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How to set up a contractual joint venture in India

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How to Set Up a Contractual Joint Venture in India, Step‑by‑step Process

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to set up a contractual joint venture in India is essential for foreign strategic partners, PE sponsors and domestic corporates that want to collaborate on a specific project or market opportunity without incorporating a new entity. A contractual (non‑equity) JV lets each party retain its separate legal identity while pooling resources, technology or market access under a binding agreement governed by the Indian Contract Act, 1872. This structure has gained fresh relevance in 2026 following tightened FDI screening under updated FEMA rules and revised DPIIT guidance, which now treat certain contractual arrangements as triggering foreign‑investment reporting obligations.

This guide walks through the entire non‑equity JV process in India, from eligibility checks and regulatory pre‑clearance to execution, stamp duty and post‑signing compliance, with the timelines, document checklists and cost estimates practitioners need before signing a term sheet.

Overview of the Contractual Joint Venture Process and Who It Applies To

A contractual joint venture India arrangement is an agreement between two or more parties to pursue a defined commercial objective, infrastructure procurement bids, technology sharing, co‑development of products, or resource pooling, without creating a separate company or LLP. Each party contributes capital, IP, personnel or other resources as agreed, and profits or losses are allocated contractually rather than through shareholding.

The key distinction from an equity JV is legal form. In an equity JV the parties incorporate a private limited company or register an LLP under the Companies Act, 2013 or the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008. In a contractual JV no new registered vehicle is created; governance, risk‑sharing and exit rights live entirely within the JV agreement itself. This makes the structure faster to implement and easier to unwind, but it also means the parties cannot limit liability through a corporate veil.

Parties typically choose a contractual JV when:

  • Project duration is finite. Construction bids, procurement tenders and R&D collaborations with a clear end‑date favour a contractual model.
  • Regulatory incorporation requirements do not apply. Where neither sectoral law nor the tender terms mandate a registered entity, a contract‑only structure avoids MCA filings and ongoing corporate compliance.
  • Speed is critical. Forming a company takes weeks of MCA processing; a contractual JV can be executed and become operative within days once the agreement is finalised.
  • Exit flexibility is valued. Unwinding a contractual JV requires only performing the termination provisions of the agreement, rather than liquidating a company or dissolving an LLP.

Where parties need limited liability, a distinct brand, or the ability to raise third‑party capital into the venture, an incorporated JV, typically a private limited company registered with the MCA, will be more appropriate. The choice between these structures should be resolved early, ideally before the term sheet is signed. For a deeper comparison of structuring options, see cross‑border joint ventures in India, structuring and FDI.

Eligibility and JV Requirements India, Who Can Enter a Contractual JV

Foreign Investor Eligibility and Corporate Form Considerations

Any Indian entity, a company, LLP, partnership firm or sole proprietorship, can enter into a contractual JV. Foreign companies and individuals may also participate, but the involvement of a foreign party introduces compliance gates under the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA) and the DPIIT Consolidated FDI Policy. Even though no equity is issued, the RBI treats certain contractual arrangements, particularly those conferring management control, veto rights over key decisions, or exclusive economic benefits, as equivalent to foreign direct investment and requires reporting through the FEMA framework.

Foreign parties from countries sharing a land border with India face additional scrutiny. Under the DPIIT’s Press Note 3 (2020) framework, as amended, investments by entities incorporated in or having beneficial ownership connected to these countries require prior government approval regardless of the route otherwise applicable to the sector. Industry observers expect this screening to extend more firmly to non‑equity arrangements following the May 2026 FEMA amendments.

When a Contractual JV Is Not Appropriate

Certain sectors, such as defence, telecom, insurance and banking, impose mandatory licensing or entity‑registration conditions that a purely contractual arrangement cannot satisfy. Similarly, many public‑sector procurement tenders require bidders to form an incorporated JV or, at minimum, register the JV consortium with the procuring authority. Where the Competition Commission of India (CCI) thresholds for merger‑control notification are met, based on the combined assets or turnover of the parties, any JV (including contractual) that amounts to an “acquisition of control” may require a pre‑closing CCI filing. Parties should screen for these thresholds before committing to the JV structure.

Step‑by‑Step Procedure to Set Up a Contractual Joint Venture in India

The non‑equity JV process India follows a logical sequence: align commercially, clear regulatory gates, draft and negotiate the agreement, execute it with proper stamp duty, and complete post‑signing filings. The timeline table below summarises each stage; detailed guidance follows in the numbered steps.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Commercial term sheet and FDI pre‑check In‑house M&A + external counsel 1–2 weeks
2. Regulatory pre‑check (sectoral FDI mapping and CCI screening) External counsel / compliance team 3–7 days
3. Draft contractual JV agreement External counsel (transaction team) + parties 2–4 weeks
4. Negotiate and sign final JV agreement Parties and local counsel 1–2 weeks
5. Make required FEMA/RBI/DPIIT notifications or apply for approvals (if triggered) Parties / authorised dealer / external counsel 1–8 weeks (varies by route)
6. Stamp duty, notarisation and execution formalities Local counsel / parties 3–10 days
7. Post‑execution filings (RBI FLA return, tax registrations, GST, MCA forms if required) Parties / tax counsel Within 30–90 days depending on filing

Step 1, Agree on Commercial Terms and Conduct an Initial FDI Pre‑Check

Both parties begin by negotiating a term sheet or letter of intent that captures the venture’s scope, each party’s contributions (cash, technology, personnel, IP), revenue‑sharing mechanics, governance principles and proposed exit triggers. At this stage the parties should also sign a confidentiality and exclusivity agreement to protect sensitive disclosures during due diligence.

Simultaneously, external counsel should run a preliminary FDI check. The objective is to determine whether the foreign party’s role, funding, licensing IP, appointing key managers or exercising veto rights, could be classified as “foreign investment” under FEMA or trigger sector‑specific approval requirements under the DPIIT Consolidated FDI Policy. If the JV involves a party from a land‑bordering country, government‑route approval must be assumed until cleared. This pre‑check avoids costly restructuring later and typically takes one to two weeks.

Step 2, Conduct a Regulatory Pre‑Check (Sectoral FDI Mapping and CCI Screening)

Counsel prepares a brief regulatory memo mapping the venture to the applicable sector under the DPIIT FDI Policy. Even a purely contractual arrangement may fall within the automatic route or government route depending on the sector (e.g., defence production, multi‑brand retail, digital media). The memo should confirm whether any sectoral regulator, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) or the Department of Pharmaceuticals, requires a licence or prior authorisation for the contemplated activities.

In parallel, counsel screens the transaction against CCI notification thresholds. If the combined assets or turnover of the JV parties exceed the thresholds prescribed under Section 5 of the Competition Act, 2002, and the arrangement confers “control” within the meaning of CCI regulations, a pre‑closing filing may be required. This regulatory pre‑check is typically completed within three to seven days.

Step 3, Draft the Contractual JV Agreement

This is the core transactional document. Because there is no separate entity with its own articles of association, the JV agreement must comprehensively cover every commercial, governance and protective term. Recommended clause headings include:

  • Scope and objectives. Define the project, geographic territory and permitted activities.
  • Contributions. Detail each party’s cash, asset, IP and personnel commitments, with valuation methodology for non‑cash contributions.
  • Governance and decision‑making. Specify the JV steering committee composition, voting thresholds and reserved matters (matters requiring unanimity or supermajority).
  • Intellectual property. Address background IP ownership, foreground IP developed during the JV, licensing terms and restrictions on use post‑termination.
  • Deadlock resolution. Include escalation procedures, mediation and, ultimately, arbitration or buy‑sell mechanisms. For a detailed analysis, see resolving deadlocks in joint ventures in India.
  • Financial terms. Cover revenue or profit allocation, cost‑sharing, invoicing protocols and audit rights.
  • Confidentiality and non‑compete. Restrict each party from competing in the JV’s area during and after the arrangement.
  • Term and termination. Define the initial term, renewal mechanics, termination triggers (breach, insolvency, change of control) and consequences of termination (IP reversion, handover, transition services).
  • Exit provisions. Include call/put options, earn‑out mechanisms or wind‑down procedures. For broader exit planning, see planning exit strategies for joint ventures.
  • Dispute resolution. Seat of arbitration, governing law, institutional rules (ICC, SIAC, or domestic arbitration under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996).

Drafting and negotiation typically take two to four weeks, depending on complexity, the number of parties and whether IP valuation or technical schedules are needed.

Step 4, Obtain Regulatory Filings and FDI Approvals (If Triggered)

Where the Step 2 pre‑check confirms that FDI approvals or notifications are required, the parties must complete the relevant filings before or immediately after execution, depending on the applicable route:

  • Automatic route. No prior approval is needed, but the Indian party (or the authorised dealer bank) must report the arrangement to the RBI through the prescribed FEMA reporting forms within the specified timeframe after execution.
  • Government route. The foreign party (or the Indian entity on its behalf) files an application with the relevant administrative ministry through the Foreign Investment Facilitation Portal (FIFP). Processing times vary from four to eight weeks, though complex cases may take longer.
  • CCI notification. If triggered, parties file Form I (short form) or Form II (long form) with the CCI. The CCI has 30 working days (Phase I) to review a Form I filing, extendable to a further 150 days (Phase II) for complex transactions.

Sector‑specific approvals, such as a defence industrial licence from the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade or IRDAI clearance for an insurance‑sector JV, run in parallel and should be initiated as soon as the term sheet is signed.

Step 5, Address Tax, Transfer Pricing and Advance Ruling Considerations

Cross‑border contributions of IP, technology or services between the JV parties may create transfer‑pricing exposure under Sections 92–92F of the Income Tax Act, 1961. If the parties are “associated enterprises”, or if the contractual arrangement creates a deemed association, all inter‑party transactions must be priced at arm’s length, supported by contemporaneous transfer‑pricing documentation.

Where the tax treatment of a specific payment (royalty, technical service fee, management charge) is uncertain, the parties may apply to the Authority for Advance Rulings (AAR) under Section 245Q of the Income Tax Act for a binding ruling. The AAR aims to issue rulings within six months, though delays are common. Tax counsel should also assess whether the foreign party’s level of involvement in the venture’s day‑to‑day operations could create a permanent establishment (PE) in India, which would subject the foreign party to Indian corporate tax on profits attributable to that PE.

Step 6, Execute the Agreement, Pay Stamp Duty and Complete Post‑Execution Filings

Once all approvals are secured and commercial terms finalised, the parties execute the contractual JV agreement. Key execution formalities include:

  • Stamp duty. The agreement must be stamped under the applicable state stamp act before or at execution. Rates vary by state and by the characterisation of the instrument, a partnership‑type agreement, a licensing agreement or a general commercial contract may attract different slabs.
  • Notarisation. While not always legally required, notarisation is standard practice and is necessary for enforcement purposes in many Indian courts.
  • Apostille or consular legalisation. If a foreign signatory executes the agreement outside India, the document may require apostille (for Hague Convention countries) or consular attestation before it is treated as valid in India.

Post‑execution, the parties must complete their FEMA/RBI reporting (if not already done at Step 4), file the annual Foreign Liabilities and Assets (FLA) return with the RBI by the prescribed deadline, register for GST if the JV involves taxable cross‑supplies of goods or services, and set up withholding‑tax compliance for any cross‑border payments.

Documents Needed for a Joint Venture in India, Checklist

Both domestic and foreign parties should assemble the following documents well before the execution date. Foreign‑party documents may require additional attestation or legalisation steps, which add processing time.

Document Notes (Issuer / Format / Validity)
Executed Contractual JV Agreement (counterparts) Parties; printed and signed counterparts; stamp duty paid per applicable state law; notarised if required.
Term sheet / Letter of Intent (if used) Parties; evidences commercial intention and key terms; not legally binding unless stated otherwise.
Board resolution(s) authorising the JV (each corporate party) Issued by each company’s board of directors; certified copy; required for regulatory filings and bank account operations.
Power of Attorney for authorised signatory Notarised and attested; for foreign signatories may need apostille or consular legalisation.
Identity and address proofs of authorised signatories Passport, Aadhaar (Indian parties) or national ID; certified copies.
Incorporation documents of each corporate party Certificate of Incorporation, Memorandum and Articles of Association (or LLP agreement), list of directors, certified copies.
Audited financial statements (latest 2 financial years) Audited accounts; required for regulatory checks, bank compliance and CCI filings (if applicable).
PAN, TAN and GST registration details PAN for Indian parties; Tax Identification Number for foreign parties; GST registration where taxable supplies arise.
Details and proof of contributions (cash, assets, IP) Valuation reports (by a registered valuer) for non‑cash contributions; IP assignment or licence deeds.
FEMA / FDI‑related affidavits and declarations As per applicable RBI/DPIIT guidance, specific forms depend on whether automatic or government route is engaged.
Sectoral licence or approval (if applicable) Issued by the relevant sector regulator (TRAI, IRDAI, Department of Pharmaceuticals, etc.).

Foreign parties should start the document‑assembly process at least two to three weeks before the target execution date to allow for attestation, apostille and courier logistics. Indian parties should ensure PAN and GST registrations are current and that board resolutions explicitly authorise the specific JV transaction.

JV Timeline India, Key Deadlines and Statutory Filing Windows

The overall timeline for a contractual joint venture in India, from term sheet to fully executed and compliant agreement, ranges from approximately six to sixteen weeks. Much of this variation depends on whether government‑route FDI approval or CCI clearance is required. The table below expands on the procedural timeline and highlights which deadlines are statutory.

Milestone Deadline Type Typical Timeframe
Term sheet to signed JV agreement Best practice (internal) 4–8 weeks
Government‑route FDI approval (if triggered) Statutory, DPIIT/FIFP processing 4–8 weeks from filing
CCI Phase I clearance (if triggered) Statutory, 30 working days ~6 weeks from filing
Stamp duty payment Statutory, before or at execution (state law) Same day or within adjudication period
FEMA/RBI reporting (automatic‑route transactions) Statutory, within 30 days of receipt of consideration or execution 30 days post‑event
RBI FLA return Statutory, annual; due by 15 July each year Annual deadline
GST registration (if taxable cross‑supplies arise) Statutory, within 30 days of becoming liable 30 days
Transfer‑pricing documentation Statutory, maintain contemporaneously; file with income tax return By the due date for filing the income tax return

Missing a FEMA reporting deadline can result in compounding penalties under Section 13 of FEMA, 1999, up to three times the amount involved. Parties should calendar all statutory windows immediately upon execution and assign responsibility internally or to external counsel.

Cost of Setting Up a Contractual JV in India, Indicative Fees

The figures below are indicative ranges based on market practice and will vary by transaction complexity, the number of parties, the states involved and the quantum of any IP or asset contributions. All amounts should be verified with instructed counsel before budgeting.

Item Indicative Amount (INR / USD) Notes
Legal drafting and negotiation INR 1,50,000–15,00,000+ (USD 1,800–18,000+) Varies with complexity, number of parties, IP schedules and dispute resolution provisions.
Stamp duty (execution) 0.1%–1.0% of transaction value or fixed slabs (state dependent) Maharashtra, Delhi, Karnataka, Gujarat and Tamil Nadu each have distinct stamp schedules; characterisation of the instrument affects the applicable rate.
Notarisation / apostille / consular fees INR 2,000–20,000 Applies where foreign signatures require legalisation or apostille.
RBI / FEMA filing and agency fees Nil to INR 50,000 Government filing fees are generally nil; professional fees for preparing and lodging applications apply.
Tax and transfer pricing advisory INR 75,000–5,00,000 Required where cross‑border IP transfers, royalty payments or related‑party services arise.
Valuation report (registered valuer) INR 50,000–3,00,000 Needed for non‑cash contributions, IP licensing and any in‑kind consideration.

In addition to direct costs, parties should budget for ongoing tax compliance: withholding tax on cross‑border payments (rates depend on the applicable Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement), GST on services supplied between the parties, and, critically, any PE risk analysis if the foreign party maintains operational control in India.

What Changed in 2026, Regulatory Updates Affecting Contractual Joint Ventures

The May 2026 amendments to the FEMA framework and the revised DPIIT FDI Policy have introduced several changes directly relevant to parties considering a contractual joint venture India structure. The likely practical effect of these changes is that more non‑equity arrangements will now require affirmative FDI reporting, even where no equity is issued. For a detailed analysis of the amendments, see key changes under the May 2026 FEMA amendments, India tightens FDI screening.

Key changes include:

  • Expanded definition of “control” for reporting purposes. Contractual clauses that grant a foreign party veto rights over material business decisions, the right to appoint a majority of the JV steering committee, or exclusive supply or distribution rights within India may now be treated as conferring “control” under the revised FEMA Master Direction on Foreign Investment. This triggers mandatory FEMA reporting even where no shares or capital contribution changes hands.
  • Tightened post‑execution reporting deadlines. Early indications suggest the RBI is applying stricter enforcement of the 30‑day reporting window for cross‑border arrangements and has increased scrutiny of late filings. Compounding penalties under Section 13 of FEMA are being imposed more readily.
  • Sectoral liberalisation in insurance. The FDI cap in the insurance sector has been raised, and certain technical collaboration or distribution arrangements between foreign insurers and Indian partners may now proceed under the automatic route. However, IRDAI prior approval remains a prerequisite for operational arrangements in the insurance sector.
  • Enhanced scrutiny for land‑border country parties. The government‑route requirement for entities with beneficial ownership links to land‑border countries has been reinforced, and industry observers expect regulators to apply this screen to contractual JV arrangements, not just equity investments, with greater consistency.

Parties executing contractual JVs in 2026 should have counsel review their agreement specifically against the updated FEMA Master Direction to confirm whether any FDI reporting or approval obligations are triggered.

Common Pitfalls When Setting Up a Contractual JV in India

  • Assuming a contractual JV falls outside FEMA coverage. Many parties mistakenly believe that because no equity is issued, FEMA and FDI rules do not apply. In practice, any arrangement that confers effective control, management rights or economic benefits equivalent to equity may trigger RBI reporting obligations. Failing to file can result in compounding penalties and, in extreme cases, enforcement action.
  • Vague governance and deadlock clauses. Without a corporate board to fall back on, the JV agreement itself must provide clear escalation and deadlock‑resolution mechanisms, mediation, expert determination, buy‑sell options or arbitration. Ambiguous governance terms lead to operational paralysis. See resolving deadlocks in joint ventures in India for mechanism design options.
  • Incorrect stamp duty calculation. Stamp duty rates vary significantly by Indian state and by the characterisation of the instrument. An agreement classified as a partnership deed attracts different duty than a general commercial contract. Under‑stamping renders the document inadmissible as evidence in Indian courts until the deficit duty and penalty are paid.
  • Ignoring transfer pricing for IP and intra‑group payments. Related‑party payments, royalties, technical fees, management charges, must comply with arm’s length standards. Failure to maintain contemporaneous transfer‑pricing documentation exposes the Indian party to an adjustment by the Transfer Pricing Officer and potential penalty proceedings.
  • Poor exit planning. A contractual JV without clear termination triggers, IP‑reversion provisions and transition‑services obligations can trap parties in an unviable arrangement. For structured exit planning guidance, see planning exit strategies for joint ventures.
  • Not screening for CCI merger‑control notification. Even contractual arrangements can trigger CCI notification if they confer “control” over one party’s business and the combined‑entity thresholds are exceeded. A missed CCI filing renders the arrangement voidable and exposes the parties to penalties.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nidhi Arora at EVA Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. RBI, FEMA / FDI Circulars and Reporting
  2. Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), Companies Act and e‑Forms
  3. DPIIT, Consolidated FDI Policy
  4. Maheshwari & Co., Joint Ventures in India: Legal Structure & Key Considerations
  5. JSA Advocates & Solicitors, Cross‑Border JV Guide
  6. India Briefing, Establishing a Joint Venture in India
  7. IWAI, Example JV Agreement Template
  8. MASLLP, How to Set Up a Joint Venture in India
  9. Companies Act 2013, Official Legislative Text
  10. Global Law Experts, Key Changes Under May 2026 FEMA Amendments

FAQs

How do you register a JV in India?
A purely contractual JV does not require registration with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) because no new legal entity is created. If the parties choose to form an equity JV, they must incorporate a company under the Companies Act, 2013 or register an LLP under the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008, both through the MCA portal. Even for a contractual JV, certain regulatory filings (FEMA, CCI) may still be required depending on the parties and the transaction structure.
At minimum: the executed JV agreement (stamped and notarised), board resolutions from each corporate party, powers of attorney for authorised signatories, incorporation documents and financial statements of each party, PAN/GST details, and any FEMA declarations triggered by foreign participation. For non‑cash contributions, a valuation report from a registered valuer is also required. The full checklist is set out in the required‑documents table above.
A contractual JV with no foreign‑investment triggers can be established in as few as six to eight weeks from term sheet to executed agreement. Where government‑route FDI approval or CCI notification is required, the timeline extends to twelve to sixteen weeks or longer. The biggest variable is regulatory processing time, which parties cannot accelerate but can plan around by initiating filings as early as possible.
Yes. Foreign companies may enter into both contractual and equity JVs in India, subject to FEMA/RBI and DPIIT FDI Policy conditions. Most sectors permit foreign participation under the automatic route, meaning no prior government approval is needed, only post‑transaction reporting. Certain sectors (defence, multi‑brand retail, print media, among others) require the government route. Entities from land‑bordering countries must obtain prior government approval regardless of the sector.
Yes. Indian law recognises and enforces contractual JVs under the Indian Contract Act, 1872. The arrangement does not need to be registered as a separate entity. However, the agreement must satisfy the essential elements of a valid contract, offer, acceptance, consideration, lawful object and free consent, and should be properly stamped under the applicable state stamp act to be admissible as evidence in Indian courts.
Missing a FEMA reporting deadline can result in compounding penalties under Section 13 of FEMA, 1999, calculated at up to three times the amount involved or at a prescribed daily rate. The RBI’s compounding process requires the party to apply for compounding, pay the penalty and regularise the delayed filing. For MCA filings (relevant where an equity JV is formed), late fees accrue daily under the Companies Act. Repeated non‑compliance can trigger prosecution. Parties should also be aware that filings related to insolvency risks may have separate deadlines, see how to file for insolvency in India for more detail.
Counsel should be engaged before the term sheet is signed, ideally at the letter‑of‑intent stage. Early legal involvement is critical for the FDI pre‑check, sectoral regulatory screening, CCI threshold analysis and structuring the agreement’s governance and IP provisions. Attempting to finalise a JV agreement without specialist transactional counsel significantly increases the risk of missing regulatory triggers or drafting unenforceable terms.
A contractual JV agreement binds only the parties to it under the principle of privity of contract in the Indian Contract Act. It is not enforceable against third parties who are not signatories. If the JV requires obligations to run with assets or bind successors, specific assignment and novation clauses should be included. Where third‑party enforceability is essential, for example, against sub‑contractors, customers or financiers, the parties should consider incorporating a separate entity or executing ancillary agreements directly with those third parties.

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How to Set Up a Contractual Joint Venture in India, Step‑by‑step Process

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