In today’s regulated financial environment, transparency matters. If you are entering a cross-border transaction, verifying a counterparty, or doing due diligence on a business partner, an LEI number search is a practical step.
This guide explains how to search an LEI number, what an LEI is, what you can check in the results, and how to confirm the status quickly.
What Is an LEI Number?
An LEI (Legal Entity Identifier) is a 20-character alphanumeric code used for global legal entity identification. It is designed to help regulators, financial institutions, and businesses identify legally registered entities involved in financial transactions.
LEI Number Meaning
An LEI:
is a 20-character code,
follows the ISO 17442 standard,
connects to key reference data about a legal entity,
supports transparency in financial markets.
When you search an LEI, you can typically see public reference information such as the entity name, registered address, registration authority, status (Active/Lapsed), and relationship data (if available).
Entities that often use LEIs include corporations, banks, NBFCs, investment firms, funds, and sometimes other registered business structures depending on the use case.
Why Search an LEI Number?
You might perform an LEI lookup to:
verify an entity before signing agreements,
support due diligence checks,
confirm whether the LEI is Active or Lapsed,
validate entity details before cross-border activity,
reduce counterparty risk by confirming the correct entity record.
How to Search LEI Number (Step-by-Step)
Step 1: Open an LEI Search Platform
Use a recognized LEI search source (for example, an LEI search portal or the GLEIF database). The goal is simple: get the most up-to-date public LEI record you can.
Step 2: Enter Company Name or LEI Code
In the search field, enter either:
the entity’s registered legal name, or
the 20-character LEI code.
Step 3: Review the Record Carefully
After results load, confirm you are looking at the correct entity by checking:
legal entity name,
registered address,
registration authority,
LEI registration date and last renewal date (if shown),
parent/relationship data (if shown).
Step 4: Confirm the Status (Active vs Lapsed)
Before you proceed with any important use case, verify:
the status shows Active (or equivalent valid status),
the renewal information is current (where applicable),
the entity data matches what you expect from official records.
What You Can Find in an LEI Search Result
A typical LEI record can include:
official legal name and registered address,
registration authority,
entity status,
LEI issuance date,
last renewal date,
relationship information (if available).
This is what makes LEI search useful for verification and counterparty checks.
How to Verify LEI Number Status
When verifying an LEI, the two most common statuses are:
Active
The LEI is current and maintained.
Lapsed
The LEI has not been renewed, which may limit its usability for some reporting or transaction requirements.
Because LEIs generally require periodic renewal, it’s good practice to check status before high-value transactions or key filings.
Common Mistakes During LEI Search
Most errors come from small input or review issues, such as:
entering the wrong characters in the LEI,
searching with an incorrect or incomplete entity name,
relying on unofficial or outdated sources,
ignoring the status or last renewal information,
skipping relationship/parent data when it matters.
A quick double-check usually prevents these problems.
How Often Should You Check an LEI?
A practical approach is to check:
before large financial transactions,
before onboarding counterparties,
before submissions or filings that reference the entity,
whenever renewal dates are close,
periodically if you manage multiple entities.
About TNV LEI (LEI International Private Limited)
If you are using TNV LEI as your portal, the page shows a search bar and options like LEI registration and LEI renewal, along with plan-style selections. (This is visible in the page screenshot you shared.)
If you want this section to avoid any stronger claims, you can keep it factual and “platform-focused,” for example:
LEI Registration
LEI Renewal
LEI Transfer
LEI data updates/modifications
LEI code search support
