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How to Incorporate a Company in India (2026), Spice+ Step-by-step, Costs & Timelines

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to incorporate a company in India has become both simpler and more nuanced in 2026, thanks to significant updates to the MCA V3 portal and the introduction of the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026. The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) now channels virtually every new company registration through the SPICe+ integrated form (INC-32), which bundles name reservation, director identification, PAN, TAN and even bank-account opening into a single workflow. Meanwhile, draft Companies (Incorporation) Amendment Rules, 2026, published by MCA via public notice dated 08. 04. 2026, propose further streamlining of KYC, conversion procedures for One Person Companies (OPCs), and rationalisation of certain director-level affidavits.

This guide walks founders, company secretaries and in-house counsel through every stage of the process as it stands in May 2026, with realistic cost estimates, timelines, and a field-level breakdown of the most common MCA V3 errors that trigger rejections.

TL;DR, Quick Answer and Top 5 Actions

  • Choose your structure first. For sole founders with limited fundraising plans, an OPC may suffice; for venture-backed or multi-founder businesses, a Private Limited company remains the standard. The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 is expected to simplify OPC-to-Pvt-Ltd conversions further.
  • File entirely online via SPICe+ on the MCA V3 portal at mca.gov.in. The form integrates name reservation (Part A), incorporation details (Part B), PAN/TAN applications, EPFO/ESIC registration and bank-account opening.
  • Budget realistically. Government fees for company registration in India typically range from INR 2,000 to INR 15,000 depending on authorised capital, with stamp duty varying by state. Professional fees for a Company Secretary or lawyer add INR 5,000–25,000.
  • Expect 7–21 working days from name approval through certificate of incorporation issuance, though MCA V3 processing delays and document-mismatch queries can extend this.
  • Watch the 2026 amendments. The draft Incorporation Amendment Rules propose new E-CON and E-CHNG forms, rationalised KYC requirements and streamlined conversion pathways for OPCs.

Read on for the full, step-by-step guide to how to incorporate a company using SPICe+ on MCA V3.

Should You Form an OPC or a Private Limited Company in 2026?

Before filing a single form, the most consequential decision is structural: should you register as a One Person Company (OPC) under Section 3(1)(c) of the Companies Act, 2013, or as a Private Limited company under Section 3(1)(a)? The choice affects governance obligations, investor access and ongoing compliance costs. Industry observers expect the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, which proposes removing the director’s affidavit requirement for OPC conversion and omitting certain criminal liabilities, to make OPCs more attractive for solo entrepreneurs while preserving Private Limited status as the preferred vehicle for external fundraising.

Feature One Person Company (OPC) Private Limited Company (Pvt Ltd)
Minimum shareholders 1 (natural person, Indian resident or NRI) 2 (up to 200)
Minimum directors 1 2
Investor-friendliness Low, most VCs and angel networks prefer Pvt Ltd High, standard for equity funding rounds
Annual compliance burden Lower (fewer board-meeting requirements), but increasing under 2026 rule changes Higher (statutory audits, quarterly board meetings, annual filings)
2026 Bill impact Simplified conversion to Pvt Ltd; proposed KYC rationalisation and removal of certain director affidavits Minor procedural streamlining; enhanced clarity on beneficial-ownership reporting

Quick Decision Checklist

  • Choose OPC if: you are a sole founder, do not plan to raise external equity in the near term, and want lighter governance.
  • Choose Pvt Ltd if: you have co-founders, plan to seek angel or VC funding, or need the credibility of a standard limited-liability corporate structure for contracts and licensing.
  • Consider LLP as an alternative if: your business model is service-led (consulting, professional services) and you want pass-through taxation with limited compliance, but note that LLPs cannot issue equity shares and have different fundraising constraints.

Overview of the SPICe+ Form and MCA V3, What Changed in 2026

The SPICe+ form (Simplified Proforma for Incorporating Company Electronically Plus) is the single integrated form mandated by MCA for online company registration in India. It replaced the earlier SPICe form and consolidates what previously required multiple separate applications. All filings are made through the MCA V3 portal, the third-generation digital platform operated by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs.

What Is SPICe+ Part A?

Part A of the SPICe+ form handles name reservation. You may propose up to two names for your company, and the Registrar of Companies (ROC) evaluates availability against existing company names, trademarks and naming guidelines. Alternatively, applicants can use the RUN (Reserve Unique Name) service separately, but SPICe+ Part A integrates this step into the incorporation flow. A reserved name remains valid for 20 days from the date of approval.

What Is SPICe+ Part B?

Part B is the substantive incorporation application. It captures director and subscriber details, registered-office address, authorised and paid-up capital, objects of the company (linked to the Memorandum of Association), and declarations under the Companies Act. Part B also generates linked applications for PAN (via CBDT/NSDL), TAN (via CBDT), EPFO and ESIC registration, GST provisional ID, and a bank-account opening request through selected partner banks, making it the single point of entry for a new company’s regulatory identity.

What Changed on MCA V3 in 2026

The draft Companies (Incorporation) Amendment Rules, 2026, published by MCA via public notice dated 08.04.2026, propose several changes that directly affect SPICe+ filings. According to practitioner analysis, the key proposed changes include rationalised KYC requirements to reduce redundant identity-verification steps, introduction of new E-CON and E-CHNG electronic forms for post-incorporation changes, streamlined conversion procedures for OPCs, and modifications to director-appointment and consent-filing requirements. These amendments are aimed at reducing the compliance burden on stakeholders and furthering the ease-of-doing-business objectives. As of May 2026, some of these changes remain in draft form and await final notification; applicants should confirm the current rules on the MCA portal before filing.

Step-by-Step: How to Incorporate a Company Using SPICe+ on MCA V3

The following walkthrough reflects the filing process on the MCA V3 portal as of May 2026. Each step must be completed sequentially; the portal enforces dependencies between stages.

Step 1, Obtain Digital Signature Certificates (DSC)

Every proposed director and subscriber must hold a valid Class 3 Digital Signature Certificate issued by a Certifying Authority recognised by the Controller of Certifying Authorities (CCA). DSCs are required to digitally sign the SPICe+ form, the Memorandum of Association (MoA) and the Articles of Association (AoA). DSCs can be obtained from licensed providers and typically take one to three working days.

Step 2, Create a Business User Account on MCA V3

The applicant (usually a practising Company Secretary, Chartered Accountant or Advocate) must register a business-user account on the MCA V3 portal. Each director must also have an individual user account. Ensure the names and identity details on the MCA account match the identity documents exactly, mismatches are among the most common causes of SPICe+ rejection.

Step 3, Reserve the Company Name (SPICe+ Part A)

Log in to the MCA V3 portal and initiate a new SPICe+ filing. In Part A, propose up to two names. The name must comply with the Companies (Incorporation) Rules, it must not be identical or too similar to existing companies or trademarks, must not contain prohibited words without prior Central Government approval, and must include the appropriate suffix (“Private Limited” for a Pvt Ltd, “OPC Private Limited” for an OPC). ROC typically processes name approvals within two to four working days.

Step 4, Complete SPICe+ Part B (Company and Director Details)

Once the name is approved, complete Part B with the following information:

  • Company details: type of company (OPC/Pvt Ltd/public), authorised share capital, paid-up capital, main division and description of objects
  • Registered office address: full address with PIN code, proof of address (utility bill not older than two months or property-tax receipt), and NOC from the premises owner if rented
  • Director details: DIN (Director Identification Number) for existing directors, or request DIN allotment through SPICe+ for first-time directors; personal details must match identity proof exactly
  • Subscriber details: shareholding pattern, subscriber names matching MoA, and subscriber proof of identity and address

Step 5, Prepare and Attach Mandatory Documents

The following attachments must accompany Part B in the prescribed formats:

Document Purpose Format Notes
MoA (INC-33) Objects and subscriber details Must be digitally signed by all subscribers and a witness
AoA (INC-34) Internal governance rules Digitally signed by all subscribers and a witness
Declaration by first directors/subscribers (INC-9) Confirms no disqualification under Companies Act Signed individually by each director
Consent to act as director (DIR-2) Each proposed director’s written consent Attach identity proof (PAN card mandatory; passport for foreign nationals)
Proof of registered office Confirms physical address Utility bill (≤2 months old) or property-tax receipt; plus NOC and rent agreement if applicable
AGILE-PRO-S Linked form for GST, EPFO/ESIC and bank-account opening Auto-populated fields; verify details before submission

Step 6, Pay Filing Fees and Stamp Duty

Fees are calculated automatically by the MCA V3 portal based on the authorised capital declared in Part B. Stamp duty must be paid electronically via the portal or through state-specific e-stamp mechanisms. Payment confirmation is required before final submission.

Step 7, Submit and Await ROC Processing

After submission, the ROC reviews the application. If all documents are in order, the ROC issues a Certificate of Incorporation bearing the Corporate Identification Number (CIN). PAN and TAN are allotted automatically through the integrated SPICe+ workflow and communicated via email. If the ROC raises a query or issues a resubmission notice, the applicant must respond within the stipulated window, typically seven days, or the application may lapse.

Common MCA V3 Errors and SPICe+ Pitfalls

Rejection rates on the MCA V3 portal remain significant, often due to avoidable mistakes. The following are the most frequently reported errors based on practitioner experience:

  • Name mismatch between documents. The director’s name on the PAN card, DSC and SPICe+ form must be character-for-character identical. Even minor discrepancies (initials vs. full name, middle name present on one document but absent on another) trigger rejection.
  • Incorrect or expired DSC. Using a Class 2 DSC instead of Class 3, or a DSC that has expired or is registered to a different PAN, will cause the form to fail validation.
  • Invalid PIN code for registered office. The PIN code must correspond to the ROC jurisdiction selected. A mismatch, common when companies use virtual-office addresses, results in automatic rejection.
  • Incorrect capital block entries. Authorised capital and paid-up capital fields must be internally consistent. Declaring paid-up capital exceeding authorised capital, or mismatched share-value calculations, will be flagged.
  • Improper attachment naming or size. Each document must be uploaded in the specified format (typically PDF, within size limits). Non-compliant file names or oversized uploads cause system-level errors.
  • Declaration text errors. The declaration in INC-9 must use the exact statutory wording. Paraphrased or abbreviated declarations are routinely rejected.

A detailed field-by-field SPICe+ checklist covering these issues and more can help minimise resubmissions. Practitioners working through how to incorporate a company on MCA V3 should build a pre-submission audit into their workflow.

Company Incorporation Cost in India, Fees, Stamp Duty and Realistic Timelines

The total company incorporation cost in India depends on authorised capital, state of registration and whether professional assistance is engaged. The table below provides indicative ranges as of May 2026.

Cost Component Typical Range (INR) Notes
ROC filing fees (SPICe+) 2,000–15,000 Banded by authorised capital (e.g., INR 1 lakh capital attracts lower fees; INR 10 lakh+ attracts higher)
Name reservation fee 1,000 Included in SPICe+ Part A; separate RUN application also INR 1,000
Stamp duty (MoA + AoA) 1,000–15,000+ Varies by state, Maharashtra, Karnataka and Delhi tend higher; some states offer e-stamp via MCA portal
DSC (per director) 800–2,500 Class 3 DSC; validity 1–3 years depending on provider
DIN application (if new) 500 Allotted free for first-time directors via SPICe+ in many cases
Professional fees (CS/CA/Lawyer) 5,000–25,000 Depends on complexity, number of directors, NRI involvement

Realistic Timelines (2026)

  • Name approval (Part A): 2–4 working days
  • Incorporation certificate (Part B processing): 5–15 working days after Part A approval
  • PAN and TAN issuance: typically auto-generated within 2–3 days of CIN issuance
  • Total end-to-end: 7–21 working days under normal circumstances

Delays commonly arise from ROC queries on document mismatches, peak filing periods (financial year-end), and intermittent MCA V3 portal downtime. Applicants should factor in an additional one to two weeks as buffer for any resubmission cycle.

Post-Incorporation Compliance Checklist, First 30, 90 and 365 Days

Receiving the Certificate of Incorporation is not the finish line. Indian corporate law imposes a series of post-incorporation obligations that must be completed within strict deadlines to avoid penalties.

Within 30 Days

  • Open a current bank account using the CIN, PAN and Certificate of Incorporation. AGILE-PRO-S facilitates this through partner banks, but a physical visit is usually required for final activation and KYC verification.
  • Deposit paid-up capital into the company’s bank account. Subscriber shares must be paid for as declared in the SPICe+ application.
  • Issue share certificates to all subscribers within 60 days of incorporation under Section 56(4) of the Companies Act, 2013.
  • File INC-20A (Declaration for Commencement of Business) if the company has share capital. This filing confirms that subscribers have paid the value of shares agreed to be taken and that the registered office is verified. Failure to file within 180 days can trigger penalties and, in extreme cases, striking off.

Within 90 Days

  • Hold the first Board meeting within 30 days of incorporation. Subsequent board meetings must occur at least four times per calendar year for a Pvt Ltd (with a gap of not more than 120 days between two meetings).
  • Register for GST if turnover thresholds are met or if conducting inter-state supply of goods or services.
  • Register under EPFO and ESIC if hiring employees (EPFO is mandatory for establishments with 20 or more employees; ESIC applies where employee wages are below the prescribed ceiling).
  • Set up statutory registers: Register of Members, Register of Directors and KMP, Register of Charges and Minutes Book.

Within 365 Days, Annual Compliance Calendar

  • Appoint a statutory auditor within 30 days of incorporation and file ADT-1 within 15 days of the appointment.
  • File Annual Return (MGT-7/MGT-7A) within 60 days of the Annual General Meeting.
  • File financial statements (AOC-4) within 30 days of the AGM.
  • Hold the first AGM within nine months from the close of the first financial year (or 18 months from incorporation, whichever is earlier).
  • File DIR-3 KYC annually for every director holding a DIN, before 30 September.

Founders unfamiliar with ongoing statutory compliance should engage a qualified Company Secretary or find corporate lawyers in India through a trusted directory to establish a compliance calendar from day one.

Troubleshooting and Conversion, Common Scenarios

SPICe+ Rejection: How to Correct and Resubmit

If the ROC rejects or raises a query on a SPICe+ submission, the rejection reason is communicated via the MCA V3 portal (applicant mailbox). Common corrective steps include re-uploading documents with corrected names, replacing expired DSCs, and re-verifying the registered-office PIN code against the ROC jurisdiction. Maintain version-controlled copies of all documents, ROC scrutiny can reference specific attachment discrepancies, and having a clear audit trail accelerates resubmission.

Converting an OPC to a Private Limited Company

Under the current Companies Act framework, an OPC can voluntarily convert into a Private Limited company by passing a special resolution, increasing the number of members and directors to the statutory minimum, and filing the prescribed conversion forms with the ROC. The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 proposes simplifying this process by removing the mandatory director affidavit for conversion and streamlining the OPC-specific compliance that previously accompanied the switch. If enacted, the likely practical effect will be faster, lower-cost conversions, making it more feasible for solo founders to start as an OPC and scale into a Pvt Ltd as the business grows.

For repeated rejections, complex multi-jurisdictional structures, or NRI-promoted companies with foreign-address complications, professional legal assistance is strongly recommended.

Conclusion, Making the Incorporation Process Work in 2026

Knowing how to incorporate a company in India in 2026 means navigating a system that is simultaneously more integrated and more demanding than in previous years. The SPICe+ form on MCA V3 consolidates what once required multiple applications into a single workflow, but this integration also means that a single field-level error can stall the entire process. Founders and their advisers should invest time upfront in document preparation, ensure character-for-character consistency across identity documents, and build a realistic timeline that accounts for potential ROC queries.

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 signals the government’s continued push toward ease of doing business, and early indications suggest that several of the proposed simplifications, particularly around OPC conversions and KYC rationalisation, will meaningfully reduce incorporation friction once enacted. Until then, diligent compliance with the current rules, combined with proactive engagement with qualified legal counsel, remains the most reliable path to a smooth company registration in India.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shuva Mandal at Anagram Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), SPICe+ Portal
  2. PRS Legislative Research, Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026
  3. Vinod Kothari Consultants, MCA Proposes Simplified Incorporation Rules (2026)
  4. Mondaq, MCA Issues Draft Companies (Incorporation) Amendment Rules 2026
  5. ClearTax, Company Registration in India
  6. IndiaFilings, Private Limited Company Registration
  7. Investopedia, Incorporation Explained

FAQs

How much does it cost to incorporate a company in India?
Total costs typically range from INR 10,000 to INR 50,000, comprising ROC filing fees (INR 2,000–15,000 based on authorised capital), stamp duty (varies by state), DSC costs (INR 800–2,500 per director) and professional fees (INR 5,000–25,000). The MCA fee schedule, available on the MCA portal, provides the official fee bands.
An OPC suits sole entrepreneurs with limited fundraising plans and a preference for lighter governance, while a Private Limited company is preferred for businesses seeking external investment, scalability and structured board governance. The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 is expected to make OPC-to-Pvt-Ltd conversions simpler, giving founders more flexibility to start small and scale up.
Under typical conditions on the MCA V3 portal via SPICe+, the end-to-end process, from name approval through certificate of incorporation and PAN/TAN issuance, takes 7 to 21 working days. Delays occur if the ROC raises document-mismatch queries or during peak filing periods.
Yes. The entire incorporation process is conducted online through SPICe+ on the MCA V3 portal at mca.gov.in. Applicants need valid DSCs, DINs and digitised attachments. Some state stamp-duty payments may require separate electronic payment before filing.
Required documents include proof of identity and address for all directors (PAN card mandatory; passport for foreign nationals), proof of registered-office address (utility bill or property-tax receipt, plus NOC if rented), the Memorandum of Association (INC-33), Articles of Association (INC-34), director consent forms (DIR-2), declaration of non-disqualification (INC-9), and AGILE-PRO-S for linked registrations.
The 2026 Bill and the draft Companies (Incorporation) Amendment Rules propose streamlined incorporation procedures, easier OPC conversion pathways and rationalised KYC requirements. Some provisions remain in draft as of May 2026 and await final notification. Applicants should confirm the current status of these amendments on the MCA portal or through the PRS Legislative Research tracker before filing.
Check the specific rejection reason on the MCA V3 portal mailbox, correct the identified mismatches (names, attachments, DSC validity or declaration wording) and resubmit within the prescribed resubmission window, typically seven days. Maintain versioned documents for an audit trail. If rejections recur, engage a practising Company Secretary or corporate lawyer.
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