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India Entry Compliance Checklist for Foreign Companies: Complete Guide

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      AI Summary

      Foreign companies entering India face a complex compliance landscape structured under multiple laws, including the Companies Act, Foreign Exchange Management Act, and Income Tax Act. This comprehensive guide outlines a checklist for adherence, categorized by the sequence of obligations from pre-incorporation through annual compliance. The scrutiny varies significantly based on the chosen entry structure, with wholly owned subsidiaries (WOS) incurring the highest compliance load but offering tax efficiencies. Key phases span from capital remittance and GSTR registration to ongoing tax compliance and data protection mandates under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act. Failure to meet these obligations can result in severe penalties, making expert guidance essential for foreign entities aiming to navigate India's regulatory framework successfully.

      When a foreign company enters India, it does not take on one compliance framework. It takes on seven simultaneously. Corporate law under the Companies Act, 2013 governs how the entity is formed and governed. Exchange control under the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 governs every capital movement. Direct tax under the Income Tax Act, 2025 governs income, withholding, and cross-border pricing. GST governs every commercial transaction. Labour law governs every hire. Data protection under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 governs every byte of customer or employee data. Sector-specific licensing governs what the company can actually do. Most foreign companies entering India receive expert advice on one or two of these domains. They discover the rest through penalty notices. This checklist covers all seven, organised not by domain but by when each obligation arises, so a CFO or legal counsel can see the full commitment before signing off on entry.

      How the compliance load varies by entry structure

      Before the checklist, one orientation point. The volume and type of obligations a foreign company takes on depends entirely on the entry vehicle it chooses. Jordensky’s 12-month compliance guide, FinPracto’s end-to-end checklist, and PerfectAccounting’s 12-month roadmap all default to the wholly owned subsidiary (WOS) and do not map how the obligation set changes for a branch office or liaison office. That matters because the tax rate difference alone (25.17% effective for a WOS versus approximately 35% for a branch office for AY 2026-27) changes the economics of compliance spend significantly, and the branch office carries RBI-specific obligations the subsidiary does not.

      Compliance domainWOSBranch officeLiaison office
      MCA / ROC filingsFull (AOC-4, MGT-7, board meetings, AGM)Partial (annual accounts with RoC)Minimal
      FEMA (RBI) filingsFC-GPR, FC-TRS, FLA, advance reportingAAC, FLAAAC only
      Income taxFull (ITR-6, TDS, transfer pricing, Form 3CEB)Full (as foreign company, higher rate)Nil (no income)
      GSTOn all taxable suppliesOn all taxable suppliesNil (no revenue)
      Labour lawFull (EPF, ESI, POSH, S&E, Professional Tax)FullMinimal
      Data protection (DPDPA)Full (if processing Indian personal data)FullFull (if any data processing)
      Transfer pricingYes (all intercompany transactions)Yes (if intercompany transactions)No
      SBO disclosure (BEN-2)YesNoNo

      The WOS carries the highest obligation count. It is also the most tax-efficient structure for long-term operations in India, which is why more than 90% of operational foreign companies choose it (DPIIT Consolidated FDI Policy, 2020, as amended). The compliance load is the price of that efficiency. Everything below assumes the WOS structure unless noted.

      The complete India entry compliance checklist

      This table covers every statutory obligation a foreign-owned WOS must meet, from the moment the structure decision is made through the first full year of operations. Obligations are sequenced by when they arise.

      Phase 1: Pre-incorporation (before the company is registered)

      ObligationWhat it isForm / filingDeadlinePenalty if missed
      SBO identificationMap the natural-person beneficial owner of the Indian entity through the full parent chain. Mandatory for any entity where a foreign entity holds 25%+ voting rights.BEN-1 notice to SBO (internal); Form BEN-2 to RoC post-incorporationBEN-2 within 30 days of incorporationINR 50,000 per day of continuing default (Section 90(10), Companies Act, 2013)
      FDI route verificationConfirm whether your sector allows automatic route FDI and at what percentage cap. Check Press Note 3 (amended March 2026) if any beneficial owner is from a land-border country.No filing; DPIIT FDI Policy reviewBefore remitting capitalInvestment may be illegal if wrong route used; compounding under FEMA
      FOCC classification analysisIf the Indian subsidiary will invest in other Indian companies, determine whether FOCC (Foreign-Owned or Controlled Company) classification applies and what FDI sectoral caps govern those downstream investments.No filing; legal analysisBefore any downstream investmentFEMA contravention; penalty up to 3x amount involved (Section 13, FEMA 1999)
      Name reservationReserve the company name via RUN service on the MCA portal.RUN formBefore SPICe+ filingName rejected at incorporation
      DSC procurementClass 3 Digital Signature Certificate for all proposed directors.DSC agency applicationBefore SPICe+ filingCannot file SPICe+ without DSC

      Phase 2: Incorporation (Day 1 to Day 15 approximately)

      ObligationWhat it isForm / filingDeadlinePenalty if missed
      Company incorporationFile SPICe+ (Simplified Proforma for Incorporating Company Electronically) to register the WOS with the RoC. MoA, AoA, DIN, PAN, TAN, EPFO, and ESIC registrations are generated simultaneously.SPICe+ Part BN/A (initiating step)N/A
      Statutory auditor appointmentAppoint the first statutory auditor within 30 days of incorporation. Cannot be waived.Board resolutionWithin 30 days of incorporationPenalty under Section 139, Companies Act, 2013
      First board meetingHold the first board meeting within 30 days of incorporation. Set out key governance decisions.Board minutesWithin 30 daysPenalty under Section 173(1), Companies Act, 2013
      Form BEN-2 (SBO disclosure)File the Significant Beneficial Owner disclosure with RoC. This is separate from SPICe+ and not prompted by the MCA portal.Form BEN-2Within 30 days of incorporationINR 50,000 per day of default (Section 90(10))
      Bank account openingOpen an Indian current account with an Authorised Dealer Category I bank. Required before any capital remittance.Bank KYC documentsBefore capital remittanceCannot receive foreign capital without an Indian account

      Phase 3: Capital remittance and FEMA (within 60 to 90 days of incorporation)

      ObligationWhat it isForm / filingDeadlinePenalty if missed
      Advance reporting of FDI receiptReport receipt of the foreign remittance to RBI through the FIRMS portal before allotting shares. Separate from FC-GPR. This step is missed by almost every first-time entrant.Advance reporting on FIRMS portalWithin 30 days of receipt of fundsFEMA contravention; penalty up to 3x amount or INR 2 lakh, whichever is higher
      Share allotmentAllot shares to the foreign investor by board resolution. Must happen before the 60-day window from receipt of funds closes.Board allotment resolutionWithin 60 days of receipt of fundsFunds must be returned to investor; failure to return is a further contravention
      Form FC-GPRReport the share issuance to RBI. The 30-day clock runs from allotment date, not from remittance receipt. Each allotment resolution is a separate FC-GPR event. In multi-tranche rounds, each tranche creates its own 30-day window.FC-GPR on FIRMS SMFWithin 30 days of each allotmentLSF = INR 7,500 + (0.025% x amount x days delayed). Percentage doubles every 12 months. Escalates to compounding (up to 3x amount) beyond 3 years.
      Form BEN-2 (if not filed at incorporation)File SBO disclosure if not completed in Phase 2.Form BEN-2Within 30 days of incorporationINR 50,000 per day

      Phase 4: Post-incorporation registrations (Month 1 to Month 3)

      ObligationWhat it isForm / filingDeadlinePenalty if missed
      GST registrationMandatory before first taxable supply, or when aggregate turnover crosses INR 20 lakhs (INR 10 lakhs in special category states).REG-01 on GST portalBefore first taxable supplySupply without registration is an offence; penalties under CGST Act, 2017, Section 122
      Shops and Establishments registrationState-level registration required in the state of operations within 30 days of commencing business. Requirement and format vary by state.State Labour DepartmentWithin 30 days of commencementState-specific penalty; typically INR 200 to INR 5,000 per day
      Professional Tax registrationState-level tax on employed individuals. Rate and applicability vary by state.State-specificWithin 30 daysState penalty
      Import Export Code (IEC)Mandatory before any import or export of goods or services. Issued by DGFT.DGFT portalBefore first import/export transactionCannot clear customs or receive foreign remittance for services without IEC
      POSH Internal Complaints CommitteeConstitute an Internal Complaints Committee once headcount reaches 10 employees. Many companies miss this because they are watching for higher headcount thresholds from other Acts.Board resolution constituting ICCBefore 10th employee joinsINR 50,000 first offence; INR 1 lakh repeat; criminal liability of employer (Section 26, POSH Act, 2013)
      Sector-specific licencesVaries by sector: FSSAI for food, RBI licence for NBFCs, IRDAI for insurance, SEBI registration for portfolio management, etc.Sector regulator applicationBefore commencing regulated activityOperating without licence is a criminal offence under the relevant sectoral Act

      Phase 5: Ongoing tax and withholding compliance (from Month 1, recurring)

      ObligationWhat it isForm / filingDeadlinePenalty if missed
      TDS deduction and depositDeduct Tax at Source on all applicable payments: salary, contractor fees, rent, royalties, payments to non-residents. No minimum threshold.Challan 281By 7th of the following monthInterest at 1.5% per month plus penalty equal to TDS amount (Section 271C, ITA 1961)
      TDS quarterly return (domestic)Report all domestic TDS deductions.Form 26QWithin 31 days of quarter endINR 200 per day (Section 234E)
      TDS quarterly return (non-resident)Report all TDS on payments to non-residents, including parent company fees.Form 27QWithin 31 days of quarter endINR 200 per day (Section 234E)
      DTAA documentationBefore each applicable cross-border payment to the parent, obtain: Tax Residency Certificate from the parent’s home-country tax authority, Form 10F filed by the foreign parent on India’s income tax portal, and a beneficial ownership declaration. Without these, TDS must be deducted at the domestic rate (20% to 40%) rather than the treaty rate (typically 5% to 15%).TRC, Form 10F, declarationBefore each applicable paymentNo penalty for missing the documents; consequence is mandatory TDS at domestic rate, not treaty rate. Recovery requires foreign parent to file an Indian return, which may create PE exposure.
      Advance taxPay estimated tax liability in four instalments if annual tax liability exceeds INR 10,000.Challan 28015 June (15%), 15 September (45%), 15 December (75%), 15 March (100%)Interest under Sections 234B and 234C, ITA 1961
      EPF contributionEmployer contributes 12% of basic wages per employee to EPFO, applicable once establishment has 20 or more employees.ECR challan on EPFO portalBy 15th of following monthDamages of 5% to 25% per annum on arrears plus prosecution under EPF Act, 1952
      ESI contributionEmployer contributes 3.25% of gross wages, applicable for employees earning below INR 21,000 per month once establishment has 10 or more employees.ESI challanBy 15th of following monthInterest and prosecution under ESI Act, 1948
      Equalisation levy2% on specified digital services provided by non-PE foreign companies to Indian residents.Statement of specified services30 June annuallyInterest plus penalty equal to levy amount (Finance Act, 2016, Section 165)

      Phase 6: Transfer pricing (from first intercompany transaction, annual documentation)

      Every Indian company that transacts with a foreign associated enterprise (AE) is subject to transfer pricing rules under Chapter X of the Income Tax Act, 2025. There is no minimum threshold. The arm’s length obligation applies from the first rupee of the first transaction.

      ObligationWhat it isForm / filingDeadlinePenalty if missed
      Arm’s length pricingAll intercompany transactions (management fees, software licences, seconded employee recharges, intra-group loans, royalties) must be priced as if between unrelated parties.No separate filing; documented in TP studyOngoingTP adjustment plus 50% to 200% of tax on understated income (Section 270A, ITA 1961)
      Transfer pricing documentationMaintain a Local File documenting the nature of transactions, pricing method, and comparables. Required when aggregate international transaction value exceeds INR 1 crore.Local File under Rule 10D, Income Tax Rules 1962Maintained before Form 3CEB filing date2% of international transaction value (Section 271AA, ITA 1961)
      Form 3CEBAccountant’s report certified by a Chartered Accountant on all international transactions. Mandatory irrespective of transaction value. One of the most commonly missed first-year filings for new subsidiaries.Form 3CEB31 October of assessment yearINR 1 lakh minimum (Section 271BA, ITA 1961)
      Master FileRequired if the MNE group’s consolidated revenue exceeds INR 500 crore and the Indian entity’s international transactions exceed INR 50 crore.Form 3CEAA31 October2% of transaction value (Section 271AA)
      Country-by-Country ReportRequired if the MNE group’s global consolidated revenue exceeds INR 5,500 crore.Form 3CEAD12 months from group’s financial year endINR 5 lakh (Section 271GB)

      Phase 7: Annual statutory compliance (every financial year)

      ObligationWhat it isForm / filingDeadlinePenalty if missed
      Annual General MeetingHold AGM within 9 months of the close of the first financial year, then within 6 months of every subsequent financial year close.Board approval; AGM minutesBy 30/09 each year (first AGM by 30/12 of first FY close)INR 1 lakh plus INR 5,000 per day (Section 99, Companies Act, 2013)
      Financial statements with RoC (AOC-4)File audited financial statements with the Registrar of Companies within 30 days of AGM.Form AOC-4Within 30 days of AGMINR 100 per day per form (accumulates without cap for certain forms)
      Annual return with RoC (MGT-7)File annual return with the Registrar of Companies within 60 days of AGM.Form MGT-7Within 60 days of AGMINR 100 per day per form
      Income tax returnAll Indian companies must file regardless of income or loss status. Companies with international transactions have a 31 October deadline.ITR-631 October (if transfer pricing applies); 30 November otherwiseINR 5,000 late filing fee; loss cannot be carried forward if return is late
      Tax auditMandatory if turnover exceeds INR 1 crore (INR 10 crores for predominantly digital-payment businesses).Form 3CA-3CD31 October0.5% of turnover or INR 1.5 lakh, whichever is lower (Section 271B)
      FLA ReturnAnnual RBI return on foreign liabilities and assets. Required every year the company has an outstanding FDI position, even if no new investment occurred in the year. This is missed by companies that file in year one and assume subsequent filings are only triggered by new investment.FLA Return on RBI portal15 July each yearINR 7,500 per default (FEMA, 1999)
      DIR-3 KYCAnnual KYC for every director holding a DIN. Non-compliance deactivates the DIN, making it impossible for that director to sign any statutory filing.DIR-3 KYC on MCA portal30 September each yearDIN deactivated; INR 5,000 to reactivate
      Board meetingsMinimum four board meetings per financial year, with no gap exceeding 120 days between consecutive meetings.Board minutesThroughout the yearINR 25,000 per director in default (Section 173, Companies Act, 2013)
      GSTR-9 (annual GST return)Annual reconciliation of GST filings. Mandatory for turnover above INR 2 crores. GSTR-9C (reconciliation statement) additionally required above INR 5 crores.GSTR-9 / GSTR-9C31 December of the following yearINR 200 per day (INR 100 CGST + INR 100 SGST) subject to maximum of 0.25% of turnover
      POSH annual reportAnnual report on POSH compliance submitted to the District Officer by every company with a constituted Internal Complaints Committee.Form as prescribedBy 31 January each yearINR 50,000 first offence; INR 1 lakh repeat (Section 26, POSH Act, 2013)

      Phase 8: Data protection (phased, building to full compliance by 13/05/2027)

      The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 applies to any entity processing digital personal data within India, and to any foreign company processing Indian residents’ data in connection with offering goods or services to them, regardless of where the company is incorporated (Section 2(i), DPDPA, 2023). The DPDP Rules, 2025 were notified by MeitY on 13/11/2025. Hogan Lovells’ November 2025 analysis confirms the old IT (SPDI) Rules, 2011 remain in force in parallel until Phase 3 is complete.

      ObligationWhat it isEffective datePenalty if missed
      Data Protection Board constitutedEnforcement body established. Complaints can be filed from this date.13/11/2025 (in force)Board operational
      Consent Manager registration opensEntities acting as intermediaries between data principals and fiduciaries must register.13/11/2026TBD by Board
      Consent noticesObtain specific, informed, unambiguous consent before processing personal data.13/05/2027Up to INR 250 crores (Section 33, DPDPA 2023)
      Breach notificationNotify the Data Protection Board and affected individuals of every personal data breach, regardless of severity.13/05/2027Up to INR 200 crores
      Security safeguardsImplement reasonable technical and organisational measures appropriate to the risk.13/05/2027Up to INR 250 crores
      Data principal rightsEnable individuals to access, correct, and erase their personal data on request.13/05/2027Up to INR 150 crores
      Data processor contractsBind all vendors processing data on the company’s behalf to DPDPA-compliant terms.13/05/2027Part of fiduciary’s accountability
      Cross-border transfer reviewVerify that data transfers to the parent company comply with the government-notified country list (to be published in 2026).13/05/2027Up to INR 250 crores
      Data Protection Officer appointmentRequired only for entities designated as Significant Data Fiduciaries. Criteria to be published by the government in 2026.On SDF designationINR 50 crores

      GDPR compliance does not satisfy DPDPA. As McDermott Will and Emery noted in December 2025, the DPDPA’s legitimate-use categories are structurally narrower than GDPR’s legitimate interest basis, and US or EU companies will need India-specific consent addenda to their existing data processing agreements.

      The six compliance triggers that most foreign companies miss entirely

      Jordensky, FinPracto, PerfectAccounting, and Fintrac Advisors all cover the headline filings. These six are the ones that appear in penalty notices, not checklists.

      1. The advance reporting obligation before FC-GPR. When the foreign parent wires capital to the Indian subsidiary, a 30-day reporting window opens immediately on the FIRMS portal, before any shares are allotted. This is separate from Form FC-GPR, which runs from allotment date. Most companies know about FC-GPR. Almost none file the advance report on time. Two contraventions from one transaction.

      2. Form BEN-2 is not part of SPICe+. The MCA portal does not prompt for it. The RoC does not send a reminder. It must be filed within 30 days of incorporation as a separate action. For PE-backed or multi-tier parent structures, the SBO identification itself requires a legal analysis before filing. The penalty is INR 50,000 per day from the date the default begins.

      3. FLA Return is annual, not transactional. Companies file the Foreign Liabilities and Assets return in year one because they remember receiving the FDI. They stop in year two because no new investment arrived. The filing obligation persists every year the company has any outstanding FDI position on its balance sheet. Missing it is INR 7,500 per default and creates a FEMA compliance gap that surfaces in funding due diligence.

      4. Each allotment date is a separate FC-GPR event. In a multi-tranche round where three investors close on different dates, there are three FC-GPR filing windows, each triggered by the specific allotment board resolution. Companies that wait for the round to fully close and file one consolidated FC-GPR are late on the first allotment. R Pareva and Company report this is the most common single pattern in FEMA compounding cases they handle.

      5. DTAA documentation must be in place before the first cross-border payment. If the TRC and Form 10F from the foreign parent are not filed before the first management fee or software licence payment to the parent, the Indian subsidiary is obligated to deduct TDS at the domestic rate. The excess TDS can only be recovered by the foreign parent filing an Indian income tax return, which may create a permanent establishment argument that costs far more than the original TDS differential.

      6. Form 3CEB applies from the first intercompany transaction, regardless of revenue. A pre-revenue subsidiary that pays a management fee or licence fee to its parent has an international transaction and must file Form 3CEB by 31 October. Many first-year subsidiaries discover this for the first time when their tax auditor raises it during year-end accounts.

      What each penalty actually costs: a quick reference

      ViolationPenalty formula or amountStatute
      Late FC-GPRINR 7,500 + (0.025% x amount x days delayed); doubles every 12 monthsRBI Circular 16/2022-23
      SBO / BEN-2 non-filingINR 50,000 per daySection 90(10), Companies Act, 2013
      Non-filing of FLA ReturnINR 7,500 per defaultFEMA, 1999
      FEMA contravention (general)Up to 3x amount involved, or INR 2 lakh if amount not quantifiableSection 13, FEMA, 1999
      Non-filing of Form 3CEBINR 1 lakh minimumSection 271BA, ITA 1961
      TP documentation failure2% of international transaction valueSection 271AA, ITA 1961
      TDS non-deductionPenalty equal to TDS amount plus interest at 1.5% per monthSection 271C, ITA 1961
      Late ROC filings (AOC-4, MGT-7)INR 100 per day per form (no statutory cap)Companies Act, 2013
      POSH ICC non-constitutionINR 50,000 first offence; INR 1 lakh repeat; criminal liabilitySection 26, POSH Act, 2013
      DPDPA data breach, failure to notifyUp to INR 200 croresSection 33, DPDPA, 2023
      DPDPA security safeguard failureUp to INR 250 croresSection 33, DPDPA, 2023
      GST registration failurePenalties under Section 122, CGST Act, 2017CGST Act, 2017
      DIR-3 KYC non-complianceDIN deactivation; INR 5,000 to reactivateCompanies Act, 2013

      FAQs on Compliance for Foreign Company in India

      Q: Does this checklist apply to a branch office or liaison office, or only a WOS?
      A: Most obligations above apply to a WOS. A branch office skips SBO/BEN-2 and has a different tax rate, but carries the same FEMA, GST, labour, and data protection obligations. A liaison office has minimal compliance: it cannot generate income, so income tax, GST, and transfer pricing do not apply, but it still requires RBI registration, an Annual Activity Certificate by 30/09 each year, and DPDPA compliance if it processes personal data.

      Q: If the parent company is listed on a foreign stock exchange, does SBO still apply?
      A: The Companies (Significant Beneficial Owners) Rules, 2018 provide an exemption for companies whose shares are listed on a recognised stock exchange. However, the exemption applies to the parent entity, not to all upstream shareholders. A PE fund that holds a stake in the listed parent through a separately incorporated vehicle does not automatically inherit the listed-entity exemption. Legal analysis is required before assuming the exemption applies.

      Q: What is the FOCC classification and when does it become relevant?
      A: A Foreign-Owned or Controlled Company is an Indian company owned or controlled by a non-resident, which includes any WOS of a foreign parent. FOCC classification becomes relevant when the Indian subsidiary makes investments in other Indian companies. Those downstream investments are treated as indirect FDI and must comply with the FDI sectoral caps applicable to the investee company’s sector, as if the foreign parent were investing directly. A subsidiary acquiring a stake in an Indian healthcare company, for example, must comply with FDI caps for that sector even though it is an Indian entity making the investment.

      Q: When must DPDPA compliance be in place?
      A: The Data Protection Board of India was constituted on 13/11/2025. Core compliance duties (consent, breach notification, security safeguards) apply from 13/05/2027. However, building consent architecture, data maps, and processor contracts after that date is substantially more expensive than building them correctly on entry. Companies entering India in 2026 should begin a DPDPA gap assessment before operations start.

      Q: Is the compliance obligation list the same for a company in a restricted sector such as defence or insurance?
      A: No. Restricted sectors carry additional sectoral licensing obligations (IRDAI registration for insurance, MHA security clearance for defence), additional FDI conditions (minimum capitalisation norms, Indian control requirements), and in some cases a government-route approval requirement before any capital can be invested. The compliance map above covers the baseline. Restricted sector overlays must be assessed against the DPIIT Consolidated FDI Policy and the relevant sectoral regulator’s framework.

      Q: How long does it take to complete all Phase 2 through Phase 4 obligations?
      A: Incorporation via SPICe+ takes 7 to 15 working days from document submission. Getting documents from the foreign parent (apostilled Certificate of Incorporation, MoA/AoA, board resolutions) takes 3 to 4 weeks. GST registration takes 7 working days. IEC takes 2 to 3 working days. FEMA advance reporting and FC-GPR are time-bound from capital receipt, not from incorporation. Realistically, a fully compliant India entry from decision to operational takes 8 to 12 weeks.

      Q: Can the Indian subsidiary start operations before all registrations are complete?
      A: No. Operating without GST registration before the registration threshold is crossed is permissible only if turnover is genuinely below INR 20 lakhs and no inter-state supply is made. Starting commercial operations without Shops and Establishments registration, IEC (if importing or exporting), or sector-specific licences is a statutory violation. The safe approach is to complete all Phase 4 registrations before the first commercial transaction.

      Regulatory references:

      • Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA), Section 13
      • Foreign Exchange Management (Non-Debt Instruments) Rules, 2019
      • Foreign Exchange Management (Establishment in India of a Branch Office or a Liaison Office or a Project Office or any Other Place of Business) Regulations, 2016
      • RBI Master Direction on Foreign Investment in India (updated January 2025)
      • RBI Circular No. 16 (RBI/2022-23/122), dated 30/09/2022 (LSF formula)
      • DPIIT Consolidated FDI Policy Circular, F.No. 5(2)/2020, effective 15/10/2020 (as amended, including Press Note 3, March 2026)
      • Companies Act, 2013, Sections 90, 96, 99, 123, 139, 149(3), 164(2), 173, 248
      • Companies (Significant Beneficial Owners) Rules, 2018
      • Companies (Incorporation) Rules, 2014
      • Income Tax Act, 1961, Sections 234B, 234C, 234E, 270A, 271AA, 271B, 271BA, 271C, 271G, 271GB, 271GB
      • Income Tax Act, 2025, Chapter X (Sections 162 to 177)
      • Income Tax Rules, 1962, Rule 10D
      • Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017, Sections 47, 122
      • Integrated Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
      • Employees’ Provident Funds and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952
      • Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948
      • Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013, Section 26
      • Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, Sections 2(i), 33
      • Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025 (notified by MeitY, 13/11/2025)
      • Finance Act, 2016, Section 165 (Equalisation Levy)
      About the Author
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      Treelife Team | support@treelife.in

      We are a legal and finance firm with a deep focus on the startup ecosystem. We offer a wide range of services, including Virtual CFO, Legal Support, Tax & Regulatory, and Global Expansion assistance.

      Our goal at Treelife is to provide you with peace of mind and ease in business.

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