KRPR & Associates / EOR vs India Subsidiary — 2026 Guide
EOR vs India Subsidiary — which is right for your company?
Employer of Record (EOR) services like Deel and Remote make it fast and easy to hire in India without setting up a company. But easy has a cost — in fees, control, and IP risk — that compounds as your team grows. Here is a complete, honest comparison to help you decide.
We are not an EOR. We are the firm that helps you set up and run your own India subsidiary — and manage the transition when you're ready to graduate from EOR.
Two very different models of India employment.
Before comparing them, it's worth understanding exactly what each model involves — because they're fundamentally different in how employment, IP, compliance, and control work.
The EOR is the legal employer. You direct the work.
An EOR service (Deel, Remote, Rippling, etc.) creates employment contracts with your India-based staff under their own Indian entity. They handle payroll, PF, taxes, and compliance. You pay the EOR a monthly fee per employee and tell the employees what to work on.
You never incorporate a company. You never deal with Indian regulators directly. It's fast to start — typically 1–2 weeks from decision to first payslip. But you are a client of the EOR, not an employer in India.
Your company is the legal employer. Full ownership and control.
A wholly owned private limited company incorporated under Indian law. Your foreign parent owns 100% of the shares. The Indian subsidiary employs your staff directly under employment contracts you control. You manage payroll, compliance, and IP ownership directly — either in-house or through a firm like KRPR.
Takes 15–20 business days to incorporate. Requires more initial setup — but after that, you own the entity and the cost-per-employee is significantly lower than EOR at any meaningful scale.
The complete comparison — every dimension that matters.
Every company's situation is different. Here are the dimensions that most affect the decision.
| Dimension | India Subsidiary (own entity) | EOR (Deel, Remote, etc.) |
|---|---|---|
| Time to first hire | 6–8 weeks Incorporation + bank + payroll setup |
1–2 weeks EOR already has India entity |
| Legal employer | Your Indian company | The EOR provider |
| IP ownership chain | Clean — subsidiary employs and assigns to parent | Complex — EOR → you. Agreement-dependent. |
| Employment contract control | Full control — custom terms, notice periods, IP clauses | Limited — EOR uses standard templates |
| Cost at 5 employees | Higher initially Setup cost + ongoing compliance |
USD 750–2,000/month EOR fees On top of salaries and statutory costs |
| Cost at 10+ employees | Lower — no per-head markup | USD 1,500–4,000/month in EOR fees alone |
| Invoice Indian clients | Yes — in INR, with GST | No — EOR entity cannot invoice on your behalf |
| Group audit readiness | Clean — your entity, your books | Workable but requires EOR cooperation |
| FEMA / FDI compliance | You manage — with a specialist firm | EOR handles India-side compliance |
| Permanent establishment risk | Well-managed with intercompany agreements | Exists — depends on EOR structure and activities |
| Benefit structure flexibility | Full control — design your own comp structure | Limited to EOR's standard offering |
| Exit / wind-down | More complex — formal winding-up process | Simpler — just end the EOR contract |
| Brand in India | Your company name — on contracts, payslips, filings | EOR company name on all employment documents |
What EOR actually costs at scale.
EOR providers typically charge USD 150–400 per employee per month on top of salary and statutory costs. Here's what that looks like for a team of 10 engineers earning ₹20 lakh CTC each — compared to running your own subsidiary.
Indicative figures based on typical EOR pricing (USD 200–300/employee/month) and standard India compliance costs. USD/INR rate assumed at 84. Actual costs vary by EOR provider, salary levels, and compliance complexity. The EOR premium grows proportionally with headcount.
When EOR makes sense — and when it doesn't.
Both models have legitimate use cases. The mistake is staying on EOR past the point where it serves you.
EOR is the right choice
- You're hiring 1–4 people in India for the first time and want to validate the market before committing to a permanent structure
- Speed is critical — you need someone productive in India within 2 weeks, not 8
- You're not sure whether India will be a long-term location for your team
- The work is not IP-critical — support, operations, or business development roles where IP ownership is not a concern
- You're a pre-revenue startup where the fixed cost of a subsidiary doesn't make sense yet
- You need to hire while your India subsidiary is being incorporated (use EOR as a bridge)
Own entity is the right choice
- You have 5 or more employees in India — or plan to reach that number within 12 months
- Your India team is building proprietary software, conducting research, or creating IP that belongs to your parent company
- You need to invoice Indian customers — EOR cannot invoice on your behalf
- Your parent company's auditors or board require a clean, wholly owned entity on the balance sheet
- You want your brand name on employment contracts, payslips, and statutory filings — not an EOR provider's name
- You need full control over compensation structure, notice periods, and employment terms
- Transfer pricing documentation is required — intercompany agreements are cleaner with your own entity
IP ownership on EOR is more complex than it looks.
For companies building software or conducting research, this is the most important factor in the EOR vs subsidiary decision — and the one most commonly ignored.
Under Indian copyright law, work created by an employee belongs to their employer. On EOR, the legal employer is the EOR provider — not you. The chain of IP ownership runs: developer → EOR → you. That additional step requires contractual assignment at every link to be clean.
EOR agreement may not cover all IP scenarios
Most EOR agreements include a broad IP assignment to you, but the coverage varies. Gaps in the assignment — particularly around moral rights, worldwide scope, and perpetual duration under Indian copyright law — may not be addressed in standard EOR contracts. These are easy to fix in your own employment agreements. They require careful review in EOR contracts.
Moral rights cannot be assigned — only waived
India's copyright law gives individual authors moral rights (the right to claim authorship and object to modifications) that belong to them even if they've assigned copyright. These cannot be assigned — they can only be waived, in writing, irrevocably. Standard EOR employment agreements may not include this waiver.
IP issues surface during due diligence
When you raise funding or sell the company, investors will examine the IP ownership chain. An incomplete EOR-to-company IP assignment discovered during M&A due diligence can delay or derail a transaction. Fixing it retroactively is possible but expensive and time-pressured.
Transitioning from EOR to your own India subsidiary.
The transition is straightforward when managed correctly. It typically takes 6–10 weeks end to end, and your India team experiences no payroll disruption.
We handle the full incorporation — entity structure, SPICe+ filing, name approval, PAN, TAN, and all registrations. The process runs in parallel with your EOR — your team keeps working normally while the new entity is set up.
Once incorporated, the bank account is opened and your parent company remits the initial share capital. We handle the FEMA reporting — FC-GPR filing within the 30-day deadline.
We draft new employment agreements under your Indian subsidiary — including your custom IP assignment, moral rights waiver, notice period, and confidentiality provisions. These are sent to employees for review and signing before the transition date.
We configure the payroll system, register for PF and professional tax, set up the accounting system, and prepare the compliance calendar. First payroll under the new entity is run cleanly — no gaps, no double-payment.
Employees formally end their employment with the EOR and commence employment with your Indian subsidiary on the agreed transition date. PF UANs are transferred, leave balances documented, and all statutory obligations handled cleanly. We coordinate with the EOR to ensure a smooth handover.
From the first month under your subsidiary, we manage the complete compliance calendar — monthly accounting, GST, TDS, payroll, and annual filings. Same team, one engagement letter, full accountability.
EOR vs subsidiary — questions we get asked.
What is the difference between EOR and an India subsidiary?
+When should I stop using EOR and set up an India subsidiary?
+How long does it take to transition from EOR to an India subsidiary?
+Do employees need to resign and rejoin when transitioning from EOR to subsidiary?
+Who owns the IP created by India-based employees on EOR?
+Can I use EOR and a subsidiary at the same time in India?
+Ready to graduate from EOR to your own India entity?
We manage the full transition — incorporation, employment contracts, payroll setup, and ongoing compliance. Schedule a confidential consultation with a senior partner.
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