What is SMA-2?
SMA-2 is the final pre-NPA stage where principal or interest is overdue between 61 and 90 days. CRILC reporting at SMA-2 is widely visible to other lenders and is often the trigger for joint lender action and recovery discussions.
| Meaning | SMA-2 is the final pre-NPA stage where principal or interest is overdue between 61 and 90 days. CRILC reporting at SMA-2 is widely visible to other lenders and is often the trigger for joint lender action and recovery discussions. |
|---|---|
| Category | Banking & NPA |
| Related Laws | RBI Framework on Stressed Assets |
| Who Uses It | Banks, CRILC, JLF |
| Why It Matters | Account becomes visible to peer lenders; intervention is urgent. |
SMA-2 explained in plain English
A practitioner's view written for borrowers and advisors — not a textbook definition.
SMA-2 is the final pre-NPA stage where principal or interest is overdue between 61 and 90 days. CRILC reporting at SMA-2 is widely visible to other lenders and is often the trigger for joint lender action and recovery discussions.
In practice, SMA-2 is used most often by banks, crilc, jlf. Each of them sees the term from a slightly different angle: borrowers care about protection and outcomes, lenders care about classification and recovery, regulators care about consistency and disclosure.
The legal anchor for SMA-2 is RBI Framework on Stressed Assets. RBI master directions, the SARFAESI Act 2002, the RDB Act 1993 and the IBC 2016 commonly interplay, depending on the loan size, security and stage of stress.
Why does it matter? Account becomes visible to peer lenders; intervention is urgent. For a stressed borrower, getting this concept right early often saves several months of penal interest, legal cost and credit-score damage.
A real example: An MSME limit overdue for 75 days is SMA-2; the bank issues a stress notice. The mechanics may look complex, but the underlying logic — the bank wants closure, the borrower wants a fair outcome — is straightforward once the right framework is in place.
If you are facing a situation involving SMA-2, the safest first step is a structured case review with a senior ex-banker who has handled comparable matters across banks and ARCs in India.
Where you'll encounter SMA-2
Whenever a loan moves from "Standard" to "stressed", SMA-2 is one of the words that starts appearing in notices, bank emails and lawyers' opinions.
Sanctioning committees, recovery teams and risk officers use SMA-2 to classify accounts, decide provisioning and approve resolution paths.
SMA-2 appears in pleadings, securitisation applications, OAs, Section 7/9 petitions and SARFAESI writs as part of the dispute record.
When stressed loans are sold to ARCs or special-situations investors, SMA-2 is used in term sheets, assignment agreements and due-diligence reports.