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The landscape for IFSC companies India has shifted decisively with the introduction of the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 in Lok Sabha on 23 March 2026. For the first time, companies incorporated in India’s International Financial Services Centre will be permitted to issue and maintain share capital denominated entirely in a permitted foreign currency, eliminating a friction point that has long pushed cross-border startups toward Singapore and Mauritius holding structures. The Bill simultaneously introduces a parallel framework for IFSC LLPs, mandates foreign-currency bookkeeping for IFSC entities, and creates transitional obligations for entities already operating in the zone.
This article provides a practitioner-led, decision-stage guide, covering what the Bill changes, who benefits, and the practical steps general counsel, founders and VC legal teams should take now.
An International Financial Services Centre (IFSC) is a designated zone within India that caters to financial services customers outside the jurisdiction of the domestic economy. India’s first and only operational IFSC is located within GIFT City in Gandhinagar, Gujarat, a purpose-built smart city that hosts banking units, insurance companies, capital market intermediaries, fund managers and fintech firms from around the world.
The IFSC is regulated by the International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA), a unified regulator established under the IFSCA Act, 2019. IFSCA consolidates powers previously exercised by SEBI, RBI, IRDAI and PFRDA for entities operating within the IFSC. This single-window regulatory model is a core attraction for global businesses evaluating India entry.
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Location | GIFT City, Gandhinagar, Gujarat, India’s first and only operational IFSC |
| Regulator | International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA) |
| Primary activities | Banking, insurance, capital markets, fund management, fintech, aircraft leasing, global treasury operations |
India International Exchange (India INX), a subsidiary of BSE, operates within the IFSC as India’s first international exchange, providing listing and trading infrastructure for securities denominated in foreign currencies. Entities registered with IFSCA can access this exchange for fundraising, debt issuance and derivatives trading, an important channel for IFSC companies India seeking to raise international capital without routing through domestic Indian markets.
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, introduced on 23 March 2026, proposes amendments to both the Companies Act, 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008. The IFSC-centric reforms represent the most consequential structural changes for international businesses considering India incorporation since the original IFSC framework was established. According to the Bill text published by PRS Legislative Research, the amendments are dominated by provisions that formalise the foreign-currency operating model for IFSC entities.
Industry observers expect these reforms to significantly reduce the regulatory arbitrage that previously drove founders toward offshore jurisdictions for holding and fundraising structures. The likely practical effect will be that IFSC incorporation becomes a direct competitor to Singapore, Mauritius and DIFC company formation for India-connected businesses.
The proposed Section 43A provides that a company set up and incorporated in the IFSC shall issue and maintain its share capital in a permitted foreign currency. This is a departure from the existing framework, where share capital was denominated in Indian rupees even for IFSC entities, creating currency conversion friction for foreign investors and complicating cap table management.
The Bill further proposes that IFSC companies may prepare their books of account and financial statements in a permitted foreign currency, subject to IFSCA rules. This aligns reporting with the operating currency of the business, a reform that addresses a long-standing pain point for multinational entities maintaining dual-currency books.
The IFSC framework accommodates several entity types, each suited to different business models and investor profiles. The 2026 reforms expand the practical utility of each by resolving the currency denomination issues that previously made offshore alternatives more attractive for cross-border startups and fund structures.
| Entity Type | Key Reporting / Currency Rules (Post-Bill 2026) | Typical Use-Case |
|---|---|---|
| IFSC Company (new Section 43A) | May issue and maintain share capital in permitted foreign currency; books may be in permitted foreign currency; subject to IFSCA rules and Companies Act modified provisions | Non-resident investors, overseas fundraising, listing on India INX |
| IFSC LLP | Partner contributions to be accounted in permitted foreign currency; separate compliance timeline for conversion of pre-existing INR contributions | Professional services firms, fund managers, advisory JV structures |
| Onshore Indian Company (domestic) | Share capital and books in INR; foreign fundraising via FPI/FII/ODI routes; different tax/tariff regimes | Local operations, Indian revenue/tax base |
Foreign companies may also register a branch or liaison office within the IFSC, subject to IFSCA approval, though the full benefits of the new currency framework apply most directly to IFSC companies and IFSC LLPs incorporated within the zone. The choice between these structures depends on investor domicile, planned fundraising currency, regulatory licensing requirements and long-term listing objectives. Founders evaluating foreign company registration India IFSC options should map their specific investor base and operational currency needs against the framework before selecting an entity type.
Whether incorporating a fresh entity or restructuring an existing offshore holding into an IFSC company, the process requires coordination across company law, IFSCA licensing and (in most cases) exchange registration. The following checklists provide a structured approach for the two most common scenarios.
Industry observers expect the end-to-end incorporation timeline to range from 60 to 90 days, depending on IFSCA licensing complexity and the responsiveness of foreign documentation requirements.
For VC-backed startups evaluating a move, the key practical question is whether the currency, tax and regulatory benefits of IFSC incorporation outweigh the transition costs. The decision framework in the “Pros and Cons” section below provides a structured approach to this analysis.
One of the strongest practical arguments for IFSC incorporation is access to a streamlined fundraising environment. IFSC companies can raise capital through private placements denominated in foreign currency, issue debt securities listed on India INX, and access derivative and hedging instruments, all within a regulatory framework designed for international transactions.
The distinction between onshore and IFSC fundraising is significant. Onshore Indian companies raising foreign capital must navigate FEMA regulations, sectoral FDI caps, pricing guidelines and RBI reporting requirements. IFSC entities, by contrast, operate under the IFSCA framework, which is designed to mirror the regulatory efficiency of competing international financial centres.
For investor due diligence, the key areas to examine include the IFSCA licence scope, any restrictions on downstream investment into onshore Indian entities, and the tax treaty position of the investor’s home jurisdiction relative to India.
The compliance and tax profile of an IFSC entity differs materially from an onshore Indian company. While specific tax incentives are subject to Finance Act notifications and may evolve, the structural advantages of the IFSC framework are well established.
Three risk scenarios that founders and VCs should stress-test:
Not every business benefits from IFSC incorporation. The decision depends on a combination of factors that vary by company size, investor base and operational model.
| Factor | IFSC Favourable | Onshore or Offshore May Be Better |
|---|---|---|
| Investor domicile | Predominantly non-resident investors; US/EU VC funds | Predominantly Indian domestic investors |
| Operating currency | Revenue and costs primarily in USD, EUR or GBP | Revenue primarily in INR |
| Planned listing | India INX or dual listing with international exchanges | BSE/NSE domestic listing planned |
| Business activity | Financial services, fund management, global treasury, fintech, aircraft leasing | Manufacturing, domestic retail, services delivered within India |
| Regulatory preference | Single-window IFSCA regulation preferred | Multiple Indian regulators acceptable; deep domestic compliance infrastructure already in place |
Consider a scenario: a VC-backed fintech startup with a founding team in Bangalore, Series A funding from a US-based fund, and plans to serve customers across Southeast Asia. Under the current framework, this startup would typically incorporate a holding entity in Singapore or Delaware and maintain an Indian subsidiary. Under the proposed IFSC reforms, the same startup could incorporate directly in the IFSC with foreign-currency share capital, raise its Series A in USD within the IFSC framework, and maintain a subsidiary onshore for Indian operations, all without leaving Indian jurisdiction. Early indications suggest this kind of restructuring is likely to become increasingly common once IFSCA publishes its operational rules.
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 represents a structural shift in how IFSC companies India are formed, funded and governed. While the Bill’s passage and IFSCA notification timeline remain to be confirmed, the direction of reform is clear and the preparatory steps are actionable now.
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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