ask For
Prepare these in advance before filing Form IEPF-5. Having everything ready reduces back-and-forth:
- Printed and signed copy of Form IEPF-5 acknowledgement (filed online)
- Form SH-8 (verification form — sometimes auto-generated, sometimes provided by the company)
- Original share certificate (for physical shareholders) or demat statement
- Death certificate of the original holder (for legal heir claims) — original or notarised
- Legal Heir Certificate or Succession Certificate (for heir claims above the small estate threshold)
- Affidavit on appropriate stamp paper (amount varies by state — typically ₹100 to ₹500)
- Indemnity Bond on stamp paper (denominations specified in company's requirements)
- Advance Stamp Receipt signed by two witnesses
- Self-attested PAN copy of claimant
- Self-attested Aadhaar copy of claimant
- Cancelled cheque with claimant's name printed (or bank certificate)
- Passport-sized photographs (usually 2)
Send physical documents to both the IEPF Authority AND the company's Nodal Officer (registered post with acknowledgement). Keep a complete set of photocopies before dispatching.
How Long Does the Nodal Officer Have to Respond?
Under the IEPF rules, once the IEPF Authority forwards a verification request to the company, the company is expected to respond within 15 working days. In practice, for large companies receiving hundreds of such requests, the actual turnaround is 30–90 days or more. There is no automatic penalty trigger if a company exceeds 15 working days — enforcement depends on investor escalation via SCORES or direct follow-up.
If you have been waiting more than 60 calendar days with no Nodal Officer response and no communication from the company, escalate without further delay. SEBI takes SCORES complaints seriously and companies are obligated to respond to SEBI when a complaint is raised.
Can You Contact the Nodal Officer Before Filing IEPF-5?
Yes, and this is actually advisable. Contacting the company's Company Secretary or Nodal Officer before filing IEPF-5 has these benefits:
- You can verify whether your specific folio's shares were actually transferred to IEPF (sometimes investors assume shares went to IEPF but they did not)
- You can confirm which documents the company wants in advance
- You can find out the current Nodal Officer's name (it changes when Company Secretaries move roles)
- For complex cases (joint holdings, deceased holders, name mismatches), pre-filing communication prevents wasted effort
There is no rule against contacting the Nodal Officer before the official IEPF-5 process begins. Most Company Secretaries will respond to a simple enquiry about folio status and IEPF transfer.
Professional Help with IEPF Nodal Officer Follow-Up
IEPF claims can take 6–18 months for complex cases involving deceased holders, large shareholdings, or non-responsive companies. Working with a Company Secretary who handles IEPF matters regularly offers these advantages:
- Correct document preparation the first time, reducing rejection risk
- Established knowledge of company-specific requirements (some companies have specific affidavit formats they insist upon)
- Professional follow-up letters that are taken more seriously than layperson correspondence
- Awareness of when to escalate to SEBI SCORES and how to frame the complaint effectively
Disclaimer: Investor Helpdesk provides documentation support and process guidance only — we are not affiliated with any company listed in this directory, IEPF Authority, SEBI, MCA, or any government body. Company contact details are sourced from publicly available annual reports and investor relations pages — verify the current Nodal Officer name and contact on the company's official website before submitting documents. This is not legal or investment advice.