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Branch vs subsidiary India tax

Branch vs Subsidiary in India, Which Is Better for Tax and Cross‑border Planning (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Updated to reflect India Income‑Tax Act (2025) and OECD Pillar Two guidance, 21 June 2026

Every foreign company entering or expanding in India faces a threshold decision: operate through a branch office (an extension of the parent entity) or incorporate an Indian subsidiary (a separate domestic company). The branch vs subsidiary India tax question determines headline tax rates, repatriation costs, parent‑company liability, and, since 2025, exposure to OECD Pillar Two top‑up charges. This guide delivers a lawyer‑led, dimension‑by‑dimension comparison so that CFOs, in‑house tax leaders, and founders can identify which structure is better for their specific facts before engaging counsel.

What Is a Branch Office in India? Legal Status, Activities, and Fit

Legal status and approval requirements (RBI / FEMA)

A branch office in India is not a separate legal entity. It is a direct extension of the foreign parent company, operating under the parent’s name and legal personality. Establishment requires prior approval from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA). The application is filed with the RBI’s Foreign Investment Division, and approval is granted subject to the parent company demonstrating a track record of profitability and a minimum net worth. The parent bears full, unlimited liability for every obligation the branch incurs in India.

Typical permitted activities and commercial fit

RBI permits branch offices to carry on a defined set of activities. These typically include export and import of goods, rendering professional or consultancy services, undertaking research, promoting technical or financial collaboration, acting as a buying or selling agent, providing IT or software development services, and supporting the parent company’s product technical requirements. Manufacturing is generally not permitted through a branch unless expressly authorised. A branch office is best suited to short‑ to medium‑term engagements: project‑based delivery, contract execution, technical support, or representative functions where the foreign parent wants operational presence without committing to full incorporation.

Practical pros and cons

  • Advantages. Faster initial setup for permitted activities; no minimum capital requirement beyond what RBI mandates for the specific activity; easier to wind down once a project concludes; profits attributable to the branch can be repatriated after Indian tax.
  • Disadvantages. Activity restrictions limit commercial flexibility; parent is directly liable for all branch obligations; taxed at the higher rate applicable to foreign companies under the Income‑Tax Act; transfer‑pricing scrutiny on profit attribution is intensive; cannot access domestic‑company tax incentives or lower rates under Section 115BAA/115BAB.

For a detailed look at how branch taxation works (rates, attribution, and withholding), see the tax implications analysis below.

What Is an Indian Subsidiary? Legal Status, Governance, and Fit

Legal status and corporate governance (MCA rules)

An Indian subsidiary is a separately incorporated company, almost always a private limited company, registered with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) under the Companies Act, 2013. It has its own legal personality, its own board of directors (at least two, with at least one resident in India), and its own assets and liabilities. The foreign parent holds the shares (up to 100 % in most sectors, subject to FDI policy) but is not automatically liable for the subsidiary’s debts. A subsidiary must comply with the full range of Indian corporate‑law obligations: annual filings, statutory audits, board meetings, and governance disclosures.

Tax residency and domestic company treatment

Because the subsidiary is incorporated in India, it qualifies as a domestic company for income‑tax purposes. That distinction is critical. Domestic companies can elect the concessional tax regime under Section 115BAA of the Income‑Tax Act (effective rate of approximately 25.17 % including surcharge and cess) or, for new manufacturing companies, Section 115BAB (effective rate of approximately 17.16 %). These rates are materially lower than the 40 % base rate plus surcharge and cess that applies to the Indian income of foreign companies, the rate used for branch profits.

Practical pros and cons

  • Advantages. Access to lower domestic tax rates and incentive regimes; limited liability shields the parent; can carry on any lawful business without RBI activity restrictions; easier to contract, litigate, and enforce locally; can raise capital, hold IP, and employ staff without constraints tied to foreign‑company status.
  • Disadvantages. Higher initial setup cost and longer incorporation timeline (MCA filings typically take four to six weeks); ongoing corporate compliance burden (audit, annual returns, board minutes); profits must be repatriated via dividends or cross‑border payments, each carrying its own withholding tax obligations; unwinding a subsidiary (voluntary liquidation) is more complex and slower than closing a branch.

Branch vs Subsidiary, Which Is Better for Tax? Side‑by‑Side Comparison

The table below is the centrepiece of the branch vs subsidiary India tax decision. Each row isolates a single decision dimension; the columns show how the two structures differ on that dimension. For the quantified tax and cost comparison, see the detailed analysis that follows.

Dimension Branch (extension of foreign parent) Subsidiary (Indian company)
Legal status No separate legal personality; part of foreign parent; parent directly liable Separate Indian legal person; limited liability for parent (subject to corporate‑veil rules)
Permitted activities RBI/FEMA approval required; activities restricted to defined categories Broad commercial activities after MCA incorporation; standard company law applies
Headline tax rate Foreign‑company rate: 40 % base plus applicable surcharge and 4 % cess Domestic‑company rate: 22 % base under Section 115BAA (or 15 % under 115BAB for new manufacturing); plus surcharge and cess
Effective tax (qualitative) Higher headline rate; attribution disputes can increase effective burden Lower headline rate; incentive regimes available; effective rate approximately 25.17 % under 115BAA
Repatriation / withholding Branch profits repatriated as income of the foreign company; cross‑border payments subject to WHT; no separate dividend channel Profits repatriated via dividends (WHT on dividends applies), royalties, or service fees, each with its own WHT rate
Pillar Two exposure Branch profits included in parent‑jurisdiction computation; IIR/UTPR top‑up risk depends on group effective rate Subsidiary taxed domestically; top‑up applies if jurisdictional effective rate falls below 15 % minimum
Compliance burden Parent‑country filings plus Indian tax return, TP documentation, and RBI annual reports; intensive attribution scrutiny Indian statutory audit, MCA annual return, income‑tax return, TP documentation, GST, predictable but administrative
Liability exposure Parent’s global assets at risk for branch obligations Generally limited to subsidiary’s assets; parent exposed only via guarantees or veil‑piercing
Setup cost and timing Variable; RBI approval can take 4–12 weeks; lower initial capital outlay MCA incorporation typically 4–6 weeks; higher upfront cost (registration, DIN, DSC, compliance setup)
Ease of exit Relatively simpler: close branch, settle liabilities, notify RBI Voluntary liquidation under Companies Act or NCLT; slower and costlier

Three points stand out from this cost comparison:

  • The tax‑rate gap is large. A branch faces an effective income‑tax rate roughly 15–18 percentage points higher than a subsidiary electing Section 115BAA, a difference that compounds for any operation generating sustained profits in India.
  • Liability isolation favours the subsidiary. Where the Indian operation involves local contracts, employment, or regulatory exposure, a subsidiary limits the parent’s downside to its equity investment. A branch exposes the parent’s worldwide assets.
  • Repatriation mechanics differ, not overall cost. A branch repatriates profits directly (no separate dividend tax, but higher headline rate already paid). A subsidiary pays tax at the lower domestic rate and then adds a withholding tax layer on dividends or service payments. The combined rate for a subsidiary still usually comes out lower, but treaty rates matter, consult a specialist for your parent jurisdiction.

Dimension‑by‑Dimension Analysis

Tax implications, rates, repatriation, Pillar Two, and transfer pricing

Tax is the dimension that most often drives the branch vs subsidiary India tax decision. This section unpacks each layer.

Corporate tax and headline rates. Under the Income‑Tax Act, 1961 (as amended through Finance Act 2025), income earned in India by a foreign company, which includes a branch office’s attributable profits, is taxed at a base rate of 40 %. With surcharge (applicable at 2 % where income exceeds ₹1 crore, or 5 % where it exceeds ₹10 crore) and 4 % health and education cess, the effective rate for a branch can range from approximately 41. 60 % to 43. 68 % depending on the quantum of income.

By contrast, a domestic subsidiary electing the concessional regime under Section 115BAA pays tax at a base rate of 22 %, with a flat 10 % surcharge and 4 % cess, yielding an effective rate of approximately 25. 17 %. New manufacturing subsidiaries set up and commencing production before the prescribed deadline can elect Section 115BAB at a 15 % base rate, resulting in an effective rate of approximately 17. 16 %.

Item Branch Subsidiary
Statutory base rate 40 % (foreign company) 22 % (Section 115BAA) or 15 % (Section 115BAB, new manufacturing)
Effective rate (incl. surcharge + cess) ~41.60 % to ~43.68 % ~25.17 % (115BAA) or ~17.16 % (115BAB)
Dividend WHT on repatriation Not applicable, branch remits profits, not dividends; WHT applies on other cross‑border payments 20 % statutory (Section 195 / 196D); reduced under applicable DTAA (e.g., 10–15 % under many treaties)
WHT on royalties / FTS to parent 10 % statutory (Section 115A); treaty rate may be lower 10 % statutory (Section 115A); treaty rate may be lower
Setup cost (indicative) ₹2–5 lakh (legal, RBI filing, compliance) ₹3–8 lakh (MCA registration, DIN/DSC, legal, initial compliance)
Annual compliance cost (indicative) ₹3–6 lakh (tax return, TP documentation, RBI reporting) ₹4–10 lakh (statutory audit, tax return, MCA filings, TP documentation, GST)

Repatriation and withholding. India does not levy a separate “branch profits tax” in the manner of, say, the United States. However, any cross‑border payment from a branch, whether characterised as service fees, royalties, or interest, triggers withholding under Section 195 at the rate prescribed by the Act or the relevant Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA), whichever is lower. For a subsidiary, the primary repatriation channel is dividends. Dividends paid to a non‑resident shareholder attract a statutory withholding rate of 20 %, but most DTAAs reduce this to 10–15 %.

The total Indian tax on repatriated profits, combining corporate tax and repatriation tax, therefore looks roughly like this: for a branch, approximately 41–44 % (all‑in, since the branch’s profits are taxed once at the foreign‑company rate); for a subsidiary, approximately 25. 17 % corporate tax plus 10–15 % dividend WHT on the after‑tax amount, yielding a combined effective burden in the range of 32–36 %, depending on the treaty. The subsidiary route typically results in a lower total repatriation tax cost.

Pillar Two interactions. Under the OECD’s Pillar Two Global Anti‑Base Erosion (GloBE) rules, multinational groups with consolidated revenue of €750 million or above must ensure that income in each jurisdiction is taxed at an effective rate of at least 15 %. For a branch, the attributable profits are included in the parent jurisdiction’s computation. If the parent jurisdiction applies the Income Inclusion Rule (IIR), and if the Indian branch’s effective tax rate (after GloBE adjustments) already exceeds 15 %, which the 41–44 % range clearly does, no top‑up is triggered by Indian operations. For a subsidiary taxed at approximately 25 %, the same conclusion holds: the domestic rate comfortably exceeds the 15 % floor.

Industry observers expect the Pillar Two calculus to affect the branch vs subsidiary choice only where the Indian entity benefits from significant tax holidays or incentive deductions that push the GloBE effective rate below 15 %. In most standard scenarios (services, trading, manufacturing under 115BAA/115BAB), both structures clear the Pillar Two threshold, but the subsidiary does so at a much lower headline cost.

Transfer pricing and profit attribution. A branch’s taxable profit is determined by attributing income to its Indian permanent establishment under the arm’s‑length standard. This requires detailed functional and factual analysis, benchmarking studies, and compliance with Section 92 and related rules. Transfer‑pricing disputes on attribution are common, and adjustments by the Transfer Pricing Officer can significantly increase the effective tax. A subsidiary faces transfer‑pricing scrutiny on intercompany transactions with its parent, but the entity boundary is cleaner: the subsidiary’s accounts are self‑contained, reducing attribution ambiguity. Both structures require contemporaneous TP documentation and Country‑by‑Country Reporting (CbCR) for qualifying groups.

Liability and enforceability

A branch carries the foreign parent’s full liability exposure in India. Creditors, employees, and counterparties can pursue claims against the parent’s global assets. Court judgments against the branch are, in law, judgments against the parent. By contrast, a subsidiary’s liability is ordinarily confined to the subsidiary’s own assets. Courts will pierce the corporate veil only in exceptional circumstances, fraud, sham arrangements, or statutory provisions that impose personal liability on directors. For operations involving material contracts, employment of large teams, or regulatory risk (environmental, labour, consumer), the subsidiary’s liability shield is a decisive advantage. Enforceability of contracts entered by a subsidiary is straightforward: the subsidiary is a domestic entity amenable to Indian courts.

A branch’s foreign status can complicate enforcement and increase litigation costs. For broader context on enforceability of corporate agreements, see our analysis of shareholders’ agreements in India.

Timing and regulatory burden

Setting up a branch requires RBI approval, which can take eight to twelve weeks (or longer for sensitive sectors). The branch must also register with the Registrar of Companies, obtain a PAN and TAN, and open an Indian bank account in the branch’s name. A subsidiary follows the standard MCA incorporation route: obtaining Director Identification Numbers (DINs), Digital Signature Certificates (DSCs), name approval, and filing the SPICe+ incorporation form. Timeline: typically four to six weeks. Both structures need GST registration if they supply taxable goods or services. Ongoing, the subsidiary’s compliance calendar is more structured, annual audits, MCA annual returns, board meetings, but the branch’s RBI annual activity certificate, TP attribution analysis, and foreign‑company tax return can be equally time‑consuming.

Dispute and enforcement considerations

If the Indian operation becomes party to a dispute, a subsidiary can be sued and can sue in Indian courts or through arbitration as a domestic party. Service of process, interim relief, and execution of decrees are straightforward. A branch, being part of a foreign entity, may face procedural complications, service of foreign‑company process rules, potential forum challenges, and the risk that Indian court orders must be enforced against overseas assets. In insolvency, a branch’s assets in India form part of the foreign parent’s estate and are potentially subject to competing claims from creditors worldwide.

A subsidiary’s insolvency is resolved under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016, with claims limited to the subsidiary’s own assets, a cleaner and more predictable process.

What Changed in 2026: Pillar Two and the Income‑Tax Act 2025 Amendments

Three regulatory developments have shifted the branch vs subsidiary India tax calculus since 2025:

  1. Pillar Two implementation progress. India’s engagement with the OECD Inclusive Framework has advanced. While India has not yet enacted a domestic Qualified Domestic Minimum Top‑up Tax (QDMTT), several parent jurisdictions of India‑investing groups, including EU member states, the UK, South Korea, and Japan, have brought IIR and UTPR rules into effect. The practical consequence: for groups headquartered in IIR‑adopting countries, any Indian branch or subsidiary whose GloBE effective tax rate falls below 15 % could trigger a top‑up in the parent jurisdiction. As noted above, both structures normally exceed that threshold, but incentive‑heavy or loss‑making entities should model the GloBE effective rate carefully.
  2. Income‑Tax Act 2025 amendments. The Finance Act 2025 tightened anti‑avoidance provisions around branch profit attribution and introduced enhanced documentation requirements for foreign companies. CBDT has also issued guidance reinforcing the applicability of the General Anti‑Avoidance Rules (GAAR) to arrangements designed primarily to exploit the branch structure for tax arbitrage. These changes increase the compliance burden and audit risk for branches relative to subsidiaries.
  3. Expanded withholding and reporting obligations. Post‑2025, payers making cross‑border remittances are subject to stricter TCS/TDS obligations and electronic reporting. While this affects both structures, branches, which route all payments through the parent, face higher volumes of withholding‑related compliance than subsidiaries, which can manage domestic payables independently.

The net effect: the advantages of the subsidiary structure, lower effective rates, cleaner compliance, liability isolation, have widened. The branch remains viable for specific, time‑limited use cases, but the tax and regulatory environment in 2026 favours the subsidiary for most foreign investors planning a sustained Indian presence.

Decision Framework: When to Choose a Branch or a Subsidiary

The right structure depends on your commercial facts. Use the framework below to match your priorities to the better option.

If your priority is… Choose
Lower effective tax rate on Indian profits Subsidiary
Limited liability / protecting global assets Subsidiary
Short‑term project (under 2 years) Branch
Manufacturing operations Subsidiary (required for most manufacturing; eligible for 115BAB)
Quick entry with minimal capital commitment Branch
Full commercial flexibility (contracts, IP, employment) Subsidiary
Easy wind‑down / exit after project completion Branch
Access to domestic tax incentives / special zones Subsidiary
Minimising Pillar Two top‑up risk at group level Either (both exceed 15 % floor in most cases); subsidiary gives more control over GloBE effective rate
Local fundraising / joint‑venture partner Subsidiary

Choose a branch when:

  • The operation is time‑limited (under two years) and falls within RBI‑permitted activities.
  • Revenue will be modest and you want to avoid the fixed cost of Indian corporate compliance.
  • The parent needs direct operational control without a separate board structure.
  • You plan to exit India after delivering a single contract or project.

Choose a subsidiary when:

  • You plan sustained Indian operations generating recurring revenue.
  • Effective tax minimisation is a priority, the domestic‑company rate is materially lower.
  • The operation will involve material contracts, local hiring, or regulatory exposure where liability isolation matters.
  • You intend to manufacture, hold IP, or build a joint venture.
  • Repatriation planning via dividends at treaty‑reduced rates is more cost‑efficient than the all‑in branch rate.
  • The parent group is subject to Pillar Two and wants a cleaner jurisdictional computation for GloBE reporting.

Worked example. A US‑headquartered SaaS company expects ₹50 crore in annual Indian revenue and a 20 % pre‑tax margin. Through a branch, income tax on ₹10 crore profit would be approximately ₹4.37 crore (at ~43.68 %). Through a subsidiary under Section 115BAA, tax would be approximately ₹2.52 crore (at ~25.17 %), plus dividend WHT at the India‑US DTAA rate of 15 % on the after‑tax profit (approximately ₹1.12 crore), for a combined outflow of approximately ₹3.64 crore. The subsidiary saves roughly ₹73 lakh per year, a difference that grows with revenue.

When to Engage a Lawyer for the Branch vs Subsidiary India Tax Decision

The branch vs subsidiary choice is often straightforward in concept but complex in execution. Engage experienced tax counsel when:

  • Expected annual Indian revenue exceeds ₹5 crore, at this scale, the rate differential between structures translates to material rupee savings that justify modelling costs.
  • The operation involves IP licensing, inter‑company financing, or royalty flows, transfer‑pricing structuring and DTAA optimisation require bespoke analysis.
  • You are part of a group subject to OECD Pillar Two, GloBE effective‑rate calculations need integration with the India entity’s structure and available incentives.
  • Manufacturing is planned, eligibility for the 115BAB rate (approximately 17.16 %) requires careful setup within prescribed timelines; errors are irreversible.
  • You are converting an existing branch to a subsidiary (or vice versa), the conversion triggers potential capital‑gains exposure, FEMA compliance steps, and CBDT procedural requirements that must be managed concurrently.

A qualified tax lawyer will deliver a customised tax model, draft or review entity‑formation documents, plan filings and regulatory approvals, and prepare a risk memorandum specific to your jurisdiction pair and commercial facts.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Tushar Jarwal at DMD Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Income‑Tax Act, 1961, Official Text and Finance Act Amendments (Income Tax India)
  2. Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), Acts, Rules and Notifications
  3. OECD, BEPS Inclusive Framework / Pillar Two Model Rules and Implementation Guidance
  4. Taxmann, Branch Office, Liaison Office or Wholly Owned Subsidiary in India (Expert Opinion)
  5. PwC Tax Summaries, Branch Income and Corporate Tax Rates
  6. India Briefing, Company Establishment: Branch Office vs Subsidiary in India
  7. Reserve Bank of India (RBI), FEMA Regulations and Foreign Office Notifications
  8. Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), Company Incorporation and Compliance
  9. Global Law Experts, OECD Pillar Two and India
  10. Saffery, Branch vs Subsidiary: What Are the Differences?

FAQs

What is the difference between a subsidiary and a branch?
A subsidiary is a separate Indian company with its own legal personality and limited liability. A branch is an extension of the foreign parent, not a distinct legal entity, and the parent bears unlimited liability for branch obligations.
A branch is taxed as a foreign company under the Income‑Tax Act at a base rate of 40 % plus applicable surcharge and 4 % cess, resulting in an effective rate of approximately 41.60–43.68 %. Tax is levied on profits attributable to the Indian permanent establishment.
A subsidiary is a separate company incorporated under the Companies Act, 2013. It is a distinct legal person, files its own tax returns, and is treated as a domestic company for Indian income‑tax purposes, unlike a branch, which is part of the foreign parent.
India does not impose a standalone “branch profits tax.” Instead, the branch’s attributable profits are taxed at the higher foreign‑company rate. Withholding tax applies on cross‑border payments (royalties, service fees, interest) from the branch to the parent or related entities.
Prefer a branch for short‑term, defined‑scope projects (under two years), where the activity falls within RBI‑permitted categories, revenue is modest, and you want a simpler exit. For sustained operations, a subsidiary is almost always more tax‑efficient.
Yes, conversion is possible but triggers FEMA compliance, potential capital‑gains charges on asset transfers, and re‑registration with MCA and tax authorities. The process should be planned with specialist counsel to avoid unintended tax liabilities and regulatory delays.
Technically, you can file RBI or MCA applications directly, but the regulatory, tax, and FEMA implications make professional guidance essential, particularly for branches (RBI approval) and for subsidiaries where inter‑company structuring or incentive elections are involved.
Choosing a branch when a subsidiary is more appropriate can result in years of overpaid tax (the rate differential can exceed 15 percentage points), unlimited parent liability, and restricted commercial activities. Restructuring later is possible but costly and time‑consuming.
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Branch vs Subsidiary in India, Which Is Better for Tax and Cross‑border Planning (2026)

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