Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023
India's landmark legislation governing the collection, storage, processing, and transfer of digital personal data — protecting the rights of 1.4 billion citizens while enabling responsible data use.
What is the DPDP Act,
2023?
The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (DPDP Act) is India's first comprehensive data protection legislation. Passed by the Indian Parliament and receiving Presidential assent on August 11, 2023, it establishes a legal framework for the processing of digital personal data in India.
The Act balances the right of individuals to protect their personal data with the need for lawful processing of such data for legitimate purposes. It applies to all organizations — from startups to large enterprises — that process digital personal data of individuals in India.
With penalties reaching up to ₹250 Crore for non-compliance, the DPDP Act mandates organizations to adopt transparent, consent-driven data practices and implement robust security safeguards.
The Road to DPDP Act
2017
Puttaswamy Judgment
Supreme Court declares Right to Privacy as a fundamental right under Article 21.
2018
Srikrishna Committee
Justice B.N. Srikrishna Committee submits draft Personal Data Protection Bill.
2019
PDP Bill Introduced
Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 introduced in Parliament and referred to Joint Committee.
2022
Bill Withdrawn
PDP Bill 2019 withdrawn to present a comprehensive new framework after committee recommendations.
2023
DPDP Act Passed
Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 passed by Parliament and receives Presidential assent.
2025
Rules & Enforcement
DPDP Rules expected to be notified, establishing operational framework and enforcement mechanisms.
Core Pillars of the DPDP Act
Consent-Based Processing
Personal data can only be processed with explicit, informed, and freely given consent of the Data Principal. Consent must be specific, clear, and easily withdrawable.
Rights of Data Principals
Individuals have the right to access, correct, erase their personal data, and nominate representatives. Organizations must honor these rights within prescribed timelines.
Obligations of Data Fiduciaries
Organizations collecting data must ensure accuracy, implement security safeguards, retain data only as needed, and appoint a Data Protection Officer where required.
Cross-Border Data Transfer
Personal data can be transferred outside India except to countries specifically restricted by the Central Government through notifications.
Children's Data Protection
Processing data of individuals below 18 years requires verifiable parental consent. Behavioral tracking and targeted advertising to children is prohibited.
Data Protection Board of India
An independent body established to adjudicate complaints, impose penalties, and oversee compliance with the Act across all sectors.
Who Does the DPDP Act Apply To?
Data Fiduciaries
Any person or organization that determines the purpose and means of processing personal data — includes businesses, startups, and enterprises.
Data Processors
Entities that process personal data on behalf of Data Fiduciaries — includes IT service providers, cloud platforms, and outsourced service providers.
Data Principals
Individuals whose personal data is being processed — every Indian citizen and resident whose data is collected by any organization.
Significant Data Fiduciaries
Large organizations designated by the government based on volume and sensitivity of data processed — subject to additional compliance obligations.
Non-Compliance Penalties
The DPDP Act prescribes significant financial penalties for violations, making compliance a business-critical priority.
Non-compliance with children's data provisions
Failure to implement security safeguards leading to breach
Non-compliance with data principal rights
Failure to notify Data Protection Board of breach
Non-fulfillment of additional obligations by Significant Data Fiduciaries
Breach of any other provision of the Act
Your DPDP Compliance Checklist
Achieving DPDP compliance requires a systematic approach. Use this checklist to assess your organization's readiness and identify gaps in your data protection framework.
Get Expert Compliance Help →- ✓ Implement lawful consent capture mechanisms with clear purpose specification
- ✓ Establish processes to honor Data Principal rights (access, correction, erasure)
- ✓ Appoint a Data Protection Officer (mandatory for Significant Data Fiduciaries)
- ✓ Implement data breach notification processes within prescribed timelines
- ✓ Review and update privacy notices and consent forms
- ✓ Conduct Data Protection Impact Assessments for high-risk processing
- ✓ Ensure cross-border data transfer compliance with government notifications
- ✓ Implement age verification and parental consent for children's data
- ✓ Establish data retention and deletion policies aligned with DPDP requirements
- ✓ Train employees on data protection responsibilities and awareness
Achieve DPDP Compliance with ConsentKeeper
Consent Lifecycle Management
Capture, track, renew, and revoke consent across all channels with complete audit trails.
Automated Compliance
Pre-built workflows for Data Principal rights — access, correction, and erasure requests handled automatically.
Enterprise-Grade Security
End-to-end encryption, role-based access, and tamper-proof consent records for audit readiness.
Regulatory Intelligence
Stay updated with latest DPDP Rules, government notifications, and compliance requirements automatically.
Don't Wait for Enforcement — Act Now
The DPDP Act is law. Organizations that prepare early will gain competitive advantage through customer trust and regulatory readiness.
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