Blog Content Overview
- 1 What is a flip structure?
- 2 The three flip structures: which one is right for you?
- 3 How to flip an Indian startup: Step-by-step execution sequence
- 4 What FEMA requires: the compliance architecture
- 5 Is the share swap taxable? The Section 47 analysis
- 6 What is POEM risk and how do you manage it?
- 7 IP transfer during a flip: valuation, tax, and intercompany agreements
- 8 Transfer pricing: the annual compliance obligation that most founders miss
- 9 ESOP migration: what happens to employee equity during a flip
- 10 AIF investor complications: when a flip gets difficult
- 11 US-side tax obligations for the Delaware entity
- 12 When should an Indian startup flip? The decision framework
- 13 Common mistakes that cost founders time and money
- 14 Case study
- 15 FAQs on Flip Structuring in India
AI Summary
The "flip structure" is a significant yet complex decision for Indian startups before attracting US investment. It involves creating a Delaware entity that becomes the parent company, with the Indian firm as its subsidiary. This shift can enhance access to US venture capital and streamline international compliance. However, it requires careful timing and structuring to avoid tax liabilities and regulatory complications. Three primary structures exist: gradual migration, direct share swap, and split economics, each suited for different stages and circumstances of a startup. Founders must navigate various legal and tax obligations, including compliance with FEMA regulations and ongoing transfer pricing rules. Ultimately, the decision to flip should consider investor preferences, customer base, and potential tax implications.
The flip structure is one of the most consequential decisions an Indian founder can make before a funding round, and one of the least understood. When a US-based investor asks you to flip, they are not just asking you to incorporate a Delaware entity. They are asking you to permanently change the tax profile of every founder and investor on your cap table, your annual compliance obligations across two jurisdictions, your ESOP structure, your IP ownership, and your eventual exit mechanics. Done at the right time with proper structuring, a flip opens access to US venture capital, global M&A exits, and a US stock option framework that is deeply familiar to institutional investors. Done too early, too late, or without the right regulatory sequencing, it creates capital gains exposure, FEMA contraventions, and a compliance burden that outlasts the funding round that triggered it.
What is a flip structure?
A flip structure is a corporate reorganisation in which an Indian company creates a new overseas holding entity, most commonly a Delaware C-Corporation for US investors, and restructures shareholding or economic ownership so that the foreign entity sits at the top of the corporate hierarchy. The original Indian company becomes a wholly-owned subsidiary of the new foreign parent. The business continues to operate from India: employees, customers, engineering, and day-to-day operations remain in the Indian entity. Only the legal domicile, shareholding structure, and fundraising layer move overseas.
A US investor then invests into the Delaware parent, which in turn holds 100% of the Indian subsidiary. The Indian subsidiary bills the US parent for services under an intercompany services agreement, and the US parent typically holds intellectual property, brand assets, and customer contracts relevant to the global business.
The term “flip” covers a family of structures. The execution method (gradual migration, direct share swap, or split economics) is not a stylistic choice. It is a risk and tax decision that has real financial consequences at the individual founder level.
Common overseas jurisdictions used by Indian startups
| Jurisdiction | Typical investor profile | Key advantage | Key risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delaware, USA | US VCs, tier-1 global funds | Preferred C-Corp for preferred stock, ISOs, QSBS | POEM risk, GILTI, US corporate tax at 21% |
| Singapore Pte Ltd | APAC-focused VCs, Southeast Asia expansion | DTAA benefits, 17% corporate tax, familiar to Indian founders | Less familiar to pure-play US VCs |
| Cayman Islands | Hedge funds, PE, offshore structures | Tax-neutral holdco, no corporate tax | Increased scrutiny, no commercial substance |
| GIFT City IFSC | India-based global fundraising | Section 80LA 10-year tax holiday, non-resident for FEMA | Ecosystem still maturing, limited exit liquidity |
The three flip structures: which one is right for you?
This is where most articles get it wrong. They describe the share swap as the standard method. In practice, the share swap is used less than founders assume because it is the most approval-heavy and tax-sensitive option. The gradual migration model is what most advisors actually recommend for early-stage companies.
Structure 1: Gradual migration (most preferred, most used in practice)
This is the most commonly recommended and executed method for early-stage Indian startups, particularly at pre-Series A. It avoids the FEMA complexity of a share swap and does not crystallise capital gains at the time of restructuring.
How it works: a new Delaware C-Corporation (F.Co) is incorporated. A new Indian private limited company (New I.Co) is set up as a wholly-owned subsidiary of F.Co. The existing Indian company (Old I.Co) continues to exist independently. Business, employees, IP, contracts, and customers are then gradually migrated from Old I.Co to New I.Co over a planned timeline. Old I.Co is allowed to wind down commercially as operations shift.
Why it is preferred:
- No immediate share swap between Indian shareholders and F.Co
- Founders do not need to transfer shares of Old I.Co to F.Co, avoiding FEMA ODI complexity at the outset
- No forced capital gains event at the shareholder level
- Legacy compliance issues, litigation risks, or messy cap table in Old I.Co remain ring-fenced
- Gives founders flexibility on migration pace
Who should use this: early-stage startups with a clean but growing revenue base, founders where speed matters more than structural elegance, situations where the cap table in Old I.Co has complexity that is difficult to migrate cleanly.
Key risk: the migration of IP and contracts from Old I.Co to New I.Co must be documented and executed correctly. Transfer of IP is a taxable event under Indian tax law if not structured properly (see the IP transfer section below). Customer contract novation requires counterparty consent. The Old I.Co cannot simply be abandoned with open compliance obligations.
This is the structure most commonly described in articles and the one founders most often assume they need. In practice, it is used less because it is more approval-heavy and tax-sensitive.
How it works: a new Delaware C-Corporation is incorporated. Each founder (and, where applicable, existing investor) transfers their shares in the Indian company to the Delaware entity in exchange for shares in the Delaware entity at an agreed swap ratio. Following the swap, the Delaware entity holds 100% of the Indian company directly, and founders hold shares of the Delaware entity.
The investor then invests fresh capital into the Delaware entity by subscribing to new preferred shares. The Delaware entity downstream invests the capital into the Indian subsidiary as FDI equity.
Why it is used: it is structurally cleaner for investors who want a single holding entity sitting directly above the Indian subsidiary with no intermediate legacy entity. It is also simpler for ESOP purposes: all equity is in one parent from day one.
Why it is tricky:
- Requires FEMA compliance at the shareholder level (Form ODI Part I, valuation certificate)
- Share exchange pricing must strictly follow RBI pricing norms under FEMA (Non-Debt Instruments) Rules, 2019
- Minority shareholders, including Indian AIF investors, may have complications (see below)
- Capital gains at the shareholder level if Section 47 exemptions are not available
- Higher risk of post-transaction challenges if documentation is not watertight
Best for: companies with a very clean cap table (founders only, or one or two angels), where all shareholders are aligned and able to participate in the flip, and where the valuation is low enough that capital gains exposure is manageable.
Structure 3: Dual-entity or split-economics structure (advanced, late-stage)
Used when the Indian company has accumulated significant value and a full share swap would crystallise a large capital gains liability at the founder or early investor level. The Indian company continues unchanged. A new Delaware entity is incorporated for future value creation. Economic rights are contractually bifurcated: historical value stays with the Indian entity, incremental upside accrues to the Delaware entity.
Who should use this: companies at Series B and beyond, valuations above approximately USD 20 million where the capital gains cost of a full swap is material, or situations where legacy Indian investors cannot migrate to a foreign entity.
This structure requires careful documentation to withstand GAAR scrutiny, the split must reflect genuine commercial substance, not just a tax deferral mechanism.
Summary: three flip structures compared
| Structure | Best stage | Tax risk at flip | FEMA complexity | Cap table cleanliness needed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gradual migration | Pre-revenue to Series A | Low (no immediate swap) | Low to moderate | Moderate |
| Direct share swap | Seed to Series A | Moderate to high | High | High |
| Split economics | Series B and beyond | Low (deferred) | Moderate | Moderate |
How to flip an Indian startup: Step-by-step execution sequence
A flip is not a single transaction. It is a sequence of coordinated legal, tax, regulatory, and operational steps executed across two jurisdictions. For a straightforward share-swap flip, the typical timeline is 8-14 weeks from kick-off to close. For a gradual migration, it can run 3-6 months depending on the pace of business migration.
Step 1: Pre-structuring assessment (weeks 1-2)
Before any filings, the founding team and advisors must settle three questions: which structure to use (gradual migration, share swap, or split economics), which jurisdiction (Delaware, Singapore, or GIFT City), and whether any cap table complications exist, Indian AIF investors, NRI shareholders with existing FEMA positions, or prior convertible note holders. A Section 47 tax opinion must be prepared at this stage, not after the fact.
Step 2: Delaware incorporation (weeks 1-2, runs parallel)
Incorporate a Delaware C-Corporation through the Delaware Division of Corporations. The founders are initial shareholders and directors. File for a US Employer Identification Number (EIN) with the Internal Revenue Service, appoint a registered agent in Delaware, and open a US business bank account. Total time: 1-2 weeks. Cost: approximately USD 500-2,000.
Step 3: Valuation (weeks 2-4)
Obtain an independent valuation of the Indian company from a SEBI-registered Category I Merchant Banker or a registered valuer under the Companies Act, 2013. Recognised valuation methodologies include discounted cash flow (DCF), comparable company analysis (CCA), and net asset value (NAV). The valuation serves three purposes: (a) determining the share swap ratio, (b) establishing the FEMA-compliant price for the ODI filing, and (c) forming the basis for capital gains computation under the Income Tax Act. Cost: ₹1.5-4 lakh. Time: 2-4 weeks.
Step 4: Board and shareholder resolutions (weeks 3-5)
Pass board resolutions and shareholder resolutions in the Indian company approving the restructuring. If existing investors hold shares, their consent is required under the shareholders’ agreement and under the Companies Act, 2013. If Indian AIF investors are on the cap table, this is the stage where complications surface (see the AIF section below).
Step 5: Share swap agreement execution (weeks 4-6)
Execute a share swap agreement specifying the shares being exchanged, the swap ratio derived from the valuation, closing conditions, and representations and warranties from each party. Each founder signs individually. Non-resident shareholders require additional documentation for their FEMA position.
Step 6: FEMA ODI filing (weeks 4-6, must precede or accompany the swap)
File Form ODI Part I with the Authorised Dealer (AD) Category-I bank before or at the time of making the financial commitment. The AD bank scrutinises the Form ODI, verifies KYC and eligibility, then forwards to the RBI and issues a Unique Identification Number (UIN) for the investment. Key document checklist: board resolution, KYC of Delaware entity, valuation report, charter documents of Delaware entity, and details of funding source.
Step 7: IP assignment or licensing (weeks 5-8)
This step is critical and consistently under-planned. All intellectual property held by the Indian company (software, patents, trademarks, domain names, trade secrets) must be formally assigned or licensed to the Delaware entity under a written agreement. The valuation and tax implications of this transfer are addressed in detail below. Where pre-flip IP is too valuable to transfer cleanly, an intercompany IP licensing arrangement (where the Indian subsidiary licenses IP to the US parent for a royalty) is often a more tax-efficient alternative.
Step 8: Customer contract migration (weeks 5-10)
Key customer contracts, particularly those with US customers, should be migrated to the Delaware entity or novated to it. Novation requires counterparty consent and can delay the process if contracts have change-of-control clauses. For the gradual migration structure, this happens over months rather than weeks. For the share-swap structure, contracts should be reviewed for assignment clauses before the flip is executed.
Step 9: Downstream FDI into Indian subsidiary (weeks 7-10)
When the US investor’s capital flows into the Delaware entity, it is on-lent or downstream invested into the Indian subsidiary as FDI equity. File Form FC-GPR with the RBI through the AD bank within 30 days of share allotment in the Indian subsidiary. This triggers the Indian subsidiary’s FDI compliance obligations.
Step 10: ROC and post-incorporation filings (weeks 8-12)
Update the Indian company’s records with the Registrar of Companies (ROC): DIR-12 for any director changes, SH-7 if the capital structure changes, and updated shareholder register reflecting the Delaware entity as the sole shareholder. Begin dual-jurisdiction compliance: Indian CA for statutory audit, annual returns, and Form 3CEB; US CPA for Form 1120, Form 5471, and Delaware franchise tax.
Step 11: ESOP migration (weeks 6-12, can run parallel)
If the Indian company had an existing ESOP scheme, options over Indian company shares must be either exchanged for options over Delaware entity shares (using the same swap ratio as founders) or cancelled and reissued under a new US equity incentive plan. This is addressed in detail in the ESOP section below.
What FEMA requires: the compliance architecture
At time of flip
When Indian resident founders acquire shares of the Delaware entity (the outbound investment), this is classified as an Overseas Direct Investment (ODI) under the Foreign Exchange Management (Overseas Investment) Rules, 2022 (OI Rules 2022). Key obligations:
- Form ODI Part I must be filed with the AD Category-I bank before or at the time of making the financial commitment.
- Total financial commitment (equity plus loans plus guarantees) to the foreign entity must not exceed 400% of the Indian entity’s net worth as per the last audited balance sheet, under the automatic route. Investments beyond this require RBI approval under the approval route.
- Where investment per founder exceeds USD 250,000 per financial year, the ODI route is mandatory; LRS cannot be used. LRS remittances above ₹7 lakh per year attract 20% TCS under Section 206C(1G) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, claimable as credit but a real cash flow impact.
- The two-layer restriction under OI Rules 2022 prohibits structures that create more than two layers of foreign subsidiaries. A flip structure (Indian entity beneath the Delaware parent) is one layer and is compliant.
- Form FC-GPR within 30 days of share allotment when the US investor’s capital enters the Indian subsidiary as FDI.
The flip must also pass the round-tripping test under Rule 19 of the FEMA compliance (Non-Debt Instruments) Rules, 2019. A flip is not round-tripping if the US parent has genuine commercial substance: US customers, independent operations, US-based management, and a documented commercial rationale. Maintaining a commercial rationale memorandum is not optional.
Post-flip annual compliance
Post-flip FEMA compliance calendar
| Filing | Deadline | Governing rule | Late fee |
|---|---|---|---|
| Form ODI Part I | At time of commitment | OI Rules 2022 | LSF: ₹7,500 + 0.025% p.a. on amount |
| Form FC-GPR (FDI into Indian sub) | Within 30 days of allotment | NDI Rules 2019 | LSF per RBI AP Circular No. 16, 2022 |
| Annual Performance Report (APR) | 31 December each year | OI Rules 2022 | LSF: ₹7,500 + 0.025% p.a. |
| FLA Return | 15 July each year | RBI FLAIR portal | Up to ₹10,000 per contravention |
| Form FC-TRS (secondary transfers) | Within 30 days | NDI Rules 2019 | LSF formula |
The LSF formula, codified under RBI AP (DIR Series) Circular No. 16 of 30 September 2022: LSF = ₹7,500 + (A × 0.025% × n), where A is the amount involved and n is the number of years of delay (rounded up). Late filing of an APR for a USD 500,000 overseas investment for two years generates an LSF of approximately ₹2.9 lakh, in addition to the compounding process.
When Indian resident founders transfer shares in the Indian company to the Delaware entity in exchange for Delaware entity shares, this constitutes a “transfer” under Section 2(47) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. Capital gain is computed as the difference between the fair market value of the Delaware shares received and the cost of acquisition of the Indian company shares transferred.
Section 47 exemptions: conditions that must be met
Section 47 of the Income Tax Act lists transfers that are not treated as “transfers” for capital gains purposes. For flip structures, the relevant provisions are:
- Section 47(via): Exempts transfer of a capital asset in a scheme of amalgamation of a foreign company with an Indian company. Limited applicability to typical forward flips.
- Section 47(viab): Exempts transfer of shares of a foreign company deriving its value from India where the transfer occurs under an amalgamation between two foreign companies, at least 25% of shareholders of the amalgamating company remain shareholders of the amalgamated company, and capital gains are not taxable in the country of the amalgamating company. This can apply to certain flip structures but the conditions are technical.
- Section 47(vii): Exempts transfer of shares by shareholders of an amalgamating company where the consideration is entirely in the form of shares in the amalgamated company. Conditions on the amalgamation under Section 2(1B) must be met precisely.
If no exemption applies, the capital gain is taxable as long-term capital gain (LTCG) at 12.5% (for shares held more than 24 months, post Budget 2024) or as short-term capital gain at applicable slab rates.
A written Section 47 tax opinion from a specialist, obtained before the swap is executed, is mandatory. If the exemption conditions are not structurally met, the founders incur a tax liability at the time of restructuring, not at exit. This is the most common preventable error in flip transactions.
GAAR risk
Chapter X-A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (General Anti-Avoidance Rule) allows the Income Tax Department to deny tax benefits where the primary purpose of an arrangement is tax avoidance and the arrangement lacks genuine commercial substance. A flip executed solely to route capital through a US entity, with no genuine US operations or customer traction, is at risk of a GAAR challenge. Documentation (a commercial rationale memorandum, US customer contracts, evidence of US management substance) provides the primary defence.
What is POEM risk and how do you manage it?
The Place of Effective Management (POEM) test under Section 6(3) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 is the most underappreciated ongoing risk in a flipped company. A foreign company is treated as an Indian tax resident, and therefore subject to Indian corporate tax on its worldwide income, if its place of effective management is in India.
For a flipped startup where the entire founding team, all senior management, and all key decisions are made from India (which is typical for early-stage companies), the Delaware entity carries a genuine POEM risk.
The Income Tax Department examines: whether all board meetings of the US entity are held from India; whether all strategic and commercial decisions are made from India; whether the US entity has no independent management in the US; and whether the US entity has no employees, office, or operational presence in the US.
POEM compliance framework, what to set up from day one
- Appoint at least one genuinely US-based director with defined decision authority over specified categories of decision (fundraising, US customer contracts, IP licensing).
- Hold at least one board meeting per quarter in the US, or at minimum with meaningful non-India quorum.
- Maintain a US office address (a registered agent address is not sufficient, operational presence matters).
- Execute US customer contracts from the US entity.
- Document contemporaneously, at each board meeting, which decisions are being made at the US entity level. Board minutes must reflect this.
- Keep the decision record available for audit at short notice.
POEM is not a one-time setup. It requires annual review as the business grows, management shifts, and US operations (or lack thereof) evolve. The cost of building this correctly from day one is minimal. The cost of addressing it retroactively during an acquisition due diligence is very high.
IP transfer during a flip: valuation, tax, and intercompany agreements
This section is consistently the most under-planned element of a flip, and the most likely to generate a tax liability that was not anticipated.
What IP needs to move?
In a clean share-swap flip, the Delaware entity typically wants to hold the primary intellectual property (software code, patents, trademarks, domain names, and trade secrets) because this is where future value is expected to accumulate and where US investors want IP to sit. In a gradual migration, IP is transferred from Old I.Co to New I.Co (which is owned by the Delaware entity) on a planned schedule.
Option 1: Full IP assignment
The Indian entity assigns ownership of IP to the Delaware entity in exchange for consideration. The valuation of this IP must be at arm’s length, certified by an independent valuer. The capital gains on IP transfer are taxable in India under Section 50B (slump sale, if IP is part of an undertaking) or under ordinary capital gains provisions. If the IP has been developed by the Indian company, the cost of acquisition may be the cost of development, resulting in a significant gain if the IP has appreciated in value.
Pre-flip IP transfer is often tax-costly for mature companies. For early-stage companies with limited IP value, it may be straightforward.
Option 2: IP licensing (often more practical)
The Indian entity retains ownership of existing IP and licenses it to the Delaware entity under a royalty agreement. The Indian entity receives royalty income, which is taxable in India at normal corporate tax rates (22% for existing domestic companies under Section 115BAA, or 25% for newly incorporated entities under Section 115BAB). The royalty paid by the Delaware entity to the Indian subsidiary is subject to Indian withholding tax.
Under the India-US Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA), royalties paid by an Indian resident to a US resident are taxable in India (at source) at a maximum of 15% (Article 12 of the India-US DTAA). The US entity can claim a foreign tax credit for this withholding against its US tax liability.
Intercompany IP licensing requires a written IP licensing agreement specifying the royalty rate, the IP licensed, territorial scope, exclusivity, term, and renewal. The royalty rate must reflect arm’s length pricing under Sections 92 to 92F of the Income Tax Act, supported by a benchmarking study. Form 3CEB must be filed if aggregate international transactions (including the royalty) exceed ₹1 crore.
Option 3: R&D services agreement for future IP
For early-stage companies where the current IP is nascent or will become obsolete as new products are built, a research and development services agreement is often the cleanest option. The Indian subsidiary continues to build the product and is compensated by the Delaware parent on a cost-plus basis. All new IP created from this point forward is assigned to the Delaware entity as work made for hire. The existing IP stays in India (or is wound down).
This approach is widely used by US-backed Indian SaaS companies and is the standard intercompany arrangement recommended by US corporate counsel.
IP transfer options compared
| Method | Tax at transfer | Ongoing tax | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full assignment | Capital gains on FMV minus cost | None (IP now in US) | Early-stage, low-value IP |
| IP licensing | No immediate gain | Royalty income taxable + 15% WHT | Mid-stage, established IP |
| R&D services (future IP) | None | Cost-plus income taxable in India | Early-stage, nascent IP |
Transfer pricing: the annual compliance obligation that most founders miss
Post-flip, every transaction between the Delaware parent and the Indian subsidiary is an international transaction subject to transfer pricing regulations under Sections 92 to 92F of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
The most common transactions:
- Development or engineering services rendered by the Indian subsidiary to the US parent (cost-plus or time-and-materials)
- Management fees charged by the US parent to the Indian subsidiary
- Royalties for IP licensed by the Indian subsidiary to the US parent (or vice versa)
- Intercompany loans
Each transaction must be priced at arm’s length under one of the prescribed methods (comparable uncontrolled price, resale price method, cost-plus method, profit-based methods). The Indian subsidiary must file Form 3CEB certified by a Chartered Accountant if aggregate international transactions exceed ₹1 crore in a financial year. Nearly every operating post-flip structure crosses this threshold within one year.
The penalty under Section 271G for failure to maintain transfer pricing documentation is 2% of the value of the international transactions per year. On a ₹5 crore annual intercompany services arrangement, that is ₹10 lakh per year for each unfiled year.
Under the India-US DTAA, the key withholding rates for intercompany payments are:
India-US DTAA withholding rates (Article references)
| Payment type | DTAA Article | Max withholding rate in India |
|---|---|---|
| Dividends (from Indian subsidiary to US parent) | Article 10 | 15% (if parent holds ≥10% of Indian sub) or 25% |
| Interest on intercompany loans | Article 11 | 15% |
| Royalties (IP licensing) | Article 12 | 15% |
| Fees for technical services | Article 12 | 15% |
These DTAA rates apply only where the US entity has the beneficial ownership of the income and a valid US tax residency certificate (Tax Residency Certificate). The POEM risk discussed above can override treaty benefits if the US entity is reclassified as an Indian tax resident.
ESOP migration: what happens to employee equity during a flip
This section covers a topic that most flip articles mention in a single paragraph. In practice, ESOP migration is one of the longest-lead-time items in a flip and affects every employee on the cap table.
Before the flip: Indian ESOP scheme
If the Indian company had an ESOP scheme (under Section 62(1)(b) of the Companies Act, 2013 and the SEBI Employee Stock Option Scheme Guidelines), employees hold options over Indian company shares. These options must be addressed at the time of the flip.
The mirror grant mechanism
The most common approach is to issue mirror grants. Employees surrender their options in the Indian company and are issued economically equivalent options in the Delaware entity, using the same swap ratio applied to the founders’ share exchange. The Delaware entity’s option plan is typically a Delaware-law Equity Incentive Plan (EIP) or Amended and Restated Stock Plan.
For Indian-resident employees, holding options or shares in a foreign entity (the Delaware parent) is governed by FEMA. Under the OI Rules 2022, Indian residents can receive and hold options in an overseas entity without prior approval, provided the securities are received as part of a genuine employment scheme and the LRS annual limit of USD 250,000 per financial year is not exceeded at the time of exercise.
The LRS limit becomes a practical issue for senior employees (CTOs, VP-level, or early joiners) who hold a significant stake. At exercise, the employee must remit the exercise price from India to the Delaware entity. If the exercise price in USD terms exceeds USD 250,000 in a financial year, the LRS cap is breached. This requires either restructuring the exercise schedule or taking an ODI position.
Tax on ESOP exercise post-flip
When an employee exercises options in the Delaware entity, the perquisite (calculated as fair market value of shares received minus exercise price paid) is taxable as salary income under Section 17(2)(vi) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. The employer (the Indian subsidiary) deducts TDS on this perquisite. For employees of DPIIT-recognised Indian startups, perquisite tax can be deferred to the earlier of five years from exercise, sale of shares, or cessation of employment, under Section 192(1C) of the Income Tax Act.
For US income tax purposes, options in a Delaware C-Corp issued to Indian-resident employees are Non-Qualified Stock Options (NSOs) under the US Internal Revenue Code. Only US employees or residents qualify for Incentive Stock Options (ISOs) under IRC Section 422. ISOs have more favourable US tax treatment, NSOs are taxed as ordinary income at exercise.
For US-resident employees or co-founders, the timing of the 83(b) election is critical. Under IRC Section 83(b), a US taxpayer can elect to recognise income on restricted stock or early-exercise options at the time of grant, rather than at vesting, when the shares are low-value. This election must be filed with the IRS within 30 days of the grant or early exercise. Missing the 83(b) window permanently forecloses this tax benefit. If the company later qualifies as a Qualified Small Business (under Section 1202 of the US Internal Revenue Code), QSBS treatment can exempt up to USD 10 million (or 10 times the adjusted tax basis) in capital gains from US federal tax, but only if the 83(b) election was timely made and other conditions are met.
ESOP treatment: Indian versus US employees
| Category | Option type | Perquisite tax | Tax deferral available? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Indian resident, DPIIT startup | NSO in Delaware entity | Section 17(2)(vi) at exercise | Yes, under Section 192(1C) |
| Indian resident, non-DPIIT startup | NSO in Delaware entity | Section 17(2)(vi) at exercise | No |
| US resident/employee | ISO (if qualified) | Favourable AMT treatment | IRC 83(b) election timing |
| US resident/employee | NSO | Ordinary income at exercise | IRC 83(b) if early exercise |
AIF investor complications: when a flip gets difficult
This is the cap table issue that most early-stage advisors underestimate. Indian Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs) regulated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) under the SEBI AIF Regulations, 2012 often cannot hold shares of a foreign entity directly, depending on their category and constitution.
Category I AIFs (venture capital funds, social impact funds) and Category II AIFs (private equity funds, debt funds) that have invested in an Indian startup at seed or pre-Series A stage face constraints on converting their Indian company shareholding into foreign entity shareholding. The constraints arise from:
- The fund’s investment mandate, as specified in its Private Placement Memorandum (PPM), may restrict investments to Indian entities.
- Category II AIFs are prohibited from investing more than 25% of their investable corpus in a single entity, and their overseas investment permissions are subject to SEBI circular conditions.
- Individual SEBI approval may be required before a Category I or II AIF can hold equity in a Delaware entity.
The practical consequence: if an Indian AIF holds even a small stake in the Indian company and the founder attempts a share-swap flip, the AIF must evaluate whether it can participate. If it cannot, the cap table post-flip has the Indian AIF sitting at the old Indian entity level while new investors are at the Delaware level, a split structure that creates governance and exit complications.
The cleanest solution is to have this conversation with AIF investors before the flip is attempted, map out which investors can participate in the Delaware entity and which cannot, and design the structure accordingly. For companies where AIF complexity is high, the gradual migration structure (which does not require existing shareholders to migrate) is often the correct answer.
US-side tax obligations for the Delaware entity
Most articles written by Indian advisors cover the Indian tax side well and say little about what the Delaware entity owes in the US. These obligations are real, annual, and professionally costly.
US corporate income tax (Form 1120)
A Delaware C-Corporation is a US taxable entity. It pays US federal corporate income tax at a flat rate of 21% on its taxable income. If the US entity’s only income is intercompany service fees received from the Indian subsidiary (billed back as cost-plus), and it has US operating expenses, its US taxable income may be low or nil in early years. But the Form 1120 must be filed annually with the IRS regardless of income.
GILTI (Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income)
Under the US Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017, US shareholders of Controlled Foreign Corporations (CFCs) (which the Indian subsidiary becomes when the Delaware parent holds more than 50%) may be subject to GILTI inclusions. GILTI is a minimum tax mechanism designed to tax income of foreign subsidiaries that does not arise from tangible assets. For an Indian software subsidiary with minimal tangible assets, GILTI exposure can arise once the Indian subsidiary becomes profitable.
GILTI is calculated as the net CFC tested income minus 10% of qualified business asset investment (QBAI). Where the Indian subsidiary earns a profit above the QBAI threshold, the US parent may owe US tax on a portion of that profit even if it has not been repatriated.
For early-stage companies with loss-making Indian subsidiaries, GILTI is typically not a current concern. As the company scales to profitability, it becomes a planning item. US tax counsel should evaluate GILTI annually from the first year of Indian subsidiary profitability.
Form 5471 (Information Return for US Persons with CFCs)
US shareholders who own 10% or more of a Controlled Foreign Corporation must file Form 5471 with their US tax return (Form 1120). For a Delaware C-Corp that is the 100% parent of the Indian subsidiary, Form 5471 is filed every year. This is a disclosure and information form, it does not itself trigger tax, but failure to file attracts penalties of USD 10,000 per form per year.
Indian founders holding shares of the Delaware entity are typically not US persons and do not have a Form 5471 obligation. US co-founders and any US-resident employees with significant equity do.
QSBS under IRC Section 1202
Qualified Small Business Stock treatment allows US taxpayers to exclude up to USD 10 million (or 10x their adjusted cost basis) in gains from the sale of stock in a Qualified Small Business from US federal capital gains tax. Requirements include: the company must be a C-Corporation at the time of the stock acquisition, the company’s gross assets must not exceed USD 50 million at the time of issuance, the stock must have been held for more than 5 years, and the stock must have been acquired at original issue.
For Indian founders who are not US persons, QSBS treatment does not apply. For US co-founders or US-based employees, the 83(b) election and QSBS planning should be addressed at incorporation of the Delaware entity, not retroactively.
When should an Indian startup flip? The decision framework
The four-variable test
1. Where is your target investor based? US-based VCs, tier-1 funds operating from San Francisco or New York, and most global CVCs have a structural preference for Delaware entities. If your next round will be led by a US VC, expect to be asked to flip. If your round will be led by India-focused VCs, they invest directly into Indian entities.
2. Where are your customers? If 70% or more of your revenue comes from Indian customers, a flip adds structural complexity without proportionate benefit. A Delaware entity’s US substance requirements (POEM, GILTI, Form 5471) are hard to satisfy when your market is predominantly Indian.
3. What is your current valuation? The lower the valuation at flip, the lower the capital gains exposure on the share swap. A flip at a seed-stage valuation of ₹5-8 crore involves manageable complexity. Above a post-money valuation of approximately USD 5-10 million, the tax cost of a share-swap flip grows materially and a gradual migration or split-economics structure deserves serious evaluation.
4. What does your cap table look like? Indian AIF investors on the cap table before the flip significantly increase complexity. If multiple Indian fund investors are present, the gradual migration structure may be the only practical option.
Decision matrix: flip or not?
| Scenario | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Pre-revenue, US VC term sheet confirmed | Flip early using gradual migration: low capital gains, low complexity |
| ARR below ₹50 lakh, US VC interest confirmed | Share-swap flip viable if cap table is clean |
| ARR ₹50 lakh-₹2 crore, US VC term sheet | Evaluate structure carefully, valuation-dependent |
| ARR above ₹2 crore, US investor but Indian customers dominant | Evaluate gradual migration or GIFT City before full flip |
| ARR above ₹5 crore, Indian VC leading round | Do not flip: Indian entity is sufficient |
| Post-Series A, large US VC existing, Indian IPO planned in 3-5 years | Begin reverse flip planning |
What has changed with angel tax abolition?
The abolition of Section 56(2)(viib) of the Income Tax Act (angel tax), effective April 2025, removes one of the primary frictions that historically drove founders to flip. Before abolition, investments at valuations above fair market value were taxed as deemed income in the hands of the Indian company. With angel tax gone, raising capital in an Indian entity at high valuations no longer carries the same punitive risk. For founders whose primary motivation was avoiding angel tax, a flip is now less compelling. The GIFT City IFSC alternative (Section 80LA, treated as non-resident for FEMA) has become comparably attractive for founders wanting global fundraising access without a full Delaware structure. Founders already holding a US parent who are now reconsidering should read the reverse flip playbook before making that decision.
Common mistakes that cost founders time and money
Treating the gradual migration structure as a workaround rather than the preferred option. Most founders arrive at the flip conversation having been told by a US investor’s counsel that they need a Delaware entity as the parent. They assume a direct share swap is the standard method. In many early-stage situations, the gradual migration model (new F.Co, new I.Co, business migrated over time) is cleaner, lower risk, and avoids triggering capital gains and FEMA ODI complexity at the outset.
Not addressing AIF investors before announcing the flip. Indian AIF investors who discover that the founder has already executed a flip and has not consulted them can create governance complications. Category II AIFs in particular need time to evaluate whether their mandate permits holding the Delaware entity’s shares. The right sequence is to map all investors, identify potential complications, and design the structure before announcing it to any investor.
Neglecting POEM documentation from month one. A Delaware entity where all management decisions are made from India is at risk of being classified as an Indian tax resident under Section 6(3) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. Building a POEM compliance framework (with a genuinely US-based director, documented decision categories, and contemporaneous board minutes) is a day-one task, not a year-two clean-up exercise.
Missing the 83(b) election window for US co-founders. The 83(b) election must be filed with the IRS within 30 days of the grant or early exercise of restricted stock or stock options. Missing this window is permanent and can cost a US co-founder significant US tax at exit. At the time of Delaware incorporation, every US-resident founder or co-founder should immediately consult US tax counsel on 83(b).
Skipping the Annual Performance Report. APR is mandatory by 31 December each year for every Indian entity with an overseas investment, without exception, even if the US entity is dormant. The most common FEMA contravention by Indian companies with overseas subsidiaries is a missed APR.
Not filing Form 3CEB after the first profitable year. Most post-flip operating structures involve an intercompany services arrangement where the Indian subsidiary bills the US parent for development services. This is a transfer pricing international transaction. Once the aggregate exceeds ₹1 crore (which happens in the first year) Form 3CEB is mandatory. Founders who discover three years of unfiled 3CEBs during a Series B diligence face a compounding process alongside a live deal.
Case study
Situation: B2B SaaS founder based in Bengaluru with a US-based co-founder. Bootstrapped to ₹40 lakh ARR from 8 US enterprise customers. Received a term sheet from a San Francisco seed fund at a USD 4.5 million pre-money valuation, with a standard flip condition. The founding team had an existing Indian ESOP scheme with 12 employees holding options.
Challenge: No prior advisor had flagged the Form ODI requirement. The founder assumed LRS would cover the share swap. The US co-founder had not yet filed an 83(b) election. No valuation report existed. The existing Indian ESOP scheme had to be migrated to a Delaware equity plan without triggering perquisite tax for employees at the time of conversion.
What Treelife did: Structured the flip as a direct share-swap (clean two-founder cap table, low valuation), obtained a SEBI Category I Merchant Banker valuation report, filed Form ODI Part I for both Indian-resident founders before execution, prepared a Section 47 tax opinion confirming the swap qualified for capital gains exemption, set up a POEM compliance framework with the US co-founder as genuinely US-based director with defined decision authority, coordinated with US counsel on the US co-founder’s 83(b) election (filed within 30 days of Delaware incorporation), migrated the Indian ESOP pool to a Delaware EIP through mirror grants with LRS implications mapped per employee, and set up the intercompany services agreement and initial Form 3CEB documentation.
Outcome: Round closed in 11 weeks. Zero FEMA contraventions. Capital gains exemption confirmed in writing pre-swap. US co-founder’s 83(b) filed on time. ESOP migration completed with clear tax briefings for each employee. Founders entered subsequent rounds with a clean compliance record across both jurisdictions.
FAQs on Flip Structuring in India
Q: What is a flip structure for an Indian startup?
A: A flip is a corporate reorganisation in which an Indian company creates a new foreign holding entity, most commonly a Delaware C-Corporation, and restructures ownership so that the foreign entity becomes the parent and the Indian company becomes its wholly-owned subsidiary. Operations remain in India; only the legal domicile and shareholding structure move overseas.
Q: Which is the most commonly used flip structure in practice?
A: The gradual migration model (incorporating a new Delaware parent and a new Indian subsidiary, then migrating business to the new Indian entity over time) is the most commonly recommended structure for early-stage companies. It avoids the FEMA ODI complexity of a direct share swap and does not immediately crystallise capital gains. The direct share-swap flip is used when the cap table is very clean and founders want a single holding entity from day one.
Q: Is the share swap taxable in India?
A: It can be. The swap is a “transfer” under Section 2(47) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. Capital gains exemptions under Section 47(via), 47(viab), or 47(vii) may apply if specific structural conditions are met. A written tax opinion from a specialist, obtained before the swap is executed, is mandatory to determine whether the exemption applies.
Q: What FEMA filings are required when flipping?
A: Form ODI Part I with the Authorised Dealer bank before or at the time of the outbound investment. Post-flip: Form FC-GPR within 30 days of any FDI into the Indian subsidiary; APR by 31 December each year; FLA Return by 15 July each year; Form FC-TRS for any secondary transfers.
Q: What is the 400% net worth limit under FEMA?
A: Under the Foreign Exchange Management (Overseas Investment) Rules, 2022, an Indian company’s total financial commitment to overseas entities may not exceed 400% of its net worth under the automatic route. Investment beyond this limit requires RBI approval.
Q: What is POEM and why does it matter for flipped companies?
A: Place of Effective Management under Section 6(3) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 is a test that determines the tax residency of a foreign company. If the Delaware parent is managed entirely from India (all key decisions made from India, no US-based management) the Indian tax authorities can treat it as an Indian tax resident, exposing its worldwide income to Indian corporate tax. Genuine US management substance, documented from day one, is the mitigation.
Q: What is GILTI and does it affect Indian flipped companies?
A: GILTI (Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income) is a US minimum tax on the income of Controlled Foreign Corporations. When the Indian subsidiary becomes profitable, the Delaware parent may owe US federal tax on a portion of the subsidiary’s income under the GILTI rules, even if that income has not been repatriated. For loss-making early-stage subsidiaries, GILTI is typically not an immediate concern. US tax counsel should review GILTI exposure as the Indian subsidiary approaches profitability.
Q: What is an 83(b) election and when must it be filed?
A: Under IRC Section 83(b), a US taxpayer can elect to recognise income on restricted stock or early-exercised options at the time of grant or exercise, rather than at vesting, when the share value is low. This election must be filed with the IRS within 30 days of the grant or exercise, no extensions. Missing this window is permanent. For US co-founders, this is a day-one item at Delaware incorporation. Timely 83(b) filing is also a prerequisite for Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) treatment under IRC Section 1202.
Q: What happens to the existing Indian ESOP scheme when a company flips?
A: Options under the Indian ESOP scheme (governed by Section 62(1)(b) of the Companies Act, 2013) must be either converted into options over Delaware entity shares through mirror grants, or cancelled and reissued under a US equity incentive plan. Indian-resident employees holding options in the Delaware entity are subject to Section 17(2)(vi) perquisite tax at exercise. Employees of DPIIT-recognised startups can defer this tax under Section 192(1C). The LRS cap of USD 250,000 per year limits exercise consideration that can be remitted offshore.
Q: Why do Indian AIF investors complicate a flip?
A: Category I and II AIFs under the SEBI AIF Regulations, 2012 may have investment mandate restrictions that prevent or limit their ability to hold shares of a foreign entity. If an AIF invested in the Indian company cannot participate in the flip, the cap table ends up with investors at two different levels (old Indian entity and new Delaware entity) creating governance and exit complications. The gradual migration structure, which does not require existing shareholders to migrate, is often the better answer when AIF investors are present.
Q: Does angel tax abolition change the flip decision?
A: Yes. The abolition of Section 56(2)(viib) from April 2025 removes the risk that investments at high valuations in an Indian entity would be treated as deemed income. For founders whose primary reason for flipping was to avoid angel tax, that rationale is now gone. The GIFT City IFSC structure, offering Section 80LA tax benefits and FEMA non-resident status, has become a more attractive alternative to a full Delaware flip for founders who want global capital access without full US domicile.
Q: Can a DPIIT-recognised startup flip?
A: Yes. DPIIT recognition vests in the Indian company and is not affected by the flip. The Indian subsidiary retains its DPIIT recognition and Section 80-IAC eligibility (100% profit deduction for 3 out of 10 years) after the flip. Recognition does not transfer to the Delaware parent.
Q: What are the key India-US DTAA withholding rates that apply post-flip?
A: Under the India-US DTAA, royalties and fees for technical services paid by the Indian subsidiary to the US parent are subject to maximum 15% withholding in India (Article 12). Interest on intercompany loans is also capped at 15% (Article 11). Dividends paid by the Indian subsidiary to the US parent are taxed at 15% if the US parent holds at least 10% of the Indian subsidiary (Article 10). These rates apply where the US entity has valid tax residency certification and beneficial ownership of the income.
Q: Can the flip be undone if we decide to list in India later?
A: Yes, but unwinding a flip (the reverse flip) is a significant transaction. It requires an NCLT scheme of arrangement or a share swap under the NDI Rules 2019 (as amended in September 2024), with RBI clearance. The tax cost can be significant: one widely reported 2024 US-to-India reverse flip reportedly incurred approximately ₹1,340 crore in tax costs, as disclosed in NCLT filings. If an Indian IPO is a realistic 4-6 year objective, the flip decision today should factor in the eventual cost of reversing it.
Q: What is the two-layer restriction under OI Rules 2022?
A: Under the Foreign Exchange Management (Overseas Investment) Rules, 2022, Indian entities cannot make overseas investments that result in more than two layers of subsidiaries overseas. A standard flip (Indian entity below Delaware parent, no further foreign subsidiaries) is one layer and is compliant. Structures with a Delaware holdco owning a Singapore entity owning the Indian subsidiary would create a layer problem from the Indian regulatory perspective.
Regulatory references:
- Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999
- Foreign Exchange Management (Overseas Investment) Rules, 2022
- Foreign Exchange Management (Overseas Investment) Regulations, 2022
- Foreign Exchange Management (Non-Debt Instruments) Rules, 2019 — Rule 19 (round-tripping prohibition)
- Foreign Exchange Management (Cross Border Merger) Regulations, 2018
- Foreign Exchange Management (Borrowing and Lending) (First Amendment) Regulations, 2026
- Income Tax Act, 1961 — Section 2(47) (definition of transfer), Section 6(3) (POEM), Section 9(1) (income deemed to accrue in India), Section 47(via), 47(viab), 47(vii), 47(vii) (capital gains exemptions), Section 50B (slump sale), Section 56(2)(viib) as abolished April 2025, Section 80LA (GIFT City IFSC exemption), Section 80-IAC (DPIIT tax holiday), Sections 92 to 92F (transfer pricing), Section 115BAA (domestic company tax rate 22%), Section 115BAB (new domestic company tax rate 25%), Section 192(1C) (ESOP tax deferral for DPIIT startups), Section 206C(1G) (TCS on LRS remittances above ₹7 lakh), Section 271G (penalty for TP documentation failure), Section 17(2)(vi) (ESOP perquisite), Chapter X-A (GAAR)
- Companies Act, 2013 — Section 62(1)(b) (ESOP), Section 230-232 (scheme of arrangement), Section 234 (cross-border mergers), Rule 25A of Companies (Compromises, Arrangements and Amalgamations) Rules, 2016 as amended September 2024
- SEBI AIF Regulations, 2012
- RBI AP (DIR Series) Circular No. 16 of 30 September 2022 (LSF formula)
- US Internal Revenue Code — Section 83(b) (property transferred in connection with performance of services), Section 422 (ISOs), Section 1202 (QSBS), Section 951A (GILTI), Form 1120, Form 5471
External sources:
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