[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
how to close an indian subsidiary

How to Close an Indian Subsidiary: Strike Off vs Voluntary Liquidation, Form STK-2, RBI/FEMA Filings and Timelines

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last updated: July 3, 2026

Understanding how to close an Indian subsidiary is one of the most procedurally demanding tasks a multinational parent, PE investor, or regional holding company will face in India. The process sits at the intersection of the Companies Act, 2013 (administered by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs), the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (overseen by IBBI), and FEMA/RBI regulations governing overseas direct investment and fund repatriation. This guide delivers a step-by-step compliance roadmap covering both primary exit routes, ROC strike-off under Section 248 and voluntary liquidation under IBC Chapter V, together with the RBI/FEMA/AD-bank reporting obligations that competitors routinely overlook.

Whether the subsidiary is a wholly-owned subsidiary (WOS) or a joint venture (JV), in-house counsel, CFOs and finance leads will find actionable checklists, sample resolutions, timeline benchmarks and a side-by-side decision matrix below.

Quick Legal Background, Companies Act, IBC and FEMA

Before choosing an exit route, decision-makers need to understand the three regulatory pillars that govern subsidiary closure in India.

Strike-off (Section 248, Companies Act, 2013) empowers the Registrar of Companies (ROC) to remove a company’s name from the register. The company itself, or the ROC acting suo motu, may initiate the process, provided statutory conditions are met. The procedural rules are set out in the Companies (Removal of Names of Companies from the Register of Companies) Rules, 2016, which prescribe Forms STK-1 through STK-7.

Voluntary liquidation (IBC, 2016, Chapter V, Section 59) applies when a solvent company wishes to wind up its affairs in an orderly manner, settle creditors, realise assets, and dissolve. The process is governed by the IBBI (Voluntary Liquidation Process) Regulations, which require the appointment of an insolvency professional as liquidator and a formal declaration of solvency by the board.

RBI/FEMA reporting applies whenever the Indian entity (or its overseas parent) holds an overseas direct investment, a JV or WOS. The RBI’s Master Directions on Overseas Direct Investment require the closure or disinvestment to be reported through the Authorised Dealer (AD) Category – I bank via Part IV of the ODI reporting framework.

Key Statutory References

  • Section 248, Companies Act, 2013, Power of Registrar to remove name of company from the register.
  • Companies (Removal of Names) Rules, 2016, Prescribes Forms STK-2 to STK-7, filing procedures and attachments.
  • Section 59, Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016, Voluntary liquidation of corporate persons.
  • IBBI (Voluntary Liquidation Process) Regulations, Detailed process, timelines and liquidator obligations.
  • RBI Master Directions, Overseas Direct Investment, Part IV reporting for closure, disinvestment, write-off and winding up of JV/WOS.

How to Close an Indian Subsidiary by ROC Strike-Off (Section 248), Form STK-2 Process and Eligibility

ROC strike-off is the faster, lower-cost route to close an Indian subsidiary, but eligibility is tightly controlled. The company must apply using Form STK-2 under the Companies (Removal of Names) Rules, 2016. Below is the complete eligibility framework, document checklist, and timeline.

Eligibility to Strike Off a Company in India

A company may apply to the ROC for strike-off if it satisfies the following conditions under Section 248 of the Companies Act, 2013 read with the 2016 Rules:

  • No business or operations. The company has not commenced business or has not carried on any business or operations during the two financial years immediately preceding the application.
  • No pending liabilities. All liabilities of the company have been fully discharged or adequately provided for. The applicant must settle liabilities before strike-off, this includes statutory dues (income tax, GST, PF, ESIC), creditor claims, and intercompany balances.
  • No pending litigations. There should be no ongoing proceedings against the company before any court, tribunal or authority.
  • Regulated entities. Companies regulated by the RBI (NBFCs, housing finance companies), SEBI (listed companies, registered intermediaries), IRDAI (insurers), or other sectoral regulators must obtain a no-objection certificate (NOC) from the relevant regulator before filing STK-2.
  • Government-owned companies. Additional approvals from the central or state government may be required (see the 2020 amendment to Rule 3).

Document Checklist, Form STK-2 Requirements

The Form STK-2 requirements are prescribed in the Companies (Removal of Names) Rules, 2016. The following documents must be attached when filing the application on the MCA portal:

  • Form STK-2, The main application, signed by a director authorised by the board.
  • Form STK-3 / STK-3A, Indemnity bond from every director, in the prescribed format, agreeing to indemnify any person against any liability that may arise even after the company’s name is struck off.
  • Form STK-4, Affidavit from every director, sworn before a magistrate or notary, confirming the company has no pending liabilities, litigations, or regulatory obligations.
  • Statement of accounts. A statement of accounts and solvency, made up to a date not more than thirty days before the date of the application, verified by a chartered accountant.
  • Board resolution. Certified copy of the board resolution authorising the application.
  • Special resolution (where required). If the company’s articles of association require member approval for dissolution, attach a certified copy of the special resolution.
  • NOC from sectoral regulator. For RBI-regulated, SEBI-regulated, IRDAI-regulated or other regulated entities.
  • Copy of the last audited financial statements and the latest income-tax return acknowledgement.

Form STK-2, Field-by-Field Quick Guide

  • Part A, Company particulars. CIN, company name, registered office address, date of incorporation, authorised and paid-up capital.
  • Part B, Application details. Declaration of grounds (Section 248(2), company applying, or Section 248(1), ROC-initiated), date of last AGM held, date to which accounts were last made up.
  • Part C, Attachments. Upload STK-3/STK-3A (indemnity), STK-4 (affidavit), statement of accounts, board resolution, special resolution (if any), NOC (if regulated entity), proof of discharge of liabilities.
  • Part D, Director verification. Digital signature of the authorised director and certification by a practising company secretary or chartered accountant.

Filing Mechanics and the ROC Strike-Off Timeline

Form STK-2 is filed electronically on the MCA V3 portal. Filing fees are nominal, typically based on the authorised capital slab applicable to the company. After filing, the ROC follows a multi-step review and public notice process:

  1. ROC scrutiny (1–3 months). The ROC examines the application, may raise queries or issue a show-cause notice if documentation is incomplete or liabilities appear unresolved.
  2. Public notice (30 days). The ROC publishes a notice on the MCA portal and in the Official Gazette, inviting objections from stakeholders, creditors, and the public within thirty days.
  3. Objection window. If no objections are received within 30 days, the ROC proceeds to strike off the company’s name. If objections are received, the ROC may reject the application or direct the company to address the objections before proceeding.
  4. Strike-off order and publication. The ROC issues a formal order removing the company’s name from the register and publishes a notice of dissolution in the Official Gazette.

The typical end-to-end ROC strike-off timeline is 3–9 months, though complex cases (regulated entities, ROC queries, or creditor objections) can extend this period. Industry observers note that re-submission pitfalls, such as mismatched dates in the statement of accounts or incomplete indemnity bonds, are the most common cause of delays.

Sample Board Resolution for Strike-Off Application

Note: This is a sample template for illustrative purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. Adapt it to the company’s specific circumstances and seek professional guidance.

“RESOLVED THAT pursuant to Section 248(2) of the Companies Act, 2013, read with the Companies (Removal of Names of Companies from the Register of Companies) Rules, 2016, the Board of Directors hereby authorises [Name of Director], Director (DIN: [DIN Number]), to sign, verify and file Form STK-2 with the Registrar of Companies, [Jurisdiction], for removal of the name of the Company from the Register of Companies, and to execute all such documents, indemnities and affidavits as may be required for this purpose.”

Voluntary Liquidation Under IBC, When to Use, Process, Timelines

Voluntary liquidation under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC) is the appropriate route when the company is solvent but has material assets to realise, creditors to settle in an orderly sequence, or when the circumstances do not satisfy the eligibility criteria for a simpler strike-off. Section 59 of the IBC and the IBBI (Voluntary Liquidation Process) Regulations set out the framework.

Eligibility and Conditions

To initiate voluntary liquidation under the IBC, the following conditions must be met:

  • Declaration of solvency. A majority of the directors must make a declaration, verified by an affidavit, that the company has no debt or that it will be able to pay its debts in full from the proceeds of assets to be sold in the liquidation. The declaration must be accompanied by audited financial statements and a report of the valuation of the company’s assets.
  • Special resolution. Within four weeks of the declaration of solvency, the members must pass a special resolution approving the voluntary liquidation and appointing an insolvency professional as the liquidator.
  • Creditor approval (where debts exist). If the company owes debts, a resolution of creditors representing two-thirds in value of the company’s debt must approve the voluntary liquidation.

Step-by-Step Voluntary Liquidation Process

  1. Board resolution and declaration of solvency, Directors pass a board resolution, execute the declaration of solvency with supporting valuations, and set a date for the extraordinary general meeting (EGM).
  2. Special resolution at EGM, Members approve the voluntary liquidation and appoint the insolvency professional (IP) as liquidator within four weeks of the declaration.
  3. Public announcement, The liquidator issues a public announcement within five days of appointment, calling upon stakeholders to submit claims.
  4. Intimation to IBBI and ROC, The liquidator informs the IBBI and the ROC of the appointment and commencement of voluntary liquidation.
  5. Verification of claims, The liquidator verifies claims received from creditors and stakeholders, prepares a list of stakeholders, and adjudicates disputes.
  6. Asset realisation and distribution, The liquidator realises the company’s assets, settles statutory dues and creditor claims in the order of priority prescribed under the IBC, and distributes any surplus to members.
  7. Final report and application for dissolution, The liquidator prepares a final report, submits it to the IBBI and the ROC, and applies to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) for an order of dissolution.
  8. NCLT dissolution order, The NCLT issues a dissolution order, and the company ceases to exist.

The typical voluntary liquidation timeline runs from 6 to 18 months, depending on the complexity of asset realisation, the volume and nature of creditor claims, and any delays in NCLT listing. The IBBI has been progressively tightening timelines and reporting requirements through amendments to the Voluntary Liquidation Process Regulations.

Costs and Professional Fees

Voluntary liquidation costs are materially higher than strike-off. Key cost components include:

  • Insolvency professional fees, The liquidator’s fees are negotiated at the time of appointment and depend on the size and complexity of the company.
  • Auditor and valuer fees, Required for the declaration of solvency, asset valuation, and final accounts.
  • Public announcement costs, Newspaper publication and statutory notices.
  • Legal and advisory fees, For preparing NCLT filings, creditor settlements, and regulatory clearances.

What Happens to a Subsidiary When a Parent Company Dissolves?

If the overseas parent dissolves before the Indian subsidiary is closed, the subsidiary does not automatically dissolve. The Indian subsidiary is a separate legal entity incorporated under Indian law. Its assets and liabilities remain governed by Indian statute. The parent’s shares in the subsidiary may vest in the parent’s liquidator or successors, who must then initiate closure of the Indian entity through one of the routes described in this guide. Creditors of the Indian subsidiary retain their rights, and statutory dues (tax, PF, ESIC) must be settled before dissolution can be achieved. Early coordination between the parent’s liquidator and Indian counsel is essential to avoid regulatory penalties or a stranded entity.

RBI / FEMA / AD-Bank Reporting: Practical Banking Steps for Closing an Indian Subsidiary

The RBI/FEMA closure reporting layer is the obligation most frequently missed by multinationals when they close an Indian subsidiary. Under the RBI’s Master Directions on Overseas Direct Investment, any Indian entity that holds an overseas JV or WOS, and any foreign entity that has invested directly into an Indian subsidiary, must report the closure or disinvestment through the AD Category – I bank.

ODI Part IV Reporting, Step-by-Step Checklist

  • Step 1, Notify the AD bank. Inform the AD Category – I bank (through which the original ODI was routed) of the proposed closure, disinvestment, or winding up. Provide the Unique Identification Number (UIN) allotted by the RBI for the investment.
  • Step 2, Submit Part IV of the ODI application. File the prescribed Part IV form with the AD bank, attaching supporting documentation: board resolution authorising closure, final audited accounts of the subsidiary, evidence of settlement of all liabilities, statutory auditor’s certificate confirming settlement of dues, and the liquidation/dissolution order or strike-off confirmation.
  • Step 3, Repatriation of funds. All disinvestment proceeds, residual balances, and final dividend distributions must be repatriated to India through proper banking channels within the timelines prescribed by FEMA. The AD bank will require evidence that the repatriated amount matches the final audited position.
  • Step 4, AD bank confirmation to RBI. The AD bank reports the closure and fund repatriation to the RBI and updates the ODI records. The UIN is closed upon confirmation.

AD Bank Documentation Checklist for Finance Teams

The following documents should be prepared and submitted to the AD Category – I bank to enable timely processing:

  • Board resolution authorising the closure and repatriation.
  • Final audited financial statements of the Indian subsidiary.
  • Liquidation/dissolution order (NCLT) or ROC strike-off confirmation letter.
  • Statutory auditor’s certificate confirming all liabilities, including statutory dues, employee entitlements, and intercompany balances, have been settled.
  • Evidence of tax clearance (income tax, GST, withholding tax on any final distributions).
  • Statement of repatriation proceeds, with bank swift confirmation for each remittance.
  • NOC from any sectoral regulator (if applicable).

For a broader context on the RBI’s new banking rules for 2026 in India, including updated AD-bank compliance expectations, see our detailed guide.

Ownership Scenarios and RBI Reporting Implications

Not all Indian subsidiaries are 100% owned. The ownership structure affects both the exit mechanics and the RBI reporting path:

  • Wholly-owned subsidiary (WOS). The foreign parent holds 100% equity. Closure and repatriation are relatively straightforward, though FEMA rules still govern the final remittance.
  • Joint venture (JV). The foreign parent holds less than 100% equity alongside Indian or other co-investors. The JV agreement will typically contain exit provisions (drag-along, tag-along, buyout mechanics) that must be exercised before or concurrently with the closure process. RBI ODI Part IV reporting must reflect the foreign investor’s proportionate disinvestment.
  • Minority holding. Where the foreign entity holds a minority stake, it may sell its shares rather than initiate a full closure. The share transfer must comply with FEMA pricing guidelines and be reported to the AD bank.

Special Cases, Regulated Sectors

When the Indian subsidiary operates in a regulated sector (banking, NBFC, insurance, securities intermediation, telecom, defence, or pharmaceuticals), additional regulator clearance is required before the ROC or NCLT will accept the closure application. For companies considering the insolvency route rather than voluntary liquidation, our guide on how to file for insolvency in India covers the involuntary pathway in detail.

Decision Matrix, Strike-Off vs Voluntary Liquidation vs Other Exit Options

Choosing the right closure route depends on the subsidiary’s financial position, regulatory status, and the parent’s timeline. The decision matrix below consolidates the key differences. For cross-border commercial and corporate guidance, this framework should be read alongside any obligations in the parent’s home jurisdiction.

Factor Strike-Off (STK-2 / Section 248) Voluntary Liquidation (IBC Chapter V)
Eligibility Company inactive or defunct; no pending litigations or regulatory constraints; no significant liabilities remaining; sectoral regulator NOC required for regulated entities. Solvent company wishing to wind up with orderly creditor settlement; declaration of solvency required; special resolution within four weeks of declaration.
Typical timeline 3–9 months (subject to ROC queries, public notice objections, and regulator NOC timelines). 6–18 months (depends on asset realisation complexity, creditor claims volume, and NCLT listing timelines).
Typical cost Low, ROC filing fees and minimal professional fees; unpredictable if regulator objections arise. Higher, insolvency professional fees, auditor/valuer costs, public announcement charges, legal advisory fees, and NCLT filing fees.
Regulator reporting ROC + sectoral regulator NOC (if applicable) + RBI/AD bank Part IV if overseas investment involved. IBBI + NCLT + ROC + RBI/AD bank Part IV for ODI-related closures.
Best suited for Dormant or shell subsidiaries with no operations, no employees, no material assets, and all liabilities fully discharged. Operating subsidiaries with employees, assets to realise, contracts to unwind, or creditors requiring orderly settlement.
Key risk ROC rejection if liabilities remain undischarged or if documentation is incomplete; director liability under indemnity bond survives strike-off. Potential for timeline overruns if creditor disputes emerge or NCLT scheduling delays; IP fees may escalate with complexity.

Other exit options include selling the subsidiary (share sale or business transfer) and merging it into an Indian affiliate. A share sale may be faster but involves FEMA pricing compliance and buyer due diligence. A merger requires NCLT sanction under the Companies Act, 2013 and can take 9–15 months. The right choice depends on whether the parent seeks a clean dissolution or a value-recovery exit.

Practical Checklist, Sample Resolutions and Filing Templates

The checklists below consolidate every key action into a printable reference. These are sample templates for illustrative purposes only and do not constitute legal advice.

One-Page STK-2 Filing Checklist

  • Confirm eligibility under Section 248, no operations, no liabilities, no litigations.
  • Pass a board resolution authorising the STK-2 application.
  • Pass a special resolution (if required by articles or by board preference).
  • Prepare statement of accounts (not older than 30 days before filing).
  • Execute Form STK-3 / STK-3A indemnity bonds for every director.
  • Swear Form STK-4 affidavits before notary/magistrate for every director.
  • Obtain NOC from sectoral regulator (if NBFC, insurance, SEBI-registered, etc.).
  • Prepare last audited financial statements and income-tax return acknowledgement.
  • File STK-2 on MCA V3 portal with digital signature.
  • Monitor ROC queries and public notice window (30 days).
  • File RBI ODI Part IV through AD bank concurrently (if overseas investment exists).

Sample Special Resolution Wording

“RESOLVED THAT pursuant to Section 248(2) of the Companies Act, 2013, and the Companies (Removal of Names of Companies from the Register of Companies) Rules, 2016, the members of [Company Name] hereby approve the filing of an application with the Registrar of Companies, [Jurisdiction], for removal of the name of the Company from the Register of Companies, and authorise the Board of Directors to take all steps, execute all documents, and do all acts and things as may be necessary to give effect to this resolution.”

AD Bank / RBI Repatriation Checklist

  • Notify AD Category – I bank of intended closure and provide the UIN.
  • File ODI Part IV with all supporting documentation listed above.
  • Complete repatriation of all residual funds and disinvestment proceeds within FEMA timelines.
  • Obtain AD bank confirmation of closure and UIN deactivation.
  • Retain copies of all filings, AD bank acknowledgements, and swift confirmations for a minimum of eight years.

Key Takeaways, How to Close an Indian Subsidiary

Closing an Indian subsidiary requires careful navigation across MCA, IBBI, and RBI/FEMA regulatory channels. The core decision, strike-off vs voluntary liquidation, depends on whether the entity is truly dormant (no liabilities, no litigations, no operations) or has assets to realise and creditors to settle. In either case, the RBI/FEMA/AD-bank reporting layer cannot be treated as optional: ODI Part IV filings, fund repatriation through proper banking channels, and AD bank confirmation are mandatory steps that protect the parent entity from future regulatory exposure.

By following the checklists, timelines, and sample templates in this guide, corporate decision-makers can manage the closure process systematically and avoid the most common pitfalls, incomplete STK-2 filings, missed regulator NOCs, and delayed repatriation, that derail subsidiary exits in India. For complex or regulated entities, engaging experienced international corporate counsel at the outset will materially reduce risk and shorten timelines. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory can help connect you with qualified practitioners for this process.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Lira Goswami at Associated Law Advisers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Corporate Affairs, Companies (Removal of Names of Companies from the Register of Companies) Rules, 2016
  2. Ministry of Corporate Affairs, Amendment Rules (2020) relating to Removal of Names
  3. The Companies Act, 2013, Legislative Department, Government of India
  4. Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India, IBBI (Voluntary Liquidation Process) Regulations
  5. Reserve Bank of India, Master Directions on Overseas Direct Investment (ODI Reporting)

FAQs

Which documents are required for closure of an Indian subsidiary?
For strike-off, you need Form STK-2, indemnity bonds (STK-3/STK-3A), affidavits (STK-4), a statement of accounts no older than 30 days, the board resolution, the last audited financials, and a sectoral regulator NOC if the company is regulated. For voluntary liquidation, you additionally need a declaration of solvency, asset valuation report, special resolution, public announcement, and final liquidator report. Consult the Companies (Removal of Names) Rules, 2016 for the full STK-2 attachment list.
The Indian subsidiary does not dissolve automatically. It is a separate legal entity under Indian law, and its assets, liabilities, and statutory obligations survive the parent’s dissolution. The parent’s shares in the subsidiary will typically vest in the parent’s liquidator or successors, who must then initiate closure through strike-off, voluntary liquidation, or a share sale. Seek qualified counsel early to prevent a stranded entity.
ROC strike-off under Section 248 is the lowest-cost option, requiring only MCA filing fees and modest professional fees. However, it is available only to companies with no outstanding liabilities, no pending litigations, and no active operations. If the company does not qualify for strike-off, voluntary liquidation under the IBC is the next option, though costs are significantly higher due to insolvency professional, auditor, and NCLT fees.
No. Indian subsidiaries may be wholly-owned (WOS), majority-held joint ventures, or minority investments. The ownership structure directly impacts the closure mechanism: a WOS can be closed unilaterally by the parent, while a JV requires coordination with co-investors and compliance with the JV agreement’s exit provisions. RBI ODI Part IV reporting must reflect the foreign investor’s proportionate share in all cases.
For a private limited (PVT Ltd) company, the typical steps are: (1) pass a board resolution to initiate closure; (2) settle all liabilities, statutory dues, and employee entitlements; (3) close bank accounts and repatriate funds via the AD bank (for foreign-invested companies); (4) file Form STK-2 for strike-off (if eligible) or initiate voluntary liquidation under the IBC; (5) complete RBI ODI Part IV reporting if overseas investment is involved; (6) obtain the ROC strike-off order or NCLT dissolution order.
The typical ROC strike-off timeline is 3–9 months from filing. The process includes ROC scrutiny (1–3 months), a mandatory 30-day public notice and objection period, and the final strike-off order. Delays can arise from incomplete documentation, ROC queries, or creditor objections. Regulated entities should allow additional time for securing sectoral regulator NOCs before filing.
Repatriation of disinvestment proceeds and residual balances does not require prior RBI approval under the automatic route, but it must be routed through the AD Category – I bank that handled the original ODI. The AD bank verifies that the repatriation is consistent with the final audited position, that all statutory dues have been cleared, and that Part IV of the ODI reporting has been filed. Non-compliance with FEMA repatriation rules can trigger penalties and adverse reporting on the entity’s FEMA compliance record.
arbitration vs litigation Indonesia
By Global Law Experts

posted 41 minutes ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How to Close an Indian Subsidiary: Strike Off vs Voluntary Liquidation, Form STK-2, RBI/FEMA Filings and Timelines

Send welcome message

Custom Message