Foreign Subsidiary Compliance in India: A Guide for 2026

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      India's evolving regulatory landscape offers significant opportunities for foreign subsidiaries, yet understanding compliance requirements is crucial. Establishing a subsidiary mandates adherence to Indian corporate laws, tax regulations, and labour laws. Foreign entities are recognized as Indian companies, facing a multifaceted compliance environment with obligations under the Companies Act, 2013 and the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA). Companies must navigate numerous regulatory authorities, ensuring timely filings and adherence to local laws, including tax and transfer pricing documentation, which are critical to avoid penalties. Effective compliance management requires organized, tech-enabled frameworks, including annual calendars and governance structures, ensuring diligence in all aspects of operations to mitigate risks and enhance efficiency in the Indian market.

      India occupies a singular position in the global investment landscape. It combines the scale of one of the world’s largest consumer markets with an increasingly sophisticated regulatory infrastructure, a maturing capital market, and a policy environment that has, over the past decade, moved with demonstrable intent toward openness for foreign capital. For multinational corporations, this creates a compelling case for establishing or deepening a subsidiary presence in India.

      What that calculation must also account for, however, is the compliance environment that comes with incorporation. A foreign subsidiary in India does not operate in a simplified regulatory space by virtue of being foreign-owned. It is, in every material sense, an Indian legal entity, subject to the full architecture of Indian corporate, tax, foreign exchange, labour, and sector-specific regulation. Layered on top of that are additional obligations that arise precisely because of the foreign ownership, most notably in the domain of FEMA reporting and transfer pricing.

      For boards, CFOs, and in-house counsel who manage India operations from a global headquarters, the gap between what they assume India compliance involves and what it actually demands is often substantial. That gap carries real consequences: financial penalty, director disqualification, regulatory scrutiny, and in the most serious cases, criminal liability. The purpose of this guide is to close that gap with a structured, authoritative account of the obligations foreign subsidiaries must meet as of 2026.

      Understanding the Legal Character of a Foreign Subsidiary

      The foundational point from which all compliance obligations flow is this: a foreign subsidiary incorporated in India is not a foreign entity with an Indian presence. It is an Indian company with a foreign parent. That distinction, simple as it sounds, has profound regulatory implications.

      A foreign subsidiary is incorporated under the Companies Act, 2013. It holds its own PAN, files its own tax returns, maintains its own statutory records, and carries independent legal obligations that cannot be delegated upward to the parent entity. The most common forms through which foreign corporations establish subsidiary presence in India include:

      • Wholly Owned Subsidiary (WOS): The foreign parent holds the entire share capital, directly or through an intermediate entity.
      • Joint Venture Company: Equity is shared between the foreign investor and one or more Indian partners, with governance rights typically negotiated through a shareholders’ agreement.
      • Step-Down Subsidiary: An Indian company in which another Indian subsidiary, rather than the foreign parent directly, holds the controlling stake.

      Each of these structures attracts the same core compliance obligations. The differences lie in the complexity of related party relationships, the number of entities involved in FEMA reporting, and the governance arrangements that flow from the shareholding structure.

      The Regulatory Architecture: Who Governs What

      Foreign subsidiaries in India do not answer to a single regulator. Their operations are overseen by a matrix of authorities, each with distinct jurisdiction and enforcement powers. Effective compliance management requires a clear understanding of this structure.

      Regulatory AuthorityDomain of Oversight
      Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA)Incorporation, annual filings, corporate governance, insolvency
      Reserve Bank of India (RBI)Foreign investment reporting, ECBs, cross-border remittances, pricing compliance
      Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT)Corporate income tax, transfer pricing, withholding tax
      Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC)GST, customs duties, anti-dumping
      Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT)Import/export licensing, advance authorisations, SEIS/RoDTEP
      Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO)PF contributions, pension obligations
      Employees’ State Insurance Corporation (ESIC)Employee health insurance
      Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI)Capital market activity, listed entity obligations
      Sector-Specific Regulators (IRDAI, TRAI, etc.)Industry-specific licensing and ongoing compliance

      The challenge for foreign subsidiaries is not only the number of regulators involved, but the absence of a single coordination mechanism between them. A transaction that triggers a FEMA filing obligation may simultaneously create a withholding tax obligation, a GST obligation under the reverse charge mechanism, and a transfer pricing documentation requirement. Each of these obligations sits with a different authority and carries its own deadline and consequence for non-compliance.

      Companies Act, 2013: The Foundation of Corporate Compliance

      The Companies Act, 2013 is the bedrock statute governing all Indian companies, and its requirements define the annual rhythm of corporate compliance for foreign subsidiaries. These obligations exist independent of business activity and cannot be suspended on the grounds that the company is dormant, pre-revenue, or in the process of restructuring.

      Annual Statutory Filings

      The following filings constitute the mandatory annual compliance calendar for a private limited foreign subsidiary:

      FormPurposeDue Date
      AOC-4Filing of financial statements with the MCAWithin 30 days of AGM
      MGT-7AAnnual Return (for companies not required to certify by CS)Within 60 days of AGM
      ADT-1Intimation of auditor appointmentWithin 15 days of AGM
      DIR-3 KYCAnnual KYC for all DIN holders30 September each year
      DPT-3Return of deposits or transactions not treated as deposits30 June each year
      MSME-1Half-yearly return on outstanding dues to MSME vendors30 April and 31 October
      BEN-2Declaration of Significant Beneficial OwnershipOn occurrence and annually

      Late filing of core forms such as AOC-4 and MGT-7A attracts per-day penalties that accumulate without cap on certain forms, making delay disproportionately expensive relative to the cost of timely compliance.

      Board and General Meetings

      • A minimum of four board meetings per financial year, with no gap exceeding 120 days between consecutive meetings
      • The Annual General Meeting must be held within six months of the close of the financial year, i.e., by 30 September
      • First AGM for newly incorporated companies must be held within nine months of the close of the first financial year
      • Board meetings may be held through video conferencing for most agenda items, subject to prescribed procedural requirements

      Governance Obligations That Frequently Fall Through the Gaps

      Several compliance requirements under the Companies Act are structural in nature but routinely handled less rigorously than filing deadlines:

      • Related Party Transaction approvals: Transactions with the foreign parent, fellow subsidiaries, or associated entities require prior board approval, and in cases meeting prescribed thresholds, prior shareholder approval. The approval must precede the transaction, not ratify it after the fact.
      • Statutory Registers: The registers of members, directors and KMP, charges, and contracts involving directors must be maintained accurately and kept current. These registers are legal records, not administrative conveniences.
      • Director Interest Disclosures: Every director must file Form MBP-1 at the first board meeting of each financial year disclosing interests in other entities. Where interests change, fresh disclosure is required.
      • Company Secretary Appointment: Companies with paid-up share capital meeting the prescribed threshold are required to appoint a whole-time Company Secretary as Key Managerial Personnel. This is a mandatory appointment, not a discretionary one.

      Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999: The FEMA Compliance Dimension

      FEMA compliance is the area where foreign subsidiaries most distinctively differ from purely domestic entities. The Reserve Bank of India administers a comprehensive reporting framework that governs the entry of foreign capital into the Indian entity, the transfer of shares between residents and non-residents, cross-border payments, and borrowings from foreign lenders. Contraventions of FEMA are not treated as technical breaches. They carry substantial penalties and require formal compounding before they can be regularised.

      Investment Reporting Obligations

      FormTriggerDeadline
      FC-GPRAllotment of shares to a foreign investorWithin 30 days of allotment
      FC-TRSTransfer of shares between resident and non-residentWithin 60 days of receipt of consideration or transfer, whichever is earlier
      FLAAnnual return on outstanding foreign investment15 July each year

      The Form FLA is consistently the most commonly missed FEMA filing across the foreign subsidiary landscape. It is required annually for any Indian company that has received foreign direct investment, regardless of whether new shares were allotted during the year. The obligation persists for as long as outstanding foreign investment exists in the company’s capital structure.

      Cross-Border Payment Compliance

      Every payment made by an Indian entity to a non-resident is a regulated event under both FEMA and the Income Tax Act. The compliance obligations include:

      • Withholding tax deduction under Section 195 of the Income Tax Act at the applicable rate, which may be reduced under a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement if the recipient qualifies
      • Form 15CA: An online declaration filed by the remitter confirming the nature and tax treatment of the remittance
      • Form 15CB: A certificate from a Chartered Accountant confirming the tax computations underlying the remittance, required in most cases where a tax treaty benefit is claimed or the payment is above the prescribed threshold
      • Treaty benefit documentation: Where a reduced withholding rate is applied under a DTAA, the recipient must furnish a Tax Residency Certificate, Form 10F, and satisfy the Principal Purpose Test and beneficial ownership conditions increasingly scrutinised by Indian tax authorities

      Common payment types that attract these obligations include management fees, technical service fees, royalties, software licence fees, dividend remittances, and intercompany loan interest. Each must be reviewed individually rather than treated as a category.

      External Commercial Borrowings

      Where the Indian subsidiary borrows from its foreign parent or from offshore lenders, the ECB framework applies. This includes:

      • Filing of Form ECB with the RBI before drawdown
      • Monthly submission of Form ECB-2 for the duration of the borrowing
      • Compliance with end-use restrictions, minimum average maturity requirements, and the all-in cost ceiling prescribed by the RBI
      • Adherence to FEMA pricing norms on interest rates, which must be at arm’s length and within the permitted ceiling

      Corporate Taxation and Transfer Pricing

      Income Tax Compliance Calendar

      A foreign subsidiary taxed as a domestic company in India is subject to the following core annual obligations:

      Compliance ItemForm / InstrumentDue Date
      Advance tax (four instalments)ChallanJune, September, December, March
      Tax Audit ReportForm 3CA / 3CD30 September
      Transfer Pricing Audit ReportForm 3CEB30 September
      Income Tax Return (with TP audit)ITR-631 October
      Master FileForm 3CEAAOn or before ITR due date
      Country-by-Country ReportForm 3CEADWithin 12 months of group accounting year end

      The concessional tax regimes available under Sections 115BAA and 115BAB provide materially lower effective rates for qualifying companies. The choice between the standard regime and a concessional regime must be made carefully and, in the case of manufacturing companies, is irrevocable once exercised.

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      Transfer Pricing: The Highest-Risk Compliance Discipline

      Transfer pricing is the area of greatest sustained enforcement attention from the CBDT, and it represents the compliance discipline where foreign subsidiaries face the most significant financial exposure.

      Every international transaction between the Indian subsidiary and its associated enterprises must be:

      • Governed by a written intercompany agreement executed before the transaction commences
      • Priced on an arm’s length basis, determined using one of the prescribed transfer pricing methods
      • Supported by contemporaneous documentation prepared before the filing of the income tax return

      The documentation framework in India operates at three levels:

      Local File – The Local File requires transaction-by-transaction analysis and must include:

      • A functional analysis identifying the functions performed, assets employed, and risks assumed by each party
      • A comparability analysis demonstrating that the selected comparable transactions or entities reflect arm’s length conditions
      • A reasoned defence of the chosen transfer pricing method and the arm’s length range applied

      Master File (Form 3CEAA) – The Master File provides a group-level overview covering:

      • The group’s organisational structure and business description
      • The group’s intangibles strategy and significant intercompany arrangements
      • The group’s intercompany financing structure

      This obligation applies to constituent entities of groups whose consolidated revenue meets the prescribed threshold.

      Country-by-Country Report (Form 3CEAD) – Applicable to the largest multinational groups, the CbCR maps the group’s revenue, profits, taxes paid, and economic activity across all jurisdictions of operation. Where the ultimate parent is resident in India, the filing obligation falls on the parent. Where the Indian entity is a constituent of a foreign-parented group, the Indian subsidiary must file a surrogate or notification report as applicable.

      High-Risk Transaction Categories

      Certain types of intercompany transactions attract disproportionate CBDT scrutiny and require particularly robust documentation:

      • Management and advisory fee arrangements, where the CBDT frequently challenges both the quantum of the charge and whether the Indian entity demonstrably benefitted from the services rendered
      • Royalty payments for use of intellectual property owned by the parent, particularly where the IP value has not been benchmarked against comparable licences
      • Cost allocation arrangements under shared service models, where the allocation key must be defensible and consistently applied
      • Intercompany loans and guarantees, where arm’s length pricing must reflect genuine credit risk and market comparables

      GST Compliance

      Filing Obligations

      Foreign subsidiaries registered under GST are subject to an ongoing cycle of returns that requires systematic management:

      ReturnPurposeFrequency / Due Date
      GSTR-1Outward supplies declarationMonthly (by 11th) or quarterly under QRMP
      GSTR-3BSummary return and tax paymentMonthly (by 20th)
      GSTR-9Annual returnBy 31 December following the financial year
      GSTR-9CReconciliation statementFiled with GSTR-9 (above threshold turnover)

      Reverse Charge on Import of Services

      The import of services from a foreign group entity is a GST event that is routinely missed by foreign subsidiaries, particularly those where the India finance team does not interact directly with the group treasury or shared services centre that manages intercompany charges.

      When an Indian subsidiary receives services from its foreign parent or fellow subsidiaries, including management advisory, information technology support, shared human resources services, or brand licensing, GST is payable under the Reverse Charge Mechanism. The liability is self-assessed and self-paid by the Indian recipient, and it arises regardless of whether the foreign supplier has any GST registration in India.

      Input tax credit on RCM payments is available to the extent the Indian entity makes taxable outward supplies, but the credit must be taken in the correct tax period and is subject to the reconciliation requirements applicable to all input tax credit claims.

      GSTR-2B Reconciliation

      The automated credit ledger in GSTR-2B is generated from supplier filings and constitutes the primary basis for input tax credit availability. Mismatches between GSTR-2B and the company’s books arise where suppliers have not filed their returns, have filed late, or have reported invoice details incorrectly. The GST department’s data analytics infrastructure is now sufficiently developed to identify these mismatches at scale, and reconciliation notices are a growing feature of the compliance environment. Monthly reconciliation is not optional for companies that wish to avoid credit reversals and interest exposure.

      Labour Law and Employment Compliance

      Statutory Obligations Framework

      India’s labour law framework covers the full employment lifecycle and imposes obligations that are both financially material and, in the case of certain statutes, carry personal liability for management:

      StatuteCore ObligationCompliance Rhythm
      EPF and MP Act, 1952Monthly PF contributions for eligible employees15th of each month
      ESI Act, 1948Contributions for employees within the wage ceiling15th of each month
      Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972Gratuity payable on separation after prescribed service periodOn exit; actuarial provisioning ongoing
      Maternity Benefit Act, 1961Paid maternity leave and related protectionsOngoing
      Payment of Bonus Act, 1965Annual bonus for qualifying employeesAnnual
      Shops and Establishments ActRegistration, renewal, working hours complianceState-specific
      Professional TaxEmployee salary deductions and employer levyState-specific, typically monthly

      The Four Labour Codes: An Evolving Landscape

      The central government has enacted four Labour Codes that consolidate and replace a significant body of legacy labour legislation:

      • Code on Wages, 2019
      • Industrial Relations Code, 2020
      • Code on Social Security, 2020
      • Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020

      While the Codes have been enacted at the central level, their operationalisation requires state governments to publish their own rules and notify operative dates. As of 2026, implementation remains uneven across states. The critical compliance consequence is that legacy statutes continue to apply in states where the Codes have not been notified, meaning companies must track their obligations on a state-by-state basis and be prepared for a transition that may require changes to payroll structures, social security contribution calculations, and employment contracts.

      POSH Compliance

      The Prevention of Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace Act, 2013 imposes statutory obligations on all employers with ten or more employees:

      • Constitution of an Internal Complaints Committee (ICC) with a majority of women members and an external independent member
      • Display of the POSH policy in visible locations in the workplace
      • Conducting annual awareness and sensitisation programmes for all employees
      • Submission of an annual report to the District Officer by 31 January
      • Maintenance of records relating to complaints and ICC proceedings

      Boards of foreign-headquartered groups frequently underestimate POSH as a compliance obligation, treating it as a HR policy matter rather than a legal requirement. The exposure from non-compliance, including regulatory penalties and reputational risk in a market where ESG scrutiny of group practices is growing, makes this treatment increasingly difficult to justify.

      Sector-Specific Compliance Considerations

      Foreign subsidiaries operating in regulated sectors are subject to compliance layers that sit entirely outside the general framework described above. The most significant regulated sectors from a foreign investment compliance perspective include:

      Financial Services and Insurance: Foreign investment in banking, non-banking financial companies, and insurance is subject to sector-specific caps, RBI and IRDAI licensing conditions, and ongoing prudential reporting obligations. The entry conditions attached to sectoral approvals carry live compliance implications throughout the life of the investment.

      Telecommunications: TRAI and DoT licensing conditions impose obligations around spectrum usage, infrastructure sharing, and domestic data localisation that are material and ongoing.

      Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices: Foreign investment conditions in brownfield pharmaceutical activities and medical device manufacturing carry post-investment compliance obligations including manufacturing condition compliance and pricing regulations under the DPCO framework.

      Defence and Aerospace: Sectoral FDI caps, security clearance requirements, and conditions relating to domestic content and technology transfer are live compliance obligations, not historical transactional conditions.

      Media and Broadcasting: Investment conditions imposed by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting carry ongoing compliance requirements relating to content standards and ownership structure.

      The common thread across regulated sectors is that the compliance obligation does not end at the point of receiving investment approval. Approval conditions must be tracked, monitored, and reported on for as long as the investment exists.

      The Compliance Management Imperative

      The breadth and complexity of the compliance obligations described in this guide make a compelling case for what Big 4 advisory practice has long advocated: compliance management in India must be an organised, resourced, and technology-enabled function, not a best-efforts exercise delegated to whoever is available.

      The foundations of an effective compliance management architecture for a foreign subsidiary include the following:

      Annual Compliance Calendar – A comprehensive, entity-specific calendar mapping every obligation across every regulator to a deadline, a designated owner, and an escalation protocol. This calendar must be maintained dynamically and reviewed at the start of each quarter.

      Transfer Pricing Governance Framework – A governance rhythm that addresses intercompany pricing at the beginning of each financial year, not in the month before the return filing deadline. This includes a review of all intercompany agreements against current benchmarks, identification of new transaction types that require analysis, and alignment between the India tax team and the group treasury or transfer pricing function.

      Intercompany Agreement Repository – Written agreements, executed before transactions commence, for every category of intercompany arrangement, including services, IP licensing, cost sharing, loans, and guarantees. These agreements are the first document an Indian transfer pricing officer will request in an audit, and their absence is treated as evidence of non-arm’s length dealing.

      FEMA Transaction Monitoring – A workflow mechanism that identifies FEMA reporting obligations at the point of the underlying transaction. FC-GPR filings delayed because the finance team was unaware of the allotment event, or FLA filings missed because the obligation was not calendared, are systemic failures, not individual errors.

      GST Reconciliation Process – A monthly reconciliation between GSTR-2B credits and books of accounts, with a defined process for following up with vendors whose filings are missing or incorrect. Given the department’s investment in data analytics, this reconciliation is no longer a year-end exercise.

      In-Country Professional Infrastructure – The appointment of qualified professionals, including a statutory auditor registered with ICAI, a Company Secretary where mandated, and experienced tax and regulatory advisors with deep India expertise, is the minimum necessary professional infrastructure for a foreign subsidiary that takes its compliance obligations seriously. Advisory relationships of convenience, where Indian compliance is managed through a single generalist contact rather than a team with specialist depth, consistently produce compliance gaps.

      FAQs on Foreign Subsidiaries Compliance in India

      1. Can the foreign parent company's global audit firm sign the statutory audit report for the Indian subsidiary?

        No. Every Indian company, including a foreign subsidiary, must appoint a statutory auditor who holds a certificate of practice from the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India. Foreign audit firms, regardless of their global network affiliation or standing, are not recognised as auditors under the Companies Act, 2013. The parent’s global auditor may review or rely upon the India audit for group consolidation purposes, but the signing auditor for the Indian entity must be an ICAI-registered Chartered Accountant or firm. This is a structural requirement, not a formality that can be managed by exception.

      2. What is the practical consequence of missing the Form FLA deadline, and how is it resolved?

        A missed Form FLA filing constitutes a contravention of FEMA, 1999. Unlike certain other regulatory omissions that can be addressed through a simple late filing, FEMA contraventions require a compounding application to the Reserve Bank of India. The application must describe the contravention, provide supporting documentation, and pay a compounding fee assessed by the RBI based on the duration of the delay and the amount of outstanding foreign investment involved. While compounding provides a route to regularisation, it is a formal regulatory process and a matter of record. Companies with recurring FEMA contraventions attract heightened scrutiny on future filings and regulatory interactions.

      3. How should a foreign subsidiary approach the design of its management fee arrangement with the parent entity to ensure it is defensible under Indian transfer pricing rules?

        A defensible management fee arrangement rests on three foundations. First, a written intercompany agreement must exist before any services are rendered and must describe the services with sufficient specificity to allow an independent party to assess what is being provided and why it has value to the Indian entity. Second, the Indian subsidiary must be able to demonstrate, through contemporaneous records, that the services were actually rendered and that the Indian entity derived an identifiable benefit from them. Arrangements where the fee is charged purely on the basis of the parent’s cost allocation model, without evidence of benefit to the Indian entity, are routinely challenged by the CBDT. Third, the quantum of the fee must be benchmarked against what an independent party would have paid for comparable services in comparable circumstances. The benchmarking analysis must be updated regularly, not left static across multiple years.

      4. What compliance obligations persist for a foreign subsidiary that has become dormant or has ceased active business operations?

        A foreign subsidiary that has ceased operations but remains incorporated continues to attract statutory compliance obligations until it is formally dissolved. These include annual MCA filings, director KYC, FLA filings if foreign investment remains on the balance sheet, and GST return filings if registration has not been formally surrendered. Companies that cease to file without formally closing the entity accumulate penalties and may have their company struck off by the MCA, which carries serious consequences for directors. The formal exit options are voluntary strike-off under Section 248 of the Companies Act, which requires all pending compliances to be settled and a clean balance sheet, or formal liquidation under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code or the Companies Act. Both routes require careful coordination across MCA, RBI, and tax authorities.

      5. How does India's DTAA network interact with the withholding tax obligations of a foreign subsidiary making payments to its parent entity?

        India’s DTAA network provides for reduced withholding tax rates on dividends, interest, royalties, and fees for technical services in many cases. The availability of the treaty rate is not automatic. The recipient entity must establish that it is a tax resident of the treaty jurisdiction through a valid Tax Residency Certificate, must submit Form 10F confirming the required particulars, and must satisfy the beneficial ownership requirement, which means that the immediate recipient must be the person who has the right to use and enjoy the income, not merely a conduit for onward remittance. Since 2023, Indian tax authorities have applied the Principal Purpose Test in a growing number of cases, disallowing treaty benefits where one of the principal purposes of an arrangement was the obtainment of that benefit. Foreign subsidiaries and their treasury teams must assess treaty availability on a transaction-by-transaction basis and maintain a documentation file that can withstand scrutiny rather than relying on a general assumption that the treaty applies.

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