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wholly owned subsidiary vs branch office India

Wholly‑owned Subsidiary vs Branch Office in India, Tax, Liability and When to Choose

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Every foreign company entering the Indian market must answer one threshold question before signing a lease, hiring staff or booking revenue: should it incorporate a wholly‑owned subsidiary (WOS) or register a branch office (BO)? The choice between a wholly owned subsidiary vs branch office in India determines corporate‑tax exposure, personal liability for the parent, regulatory filings, transfer‑pricing obligations and the speed at which you can start trading. This guide sets out the tax rates, compliance burdens and liability consequences dimension by dimension, then delivers a concrete decision framework, choose a subsidiary when your priorities are X, choose a branch when they are Y, so that CFOs, general counsels and founders can narrow the field before instructing an international corporate lawyer.

Option A: Wholly‑Owned Subsidiary, What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Legal Form and Incorporation Under the Companies Act 2013

A wholly‑owned subsidiary is a separate Indian company, typically a private limited company, in which the foreign parent holds 100 % of the share capital. It is incorporated under the Companies Act, 2013 and registered with the Registrar of Companies (RoC) at the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA). Because the subsidiary is a distinct legal entity, it has its own board, its own PAN (tax number) and its own statutory obligations. At least two directors are required, of whom at least one must be resident in India (having spent 182 days or more in India during the preceding calendar year).

The minimum authorised share capital requirements for a private limited company were removed by the Companies (Amendment) Act 2015, but the company must still issue at least one share at incorporation.

Permitted Activities and FDI Treatment

A WOS can conduct any lawful business in India, including manufacturing, trading, services and e‑commerce, subject to the sectoral caps and conditions in the Consolidated FDI Policy issued by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT). Most sectors allow 100 % FDI under the automatic route, meaning no prior government approval is needed for the investment. Sectors such as defence, telecommunications and insurance carry ownership ceilings or require the government‑approval route. Because the subsidiary is classified as an Indian “domestic company” for tax purposes, it can access concessional corporate‑tax rates and domestic incentive schemes that are unavailable to a branch office.

Pros and Cons

  • Separate legal personality. The parent’s liability is limited to its equity contribution.
  • Lower effective tax rate. Domestic‑company rates (as low as 25.17 % under Section 115BAA of the Income Tax Act, 1961) are available.
  • Full commercial scope. No restriction on the type of business activities.
  • Access to local incentives. PLI schemes, SEZ benefits and government tenders typically require an Indian‑incorporated entity.
  • Credibility with local counterparties. Indian banks, landlords and customers prefer contracting with an Indian company.
  • Higher setup cost and time. Incorporation, board formation and statutory registrations take longer than branch registration.
  • Ongoing compliance burden. Annual filings, board meetings, statutory audits and secretarial compliance under the Companies Act 2013 are mandatory.
  • Exit complexity. Winding up or striking off an Indian company is procedurally heavier than closing a branch.

Option B: Branch Office, What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Legal Status and RBI Registration

A branch office is not a separate legal entity. It is an extension of the foreign parent company, operating in India under the parent’s name and on the parent’s balance sheet. Establishment requires prior approval from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) under the Foreign Exchange Management (Establishment in India of a Branch Office or a Liaison Office or a Project Office of a Foreign Entity) Regulations, 2016. The application is filed through the designated Authorised Dealer (AD) bank. The RBI assesses the parent company’s track record, profitability and net worth before granting approval.

Once registered, the branch must also register with the RoC under Section 380 of the Companies Act, 2013 as a “place of business of a foreign company” and comply with applicable RBI reporting requirements.

Activities Allowed

The RBI’s approval letter specifies the permitted activities, which are narrower than those available to a subsidiary. Typical permitted categories include export/import of goods, rendering professional or consultancy services, carrying out research work, promoting technical or financial collaborations, acting as a buying or selling agent, rendering IT and software‑development services, and providing technical support to products supplied by the parent. Critically, a branch office is generally not permitted to carry on manufacturing on its own account or to engage in retail trading in India.

Pros and Cons

  • Simpler setup. No need to incorporate a separate company or appoint a local board of directors.
  • Centralised control. The branch operates under the parent’s governance; no minority‑shareholder concerns.
  • Easier profit repatriation. Profits attributed to the branch can be remitted after tax without dividend‑distribution formalities.
  • Lower ongoing corporate‑governance burden. No requirement for board meetings or annual general meetings under the Companies Act.
  • Full parent liability. The foreign parent is directly liable for all obligations of the branch, with no limited‑liability shield.
  • Higher effective tax rate. A branch is taxed as a non‑resident foreign company at 40 % plus applicable surcharge and cess.
  • Activity restrictions. Manufacturing and retail trading are typically excluded.
  • RBI approval dependency. The initial approval process can be unpredictable in duration and scope.

Wholly‑Owned Subsidiary vs Branch Office in India: Side‑by‑Side Comparison

Dimension Wholly‑Owned Subsidiary Branch Office
Legal status Separate Indian company (private limited) Extension of the foreign parent, no separate legal personality
Ownership and control 100 % owned by foreign parent via equity shares; governed by its own board Wholly controlled by parent; no separate board or shareholders
Activities allowed Any lawful business (subject to FDI sectoral caps) Activities listed in RBI approval, typically services, liaison, import/export; no manufacturing or retail trading
Incorporation / setup steps DSC → DIN → name reservation → MoA/AoA → RoC incorporation → PAN/TAN/GST AD bank application → RBI approval → RoC registration (Section 380) → PAN/TAN/GST
Regulatory approvals Automatic route (most sectors) or government route (DPIIT/FIPB successor) under FDI Policy RBI prior approval mandatory; also subject to FEMA regulations
Tax treatment (headline rate) Domestic company: 22 % + surcharge + cess (≈ 25.17 %) under Section 115BAA; or 30 % standard Foreign company: 40 % + surcharge + cess (≈ 41.6 %–43.68 %)
Transfer pricing exposure All “international transactions” with associated enterprises must comply with Sections 92–92F Branch profit attribution under OECD PE guidelines + Indian TP rules; same Sections 92–92F apply
Liability and creditor risk Limited to the subsidiary’s own assets, parent shielded unless veil is pierced Parent is fully and directly liable for all branch debts and obligations
Compliance burden (filings, audit) Statutory audit, annual return (MCA), board/AGM minutes, secretarial compliance Annual accounts filed with RoC (foreign company provisions); Annual Activity Certificate to RBI; audited by Indian auditor
Typical setup time 4–8 weeks (automatic‑route FDI) 8–16 weeks (RBI approval timelines vary)
Indicative setup cost INR 50,000–2,00,000 (government fees + professional charges) INR 40,000–1,50,000 (government fees + professional charges)
Repatriation of profits Dividend, subject to withholding tax (typically 20 % reduced under DTAA) Branch profits repatriated after Indian tax; no additional dividend withholding, but verify treaty treatment
Dispute resolution / enforceability Indian courts have full jurisdiction; shareholders’ agreements are enforceable subject to Indian contract law Indian courts have jurisdiction over the branch; parent also exposed to claims in parent jurisdiction

Read the table by identifying the dimensions that matter most to your business. For cost‑sensitive service exporters with no manufacturing plans, the branch column may look attractive, until the tax‑rate row reveals a headline rate nearly double that of the subsidiary. For companies planning long‑term market presence with local hiring and revenue, the subsidiary column dominates on every dimension except setup simplicity.

The sections below unpack the five most decisive dimensions, tax, liability, transfer pricing, regulatory compliance, and cost, with the specific numbers and statutory references needed to make an informed choice between a wholly owned subsidiary vs branch office in India.

Dimension‑by‑Dimension Analysis

Tax Implications

Tax is the single most consequential dimension in the subsidiary‑versus‑branch decision. The Income Tax Act, 1961 draws a sharp distinction between a “domestic company” (which includes an Indian subsidiary of a foreign parent) and a “foreign company” (which is how a branch office is classified). That classification drives a rate differential that, for profitable operations, easily exceeds the entire cost of incorporating a subsidiary.

Tax item Wholly‑owned subsidiary (domestic company) Branch office (foreign company)
Basic corporate tax rate 22 % (Section 115BAA) or 15 % for new manufacturing cos (Section 115BAB); standard rate 30 % 40 % (Section 2(22A) read with Finance Act rates)
Surcharge 10 % on income > INR 1 crore; 12 % on income > INR 10 crore (7 %/12 % for 115BAA optees) 2 % on income > INR 1 crore; 5 % on income > INR 10 crore
Health & Education Cess 4 % on tax + surcharge 4 % on tax + surcharge
Effective rate (typical) ≈ 25.17 % (Section 115BAA) to ≈ 34.94 % (standard) ≈ 41.60 % to ≈ 43.68 %
Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) 15 % of book profits (not applicable if 115BAA opted) MAT generally does not apply to foreign companies computing tax under normal provisions
Dividend withholding on repatriation 20 % (reduced under DTAA, e.g., 10 % under India‑Singapore DTAA, 10 % India‑Netherlands) No separate dividend; profits remitted after branch tax, but verify treaty “branch profits tax” clauses
Capital‑gains treatment Domestic rates apply (12.5 % LTCG on listed securities; 20 % with indexation on other assets) Same statutory rates, but foreign‑company classification can affect treaty eligibility
DTAA benefit access India‑resident company, can claim DTAA relief as a resident Can claim PE‑related treaty protections; but some treaties impose a branch profits tax adjustment

The effective‑rate gap between a subsidiary taxed under Section 115BAA (≈ 25.17 %) and a branch taxed as a foreign company (≈ 41.60 %+) is roughly 16 to 18 percentage points. For a branch generating INR 10 crore of taxable profit, the additional annual tax cost approaches INR 1.6–1.8 crore, a sum that dwarfs any savings on incorporation or governance costs. However, the branch avoids dividend‑distribution withholding, which partially narrows the gap when profits are fully repatriated. The net comparison therefore depends on the applicable DTAA and the repatriation strategy.

Liability and Enforceability

A wholly‑owned subsidiary provides a statutory liability firewall. Because the subsidiary is a separate legal person under Section 2(68) of the Companies Act 2013, creditors, including employees, landlords and commercial counterparties, can enforce claims only against the subsidiary’s assets. The parent company’s global balance sheet is insulated unless a court pierces the corporate veil, which Indian courts do only in cases of fraud, sham transactions or statutory non‑compliance. If the Indian venture faces insolvency proceedings, claims are ring‑fenced to the subsidiary.

A branch office offers no such protection. It is legally the foreign parent operating in India. Every contract, employment obligation, tax demand and tort claim is a direct obligation of the parent. If the branch incurs a liability that exceeds its Indian assets, creditors can pursue the parent’s global assets, including through cross‑border enforcement proceedings. For companies entering sectors with meaningful litigation or regulatory‑fine exposure, this distinction alone can be decisive.

Transfer Pricing and Documentation

Both structures trigger Indian transfer pricing obligations, but in different ways. A subsidiary’s transactions with its foreign parent are “international transactions” under Sections 92 to 92F of the Income Tax Act, requiring arm’s‑length pricing, contemporaneous documentation (Form 3CEB filed by the due date of the tax return) and, for transactions exceeding INR 1 crore, a transfer pricing study.

A branch office does not transact with itself (it is the same entity), so the transfer pricing framework applies via the concept of profit attribution to a permanent establishment (PE). Under Article 7 of most of India’s DTAAs and the OECD’s Authorised OECD Approach, the branch’s profits must reflect what an independent enterprise performing the same functions, using the same assets and assuming the same risks would have earned. In practice, the attribution exercise can be more complex and more contentious with Indian tax authorities than arm’s‑length pricing of clearly defined intercompany transactions in a subsidiary structure. Early indications suggest that Indian revenue authorities are increasing scrutiny of branch‑profit attribution under evolving OECD guidelines.

Regulatory and FDI Compliance

Establishing a subsidiary in a sector eligible for 100 % FDI under the automatic route requires no prior government approval, the company simply files post‑investment reporting with the RBI through its AD bank. Sectors under the government‑approval route (e.g., multi‑brand retail, certain media activities, mining) require prior clearance from the relevant ministry.

A branch office always requires prior RBI approval, regardless of sector. The RBI evaluates the parent company’s financial standing, track record and the proposed activities before issuing the approval letter. The branch must also comply with annual reporting to the RBI (Annual Activity Certificate from its auditors) and is subject to FEMA regulations on inward remittances and profit repatriation. Any change in the branch’s permitted activities requires a fresh RBI application, adding regulatory friction for businesses that need to pivot or expand scope.

Cost and Timing

Cost / timing item Wholly‑owned subsidiary Branch office
Government registration fees INR 10,000–70,000 (varies by authorised capital) INR 5,000–50,000 (RoC fees for foreign company registration)
Professional fees (legal + CA) INR 40,000–1,50,000 INR 35,000–1,00,000
Annual statutory audit Required (Companies Act 2013) Required (Indian accounts must be audited)
Annual compliance cost (filings, secretarial) INR 1,00,000–3,00,000 per year INR 60,000–1,50,000 per year
Setup timeline 4–8 weeks (automatic route) 8–16 weeks (RBI approval dependent)

The branch office is marginally cheaper to establish and maintain from a compliance‑cost standpoint. However, when the tax‑rate differential is factored in, the subsidiary is almost always cheaper on a total‑cost‑of‑ownership basis for any operation generating taxable profits in India.

What Changed in 2025–2026

Several regulatory developments in 2025 and 2026 affect the wholly owned subsidiary vs branch office India decision:

  • FEMA amendments (May 2026). India tightened FDI screening for investments from countries sharing a land border and liberalised investment thresholds in the insurance sector. Subsidiaries in newly liberalised sectors can now accept 100 % FDI under the automatic route where previously the government route applied. Verify the latest RBI and FEMA notifications for sector‑specific changes.
  • Transfer pricing documentation. CBDT circulars issued in late 2025 reinforced the requirement for contemporaneous TP documentation for branch‑profit attribution, aligning India more closely with the OECD’s Authorised OECD Approach.
  • Corporate tax rates. No material change to the headline corporate tax rates under Sections 115BAA or 115BAB has been enacted for assessment year 2026–27. The concessional regime remains available to new subsidiary optees.

Industry observers expect further tightening of PE attribution rules as India implements Pillar Two of the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework, which will primarily affect large multinationals with consolidated revenues exceeding EUR 750 million.

Decision Framework: When to Choose a Subsidiary vs a Branch Office in India

Choose a wholly‑owned subsidiary when:

  • You plan to generate significant revenue from Indian customers or contracts.
  • You need to hire a local workforce and build long‑term operations.
  • Limiting the parent company’s liability to its equity contribution is a priority.
  • You want access to concessional tax rates under Section 115BAA or Section 115BAB.
  • Your business involves manufacturing, retail trading or any activity not typically permitted for branch offices.
  • You intend to bid on Indian government tenders or participate in PLI schemes that require an Indian‑incorporated entity.
  • You need clean arm’s‑length transfer pricing between defined entities rather than complex PE attribution.
  • You are considering an eventual partial exit, local fundraise or IPO, only a subsidiary provides a share‑capital structure for these events.

Choose a branch office when:

  • Your India presence is limited to a defined project with a fixed duration (typically under 3–5 years).
  • Activities are restricted to liaison, export promotion, consultancy or technical support, all within the RBI’s permitted categories.
  • You want centralised parent‑company control without a separate board or local shareholders.
  • Expected Indian taxable profits are minimal or nil (so the higher tax rate has limited impact).
  • You need to test the Indian market before committing to full incorporation.
  • Your priority is speed of profit repatriation without dividend‑distribution formalities.
If your priority is… Choose…
Minimising Indian tax on profits Wholly‑owned subsidiary
Shielding the parent from Indian liabilities Wholly‑owned subsidiary
Manufacturing or retail activities Wholly‑owned subsidiary
Fastest possible profit repatriation (no dividend process) Branch office
Short‑term, service‑only project Branch office
Accessing government tenders or PLI incentives Wholly‑owned subsidiary
Minimal governance overhead Branch office
Future equity fundraise, JV or IPO Wholly‑owned subsidiary

As a two‑step rule of thumb: Step 1, if you will generate taxable profits in India exceeding INR 50 lakh annually, choose a subsidiary (the tax saving alone justifies the additional compliance cost). Step 2, if your India activities are time‑bound and restricted to services or liaison, and Indian‑source profits will be minimal, a branch office is the faster, leaner option.

When to Engage a Lawyer for the Subsidiary‑vs‑Branch Decision

Many founders and CFOs can narrow the choice to a shortlist using the framework above. Engage specialist international corporate counsel when any of the following triggers apply:

  • Regulated sectors. Your planned activity falls under a sectoral FDI cap or requires the government‑approval route (insurance, defence, telecommunications, multi‑brand retail, media, banking).
  • Significant intercompany transactions. You anticipate IP licensing, management fees or cost‑sharing arrangements that will require a defensible transfer pricing policy and benchmarking study.
  • Multi‑jurisdictional tax planning. Your group operates in three or more tax jurisdictions and needs the India structure to be compatible with DTAA networks, Pillar Two obligations or CFC rules in the parent’s home jurisdiction.
  • Post‑M&A restructuring. You have acquired an Indian target and must decide whether to integrate it as a subsidiary or convert existing branch arrangements.
  • Material liability exposure. The Indian operation will face potential product‑liability, employment or environmental claims where the parent’s global assets must be ring‑fenced.

Before your first call, prepare: the group’s corporate chart, projected Indian revenue and cost model, a list of intercompany transactions (including IP, shared services and management fees), the target activity description, and the parent company’s audited financials for the last two years.

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. Companies Act, 2013, Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA)
  2. Income Tax Act, 1961, Income Tax Department of India
  3. Reserve Bank of India (RBI), Guidelines on Branch / Liaison / Project Offices
  4. DPIIT, Consolidated FDI Policy and FEMA Regulations
  5. Transfer Pricing Rules, Income Tax Department of India
  6. OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines
  7. Taxmann, Tax Commentary and Case Law Database
  8. India Briefing, Doing Business Guides
  9. OECD BEPS / Pillar Two Framework

FAQs

What is the difference between a branch company and a subsidiary company in India?
A subsidiary is a separate Indian company with its own legal personality, incorporated under the Companies Act, 2013. A branch office is not a separate entity, it is the foreign parent company operating in India through a registered place of business. The subsidiary has its own board, share capital and limited liability; the branch has none of these.
A branch office is taxed as a foreign company at 40 % plus surcharge and cess (effective rate ≈ 41.60 %–43.68 %). A subsidiary is taxed as a domestic company, with access to concessional rates as low as ≈ 25.17 % under Section 115BAA of the Income Tax Act, 1961. The subsidiary pays dividend withholding tax on repatriation; the branch remits profits after tax with no further dividend levy, but the headline rate is substantially higher.
A subsidiary in a sector open to 100 % FDI under the automatic route needs no prior approval, only post‑investment reporting to the RBI. A branch office always requires prior RBI approval under FEMA regulations, regardless of sector. Both must comply with annual RBI/FEMA reporting, but the branch faces additional requirements including the Annual Activity Certificate.
Choose a branch office when your India presence is time‑bound (typically under 3–5 years), limited to service or liaison activities permitted by the RBI, and expected to generate little or no Indian taxable profit. If any of these conditions do not apply, a subsidiary is usually the stronger choice.
Both are subject to Indian transfer pricing rules under Sections 92–92F. However, a subsidiary’s intercompany transactions are discrete and easier to document. A branch’s taxable income is determined by profit attribution to the permanent establishment, which involves more complex functional and risk analysis under OECD PE guidelines and is subject to increasing scrutiny by Indian tax authorities.
Yes. The foreign parent can incorporate a new Indian subsidiary and transfer the branch’s business to it by way of a slump sale or business transfer agreement, followed by closure of the branch with RBI approval. The process typically takes 3–6 months and involves transfer pricing, GST and stamp‑duty considerations. It is not uncommon, many multinationals start with a branch to test the market and then convert once operations justify the subsidiary structure.
The most common consequence is avoidable tax leakage. A profitable branch paying 41 %+ instead of 25 % annually accumulates a significant cost disadvantage. Conversely, incorporating a subsidiary for a short‑term project adds unnecessary governance and wind‑down costs. In both cases, restructuring mid‑course is possible but involves professional fees, regulatory filings and potential tax friction on the transfer of assets.
A subsidiary in a sector eligible for automatic‑route FDI can be incorporated in 4–8 weeks. A branch office typically takes 8–16 weeks because of the mandatory RBI approval step, which does not carry a statutory processing deadline. Complex applications, or those in sensitive sectors, can take longer.
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Wholly‑owned Subsidiary vs Branch Office in India, Tax, Liability and When to Choose

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