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While entering the Indian market, entrepreneurs often are confused between a “firm” and a “company”. Specifically in the Indian context, where the two are used interchangeably. However, when it comes to on-ground realities and legal compliances, the two are very different.
To get started, its first important to understanding that the difference between company and firm is not just a choice but a necessity. This will help you make sound decisions for your business later down the road. Whether it’s a Private Limited Company or a Limited Liability Partnership, decisions today will result in how much your business can scale and in what direction.
From tax treatment, exposure of personal liability, and eligibility to raise funding, there are so many things to pack in this one decision. This blog covers this, covering major aspects of structure affecting your business.
A legally identifiable entity formed by two or more persons through a partnership agreement is a firm. In India, there are two main types of firms:
Traditional Partnership Firm: In this type of firm two or more individuals forms an agreement on certain terms and conditions, setting out profit-sharing ratios, responsibilities, and dispute resolution mechanisms. Firms have no separate legal identity from its partners. The registration for a traditional firm is also optional, though unregistered firms cannot sue third parties to enforce contracts, which means no legal protection. Also, it cannot have foreign nationals as partners, which makes this structure largely irrelevant for foreign investors operating independently.
Limited Liability Partnership (LLP): This is the most common form of firm accepted in India. It offers operational flexibility and limited liability protection for its partners. Unlike a traditional partnership firm, an LLP is a separate legal entity. It is registered with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs. It can have foreign nationals as designated partners, under compliance with FEMA and sector-specific FDI restrictions.
A company is a legal structure having its own separate identity, distinct from its shareholders and directors.
If you are setting up a company in India, then these are the most relevant structures for foreign businesses:
Private Limited Company (Pvt. Ltd.): This is the most recommended structure for foreign businesses that enter India. As it allows direct foreign investment, can issue equity, shares, limits shareholder liability to paid-up capital, and is recognised by Indian banks, investors, and institutional counterparts. Most foreign businesses set up as a Wholly Owned Subsidiary (WOS), in this 100% of the shares are held by the parent company.
Public Limited Company: This is suitable for large-scale operations planning to eventually list on Indian stock exchanges. This is more compliance-intensive, with mandatory public disclosures.
Main differences between firm and company are mentioned in the table below:
| Parameter | Partnership Firm | LLP | Private Limited Company |
|---|---|---|---|
| Governing Law | Indian Partnership Act, 1932 | LLP Act, 2008 | Companies Act, 2013 |
| Legal Identity | No separate identity | Separate legal entity | Separate legal entity |
| Liability | Unlimited (partners) | Limited to contribution | Limited to shareholding |
| Foreign Ownership (FDI) | Not permitted | Permitted in select sectors | Permitted under automatic/approval route |
| Minimum Members | 2 partners | 2 designated partners | 2 directors, 1 shareholder |
| Equity Fundraising | Not possible | Not possible | Possible |
| Perpetual Succession | No | Yes | Yes |
| Annual Compliance | Low | Moderate | Moderate to high |
| Incorporation Cost (approx.) | INR 5,000-15,000 | INR 10,000-25,000 | INR 15,000- 50,000 |
| Audit Requirement | Only if turnover > INR1 crore | Mandatory if turnover > INR 40 lakh | Mandatory (all companies) |
| RBI / FEMA Filing | Not applicable | Required if foreign capital involved | FC-GPR, FLA Return, FCGPR filings required |
If you are a foreign company entering India, FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999) compliance is mandatory regardless of the structure you choose.
For Private Limited Company:
For an LLP with foreign investment:
In a Partnership Firm, FDI is generally prohibited.
Structure selection includes a crucial question, i.e. what are the different business taxes in India? From Particularly for-profit repatriation, transfer pricing, and group consolidation, it affects what entity you consider choosing.
| Entity | Base Tax Rate | Surcharge | Effective Rate (approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Partnership Firm | 30% | Applicable if income > INR 1 crore | ~34.94% |
| LLP | 30% | Applicable if income > INR 1 crore | ~34.94% |
| Domestic Company (turnover ≤ INR 400 crore) | 25% | + cess | ~26% |
| New Manufacturing Company (Section 115BAB) | 15% | + surcharge + cess | ~17.01% |
There is no straightforward answer to this question. The right structure depends on your business model, ownership plans, and growth horizon. Here is an overview:
You should go for a Private Limited Company if:
Consider an LLP if you:
The most recommended and suitable structure for most of the foreign businesses is a Private Limited Company or a Wholly Owned Subsidiary. This is because of several reasons:
An LLP can be a reasonable choice for foreign businesses with modest turnover, professional services operations (consulting, legal support, tech services), or holding structures in specific contexts. It has lower annual compliance costs, no mandatory share capital requirement, and registration cost also vary. However, if you anticipate scaling, taking on investors, or operating in a sector with FDI caps, you must eventually convert to a company anyway.
While choosing between company vs firm, it’s not just about the structure but implies various aspects of running a business and its long-term repercussion. It affects compliance burden, ability to raise funds, tax treatment, and limited liability of partners. For instance, choosing between a Private Limited Company or LLP, should be a decision taken with clear goals and having evaluated business plans.
If you are a foreign business with plans of scaling in India, working with banks and large clients, a Private Limited Company is an ideal option for you. However, first time entrepreneurs can face difficulties while getting set up. Going for professional guidance can be a smart decision, our experts at Stratrich can help you navigate your way through it.