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.
Table of Contents
Toggle1. 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:
Name reservation + DSCs (Digital Signatures for Directors)
SPICe+ incorporation filing (Indian equivalent of Articles of Incorporation)
PAN + TAN allotment
Bank account opening
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