Blog Content Overview
- 1 Treelife Resources
- 1.1 Explore our resources to fuel your success and propel your business forward.
- 1.2 Latest Posts
- 1.2.0.1 Co-founder disputes in Indian startups: legal options, buyout mechanics & SHA
- 1.2.0.2 Legal Due Diligence Checklist for Indian Startups: What Investors actually check
- 1.2.0.3 Term Sheets in India : Complete Guide for Startups & Businesses
- 1.2.0.4 TDS and TCS Compliance in India: Guide for Startups and Businesses
- 1.2.0.5 RBI 2026 Repo Rate: Monetary Policy, Rupee, What Founders need to know
- 1.2.0.6 PF Compliance in India: Complete guide for Startups & Businesses
- 1.2.0.7 ESI Compliance in India: ESIC Applicability, Eligibility, Contribution Rates,
- 1.2.0.8 Professional Tax Compliance in India: State-wise Rates, Rules, and Risks for startups
- 1.3 Thought Leadership
- 1.3.0.1 Treelife supported HyperNorm AI in their $2.2 million Seed fundraise!
- 1.3.0.2 How to close an Indian subsidiary: Strike off, Voluntary liquidation and Branch office closure
- 1.3.0.3 Allotment of Shares in India: Complete ROC Filing and PAS-3 Compliance Guide
- 1.3.0.4 Copyright Protection in India for Startups: What qualifies and how to register
- 1.3.0.5 iSAFE Notes in India – Funding, Investment & Taxation
- 1.3.0.6 Treelife supported HyperNorm AI in their $2.2 million Seed fundraise!
- 1.3.0.7 Treelife supports Piper Serica in their seed investment in Vobiz AI
- 1.3.0.8 Treelife Piper Serica in their seed investment in Ubiqedge
- 1.3.0.9 Treelife supported Artium Academy in their Series A round!
- 1.3.0.10 Treelife supported Spintly in their $8 million Series A round!
- 1.3.0.11 How to close an Indian subsidiary: Strike off, Voluntary liquidation and Branch office closure
- 1.3.0.12 Copyright Protection in India for Startups: What qualifies and how to register
- 1.3.0.13 iSAFE Notes in India – Funding, Investment & Taxation
- 1.3.0.14 Co-founder Equity Structure in India: A Co-Founders’ Agreement may not be enough
- 1.3.0.15 Co-founder disputes in Indian startups: legal options, buyout mechanics & SHA
- 1.3.0.16 IFSCA tightening scrutiny on GIFT City AIFs – Money Control Exclusive adds Jitesh Agarwal’s note
- 1.3.0.17 Lenskart built its empire on franchisees. Now it’s battling them in courts
- 1.3.0.18 Treelife featured and authored a chapter in a report, “Funds in GIFT City- Scaling New Heights” by Eleveight
- 1.3.0.19 Blinkit 2.0: Can Zomato’s Juggernaut Fight Off Quick Commerce Rivals?
- 1.3.0.20 Startup India’s Post – Mapping India’s Spacetech Industry & Regulatory Landscape,
- 1.3.0.21 RBI 2026 Repo Rate: Monetary Policy, Rupee, What Founders need to know
- 1.3.0.22 India Amends Press Note 3 (2020): What the FDI Policy Update Means for Investors and Founders
- 1.3.0.23 Revised Regulatory Framework for Angel Funds in India (2025)
- 1.3.0.24 SEBI Revamps Angel Fund Framework to Boost Startup Funding
- 1.3.0.25 SEBI Mandates New Certification Norms for AIF Managers
- 1.4 We Are Problem Solvers. And Take Accountability.
Latest Posts
June 10, 2026 | Legal
Co-founder disputes in Indian startups: legal options, buyout mechanics & SHA
Read More
June 10, 2026 | Compliance
Legal Due Diligence Checklist for Indian Startups: What Investors actually check
Read More
June 9, 2026 | Compliance
TDS and TCS Compliance in India: Guide for Startups and Businesses
Read More
June 9, 2026 | News
RBI 2026 Repo Rate: Monetary Policy, Rupee, What Founders need to know
Read More
June 9, 2026 | Compliance
PF Compliance in India: Complete guide for Startups & Businesses
Read More
June 9, 2026 | Compliance
ESI Compliance in India: ESIC Applicability, Eligibility, Contribution Rates,
Read More
June 8, 2026 | Taxation
Professional Tax Compliance in India: State-wise Rates, Rules, and Risks for startups
Read MoreThought Leadership
How to close an Indian subsidiary: Strike off, Voluntary liquidation and Branch office closure
A foreign parent company can close its Indian subsidiary through two routes: strike off under Section 248 of the Companies Act 2013 for defunct companies with no assets or liabilities, or voluntary liquidation under Section 59 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 for solvent companies that need a final,…
Every time a private limited company in India issues shares, whether to a seed investor, a Series A fund, or an ESOP pool, it triggers a sequence of statutory filings that must be completed in a specific order within tight timelines. Get the sequence wrong, file the wrong form under…
Copyright Protection in India for Startups: What qualifies and how to register
Copyright is simultaneously the most pervasive and most mismanaged intellectual property right in the Indian startup ecosystem. Every line of code a developer writes, every screen a designer produces, every course module a content team authors, all of it attracts copyright the moment it is fixed in a tangible form….
iSAFE Notes in India – Funding, Investment & Taxation
India’s startup ecosystem has witnessed the emergence of various funding tools designed to address the challenges of early-stage fundraising. Among these, the India Simple Agreement for Future Equity (“iSAFE”) notes have gained traction as an innovative funding mechanism tailored specifically for the Indian market. iSAFE notes are agreements to purchase…
How to close an Indian subsidiary: Strike off, Voluntary liquidation and Branch office closure
A foreign parent company can close its Indian subsidiary through two routes: strike off under Section 248 of the Companies Act 2013 for defunct companies with no assets or liabilities, or voluntary liquidation under Section 59 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 for solvent companies that need a final,…
Copyright Protection in India for Startups: What qualifies and how to register
Copyright is simultaneously the most pervasive and most mismanaged intellectual property right in the Indian startup ecosystem. Every line of code a developer writes, every screen a designer produces, every course module a content team authors, all of it attracts copyright the moment it is fixed in a tangible form….
iSAFE Notes in India – Funding, Investment & Taxation
India’s startup ecosystem has witnessed the emergence of various funding tools designed to address the challenges of early-stage fundraising. Among these, the India Simple Agreement for Future Equity (“iSAFE”) notes have gained traction as an innovative funding mechanism tailored specifically for the Indian market. iSAFE notes are agreements to purchase…
Co-founder Equity Structure in India: A Co-Founders’ Agreement may not be enough
The co-founder agreement is the easy part. The hard part is making sure the AOA, the shareholders’ agreement, and the cap table can actually deliver the outcome the agreement promises, particularly when a co-founder leaves. A co-founder equity structure India founders often inherit from templates or peer advice tends to…
Co-founder disputes in Indian startups: legal options, buyout mechanics & SHA
When a co-founder dispute surfaces in an Indian startup, the outcome is rarely decided in a boardroom or a court. It is decided by whatever was written into the shareholders’ agreement six months or two years before the relationship broke down. Founders who go into a dispute with a well-drafted…
RBI 2026 Repo Rate: Monetary Policy, Rupee, What Founders need to know
The Reserve Bank of India held its benchmark repo rate steady at 5.25% at the June 2026 Monetary Policy Committee meeting, unanimously, under Governor Sanjay Malhotra. This is the third meeting in a row that the rate has stayed put, following a run of 150 basis point cuts between February…
India Amends Press Note 3 (2020): What the FDI Policy Update Means for Investors and Founders
India’s Cabinet approved an amendment to Press Note 3 (PN3) of 2020 in March 2026, and it is generating significant attention across the investment and startup community. Headlines have rushed to label it a sweeping FDI liberalisation. The reality is considerably more targeted. This report breaks down exactly what changed,…
Revised Regulatory Framework for Angel Funds in India (2025)
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) recently announced a major overhaul to the regulatory framework for Angel Funds under the Alternative Investment Funds (AIF) Regulations, 2012. This new framework, introduced in 2025, aims to enhance transparency, improve operational clarity, and encourage investor participation. In this article, we’ll explore…
SEBI Revamps Angel Fund Framework to Boost Startup Funding
In a significant move to invigorate India’s startup ecosystem, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), during its board meeting on June 19, 2025, approved substantial changes to the Angel Fund Framework. These revisions are designed to unlock more capital for early-stage companies while simultaneously ensuring enhanced investor suitability…
SEBI Mandates New Certification Norms for AIF Managers
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has officially unveiled revised certification requirements for key investment personnel of Alternative Investment Fund (AIF) managers. This crucial update, detailed in SEBI circular F. No. SEBI/LAD-NRO/GN/2025/249 dated June 25, 2025, aims to enhance professional standards and ensure a higher level of expertise…