Abstract
Indian Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) operate in an increasingly complex regulatory environment marked by frequent legal changes, expanding compliance obligations, and heightened enforcement mechanisms. Despite their critical donation to profitable growth and employment, MSMEs frequently warrant structured legal threat operation fabrics, performing in compliance failures and increased legal exposure. Being literature largely focuses on nonsupervisory burden and ease of doing business, with limited attention to compliance preparedness as a preventative legal threat medium. This study examines the relationship between compliance preparedness and legal threat exposure in Indian MSMEs. Using a mixed- system approach, the exploration combines doctrinal analysis of crucial nonsupervisory bills with empirical inputs from MSME stakeholders and compliance professionals. The findings reveal significant governance gaps, including reactive compliance practices, overdependence on external advisers, and absence of internal compliance systems. The study argues that compliance in MSMEs is treated as a procedural obligation rather than an element of threat governance, thereby adding vulnerability to penalties, controversies, and functional dislocations.