A Telegram channel forwards you a screenshot: “SEBI-verified 200% return in 11 months, join now.” Before you send a rupee, do one thing: ask whether that return was verified by PaRRVA, SEBI's Past Risk and Return Verification Agency, and demand the PaRRVA reference for the exact advertised figure. If the adviser cannot show it, the “verified” claim is hollow, because only PaRRVA, not the adviser, can certify past performance.
PaRRVA is the single point where an investment adviser, research analyst or algorithmic-trading provider gets its past risk and return figures independently checked before those figures appear in an advertisement. SEBI operationalised it through Circular No. HO/38/14/(4)2026-MIRSD-POD/I/10557/2026 dated 29 April 2026. The rule is simple: a regulated person may show verified performance, but the verification is done by the agency, not by the person selling you the product.
For years, advisers and “finfluencers” could advertise eye-watering past returns with nothing stopping them from inventing or cherry-picking the figures. There was no neutral referee. PaRRVA, the Past Risk and Return Verification Agency, is that referee. It independently verifies the past risk and return of services offered by registered investment advisers, research analysts and algorithmic-trading providers, so that what you see in an advertisement has been checked by someone other than the seller.
Under the SEBI framework, CARE Ratings Limited has been granted recognition as PaRRVA, with the National Stock Exchange of India Limited acting as the PaRRVA Data Centre. The framework was specified by SEBI on 4 April 2025, a pilot phase ran from 8 December 2025, and PaRRVA began providing services on a regular basis from 4 May 2026. Registered advisers, research analysts and algo providers who want to communicate verified past performance to clients were required to enroll with PaRRVA by 3 August 2026.
The point for you as an investor is narrow and powerful: a performance number that has passed through PaRRVA can be trusted as far as the verification goes; a number that has not is just a claim. The label “verified” only means something if it traces back to the agency.
Kashvi Pathak, a salaried professional in Pune, receives a WhatsApp forward in May 2026: a slick card reading “SEBI-verified 220% returns, our algo never loses.” She replies asking for the PaRRVA reference and the adviser's SEBI registration number for that exact 220% figure. The “adviser” sends a cropped logo and changes the subject, then removes her from the group. Because no PaRRVA-verified record and no registration number ever materialised, Kashvi treats the entire claim as fake and reports the channel. She loses nothing. The single question, “show me the PaRRVA verification for that number”, did the whole job.
PaRRVA tells you whether an advertised return is real. The RTI Act, 2005 and SEBI's own grievance machinery tell you what to do when you have been misled. If you suspect a registered intermediary advertised unverified or false performance, you can complain through SEBI's redress channels, and you can use RTI to seek records from public authorities about action taken on your complaint. The two tools work together: verify before you invest, document and escalate after.
You can read more on confirming an adviser is genuine in the guide to SEBI finfluencer rules and checking a registered advisor, and on raising a grievance in the SEBI SCORES and Smart ODR complaint guide. To draft a clean RTI seeking the status of a complaint, use the AI RTI Drafter. For the full method of using RTI to hold authorities accountable, see The RTI Playbook.
PaRRVA verifies the past risk and return figures of services offered by SEBI-registered investment advisers, research analysts and algorithmic-trading providers. It checks the numbers an adviser wants to advertise, so the performance you see has been confirmed by an independent agency rather than by the seller.
Be sceptical. SEBI does not verify return figures directly. Verification is done by PaRRVA, the agency SEBI recognised for this. A claim phrased as “SEBI-verified” or “SEBI-approved returns” often signals a fabricated badge, so ask for the PaRRVA reference for the exact number shown.
Under the SEBI framework, CARE Ratings Limited has been granted recognition as PaRRVA, with the National Stock Exchange of India Limited acting as the PaRRVA Data Centre. The framework was specified on 4 April 2025 and PaRRVA began regular services from 4 May 2026.
No. Verification confirms what happened in the past, checked independently. It says nothing about the future. No SEBI-registered adviser may promise or guarantee a future return, and any assured-return claim is a violation regardless of past performance.
SEBI operationalised PaRRVA through Circular No. HO/38/14/(4)2026-MIRSD-POD/I/10557/2026 dated 29 April 2026. It sets out how recognised agencies verify the past risk and return of advisers, research analysts and algo providers before those figures are advertised.
Registered investment advisers, research analysts and algorithmic-trading providers who wanted to communicate verified past performance to clients were required to enroll with PaRRVA by 3 August 2026. An adviser advertising “verified” returns should already be in the PaRRVA system.
Stop, and do not invest on the strength of the claim. Confirm the adviser's SEBI registration, ask for the PaRRVA reference, and if it cannot be produced, treat the claim as unverified. You can then raise a grievance through SEBI's redress channels and use RTI to track action on your complaint.
PaRRVA covers the past performance of investment advisory services, research services and algorithmic trading. Other products have their own disclosure rules. The core lesson still holds: any “verified” performance badge should trace back to an identifiable, independent verifier, not to the seller alone.