Setting Up a Business in India: What Foreign Companies Get Wrong (And How to Do It Right)
India is one of the most compelling markets in the world right now. The consumer base is enormous, the tech talent pool is world-class, and the government has genuinely simplified large parts of the business environment over the past decade.
But India is also a market where the details matter enormously. Companies that arrive with assumptions shaped by their home markets often find themselves facing avoidable compliance issues, structural inefficiencies, or registration delays that could have been prevented.
Here’s a practical overview of what foreign companies need to understand before setting up operations in India.
First Decision: Which Structure?
The legal structure you choose shapes everything – your tax obligations, your ability to repatriate profits, your liability exposure, and your regulatory requirements. There’s no one-size-fits-all answer.
Wholly Owned Subsidiary (Private Limited Company)
This is the most common route for foreign companies wanting full control. You incorporate a Private Limited Company under the Companies Act 2013, with the foreign parent holding 100% of shares (subject to FDI sectoral limits). It has full legal standing, can employ staff, enter contracts, and hold assets.
The administrative overhead is real – annual MCA filings, board meetings, statutory audits, GST, TDS, payroll compliance but for companies with serious long-term India plans, it’s the cleanest structure.
Liaison Office (LO)
If you’re at the exploratory stage, then representing your parent company, understanding the market, building relationships – a Liaison Office lets you do that without engaging in any commercial activity. No revenue, no contracts. Permitted activities are strictly limited to market research and promoting the parent company’s business.
An LO requires RBI approval and has annual compliance requirements (filing Annual Activity Certificate with RBI).
Branch Office (BO)
For specific sectors (manufacturing, trading, professional services for export), a Branch Office allows the parent company to carry out defined business activities in India. It requires RBI approval and comes with strict activity restrictions and compliance requirements.
Project Office (PO)
If you’ve won a specific contract in India, typically infrastructure or EPC projects – a Project Office lets you execute that contract without incorporating a full company. It’s temporary by design and linked to the project’s duration.
The Registration Checklist That Most Companies Underestimate
Even for a straightforward Private Limited Company incorporation, the process touches multiple authorities. Getting these right from the start saves significant time and cost later.
Corporate Registration (MCA)
Name reservation, Digital Signature Certificates (DSCs) for directors, Director Identification Numbers (DINs), MOA and AOA drafting, and Certificate of Incorporation. The MCA21 portal has modernized much of this, but the documentation requirements, particularly for foreign directors need careful preparation.
Tax Registrations
PAN (Permanent Account Number) for the entity, TAN (Tax Deduction and Collection Account Number) for payroll and vendor payments, and GST registration once your taxable supplies begin.
FEMA and RBI Compliance
All foreign investment must be reported to the RBI within 30 days of receipt of funds using FC-GPR (Foreign Currency-Gross Provisional Return). Failure to report on time attracts penalties. For companies with ongoing foreign investments or overseas transactions, FEMA compliance is an ongoing obligation, not a one-time filing.
MSME Registration (if applicable)
If your Indian entity qualifies as a Micro, Small, or Medium Enterprise, Udyam registration unlocks priority sector lending benefits, government scheme access, and certain tax advantages.
What Surprises Most Foreign Companies
Payroll Compliance Is Complex and State-Dependent
India’s payroll compliance involves central statutes (PF, ESI, Gratuity, Bonus) and state-specific requirements (Professional Tax, Shops & Establishment Act registrations). The Shops & Establishment Act registration, for example, must be done in every state where you have employees – often overlooked by companies that assume one registration covers all locations.
TDS Is Pervasive
Tax Deducted at Source applies not just to salaries but to most vendor payments like professional fees, rent, contractor payments. The rates vary, the due dates are tight (7th of the following month), and the quarterly TDS returns (26Q, 24Q) must be filed accurately. Errors in TDS filings affect your vendors’ tax credits, which creates relationship friction.
Transfer Pricing Applies from Day One
Any transaction between your Indian entity and its overseas parent like the management fees, IT services, royalties, intercompany loans is a related party transaction subject to Indian transfer pricing regulations. This requires maintaining contemporaneous documentation (a TP study) and, for entities exceeding specified thresholds, Form 3CEB filing certified by a Chartered Accountant.
Many companies treat transfer pricing as an afterthought. Indian tax authorities don’t.
Statutory Audit Is Mandatory
Every Private Limited Company in India must have its accounts audited by an independent Chartered Accountant, regardless of size. There’s no minimum turnover threshold. This isn’t optional, and the audit must be completed within six months of the financial year end (India’s financial year runs April to March).
The India Opportunity Is Real – If You’re Set Up Correctly
India rewards companies that take compliance seriously. A well-structured, fully compliant Indian entity builds credibility with customers, employees, and government counterparts. It also makes future transactions – fundraising, M&A, strategic partnerships significantly smoother.
The administrative complexity of India is real, but it’s manageable with the right local partner one who understands both Indian regulations and the expectations of international parent companies.
Finanezy supports foreign companies entering India with end-to-end company formation, FEMA compliance, transfer pricing documentation, statutory audits, and ongoing finance and compliance outsourcing – so your India operations run as smoothly as your home market.



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