ICAI REG. NO. 139415 Peer-reviewed firm · Pune, India · Practicing since 2012

10 Things Foreign Founders Must Know Before Setting Up a Company in India (2026)

By CA Rohit Lohade, KRPR & Associates  ·  Updated May 2026  ·  12 min read

Bottom line up front: India is not complex — it is structured. The founders who struggle are those who don't understand the rules, the sequencing, or the compliance rhythm before they begin. The ones who succeed treat India like a long-term market, not a one-time paperwork exercise. Here is everything you need to know before you start.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

  1. The setup sequence matters more than anything else
  2. Choose the right legal structure from day one
  3. Understand your FDI sector and route
  4. Apostille is the step that takes the longest — start it first
  5. The resident director requirement is non-negotiable
  6. India payroll is a compliance system, not just a salary process
  7. FEMA governs every rupee that crosses the border
  8. Transfer pricing applies from your very first intercompany invoice
  9. Define IP ownership before you hire your first employee
  10. The right advisor saves you years of problems
  11. Frequently asked questions

1. The Setup Sequence Matters More Than Anything Else

Most delays when setting up a company in India are not caused by Indian bureaucracy. They are caused by doing steps in the wrong order. Getting the sequence right means your incorporation can complete in 7–12 working days. Getting it wrong means 6–8 weeks of avoidable delays.

The correct sequence:

StepActionTime required
1Start apostille of parent company documents1–3 weeks (do this first)
2Obtain DSCs (Digital Signature Certificates) for all directors3–5 working days
3Reserve company name on MCA SPICe+ portal2–4 working days
4File SPICe+ incorporation form7–10 working days
5Open corporate bank account10–15 working days
6Remit share capital + obtain FIRC2–5 working days
7File FC-GPR with RBIWithin 30 days of allotment
8File INC-20A (commencement of business)Within 180 days of incorporation

Common sequencing mistakes that cause weeks of delay:

  • Trying to open a bank account before the company is incorporated
  • Hiring employees or signing contracts before the company legally exists
  • Assuming US or UK documents will be accepted without notarisation and apostille
  • Sending uninapostilled documents and having them rejected at MCA
  • Missing the FC-GPR 30-day deadline after share allotment — this is the single most penalised compliance error

⚠ Critical: INC-20A (the commencement of business declaration) must be filed within 180 days of incorporation. Without it, your company legally cannot commence business, sign commercial contracts, or make payments. It is the most commonly missed filing by foreign companies.

Full step-by-step guide to setting up a subsidiary in India


2. Choose the Right Legal Structure From Day One

For the vast majority of foreign companies, the answer is a Private Limited Company (Pvt Ltd) — but understanding why matters, because choosing the wrong structure creates problems that are expensive to fix later.

StructureBest forKey limitation
Private Limited CompanyTechnology centres, back offices, manufacturing, trading, servicesRequires 2 directors, 1 must be resident in India
Branch OfficeImport/export representation for an existing foreign companyHigher tax rate (40%), RBI approval required, cannot conduct all commercial activities
Liaison OfficeMarket research onlyCannot generate any revenue at all
LLPProfessional partnershipsFDI requires government approval (not automatic route) — less suitable for foreign companies
Project OfficeExecuting a single specific project contractTemporary — limited to duration of contract

The Private Limited Company gives you:

  • Limited liability — your parent company's assets are protected from Indian liabilities
  • 100% foreign ownership in most sectors under the automatic FDI route
  • Full commercial freedom — hire, invoice, contract, and operate
  • The lowest corporate tax rate (22–25%) of any foreign-owned structure
  • Clean IP ownership chain — employees assign IP to the subsidiary, which assigns to the parent

Subsidiary vs Branch Office vs Liaison Office — full comparison


3. Understand Your FDI Sector and Route Before You File

Not all sectors allow 100% foreign ownership. Before you begin incorporation, confirm that your business activity falls under the Automatic Route — otherwise you need government approval first, which adds weeks or months.

SectorFDI routeForeign ownership cap
IT, software, back-office servicesAutomatic100%
ManufacturingAutomatic100%
E-commerce (marketplace model)Automatic100%
Professional servicesAutomatic100%
InsuranceAutomatic up to 74%74% automatic, beyond requires approval
DefenceAutomatic up to 74%Beyond 74% requires government approval
Broadcast / print mediaGovernment route26–49% depending on type
Agriculture, real estateRestricted / prohibitedNot permitted

You also need to use the correct NIC (National Industrial Classification) code when filing incorporation documents. If the NIC code doesn't match your actual business activity, it can cause problems during GST registration, FEMA filings, and tax assessments. We verify the correct code as part of every incorporation we manage.


4. Apostille Is the Step That Takes the Longest — Start It First

This is the most overlooked cause of delay. Before any incorporation documents can be filed in India, your foreign parent company documents must be notarised and apostilled in your home country.

Why this takes time:

CountryApostille authorityTypical processing time
United KingdomFCDO (Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office) — but a UK solicitor must certify documents first2–5 working days (standard) — budget 1–2 weeks total
United StatesSecretary of State (varies by state)5–15 working days depending on state
GermanyRegional Oberlandesgericht1–3 weeks
NetherlandsLocal notary + district court1–2 weeks
SingaporeSingapore Academy of Law3–5 working days
AustraliaState and Territory government offices1–2 weeks

Documents that need apostilling:

  • Certificate of Incorporation of the foreign parent company
  • Memorandum and Articles of Association (or equivalent)
  • Board Resolution authorising the Indian subsidiary
  • Latest audited financials or certificate of good standing
  • Proof of registered address
  • Passports and address proof of foreign directors

Start the apostille process the day you decide to set up in India. The Indian filing itself is fast. The foreign document process is what determines your actual go-live date.

Full documents checklist with country-specific apostille guidance


5. The Resident Director Requirement Is Non-Negotiable

Under Section 149(3) of the Companies Act, 2013, every Indian company must have at least one director who has resided in India for 182 or more days in the previous financial year.

This surprises many foreign founders. You cannot simply appoint two foreign directors and proceed. You need a qualifying India-resident director from day one.

Your options:

OptionSuitable whenRisk/consideration
Appoint a co-founder or senior employee who lives in IndiaYou already have India-based leadershipGives the person full director powers — ensure your governance documents limit authority appropriately
Appoint a nominee resident directorNo India-based team initially — lean entity, trading subsidiary, or early-stage setupGovernance documents must clearly limit the nominee's authority (no commercial signing power, no bank access)

When using a nominee director, best practice is to:

  • Define authority limits in the Board Resolution and Articles of Association
  • Obtain an undated resignation letter held by the foreign parent — allows removal at any time
  • Ensure the nominee has NO bank signing authority
  • Ensure the nominee cannot execute any commercial contract

Resident Director Services — how KRPR provides this


6. India Payroll Is a Compliance System, Not Just a Salary Process

This is the biggest operational surprise for foreign founders. In India, payroll = compliance. The moment you hire your first employee, you automatically enter a set of statutory systems — each with its own registrations, monthly filings, and deadlines.

Statutory systemWhat it isEmployer obligation
PF (Provident Fund)Retirement savings — mandatory for employees earning under ₹15,000/month basic; optional above12% of basic salary contributed by employer + 12% deducted from employee
ESICEmployee State Insurance — health and accident cover3.25% employer contribution for employees earning under ₹21,000/month
Professional TaxState-level tax on employmentVaries by state — typically ₹200/month per employee in Maharashtra
TDS on salaryTax deducted at source on salaryMonthly deduction based on employee's projected annual tax liability
Shops & Establishment ActState-specific registration covering working hours, leave, and conditionsRegister within 30 days of first hire
GratuityStatutory lump-sum paid on resignation/retirement after 5 years15 days' salary per year of service — often requires actuarial valuation

Your global HR tools will not handle this.

Platforms like Rippling, Gusto, Deel, Oyster, and Remote do not support:

  • Form 24Q (quarterly TDS return on salaries)
  • PF ECR (Electronic Challan cum Return) uploads
  • ESIC returns on the ESIC portal
  • Professional tax calculations by state
  • Leave encashment rules under the Factories Act / Shops Act
  • Full & Final settlement calculations
  • Reimbursements exempt under Section 10 of the Income Tax Act

Using a global platform without India-specific payroll support leads to incorrect payslips, statutory notices, mismatched filings, and unhappy employees. Plan payroll infrastructure before you hire — not after.

Payroll & HR for foreign companies in India


7. FEMA Governs Every Rupee That Crosses the Border

The Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) is the law that governs all cross-border money flows involving India. Every inbound and outbound transaction your Indian subsidiary makes has a FEMA dimension — and violations carry significant penalties.

What FEMA controls:

  • Inbound capital — how share capital and loans come in from the foreign parent
  • Outbound payments — dividends, royalties, management fees, technical service fees going to the parent
  • RBI reporting obligations — FC-GPR (share issuance), FC-TRS (share transfers), APR (Annual Performance Report), FLA return (Foreign Liabilities & Assets)
  • Intercompany transactions — how services are invoiced between the subsidiary and the parent
  • Loan structures — External Commercial Borrowings (ECB) have their own regulations
FEMA filingWhen requiredDeadline
FC-GPRAfter initial share capital is received and allottedWithin 30 days of allotment
FC-TRSWhen shares in the Indian company are transferredWithin 60 days of transfer
Annual Performance Report (APR)Every year for companies with FDI31 December annually
FLA ReturnEvery year — foreign liabilities and assets statement15 July annually
Form 15CA / 15CBBefore every outbound remittance (dividends, fees, royalties)Before remitting

The APR and FLA return are filed every year for as long as your foreign-owned entity exists — yet they are the most commonly unfiled returns we see when new clients come to us. Penalties for non-filing are substantial.

FEMA & FDI compliance — our specialist desk


8. Transfer Pricing Applies From Your Very First Intercompany Invoice

If your Indian subsidiary provides services to the foreign parent — software development, back-office work, R&D, customer support — those services must be invoiced at arm's length prices. This is transfer pricing, and it applies to every foreign-owned Indian entity from day one.

What counts as an intercompany transaction subject to transfer pricing:

  • Software development or IT services recharged to the parent
  • Back-office or BPO services
  • Management fees paid to or received from the parent
  • Software licences or IP licences between the entities
  • Shared service allocations (HR, finance, legal)
  • Intercompany loans
  • Sale or purchase of goods between related parties

Formal requirements when aggregate transactions exceed ₹1 crore:

  • Transfer pricing documentation study (benchmarking analysis)
  • Form 3CEB — signed by a Chartered Accountant — filed annually with the income tax return
  • Master File and Country-by-Country Report (CbCR) for large groups (consolidated revenue above ₹5,500 crore)

⚠ This is the #1 source of tax notices within 12–18 months of setup. Companies that copy their US/UK/European intercompany pricing models without adjusting for Indian TP requirements face tax adjustments, penalties, and double taxation. Get the intercompany model right before you issue the first invoice.

Transfer pricing advisory — how we structure and document it


9. Define IP Ownership Before You Hire Your First Employee

Under Indian copyright law, IP created by an employee belongs to their employer. If your India team is employed by the Indian subsidiary, the subsidiary owns the IP — not the foreign parent. Without the right agreements in place, your parent company may not legally own the code, designs, or research your India team produces.

What you need before hiring:

DocumentWhat it does
IP Assignment Agreement (subsidiary → parent)Assigns all IP created by the subsidiary to the foreign parent. Must be drafted under Indian law and properly executed.
Employee Invention Assignment in employment contractEach employee assigns their IP to the subsidiary as part of the employment terms
Moral rights waiverIndian copyright law gives individual authors non-assignable moral rights. These must be waived in writing by each employee — they cannot be assigned.
Intercompany IP licence (if parent retains IP)If the parent already owns IP and the India subsidiary uses it, a formal licence agreement is required for transfer pricing purposes

You must also decide:

  • Will India be a cost centre (subsidiary charges cost + markup to parent) or a profit centre (subsidiary earns revenue directly)?
  • Where does your revenue sit — in India or in the parent?
  • Does your India subsidiary invoice Indian customers, or does the parent?
  • How will software built in India be licensed to or owned by the parent?

These decisions affect your corporate structure, tax position, FEMA compliance, and transfer pricing model. They are far easier to get right before incorporation than to fix retroactively.


10. The Right Advisor Saves You Years of Problems

Most foreign founders who struggle with India operations didn't choose the wrong entity. They chose the wrong advisor — or fragmented their advisory across four disconnected vendors.

Running a foreign-owned Indian subsidiary involves:

  • Company law (Companies Act, MCA, ROC)
  • Foreign exchange law (FEMA, RBI)
  • Tax (Income Tax, TDS, GST)
  • Transfer pricing
  • Payroll and labour law
  • Statutory audit

When these are managed by different firms — a CA for accounts, a CS for ROC, an HR firm for payroll — critical gaps appear between them. FEMA filings get missed because nobody owns them. Transfer pricing documentation isn't coordinated with the tax return. Payroll and TDS don't reconcile. These gaps are where penalties accumulate.

What to look for in an India advisor:

CriterionWhy it matters
All disciplines in-houseNo coordination gaps between CA, CS, payroll, and FEMA teams
ICAI registered and peer reviewedIndependent quality certification — fewer than 10% of firms qualify
Experience with foreign-owned entities specificallyDomestic CA firms often don't know FEMA, TP, or parent company reporting requirements
Communicates with your parent-country finance team directlyYour CFO needs answers in English, in their format, on their timeline
Proactively notifies you of regulatory changesIndia's rules change frequently — you should hear from your advisor before you hear from the tax department

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to set up a company in India?

Incorporation itself takes 7–12 working days once documents are filed with MCA. However, the apostille process for foreign documents typically adds 1–3 weeks, making the total elapsed time 5–8 weeks from decision to operational bank account.

Do I need to travel to India to set up a company?

No. The entire incorporation process is online. Digital signatures are done via video verification. Bank accounts can be opened remotely. You can receive your Certificate of Incorporation without setting foot in India.

Can my foreign company own 100% of the Indian subsidiary?

Yes, in most sectors. India's FDI policy allows 100% foreign ownership under the automatic route in IT, software, manufacturing, professional services, trading, and back-office operations. No government approval is needed for these sectors.

What is the biggest compliance mistake foreign companies make in India?

Missing the FC-GPR filing deadline. After shares are allotted, companies have 30 days to report the foreign investment to RBI. Many foreign companies are unaware this filing exists. Missing it results in compounding penalties. The second most common mistake is not filing INC-20A within 180 days of incorporation.

Does transfer pricing apply to my Indian subsidiary?

Yes. Every transaction between the Indian subsidiary and the foreign parent must be priced at arm's length. If these exceed ₹1 crore in aggregate, formal transfer pricing documentation and a Form 3CEB signed by a CA is mandatory.

Can I use global HR tools like Deel or Rippling for Indian payroll?

Not for statutory compliance. Global HR platforms do not support India-specific statutory filings such as Form 24Q, PF ECR uploads, ESIC returns, or professional tax. You need a dedicated India payroll and compliance provider.

What is FEMA and why does it matter for my India subsidiary?

FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act) governs all cross-border money flows involving India — how capital comes in, how profits go out, and what must be reported to the RBI. Every foreign-owned Indian subsidiary must comply with FEMA for every inbound and outbound transaction.

Who owns the IP created by my India team?

Under Indian copyright law, IP created by an employee belongs to the employer — the Indian subsidiary, not the foreign parent. You need a properly drafted IP assignment agreement between the Indian subsidiary and the foreign parent, plus a moral rights waiver in each employee's contract.


Ready to get India right from day one?

Speak confidentially with a senior KRPR advisor. We assess your structure, identify the risks, and outline a clear path forward — at no obligation.

Request a senior consultation →

KRPR & Associates  ·  Chartered Accountants  ·  ICAI Reg. No. 139415  ·  Peer Reviewed  ·  Pune, India  ·  Practicing since 2012


About the Author

CA Rohit Lohade is a Chartered Accountant and partner at KRPR & Associates, a Pune-based CA firm specialising in India entry and compliance for foreign-owned companies. He has personally led over 150 foreign subsidiary incorporations and advises global CFOs and founders on FEMA, transfer pricing, and cross-border structuring. KRPR & Associates is an ICAI-registered, peer-reviewed firm practicing since 2012.

Setting up a company in India is one of the smartest long-term decisions a global founder can make — especially if you’re building tech, engineering, product, design, or consulting teams.

But here’s the truth:

India is not “complex.”
India is structured.

The founders who struggle are the ones who don’t understand the rules, the sequencing, or the compliance rhythm.
The founders who succeed treat India like a long-term market — not a one-time paperwork project.

If you’re exploring an India subsidiary, here are the 5 things you absolutely must know before you begin.


1. India Company Setup Isn’t Hard — But It Requires the Right Sequence

Most delays don’t happen because of “Indian bureaucracy.”
They happen because steps are done in the wrong order.

The correct sequence looks like this:

  1. Name reservation + DSCs (Digital Signatures for Directors)

  2. SPICe+ incorporation filing (Indian equivalent of Articles of Incorporation)

  3. PAN + TAN allotment

  4. Bank account opening

  5. FDI compliance (FC-GPR filing) under RBI rules

Foreign founders often start with:

  • opening a bank account too early

  • trying to hire before the company is created

  • assuming US/UK company documents will be accepted

  • using contractor agreements not valid under Indian law

This causes weeks of delay — unnecessarily.

With the right sequencing, incorporation takes 7–12 working days.


2. India’s Payroll & Compliance System Is Not Like the US or Europe

This is the biggest surprise for foreign founders:

Payroll = compliance in India.

When you hire your first employee, you automatically enter several statutory systems:

  • PF (Provident Fund) → retirement benefit

  • ESIC → employee insurance

  • Professional Tax → state-specific

  • TDS on salary → tax deducted at source

  • Shops & Establishment → state registration

  • Gratuity eligibility after 5 years

Your HR software (Rippling, Gusto, Deel, Oyster, Remote) will not manage these.
Most global platforms do not support:

  • Form 24Q

  • LWF

  • Statutory registers

  • India tax projections

  • Reimbursements under Section 10

  • Leave encashment rules

  • Full & Final settlements

This misunderstanding leads to:

  • incorrect payslips

  • statutory notices

  • mismatched filings

  • unhappy employees

Plan payroll upfront. Don’t treat it as an afterthought.


3. Intercompany Transactions Must Follow BOTH FEMA and Transfer Pricing (This Is Where Founders Slip)

This is the most misunderstood part of running a foreign-owned Indian subsidiary.

Your India subsidiary cannot simply “send invoices” or “transfer money” to the parent company.

Every transaction must comply with:

A. FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act)

Controls:

  • inbound funding

  • outbound payments

  • reporting timelines

  • documentation for cross-border services

B. Transfer Pricing (Income Tax Act)

Controls:

  • intercompany mark-ups

  • salary recharge models

  • cost allocations

  • benchmarking

  • Form 3CEB

  • Master File & CbCR (if applicable)

Many founders copy their US/UK/European pricing models, and this leads to:

  • tax adjustments

  • FEMA violations

  • double taxation

This is the #1 place where companies get notices within 12–18 months.

Get your intercompany model right from day one — it affects everything.


4. Think Beyond Incorporation: You Must Define Ownership, IP, and Business Model

Most blogs talk only about filing forms.

But incorporation isn’t the point.
Your operating design is.

Before you hire your first Indian employee, you must decide:

A. Who owns the IP?

Parent or subsidiary?
If unclear, your customer contracts, patents, and codebase are exposed.

B. Where does revenue sit?

India subsidiary?
Or parent company?

Hiring in India does NOT mean revenue must be booked in India.

C. How will employees sign NDAs, invention assignment, and confidentiality?

US/EU templates are usually invalid in India.

D. Will India be a cost center or profit center?

This affects:

  • Transfer pricing mark-up

  • GST

  • Tax structure

  • Future audits

This thinking must be done BEFORE incorporation — not after.


5. Choosing the Right India Advisor Matters More Than Choosing the Right Entity

Most foreign founders choose the wrong advisor and then blame “India being slow.”

Red flags:

  • A consultant who only does incorporation, not monthly compliance

  • No clarity on RBI reporting (FC-GPR / FLA)

  • No experience with foreign-owned companies

  • No payroll expertise

  • No transfer pricing team

  • No intercompany structuring capability

A foreign subsidiary needs:

  • Accounting

  • Payroll

  • GST

  • TDS

  • Year-end financials

  • Statutory audit

  • Secretarial (ROC) filings

  • FDI compliance

  • Transfer Pricing

You need one team managing everything.
Not four disconnected vendors.


Conclusion: India Rewards Prepared Founders

India is one of the best places in the world to:

  • build engineering and product teams

  • expand operations

  • access world-class talent

  • establish long-term global capability centers

But like any regulated market, success depends on:

✔ the right sequence
✔ the right structure
✔ the right payroll model
✔ the right intercompany design
✔ the right advisory partner

When done correctly, an India subsidiary is:

  • fast to set up

  • easy to maintain

  • scalable

  • fully compliant

  • highly cost-effective


Want to set up your India subsidiary the right way?

Download our India Entry Guide for Foreign Founders (PDF).

Or book a free consultation at: krprassociates.com/contact

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