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Understanding how to register a foreign company in India in 2026 is the essential first step for any overseas business planning to establish operations, pursue contracts, or test the Indian market. The Companies Act, 2013 and the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA) together govern the four principal entry routes, liaison office, branch office, project office, and wholly owned subsidiary, each carrying distinct regulatory obligations, filing procedures, and timelines. The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 has introduced procedural simplifications to MCA filings and SPICe+ workflows that directly affect how foreign entities prepare their applications.
This guide walks through every stage of the foreign company registration process in India, from choosing the right structure and satisfying FDI compliance requirements, through the documents needed, costs, and key deadlines, so that foreign investors, general counsel, and company secretaries can act with confidence.
Any company incorporated outside India that establishes or intends to establish a place of business within the country must comply with Indian registration requirements. The precise procedure depends on the structure chosen. Indian law provides four main routes for foreign company registration in India, each suited to a different commercial objective.
The choice of structure determines whether the foreign entity applies to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) through an Authorised Dealer (AD) bank (for LO, BO, or PO) or files incorporation documents directly with the Registrar of Companies (RoC) via the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) portal (for a subsidiary). Many foreign companies that initially enter through an LO or BO later convert to a subsidiary once commercial operations scale, a pathway that the 2026 amendments have streamlined.
Before filing any application, foreign entities must confirm they satisfy India’s eligibility requirements, particularly around FDI sectoral caps, resident director rules, and minimum capital or track-record thresholds set by the RBI for non-incorporated presences.
India’s FDI policy classifies sectors into three broad categories based on the level of foreign ownership permitted and the approval route required. FDI compliance is mandatory before proceeding with any incorporation or RBI application.
| Category | FDI Cap | Approval Route |
|---|---|---|
| Most manufacturing, IT, e-commerce (marketplace), infrastructure | 100% | Automatic, no prior government approval needed |
| Defence, telecom, insurance, pension, certain media | 26%–74% (varies by sub-sector) | Automatic up to threshold; government approval above |
| Multi-brand retail, lottery, gambling, atomic energy | Prohibited or restricted | Not permitted / government route only |
The applicable sectoral cap and approval route must be confirmed at the outset. Filing under the wrong route, or failing to obtain government approval where required, can invalidate the registration and trigger enforcement action under FEMA.
For a subsidiary (Indian private limited company), the Companies Act, 2013 requires that at least one director is a resident of India, defined as a person who has stayed in India for at least 182 days during the preceding financial year. All directors, including foreign nationals, must hold a Director Identification Number (DIN) issued by the MCA. Foreign directors obtain a DIN by filing DIR‑3 (or through the integrated SPICe+ Part B form at the time of incorporation). Each director must also file DIR‑2 (Consent to Act as Director), which must be notarised for foreign nationals signing outside India.
For an LO, BO, or PO, there is no statutory resident director requirement under the Companies Act. However, the foreign entity must appoint an authorised representative in India who is responsible for regulatory filings, correspondence with the RoC and RBI, and local compliance. A Digital Signature Certificate (DSC) is required for any person signing electronic filings on the MCA portal.
NRIs and foreign nationals may serve as directors and shareholders in Indian companies, subject to the sectoral FDI cap and the resident director rule. A foreign company may hold up to 100% of shares in an Indian subsidiary in sectors where 100% FDI is permitted under the automatic route.
The registration steps differ depending on the chosen structure. Below is the consolidated procedure covering both the RBI/FEMA route (for LO, BO, PO) and the MCA/SPICe+ route (for subsidiary incorporation). The timeline table following the steps provides a quick-reference summary.
If the chosen route is a subsidiary, the incorporation is filed entirely online through the MCA portal using the SPICe+ (Simplified Proforma for Incorporating Company Electronically Plus) form.
Establishing an LO, BO, or PO requires prior approval from the RBI, routed through an AD bank in India. The governing regulations are the Foreign Exchange Management (Establishment in India of a Branch Office or a Liaison Office or a Project Office or Any Other Place of Business) Regulations, 2016.
A project office may be established under the automatic route (without prior RBI approval) where the project is funded directly by inward remittance from abroad, or where a bilateral or multilateral funding agency finances the project and the agency’s home country has a security clearance from the Government of India. In these cases, the AD bank grants approval directly, reducing the timeline from months to weeks.
Foreign companies that initially establish an LO or BO often convert to a subsidiary once commercial operations demand full-scale activity. The conversion involves incorporating a new Indian company, transferring assets and personnel, closing the LO/BO with RBI approval, and filing closure documents with the RoC. Industry observers expect the 2026 amendments to reduce the number of parallel filings required for this conversion. Typical duration for conversion: 30–120+ days depending on RBI and RoC processing.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Decide structure and check FDI sectoral cap | Parent company + external counsel | 1–3 business days |
| Board approval / PoA / nominate authorised representative | Parent company / board secretary | 1–7 days |
| Obtain DSCs for foreign directors | Proposed directors (via Indian DSC vendor) | 1–7 days |
| Apply for DIN / file DIR‑3 (if required) | Applicant / MCA filing agent | 1–3 days (auto-allotment) |
| Name reservation (RUN / SPICe+ Part A) | Applicant / RoC | 1–3 working days |
| File SPICe+ Part B (incorporation) with MoA/AoA and attachments | Company secretary / authorised agent | 7–14 working days (RoC processing) |
| RBI application for LO/BO/PO (via AD bank) | Applicant + AD bank | 30–90 days (varies) |
| RoC registration of place of business (LO/BO/PO) | Authorised signatory / RoC | Within 30 days of establishment |
| PAN and TAN application (post-incorporation, subsidiary) | Company / tax agent | Issued with Certificate of Incorporation |
| GST registration (if taxable supply threshold met) | Company / tax agent | 3–15 working days |
| Convert LO/BO to subsidiary (if applicable) | Legal counsel / RoC / RBI | 30–120+ days depending on approvals |
Document preparation is frequently the most time-consuming part of the registration process, particularly for foreign entities unfamiliar with Indian attestation and apostille requirements. Every document originating outside India must be notarised by a public notary in the country of origin, apostilled (for Hague Convention countries) or consularised (for non-Hague countries), and translated into English by a certified translator if not already in English.
| Document | Notes (Issuer / Format / Validity) |
|---|---|
| Certificate of Incorporation of parent company | Issued by parent country registry, certified copy, apostilled or consularised |
| Memorandum and Articles of Association (parent) | Certified copy; English translation if not in English; notarised and apostilled |
| Board resolution authorising establishment / appointment of directors | Issued by parent company board; notarised and apostilled |
| Power of Attorney in favour of authorised signatory | Notarised and apostilled; include specimen signature of authorised representative |
| Passport and proof of address of foreign directors / shareholders | Attested or notarised; recent utility bill or bank statement (not older than 2 months) |
| DIR‑2 (Consent to Act as Director) and DIR‑3 (DIN application) | Signed and notarised (for foreign nationals signing outside India) |
| Proof of registered office in India (subsidiary) or office address (LO/BO/PO) | Lease agreement, NOC from landlord, or utility bill; signed and witnessed |
| Auditor / CA certificate (FDI compliance certificates where required) | As per RBI / FEMA categories, confirm specific requirements with counsel |
| Bank reference letter (parent company) | Recent bank reference or credit reference from parent’s principal banker |
| Project contract (project office only) | Copy of the contract establishing the project basis; notarised |
| Financial statements of parent (last 2–3 years) | Audited, notarised, and apostilled; required by RBI / AD bank for LO/BO/PO |
Documents checklist for foreign company incorporation in India (downloadable templates), covering board resolution templates, DIR‑2 specimens, and PoA formats, will be published as a supporting resource. Pre-checking documents against the RoC’s and AD bank’s specific requirements before submission significantly reduces the risk of queries and delays.
The end-to-end timeline for registering a foreign company in India in 2026 depends on the chosen structure and the completeness of documentation at the time of filing.
Expedited processing is possible where documents are pre-verified by counsel, DSCs are arranged in advance, and the AD bank’s specific checklist is satisfied before submission. Engaging a qualified company law practitioner at the planning stage, rather than after filing, typically compresses the timeline by avoiding RoC queries and RBI information requests.
The most commonly missed deadline is the 30-day RoC registration window for LO, BO, and PO establishments. Starting RoC filing preparation in parallel with the RBI application, rather than waiting for approval, is the most effective way to meet this deadline.
The cost of foreign company registration in India varies by structure, state of incorporation, and authorised share capital. The following table provides indicative ranges current as of June 2026. Actual amounts should be verified with the applicable RoC jurisdiction and AD bank.
| Item | Typical Amount / Estimate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| MCA / RoC filing fees and stamp duty (SPICe+) | INR 7,000 – INR 30,000+ | Depends on authorised capital and state-specific stamp duty on MoA. Verify per RoC jurisdiction. |
| Professional fees (lawyer / company secretary / CA) | INR 25,000 – INR 200,000+ | Varies by complexity; includes document preparation and liaison with RoC / RBI. |
| RBI / AD bank application and processing charges | INR 5,000 – INR 50,000 | Bank service charges vary, confirm with the designated AD bank. |
| Notarisation / apostille / consular fees (overseas) | USD 50 – 500 per document | Costs differ by country and number of documents requiring attestation. |
| DSC and DIN processing | INR 2,000 – INR 6,000 per DSC | DSC vendor costs vary; DIN auto-allotment via SPICe+ carries minimal MCA fees. |
| PAN / TAN / GST registration | Nil (government fee), professional fees apply | PAN and TAN are allotted automatically through SPICe+. GST registration timing depends on supply thresholds. |
Tax considerations. A branch office or BO may create a taxable permanent establishment (PE) in India under the Income Tax Act, 1961 and applicable Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs), exposing the foreign entity to Indian corporate tax on income attributable to the PE. A subsidiary, being a separate Indian company, is taxed independently. GST registration is required if the entity makes taxable supplies exceeding the applicable threshold turnover. Foreign entities should obtain tax advice before finalising the entry structure, costs, taxes and mandatory compliance after incorporation in India (foreign-owned entities) is a critical consideration at the planning stage.
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 introduced several procedural changes that affect how foreign companies register in India. The likely practical effects include:
Foreign entities currently preparing applications should review the latest MCA circulars and the official text of the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 to confirm which provisions are in force and whether transitional arrangements apply to pending filings.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ruby Singh Ahuja at Karanjawala & Company Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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