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how to set up an international joint venture in India

How to Set Up an International Joint Venture in India, Step‑by‑step (2026 Update)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 day ago

Last reviewed: June 13, 2026

Understanding how to set up an international joint venture in India is essential for any foreign investor planning market entry in 2026. A joint venture (JV) allows a foreign company to combine capital, technology or market access with a local Indian partner while sharing risk, but the process involves multiple regulators, mandatory filings under the Companies Act 2013 and the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), and careful navigation of India’s FDI policy administered by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT).

The joint venture process India 2026 has been reshaped by the March 2026 DPIIT FDI Press Note relaxations and the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, both of which alter approval routes and filing obligations in ways that directly affect timeline and cost. This guide provides the complete procedural playbook, eligibility, structure selection, step‑by‑step approvals, required documents, costs, deadlines and the most common pitfalls, so that foreign investors and their counsel can plan with precision.

Overview of the Joint Venture Process and Who It Applies To

An international joint venture in India is a commercial arrangement in which a foreign entity and an Indian entity co‑invest in a shared business. Foreign companies choose this route, rather than a wholly owned subsidiary, branch office or liaison office, when they need a local partner’s distribution network, regulatory licences, sector knowledge or land access. The regulatory framework governing the JV formation process rests on three pillars: the Companies Act 2013 (incorporation and corporate governance, administered by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs), FEMA and the Consolidated FDI Policy (foreign exchange and investment route approvals, administered by the RBI and DPIIT), and sector‑specific regulators (such as SEBI, the Telecom Regulatory Authority, or the RBI for financial services entities).

Since March 2026, several sectors previously requiring government‑route FDI approvals have been moved to the automatic route or have had their sectoral caps raised, see the detailed discussion in the 2026 regulatory changes section below. The likely practical effect for most commercial‑sector JVs is a shorter approval window and fewer pre‑closing regulatory touchpoints.

Types of JV Structures

  • Equity JV company. The foreign and Indian partners incorporate a new Indian company (private or public limited) and subscribe to shares in agreed proportions. This is the most common structure for long‑term manufacturing, technology or services ventures. It provides limited liability and a clear governance framework through the articles of association and a shareholders’ agreement (SHA).
  • Contractual JV (unincorporated). The parties collaborate under a contractual arrangement without forming a separate legal entity. This suits project‑specific work (e.g., infrastructure or engineering contracts) but carries joint‑and‑several liability exposure and fewer governance protections.
  • 50:50 JV vs controlling JV. A 50:50 split provides equal governance and deadlock risk; a controlling JV (where one partner holds a majority) simplifies decision‑making but requires stronger minority protections. The choice affects board composition, reserved‑matter lists and exit mechanics.
  • JV through LLP. A limited liability partnership is an alternative corporate form available in India. Foreign investment in LLPs is permitted only in sectors where 100% FDI is allowed under the automatic route and where there are no FDI‑linked performance conditions. For more detail on this structure, see the LLPs in India guidance.

Eligibility and Prerequisites, JV Requirements India

Before committing to a JV, foreign investors must confirm that the proposed business activity is open to foreign investment and determine the applicable FDI route. India’s FDI policy classifies every sector as one of three categories: prohibited (e.g., lottery, gambling, chit funds, trading in transferable development rights), automatic route (no prior government approval, the investment is made and then reported), or government route (prior approval from the relevant ministry or DPIIT is required before the investment can proceed). The consolidated FDI policy published by DPIIT, updated by periodic press notes, sets out the applicable sectoral cap and route for each activity.

Sectoral Caps and Where to Check

Sectoral caps determine the maximum percentage of foreign equity permitted. For example, defence manufacturing permits up to 74% under the automatic route (with government‑route approval required beyond that threshold), while single‑brand retail trading allows 100% FDI but requires government approval above 49%. The current sectoral caps and conditions are published in the Consolidated FDI Policy on the DPIIT website and are updated by press notes, including the March 2026 Press Note discussed in the 2026 changes section. Foreign investors should also check whether sectoral regulators impose additional conditions: the RBI for NBFCs, SEBI for securities‑market intermediaries, or DGFT for export‑control items.

Pre‑investment screening requirements include beneficial‑ownership disclosure, KYC documentation for all foreign signatories, sanctions and denied‑party screening (especially relevant for investors from jurisdictions subject to international restrictions), and a preliminary assessment of whether the Competition Commission of India (CCI) pre‑merger notification thresholds will be triggered by the proposed transaction.

Corporate Forms and Minimum Capital

For an equity JV, the standard vehicle is a private limited company incorporated under the Companies Act 2013. There is no statutory minimum paid‑up capital for a private company, although sector‑specific regulators may impose capital adequacy requirements (for example, RBI prescribes minimum net‑owned funds for NBFCs). Foreign investment in Indian LLPs is more restricted, it is available only in sectors where 100% FDI is permitted under the automatic route with no FDI‑linked performance conditions. Contractual JVs do not involve incorporation but require detailed contractual frameworks for governance, profit‑sharing and dispute resolution.

How to Set Up an International Joint Venture in India, Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The following seven steps outline the complete joint venture process India 2026 for an equity JV company, the most common structure. The timeline table below summarises each step, the responsible party and the typical duration.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Partner selection and due diligence (LOI/MOU) Foreign investor + Indian partner + counsel 2–6 weeks
2. Structure and term sheet negotiation Lead counsel and commercial teams 2–8 weeks
3. Drafting JV agreement / SHA Corporate counsel 2–6 weeks (parallel with approvals)
4. FDI approvals and regulatory compliance Foreign investor / Indian partner via counsel Automatic route: immediate to 2 weeks (post‑allotment filings); Government route: 6–12+ weeks
5. Incorporation of JV company (SPICe+) Company secretary / local counsel 1–4 weeks
6. Closing and funds transfer Parties, escrow bank 1–3 weeks (conditional on CPs)
7. Post‑closing regulatory filings (ROC / FEMA / GST) Company secretary / counsel ROC: within 30 days; FEMA: within 30 days; GST: immediate; other sector filings vary

Step 1: Partner Selection, NDAs and Commercial Due Diligence

Identify and screen the prospective Indian partner. Conduct commercial and legal due diligence covering financial health, regulatory standing, litigation history, IP ownership, labour compliance and anti‑corruption risk. Execute a non‑disclosure agreement before sharing proprietary information. At this stage, assess whether the combined market share of the JV partners is likely to trigger CCI pre‑merger notification thresholds. The deliverables from this phase are typically a letter of intent (LOI) or memorandum of understanding (MOU) setting out the commercial framework and, where appropriate, exclusivity and conditions precedent. This step is led by the foreign investor’s corporate development team, supported by external counsel and a financial due diligence adviser.

Step 2: Structure the JV, Shareholding, Control and Governance

Decide the capital structure: equity split, share classes (ordinary vs preference), board composition, quorum requirements, reserved matters requiring supermajority or unanimous approval, pre‑emptive rights on future share issuances, tag‑along and drag‑along rights, and exit mechanisms (put/call options, IPO, buy‑back). The structure must align with the FDI sectoral cap: if the foreign partner intends to hold more than the automatic‑route cap, a government‑route application will be required. Where the JV involves technology or IP contributions, agree the basis of valuation and whether IP will be licensed or assigned. These decisions feed directly into the joint venture agreement India and the articles of association of the new company.

Step 3: Term Sheet, Negotiation and Drafting the JV Agreement

Prepare a binding or indicative term sheet summarising contributions (cash, technology, IP, know‑how), management and governance framework, profit distribution, non‑compete and non‑solicitation covenants, representations and warranties, indemnity caps and baskets, deadlock resolution mechanisms (escalation, mediation, shoot‑out or put/call), and dispute resolution (specifying arbitral seat and governing law, Indian JVs commonly adopt Singapore or London seats under ICC or SIAC rules, with Indian law governing the agreement). Tax structuring, including transfer pricing for inter‑company transactions, withholding tax on royalties or technical service fees, and permanent establishment risk, should be addressed at this stage with the input of international tax counsel. Draft the shareholders’ agreement (SHA) in parallel with the regulatory approval process to avoid sequential delays.

Step 4: Regulatory Approvals and FDI Compliance

This is the critical regulatory gate. Determine whether the proposed JV falls under the automatic route or the government route for FDI approvals.

Automatic route: No prior approval is required. The foreign investor remits funds through normal banking channels, and the Indian company reports the investment to the RBI through the authorised dealer (AD) bank within 30 days of allotment or transfer. This is the fastest path and applies to most commercial and manufacturing sectors.

Government route: Prior approval must be obtained from the concerned administrative ministry or department, with the application routed through the DPIIT’s Foreign Investment Facilitation Portal. The typical processing time is 6–12 weeks, although complex cases (particularly in defence, media or telecommunications) may take longer. The March 2026 DPIIT Press Note moved several sectors from the government route to the automatic route or raised the automatic‑route threshold, see the 2026 changes section for specifics.

Regardless of route, the following FEMA compliance steps are mandatory after the investment is made:

  • Form FC‑TRS: Filed with the AD bank within 60 days of share transfer (for acquisitions of existing shares).
  • AD bank reporting: Report inward remittance and share allotment to the RBI within 30 days.
  • FLA return: Filed annually by the Indian JV entity with the RBI, reporting all foreign liabilities and assets.

Where applicable, obtain CCI pre‑merger approval (if asset or turnover thresholds are met) and sector‑specific licences. For example, an NBFC JV requires RBI registration, and a telecom JV requires Department of Telecommunications clearance. For a broader view of recent regulatory shifts affecting banking and financial services, refer to the RBI new banking rules 2026 discussion.

Step 5: Corporate Formalities, Incorporate the JV Vehicle

For an equity JV, incorporate the new company through the MCA’s SPICe+ (Simplified Proforma for Incorporating Company Electronically Plus) portal. The process involves name reservation through the RUN (Reserve Unique Name) service, obtaining digital signature certificates (DSCs) and Director Identification Numbers (DINs) for all proposed directors, filing the SPICe+ form with the memorandum and articles of association, and obtaining PAN and TAN for the new entity. At least one director must be a person resident in India (defined under the Companies Act 2013 as a person who has stayed in India for at least 182 days in the preceding calendar year). Typical incorporation takes 1–4 weeks from submission, assuming documentation is complete and MCA raises no queries.

Step 6: Closing Mechanics, Funds Flow and Share Allotment

Satisfy all conditions precedent listed in the SHA, typically including regulatory approvals, third‑party consents, completion of incorporation, opening of an escrow account and delivery of closing documents. The foreign investor remits subscription money in convertible foreign exchange through normal banking channels to the company’s designated bank account. Shares are allotted by board resolution and share certificates issued. Where pricing applies (for transfer of existing shares), the valuation must comply with FEMA pricing guidelines, shares of an unlisted Indian company transferred to a non‑resident must be at or above the fair market value determined by a registered valuer using an internationally accepted pricing methodology.

An escrow arrangement is advisable to manage conditionality risk, with corporate counsel, tax counsel and the escrow bank coordinating the closing sequence.

Step 7: Post‑Closing Filings and Operational Readiness

Within 30 days of allotment, file Form PAS‑3 (return of allotment) with the Registrar of Companies (ROC). File Form DIR‑12 within 30 days of appointing any new director. Report the foreign investment to the RBI through the AD bank and ensure the FLA return is filed in the annual cycle. Register for GST if the JV will make taxable supplies, registration should be obtained before commencing business. Complete labour registrations under applicable state labour codes, obtain trade licences, and apply for any sector‑specific operating permits. The company secretary or local counsel is responsible for these post‑closing filings ROC GST obligations, and delays attract penalties under both the Companies Act and FEMA.

For cross‑border JV structures, also review whether international commercial considerations intersect with other international commercial guidance.

Documents Needed for JV India, Required Documents and Information

The table below lists the core documents needed at each stage of the joint venture process. Investors should treat this as a working checklist and engage local counsel to confirm jurisdiction‑specific requirements (e.g., apostille conventions, language of notarisation, or state‑specific stamp duty instruments).

Document Notes
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) / LOI Signed by both parties; sets exclusivity and conditions precedent
Term sheet Commercial summary of structure; useful for regulatory approval applications
Certified copy of certificate of incorporation of foreign investor Issued by foreign registrar; notarised and apostilled or consularised as applicable
Board resolution of foreign investor authorising the JV Duly signed and notarised; translated into English if executed in another language
Passport and address proof of authorised signatories Scanned copies; notarised if required by MCA or AD bank
KYC documents and beneficial ownership details Required for RBI/FEMA filings; includes beneficial owner declaration form
Valuation report Chartered or registered valuer report for pricing support (mandatory for share transfers)
IP / technology licence agreement Draft licence or assignment agreement with schedules if IP is contributed to the JV
Share subscription / transfer deed and share certificates Share transfer forms (Form SH‑4), board resolutions approving allotment
SPICe+ incorporation forms DSCs for directors; identity and address proof; memorandum and articles of association
Board and shareholder resolutions (post‑allotment) For allotment of shares, appointment of directors, authorisation of filings
RBI / FEMA filing documents (e.g., Form FC‑TRS) Filed through AD bank after inward remittance or share transfer
Sector‑specific licence applications e.g., SEBI / NBFC / RBI / Telecom / DGFT permits as applicable to the JV’s activity
GST registration documents PAN of entity, proof of business address, director identity documents
Power of attorney (if using local agent) Executed in accordance with jurisdictional formalities; notarised and apostilled
Legal opinion (optional but recommended) On title to contributed assets or IP and on regulatory compliance of the proposed structure

JV Timeline India, Key Deadlines and Post‑Closing Calendar

The overall JV timeline India from initial due diligence to operational readiness typically spans 3–6 months, though straightforward automatic‑route transactions can complete in as little as 8–12 weeks. The table below provides a compressed milestone calendar for the 0–90 day post‑closing window, during which most statutory filing deadlines fall.

Milestone Deadline Responsible Party
Completion of incorporation (SPICe+) Day 0–21 after submission Company secretary / incorporation agent
Allotment of shares and share certificates issued At closing (Day 0–7) Company secretary / board
RBI / FEMA reporting (AD bank reporting of inward remittance) Within 30 days of allotment Applicant / AD bank
File Form FC‑TRS (if share transfer) Within 60 days of transfer Applicant / AD bank
File Form PAS‑3 (allotment return) with ROC Within 30 days of allotment Company secretary
File DIR‑12 (director appointment) with ROC Within 30 days of appointment Company secretary
GST registration Prior to first taxable supply Applicant / tax advisor
FLA return (annual) Annually as prescribed by RBI Company secretary / finance team
Government‑route follow‑ups (if applicable) Varies, monitor DPIIT / RBI timelines Investor / counsel

Missing any of these statutory deadlines triggers penalties under the Companies Act 2013 (for ROC filings) or compounding proceedings under FEMA (for RBI/FEMA reporting). Early preparation of a compliance calendar, ideally before closing, is strongly recommended.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations for a Joint Venture in India

The total cost of establishing a JV in India varies widely depending on deal complexity, sector, negotiation rounds and the state in which the company is incorporated. The table below sets out the principal cost categories and realistic ranges.

Item Typical Amount / Range Notes
Corporate counsel (India) $5,000 – $50,000+ Depends on complexity, sector and negotiation rounds
Local transactional counsel $3,000 – $25,000 For incorporation, ROC filings and local advisory
Valuation report $1,500 – $10,000 Scope‑dependent; mandatory for share transfer pricing
Government / application fees (FDI government route) Varies (₹) DPIIT / sectoral regulator fees are case‑specific
MCA incorporation fees ₹2,000 – ₹50,000 (approx) Depends on authorised capital; stamp duty varies by state
RBI / AD bank filing fees Typically nominal AD bank may charge processing fees
Stamp duty on share transfer 0.5% – 12% of consideration Varies significantly by state and instrument type; verify with local counsel
Escrow / bank fees $500 – $5,000 Transaction‑value dependent
Tax advice / structuring fees $2,000 – $20,000+ International tax treaties, transfer pricing and PE risk assessment
Ongoing compliance (annual) $1,000 – $10,000 ROC filings, tax returns, GST compliance, secretarial work

Key tax considerations for the joint venture process India 2026 include:

  • Transfer pricing. Inter‑company transactions between the JV entity and either partner must be at arm’s length. Seek specialist transfer pricing advice before fixing royalty, management fee or technology licence rates.
  • Permanent establishment risk. If the foreign partner exercises significant operational control or decision‑making from India, the Indian tax authorities may treat the foreign entity as having a permanent establishment, triggering Indian corporate tax liability.
  • Withholding tax. Payments for royalties, technical services or interest to the foreign partner are subject to withholding tax. Rates may be reduced under applicable double taxation avoidance agreements (DTAAs).
  • GST on IP and technology transfer. Transfer or licence of intellectual property to the JV entity may attract GST as an import of services. Structure the transaction with indirect tax counsel to manage input tax credit eligibility.
  • Stamp duty. Rates vary materially between states. Share transfer instruments in Maharashtra attract different rates from those in Karnataka or Delhi. Verify applicable rates with local counsel before closing.

What Changes in 2026, Regulatory and Approval Updates for FDI Approvals for JV India

Two developments in 2026 have materially altered the landscape for foreign investors planning a JV in India.

March 2026 DPIIT FDI Press Note relaxations. The DPIIT issued a press note in March 2026 that moved several sectors from the government approval route to the automatic route or raised the automatic‑route threshold for foreign equity. Industry observers expect the practical effect to be a meaningful reduction in pre‑closing timelines for JVs in the affected sectors, because the automatic route eliminates the 6–12 week government‑approval waiting period entirely. The press note also streamlined certain filing and disclosure conditions for investments in non‑sensitive commercial sectors.

Foreign investors should check the current version of the Consolidated FDI Policy on the DPIIT website to confirm whether their target sector now qualifies for the automatic route and whether any conditionalities (such as reporting obligations or local‑sourcing requirements) attach to the relaxed threshold.

Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026. This Bill introduces amendments to the Companies Act 2013 that affect incorporation procedures, minority shareholder protections and corporate filing formalities. Early indications suggest the amendments will simplify certain ROC filings and introduce enhanced protections for minority partners in JV structures, including strengthened oppression and mismanagement remedies. The Bill’s status, whether passed or still under parliamentary consideration, should be confirmed with counsel before relying on any provisions that are not yet in force. The PRS India bill tracker provides the most current legislative status.

Together, these 2026 changes reshape the joint venture process India 2026 in three practical ways: (1) shorter approval timelines for a wider set of sectors under the automatic route; (2) potentially simplified post‑closing filings under the amended Companies Act; and (3) stronger minority‑protection provisions that should be reflected in JV agreement drafting, particularly in reserved‑matter and exit‑trigger clauses.

Common Pitfalls in Setting Up a Joint Venture in India and How to Avoid Them

  • Mis‑classifying the FDI route. Assuming automatic‑route eligibility without verifying the current Consolidated FDI Policy and the March 2026 Press Note can trigger FEMA contraventions. Check the DPIIT sectoral list before every transaction.
  • Missing RBI / FEMA filing deadlines. Late filing of Form FC‑TRS or AD bank reports can result in compounding proceedings. Build filing deadlines into the closing checklist.
  • Inadequate term sheet. A vague or non‑binding term sheet leads to protracted SHA negotiations. Include all material commercial terms, contributions, governance, exit, deadlock, in the term sheet to accelerate drafting.
  • Unclear IP ownership. Failing to define whether IP contributed by a partner is licensed or assigned, and on what terms, creates disputes post‑closing. Document IP rights in a standalone licence or assignment agreement annexed to the SHA.
  • Insufficient deadlock and exit clauses. Equal‑equity JVs without robust deadlock resolution (escalation, mediation, shoot‑out, put/call) risk operational paralysis. Draft deadlock mechanics at term‑sheet stage.
  • Stamp duty mis‑estimation. Stamp duty rates vary significantly between Indian states. Underestimating this cost, particularly on share transfer instruments, causes budget overruns. Obtain state‑specific advice before closing.
  • Ignoring employee transfer and labour registrations. Where the JV absorbs employees from a partner, transfer terms must comply with applicable labour codes and employment contracts. Register under state labour laws promptly.
  • Not checking sectoral licence preconditions. Some sectors (financial services, telecommunications, defence) require prior regulatory licences before the JV can commence operations. Identify licence requirements during due diligence, not after incorporation.
  • Weak escrow and closing conditions. Proceeding to fund transfer without a properly structured escrow arrangement and detailed CPs list creates settlement risk. Engage an escrow bank early and document CPs exhaustively.
  • Late ROC filings leading to penalties. Form PAS‑3 and DIR‑12 carry 30‑day filing deadlines from allotment or appointment. Late filings attract additional fees and potential prosecution under the Companies Act 2013. Assign responsibility to the company secretary and diarise deadlines.

Conclusion

Knowing how to set up an international joint venture in India, from initial partner screening through regulatory approvals to post‑closing compliance, requires navigating the interplay between the Companies Act 2013, FEMA, the Consolidated FDI Policy and sector‑specific regulations. The 2026 regulatory changes, including the March 2026 DPIIT Press Note and the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, have made the process faster for many sectors but have also introduced new compliance and disclosure obligations that JV partners must plan for. Following the step‑by‑step procedure outlined above, preparing the full set of documents needed for JV India, and engaging experienced counsel early will position foreign investors to execute their market‑entry transactions efficiently and with regulatory certainty.

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. Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), FDI Policy / Press Notes
  2. Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), Companies Act 2013
  3. Reserve Bank of India (RBI), FEMA / FDI Reporting and AD Bank Guidance
  4. Invest India, Doing Business in India / Sector Guidance
  5. PRS India, Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026
  6. JSA Advocates & Solicitors, Cross‑Border Joint Venture and Strategic Alliance Guide: India
  7. Mercurius & Associates LLP (MAS LLP), How to Set Up a Joint Venture in India (2026 Guide)
  8. Dezan Shira & Associates, Establishing a Joint Venture in India
  9. Gazette of India, Official Notifications

FAQs

How do foreign companies operate in India?
Foreign companies enter India through several routes: incorporating a joint venture company with a local partner, setting up a wholly owned subsidiary, or establishing a branch office or liaison office. A JV is preferred when the foreign investor needs a local partner’s market access, regulatory licences or operational expertise. Branch and liaison offices are limited in scope, liaison offices cannot conduct commercial activity, and branch offices require RBI approval.
The primary approval framework is the FDI policy administered by DPIIT. Investments in sectors on the automatic route require no prior approval, the investment is reported to the RBI through the AD bank after allotment. Sectors on the government route require prior approval from the relevant ministry through the DPIIT portal. Since the March 2026 DPIIT Press Note, more sectors qualify for the automatic route. Sector‑specific approvals from regulators such as SEBI, the RBI or CCI may also be required.
The core documents include the MOU or LOI, term sheet, certified and apostilled certificate of incorporation of the foreign investor, board resolution authorising the JV, KYC and beneficial ownership details, valuation report (for share transfers), the SHA or JV agreement, SPICe+ incorporation forms and share subscription documents. The full checklist is set out in the required documents table above.
The end‑to‑end JV timeline India, from partner selection to operational readiness, typically spans 3–6 months. Automatic‑route transactions can complete in 8–12 weeks. Government‑route approvals add 6–12 weeks. Incorporation through SPICe+ takes 1–4 weeks. Post‑closing filings must generally be completed within 30 days.
If a foreign company holds 100% of the equity, the entity is technically a wholly owned subsidiary, not a joint venture. However, 100% FDI is permitted in many sectors under the automatic route. In sectors with lower caps (e.g., 49% in multi‑brand retail or insurance intermediaries), a local partner must hold the balance, making a JV the required structure.
Late ROC filings attract additional fees calculated per day of delay and, in serious cases, can lead to prosecution of directors. Late FEMA filings may result in compounding proceedings initiated by the RBI, with penalties that can be substantial. If a filing is missed, engage counsel immediately to submit the late filing with the applicable penalty and to assess whether a compounding application is necessary.
At the earliest possible stage, ideally before signing an LOI or MOU. Counsel is essential for confirming FDI route eligibility, structuring the transaction, drafting the SHA, managing regulatory approvals and ensuring FEMA compliance. Early engagement reduces the risk of structural defects that are costly to unwind. To identify experienced international corporate counsel in India, consult the India lawyer directory.
Yes. Under the Companies Act 2013, every Indian company must have at least one director who is a person resident in India, defined as a person who has stayed in India for a total period of not less than 182 days during the immediately preceding calendar year. This requirement applies regardless of whether the company is a JV or a wholly owned subsidiary.
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How to Set Up an International Joint Venture in India, Step‑by‑step (2026 Update)

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