If you are procuring solar modules or cells for any project in India in 2026 — residential, commercial, or utility-scale — the ALMM (Approved List of Models and Manufacturers) is not optional reading. It is the central compliance requirement that determines whether your project qualifies for government subsidies, whether your contracts hold up under scrutiny, and whether your modules pass DISCOM inspection.
This guide explains what ALMM is, how it has evolved, what the June 2026 mandate means in practice, and what Indian EPCs and developers must do to stay compliant.
The Approved List of Models and Manufacturers (ALMM) is a mandatory registry maintained by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE). It lists solar PV modules (List-I) and solar PV cells (List-II) that have been verified for quality and domestic manufacturing compliance.
Only products on the ALMM list can be used in:
Using a non-ALMM-listed product in these contexts risks rejection of subsidy claims, cancellation of net metering approvals, or voiding of project contracts.
As of mid-2026, the ALMM List-I covers 80+ approved module manufacturers with a combined listed capacity exceeding 60 GW. The ALMM List-II for solar cells — introduced more recently — has been revised seven times since its launch in 2025, reflecting the rapid pace of Indian cell manufacturing expansion.
ALMM List-I — Solar PV Modules
This is the original ALMM list. It covers finished solar modules — the panel you see on a rooftop or in a solar park. To be listed, a module must:
ALMM List-II — Solar PV Cells
Introduced in 2025, List-II covers solar cells — the individual silicon wafers that are assembled into modules. This was a critical expansion of the ALMM framework, ensuring that not just the finished module but also its core component (the cell) meets domestic manufacturing requirements.
The June 1, 2026 deadline made ALMM List-II compliance mandatory for all project commissioning from that date onward. This means projects commissioned after June 2026 must use cells from a List-II approved manufacturer — regardless of when the contract was signed.
Websol Energy System is an ALMM List-II approved solar cell manufacturer, with its M10 Bifacial Mono-PERC cells verified for domestic manufacture at the Falta SEZ facility in West Bengal.
MNRE’s position has been unambiguous: no blanket extension of ALMM List-II compliance beyond June 1, 2026. This was reinforced by a series of advisory circulars issued between November 2025 and May 2026.
What this means practically:
For EPCs currently in procurement or mid-execution, this has forced rapid verification of entire Bills of Materials (BOMs) — particularly for projects that had contracted cells from manufacturers who were not yet listed.
The DCR (Domestic Content Requirement) and ALMM are related but distinct frameworks. Understanding both is essential.
A module can be ALMM-listed but not DCR-compliant (if it uses imported cells). A module can be made with Indian cells but those cells might not be ALMM List-II listed.
For the strictest compliance — particularly under PM Surya Ghar and SECI tenders — you need both: ALMM-listed modules made with ALMM List-II listed domestic cells.
Our detailed guide on DCR cells and DCR module compliance explains how the two frameworks interact and how to structure procurement correctly.
The PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana — India’s flagship residential rooftop solar scheme — has already facilitated over 40 lakh household installations as of mid-2026, with subsidies of up to ₹78,000 per household and a target of 75 lakh installations by December 2026.
But here is the critical detail: if your installation uses non-ALMM modules, the subsidy is not released. The National Portal checks module compliance at the point of application, and DISCOMs verify at the point of commissioning.
For installers, this means:
Step 1: Get the module model number from your supplier
Do not accept manufacturer name alone. Get the exact model number as it appears on the datasheet.
Step 2: Check the MNRE ALMM portal
Visit mnre.gov.in/en/approved-list-of-models-and-manufacturers-almm/ and download the latest List-I (modules) and List-II (cells). Search for the model number.
Step 3: Verify the cell manufacturer
If your project requires DCR compliance or List-II cell compliance, ask your module supplier to confirm which cell manufacturer’s cells are used and verify that manufacturer’s List-II status.
Step 4: Check BIS validity
ALMM listing and BIS certification are linked. If a manufacturer’s BIS licence lapses, their ALMM listing is suspended. Verify BIS certificate validity — not just ALMM listing date.
Step 5: Document everything
For government projects, maintain documentary evidence of ALMM compliance at the time of procurement, commissioning, and subsidy claim. DISCOMs in several states have begun requiring this documentation as part of net metering applications.
Websol Energy System is one of India’s longest-running solar cell manufacturers, having started production in 1994. Its M10 Bifacial Mono-PERC solar cells are manufactured at the Falta Special Economic Zone in West Bengal under verified quality processes.
Websol’s ALMM List-II listing means that module manufacturers who source cells from Websol can use those modules in:
For module manufacturers looking for a reliable, ALMM-listed domestic cell supplier, contact Websol’s supply team to discuss sourcing and capacity.
The absence of Chinese manufacturers is particularly relevant for Indian EPCs who previously sourced low-cost imported modules. Under ALMM compliance, the entire supply chain must be domestically anchored — a structural shift that benefits established Indian manufacturers.
Not strictly, unless the project is connected to a DISCOM grid under net metering — in which case many state electricity regulatory commissions require ALMM-listed modules. For fully off-grid captive projects with no government funding or subsidy, ALMM is not mandatory — though it remains a quality benchmark worth applying.
For pure ALMM compliance (List-I), yes — the module must be listed but the cells are not required to be List-II listed unless DCR applies. However, for projects commissioned after June 2026 with DCR requirements or PM Surya Ghar subsidy eligibility, cells must also be List-II listed.
The MNRE updates List-I approximately monthly and List-II has been revised multiple times since its launch in 2025. Always download the latest version from mnre.gov.in before finalising procurement.
This is a real risk. MNRE has indicated that case-by-case relief may be available for documented circumstances, but there is no automatic protection. Best practice is to lock in ALMM-listed modules with long-dated listing validity and from manufacturers with consistent BIS renewal history.
Yes. Vertically integrated manufacturers who produce both cells and modules must have their cells listed under List-II if those modules are to qualify for ALMM compliance in government-linked projects.
Websol’s ALMM List-II status can be verified directly on the MNRE portal. For procurement inquiries and supply documentation, contact Websol.
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