Once called the "King of Good Times" due to his extravagant lifestyle, Mallya and his companies have been embroiled in financial scandals, and controversies since 2012. Mallya left India on 2 March 2016 after saying he wanted to move to Britain to be closer to his children. and the
Attorney General said that Mallya's assets abroad are "far in excess to loans taken by him". and he resigned from the
Rajya Sabha on 2 May 2016, the day before their Ethics Committee was prepared to recommend his expulsion. Also, the
High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad issued a non-bailable warrant against Mallya on 13 March 2016 for his failure to appear in the court regarding an allegation of cheating the
GMR Hyderabad International Airport Ltd by issuing them a
dishonoured cheque for . On 13 June 2016, the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) court declared Mallya a "proclaimed offender" on a request by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) in connection with its money laundering probe against him in an alleged loan default case. Mallya co-owned the
Formula One team
Force India from 2007 to 2018. In the middle of the
2018 Formula One season, Sahara Force India went into administration due to financial trouble. In August 2018, the team's assets were purchased by
Racing Point F1 Team, and continued to race under the Force India name for the remainder of the 2018 season.
Accusations On 18 April 2017, Mallya was arrested by the UK Metropolitan Police extradition unit "on behalf of the Indian authorities in relation to accusations of fraud", and was released on bail pending further consideration of the case. On 9 May 2017, the
Supreme Court of India found Mallya guilty of
contempt of court and summoned him to appear on 10 July. When he failed to appear, the Supreme Court said the contempt case would only proceed further after he is produced before the court. Mallya dismissed the proceedings against him – calling the situation a "witch hunt". In the meantime, he is not allowed to leave Britain, but he said that is no hardship for him. An appeal to extradite him from Britain was filed on charges of bank fraud estimated at . The final hearing on extradition will be held at the Westminster Magistrate's Court on 31 July. Mallya is on bail since his arrest on an extradition warrant in April 2017. Mallya is fighting an extradition case in the UK. On 16 June 2018 Vijay Mallya was ordered to pay £200,000 (₹18.1 million) to Indian banks by a United Kingdom court. He was also asked to pay money towards registration of worldwide freezing order and of Karnataka's Debt Recovery Tribunal (DRT). Vijay Mallya has to pay dues to 13 banks namely- SBI, BOB, Corporation Bank, Federal Bank Ltd, IDBI Bank, Indian Overseas Bank, J&K Bank, Punjab and Sind Bank, PNB, State Bank of Mysore, UCO Bank, UBI and
JM Financial Asset Reconstruction Co. Pvt Ltd. The consortium attempted to gain possession of Mallya's £20 million property on
Cornwall Terrace in London, but Mallya claimed it was owned by his mother.
UBS went to court in 2018, seeking to evict Mallya, his son Sidhartha and his mother Lalith from Cornwall Terrace. A trial was set for May 2019. The trial did not go ahead since Mallya drew up a settlement with UBS. According to the terms of the agreement, Mallya can remain in the property and if the mortgage is not repaid by April 2020, UBS has a right to immediate possession. Mallya must also pay the interest of £820,333 accrued up to April 2019 plus any further amount accrued up to 1 May 2020. He was also instructed to pay legal costs of £1,047,081 and receivers' costs of £223,863. In December 2018, the court ruled that he can be extradited to India to face fraud investigations. In April 2020, the plea file by Vijay Mallya against his extradition to India was rejected by London High court. Vijay Mallya lost his final appeal against extradition. Mallya had filed an appeal in the UK Supreme Court earlier in month of May 2020 in the wake of losing an appeal in the London High Court against an extradition order to India on alleged charges of fraud and money laundering related to unrecovered loans to Kingfisher Airlines. It was said that he could be extradited in next 28 days. However, in October 2020 the Indian government was notified that Mallya could not be currently extradited due to an unspecified "confidential legal matter". On 11 July 2022, the Supreme Court sentenced Mallya to four months in jail and imposed a Rs 2,000 fine on him in a 2017 contempt of court case. He was convicted of contempt in 2017 over transferring
US$40 million to his children in violation of court orders. In addition to the jail term, the top court required Mallya to deposit the $40 million with 8 percent interest within four weeks to the Supreme Court legal services authority, on pain of attachment of properties and a further sentence of two months.
Leaked documents Mallya was named in the
Panama Papers and
Paradise Papers,
leaked confidential documents relating to
offshore investment.
Public appearance in a podcast In June 2025, Vijay Mallya made a rare public appearance in
Raj Shamani's podcast for a four-hour-long interview. The interview marked one of Mallya's first in-depth public commentaries since leaving India in 2016. The appearance triggered renewed media coverage and public debate in India, with users calling it as an attempt to whitewash his image, with criticism over the platforming of a controversial figure amidst his fugitive status. Mallya claimed he repaid against loans totaling . ==Awards==