How Does KYC Work in Stock Market India? Complete Beginner’s Guide (2026)

Direct Question You downloaded Groww or Zerodha, entered your mobile number — and hit a wall called KYC. What exactly is it checking? Who stores your documents? And why does one tiny name mismatch hold up your entire account for days?
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Author’s Note — Kalpeshr Patil When I opened my first Demat account, my PAN showed “Kalpeshr E Patil” but my Aadhaar showed “Kalpesh Eknath Patil.” One initial — two days wasted waiting for the broker to manually verify the match.

If you’ve tried opening a Demat account with Groww, Zerodha, Upstox, or Angel One, you’ve seen the mandatory KYC step. Before you can buy a single share, your identity must be verified. That’s how KYC works in stock market India — and this guide breaks down every part of it.

You’ll learn what KYC is, why it’s mandatory, how the step-by-step process works, the difference between eKYC, Video KYC, and Physical KYC, what KRA and CKYC mean, and how to check your KYC status using your PAN card.

⚡ 60-Second Summary KYC (Know Your Customer) verifies your identity before you can invest in Indian stocks. Every SEBI-registered broker requires it. Most beginners complete it online in minutes using eKYC and Video KYC. Your verified records are stored by a KYC Registration Agency (KRA) — so future account openings go faster. A single document mismatch can put your KYC “On Hold,” but it’s fixable.

What is KYC in Stock Market India?

KYC stands for Know Your Customer. It’s the identity verification process used by stock brokers, mutual fund companies, and banks to confirm you are who you say you are before allowing you to invest.

Think of it like airport security. You show your identity proof before boarding — no exceptions. KYC works the same way. Before buying shares of Reliance Industries, TCS, or any Nifty 50 ETF, your identity needs to be on record with a SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India)-registered broker.

KYC verifies your:

  • Full name and PAN card details
  • Aadhaar details (where applicable)
  • Date of birth
  • Current address
  • Mobile number and email ID
  • Photograph and signature
  • Bank account details

Is KYC Mandatory?

Yes — without exception. You cannot buy shares, sell shares, apply for IPOs, invest in ETFs, or open a Demat account without completing KYC first. Brokers are legally prohibited from activating your trading account until verification is done.

Who Regulates KYC Rules?

SEBI sets the rules. Stock brokers like Groww, Zerodha, Upstox, and Angel One collect your documents and run the verification. A third party called the KYC Registration Agency (KRA) stores your verified records centrally — you’ll learn more about KRA below.

How Does KYC Work in Stock Market India?

Most beginners think KYC means uploading a PAN card. There are actually several checks happening behind the scenes. Here’s the complete picture.

Step-by-Step KYC Process for a Demat Account

1
Register with a Broker
Enter your mobile number, email, and PAN on the broker’s app or website to create the initial application.
2
Identity Verification
Upload your PAN card, Aadhaar (if required), photograph, and signature. The broker checks these against official records.
3
Address Verification
Submit address proof — Aadhaar, Passport, Driving Licence, or Voter ID. Your address must match the documents submitted.
4
Bank Account Verification
Provide your account number and IFSC code. Some brokers verify this automatically; others ask for a cancelled cheque.
5
Video or eKYC Check
Record a short selfie video, blink, read a displayed number aloud, or show your PAN to the camera. Confirms a real person is applying.
6
KRA Submission
The broker submits your verified information to the KYC Registration Agency, which stores it in a central database.
7
Account Activated
Once all checks pass, your Trading and Demat accounts are live. You can now buy shares listed on the NSE and BSE.
⏱ Timeline Note For most online brokers, the full process takes a few minutes to one business day. If documents need correction or manual review, it can take 2–3 days.

Here’s the same process as a quick reference table:

Step What Happens
1Register with a stock broker
2Enter PAN details
3Upload identity documents
4Verify address
5Verify bank account
6Complete eKYC or Video KYC
7Broker submits details to KRA
8Verification completed
9Trading and Demat account activated ✅

What Actually Happens After You Click “Submit”?

Most guides stop at “upload your documents.” But submitting your KYC is only the beginning. Here’s what happens inside the system — steps that most investors never see.

1
OCR Reads Your PAN
The broker’s system uses Optical Character Recognition (OCR) to extract your name, date of birth, and PAN number from the uploaded image. If your photo is blurred, shadowed, or cropped, OCR fails and your application gets flagged — even if the document is perfectly valid.
⚡ Insider tip: Photograph documents flat on a white surface under daylight, never from an angle.
2
Three-Way Name Match
The system cross-checks your name across three sources simultaneously: PAN, Aadhaar, and bank records. Minor spelling differences like “K. Patil” vs “Kalpesh Patil” may pass through fuzzy logic auto-approval. But mismatches involving middle names or maiden names often trigger a manual review queue — which adds 1–2 days.
⚡ Insider tip: PAN is the master document. If PAN and Aadhaar differ, align your PAN to match Aadhaar via the NSDL/UTIITSL portal — it’s faster than fixing Aadhaar.
3
Face Match and Liveness Check
During Video KYC, an AI system compares your live face against the photograph on your PAN. It also runs a liveness check — asking you to blink, turn your head, or read a code aloud — to confirm a real person is present. Poor lighting, glasses, or an unstable internet connection during recording are common rejection reasons here.
⚡ Insider tip: Sit near a window. Natural front light reduces face-match failures significantly.
4
AML Screening and Risk Flags
Before approval, your PAN is cross-checked against watchlists for duplicate accounts, blacklisted records, and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) databases. Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs) and high-value applications automatically go into a higher manual review tier — this is standard compliance, not a negative reflection on you.
5
Submission to KRA — And the Wait
After internal verification, the broker batches your records and submits them to the KRA. Here’s what most investors don’t know: mid-tier brokers often batch-submit at fixed times — end of business day or every few hours. If you submit at 5 PM, your record may not reach the KRA until the next morning. This is not a delay on your end — it’s a queue in the broker’s backend system.
💡 Key Realization

Most KYC delays aren’t caused by your documents being wrong. They’re caused by backend queues, batch processing windows, and manual review triggers. Once you know this, you stop panicking and simply wait for the right window.

eKYC vs Physical KYC vs Video KYC

Not every investor completes KYC the same way. 3 methods are in common use today.

1. eKYC — Fastest Option

Everything happens online. You verify your PAN, authenticate via Aadhaar OTP (where applicable), and upload documents digitally. No branch visit, no paperwork. This is what most first-time investors use with online brokers like Groww, Zerodha, and Upstox.

2. Physical KYC — Traditional Method

You submit paper copies and signed forms at a branch office or through a broker representative. Verification takes longer, but some investors prefer this route — especially those with limited internet access or who want in-person support.

3. Video KYC — Now Standard with Modern Brokers

During a live or recorded session, you show your PAN card, display your face clearly, speak a verification code, and confirm your identity on camera. It keeps the process fully online while significantly reducing fraud.

ekyc vs video kyc vs physical kyc india 2026
Most beginners today complete eKYC combined with Video KYC — no branch visit needed.
Feature eKYC Physical KYC Video KYC
Online Process Yes No Yes
Paper Documents Minimal Required Minimal
Branch Visit No Usually Yes No
Processing Speed Fast Slower Fast
Popular with Online Brokers Yes Less Common Yes

Most beginners today choose eKYC combined with Video KYC. Whether you open an account with Groww, Zerodha, Angel One, or ICICI Direct, the core verification checks are the same — only the app interface differs.

KYC Edge Cases: When Standard Advice Fails

The standard KYC guide assumes a simple scenario — a resident Indian adult with a linked Aadhaar, a clean PAN, and a standard bank account. But real life is rarely this tidy. Here are the most common situations where standard KYC advice breaks down, and what to do instead.

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NRI Investors
Standard eKYC using Aadhaar OTP does not work for Non-Resident Indians. NRIs must link an NRE or NRO bank account, submit a FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act) declaration, and go through a separate Video KYC queue that most brokers route differently. Some brokers don’t support NRI accounts at all.
→ Check broker’s NRI page before starting the process.
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Minor Accounts
A minor (under 18) can have a Demat account, but the guardian must complete the full KYC on their behalf — including Video KYC. The minor needs a PAN, but the guardian’s identity and address proof are what the broker actually verifies. On the minor’s 18th birthday, the account freezes automatically and a fresh independent KYC is required.
→ Set a calendar reminder before the child’s 18th birthday.
💍
Name Change (Marriage / Legal)
If your name changed after marriage and PAN reflects the old name but Aadhaar shows the new name — or vice versa — you’ll hit a mismatch wall. Level 1: align PAN to Aadhaar via NSDL/UTIITSL (fastest). Level 2: submit a marriage certificate alongside your Aadhaar. Level 3: a full legal name change requires a State Gazette notification copy to override the KRA record.
→ Update PAN first — it’s the master financial identity in India.
📵
Aadhaar Not Linked to Mobile
eKYC via Aadhaar OTP requires your Aadhaar to be linked to an active mobile number. If your mobile isn’t linked — or was changed recently and the UIDAI record hasn’t updated — OTP-based eKYC fails completely. In this case, the only options are Physical KYC or visiting an Aadhaar Seva Kendra to update your mobile number first.
→ Check your Aadhaar–mobile link at uidai.gov.in before applying.
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Joint Demat Accounts
If three people open a joint Demat account, all three must have “Validated” KRA statuses independently. A single co-holder with an “On Hold” status blocks the entire application. Tax liability for capital gains falls entirely on the primary account holder — something many families setting up joint accounts overlook.
→ Verify all co-holders’ KYC status before starting a joint application.
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No Fixed Address (PGs / Students)
Students in hostels, people in paying-guest accommodations, or frequent movers often struggle with address proof. Utility bills aren’t in their name; rental agreements may be informal. Most brokers accept a bank statement as address proof — use a bank account that has your current address on record, even if recently updated.
→ A bank statement with your current address is usually the most flexible option.
⚠️ Edge Case Reality Standard eKYC is a privilege for resident Indian adults with clean documents. If your situation falls outside this — NRI, minor, name change, no mobile link — expect to use Physical KYC or a modified workflow. Plan for an extra 3–7 days in these cases.

What is KRA in the Indian Stock Market?

After your broker finishes verifying your documents, where do those records go? To a KYC Registration Agency (KRA).

A KRA acts as a central record keeper for investor KYC data. Instead of every broker maintaining its own separate records, KRAs hold a verified database that financial institutions can access when needed.

Here’s why that matters. Say you opened a Demat account with Groww in 2024. Two years later you want to open another with Zerodha. Without a central system, you’d submit everything from scratch. Because your records are already at a KRA, much of the verification can be skipped or fast-tracked.

What Does a KRA Store?

A KRA stores your PAN, name, date of birth, address, mobile number, email, photograph, signature, and KYC status. It does not store your stock holdings, trading history, or portfolio — those remain with your Demat account and Depository Participant (DP).

Popular KRAs in India

  • CVL KRA
  • CAMS KRA
  • NDML KRA
  • Karvy KRA
  • NSE KRA

All operate under the same regulatory framework. For investors, the experience is identical regardless of which KRA your broker uses.

What is CKYC?

KYC and CKYC are related but not the same thing.

CKYC stands for Central Know Your Customer. It was introduced to create one common customer identification system across different financial sectors — banks, mutual funds, insurance, and stock brokers.

After successful CKYC registration, some investors receive a 14-digit CKYC Identification Number. Financial institutions can use this number to retrieve your verified data without asking you to re-submit documents each time you open a new financial account.

💡 KYC vs CKYC — Quick Distinction

KYC is broker-specific verification, stored at a KRA. CKYC is a cross-sector system — it spans banks, mutual funds, and insurance too. You may have done both without knowing it.

KYC Status Explained

Log into your broker account and you might see: RegisteredValidated, or On Hold. Here’s what each means.

kyc status registered validated on hold india 2026
Your KYC status can be Registered, Validated, or On Hold — here’s what each one means for your account
Status What It Means Action Required?
Registered Documents submitted. Some verification still pending. Wait — usually resolves automatically.
Validated All checks complete. KYC record accepted. None — you’re ready to trade.
On Hold Correction required before verification can continue. Fix the flagged document or mismatch.

Common Reasons for “On Hold” or Rejection

01
Name Mismatch
PAN shows “Rahul R Sharma” but Aadhaar shows “Rahul Ramesh Sharma.” Even one initial difference can trigger a hold.
02
Blurred Document
PAN or Aadhaar photo is too dark, glared, or cropped. Re-upload in good lighting with full document visible.
03
Signature Mismatch
The signature you drew on-screen doesn’t match what’s on your PAN card or bank records.
04
Bank Account Issue
Wrong IFSC code, name doesn’t match bank records, or the account number was entered incorrectly.
05
Expired Address Proof
Some brokers reject address proof older than 3 months. Use a recent utility bill or bank statement if Aadhaar isn’t available.
06
Unclear Photograph
Face not fully visible, sunglasses on, or background too busy. Take a fresh selfie in a well-lit space.
⚠️ Common Mistake Double-check every document before uploading. A 2-minute review saves 2 days of waiting. The most common hold reason is a name spelling difference between PAN and Aadhaar.

KYC Myths vs Reality — What Investors Get Wrong

Most KYC guides tell you the rules. Almost none explain what investors wrongly believe about those rules. These misconceptions are exactly what causes delays, frozen accounts, and missed IPO windows.

❌ Myth ✅ Reality
MythKYC is a one-time process — done forever. RealityYour KYC can go “On Hold” years later. Address changes, mobile number updates, account dormancy (12+ months without trading), and periodic SEBI compliance drives all trigger re-verification requirements.
MythOne broker’s KYC works everywhere automatically. RealityThe KRA stores your verified record centrally, but some brokers still run their own additional checks — especially when their internal risk systems flag something. You may need to upload documents again even with an existing KRA record.
MythVideo KYC is always instant. RealityPoor network during Video KYC can cause a recorded session to be rejected later during compliance review — even if it seemed successful in the app. Weekend and holiday submissions go into a manual queue that is processed only on business days.
MythMy name must match 100% across all documents. RealityMinor variations — initials vs full name — are often auto-approved through fuzzy matching. But specific combinations (middle name vs. no middle name, maiden name vs. married name) still trigger manual review at certain KRAs. Check rather than assume.
MythKYC approval means my account is fully active. RealityKYC approval and account activation are two separate events. Some brokers activate trading within minutes of KYC clearance; others take one additional business day for internal account setup. If you want to trade F&O, a separate financial KYC (income proof via ITR or bank statements) is required on top of standard KYC.
MythKYC protects me from all stock market fraud. RealityKYC verifies identity at account opening. It significantly reduces fraud but cannot prevent mis-selling, unauthorized trading, or phishing attacks after your account is active. Stay alert even after KYC is complete.
📝 Quick Check If you haven’t logged into your broker account for more than a year, check your KYC status before your next IPO application. A silent “On Hold” from dormancy will block your application — and the IPO won’t wait.

How to Check KYC Status Using Your PAN Card

Checking your status takes under 2 minutes.

  1. Visit the official KRA status-check portal (CVL KRA, CAMS KRA, or NSE KRA — all are available online).
  2. Enter your PAN number.
  3. Complete the security verification if prompted.
  4. Submit the request.
  5. Your current KYC status displays — Registered, Validated, On Hold, or Rejected.

If the status shows “On Hold,” your broker usually sends an email or app notification detailing exactly which document needs correction.

Real Stock Market Example

Rahul wants to invest in Reliance Industries because he believes in the company’s long-term potential.

He downloads Groww, enters his PAN, uploads his Aadhaar and photograph, links his bank account, and completes a 60-second Video KYC on his phone. The broker verifies everything and submits the records to the KRA.

The next morning, Rahul’s account is active. He can now:

Notice something: before buying his first share, Rahul didn’t need to understand charts or read financial statements. The very first step was proving he is who he says he is. That’s the role KYC plays in the Indian stock market.

Why KYC Protects Investors

KYC isn’t just a regulatory checkbox — it has real benefits for you as an investor.

Benefit What It Means for You
Prevents Identity Fraud Nobody can open a trading account in your name without your documents.
Reduces Money Laundering Financial institutions verify where funds are coming from — protecting the entire market.
Faster Future Account Opening Once your KYC record is at a KRA, new accounts with other institutions go quicker.
Safer Online Investing Verified investor records make the ecosystem more trustworthy for everyone.
SEBI Compliance Brokers follow the same rules — no broker can skip or shortcut the process.

Limitations to Keep in Mind

  • Initial documentation: First-time investors need to collect and upload multiple documents.
  • Verification delays: A single mismatch can add days to your account opening.
  • Doesn’t eliminate every fraud: KYC reduces fraud significantly but no system catches everything.
  • Periodic re-verification: Brokers may request updated documents if your address or mobile number changes.
📌 Key Takeaways
  • KYC (Know Your Customer) is mandatory before opening a Demat or trading account in India.
  • The process verifies your identity, address, and bank account through your broker.
  • Most beginners complete KYC online using eKYC and Video KYC — no branch visit needed.
  • A KYC Registration Agency (KRA) stores your verified records centrally.
  • CKYC is a cross-sector system — one record works across banks, mutual funds, and brokers.
  • Your KYC status will show Registered, Validated, or On Hold.
  • Most delays happen because of a name mismatch or a blurred document upload.
  • Once approved, you can invest in shares, ETFs, and IPOs through your broker.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is KYC mandatory for investing in the Indian stock market? +
Yes. Understanding how KYC works in stock market India starts here — every investor must complete KYC before opening a Demat and trading account with a SEBI-registered broker. Without it, you cannot legally buy or sell shares.
Can I buy shares without completing KYC? +
No. Brokers cannot activate your trading account until identity verification is complete. This applies to all investments — shares, ETFs, IPOs, and mutual funds through a stockbroker.
How long does KYC approval take? +
For most online brokers, KYC is complete within a few minutes to one business day. If documents contain errors or need manual review, the process can take 2–3 business days. Make sure all documents are clear and names match exactly across PAN and Aadhaar.
What documents are required for KYC? +
Requirements vary slightly between brokers, but you’ll typically need: PAN Card, Aadhaar (where applicable), address proof, bank account details, a passport-size photograph, and a signature. Some brokers also require Video KYC. For the full list, see our guide on Documents Required for Demat Account.
What does “KYC On Hold” mean? +
“On Hold” means a correction is needed before verification can continue — it’s not a rejection. Common reasons include a name mismatch between PAN and Aadhaar, an unclear document upload, an incorrect signature, or a bank verification issue. Fix the flagged item and resubmit — verification usually resumes within 24 hours.
Do I need to complete KYC again if I open an account with another broker? +
In many cases, your verified KYC information can be reused through the KRA system. Your new broker retrieves your existing record from the KRA. That said, some brokers may still ask for certain confirmations or updated documents depending on their internal requirements and current SEBI regulations.
Does KYC expire? +
KYC doesn’t have a fixed expiry date. However, your broker or financial institution may ask for an updated KYC if your address changes, your mobile number changes, or SEBI issues new verification requirements. It’s a good practice to keep your KYC details current with your broker.

How Does KYC Work in Stock Market India — Final Word

KYC is the foundation of every Demat account in India. Before you can buy shares of Reliance Industries, TCS, or Infosys — or invest in a Nifty 50 ETF — your identity must be verified through this process. That’s how KYC works in stock market India at its core.

The process protects you as much as it protects the market. It stops fraudulent accounts, keeps investments traceable, and ensures brokers follow SEBI‘s rules consistently. And with eKYC and Video KYC, most investors today complete the whole thing from their phone in under 15 minutes.

One last tip: check every document before uploading. Make sure the name on your PAN matches your Aadhaar exactly — including middle names and initials. That single detail is the most common reason accounts go “On Hold.”

✅ Your Next Step Ready to open your Demat account? Read our step-by-step guide on How to Start Investing in the Stock Market — it walks you through everything that comes after KYC is done, including buying your first stock.
Disclaimer: This article is published for educational purposes only. It does not provide investment, legal, tax, or financial advice. KYC rules, broker requirements, and SEBI regulations may change over time. Always refer to the latest guidelines issued by SEBI, your stock broker, or the relevant KYC Registration Agency before making financial decisions.

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