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India’s regulatory framework gives foreign companies several ways to establish a presence here. The branch office is one of them, and in the right circumstances, it is one of the cleaner options available. It does not require a new Indian company to be incorporated, does not demand a local shareholding structure, and keeps operational control firmly with the overseas parent.
The foreign company branch office India setup sits under a specific regulatory framework governed by the Reserve Bank of India and the Companies Act, 2013. Businesses considering a foreign company branch office in India should understand these rules early because the structure is designed for specific business activities rather than unrestricted commercial operations. This distinction matters. The branch office comes with boundaries that define whether the structure fits a company’s India strategy or not.
A branch office is an extension of the foreign parent company. The parent remains fully responsible for everything the branch does, owes, and undertakes in India.
This has practical consequences. The branch cannot operate freely across all business lines. The RBI specifies what it may do, and anything outside that list requires a different structure altogether.
Permitted activities typically include:
Manufacturing is not permitted through a branch office, with a limited exception for units in Special Economic Zones (SEZs) set up exclusively for export-oriented activity.
Before any application reaches the RBI, companies planning a foreign company branch office in India must first satisfy the eligibility requirements prescribed under FEMA and RBI regulations. These are not formalities. They set the floor for who can apply. The company must be:
The RBI also weighs the proposed activity against India’s foreign investment framework. If the parent company operates in a sector the government treats as sensitive, or if the ownership chain has layers that need unwinding, the review will not only take more time but also ask harder questions.
Setting up a foreign company branch office in India follows fixed procedural steps, and delays often arise when documentation or activity descriptions are incomplete.
The application is filed through Form FNC via an Authorised Dealer Category-I bank. Which route it takes from there depends on where the parent company’s business sits within India’s FDI framework. Businesses under the automatic route go through the standard RBI channel. Those outside it go through an additional round of government review before anything moves forward.
Most applications that slow down do so because of missing documents, not because the legal questions are difficult. The RBI looks at three things in particular: the parent’s financial history, what the Indian operations will involve, and whether the activity described matches what a branch office is allowed to do.
Corporate registration comes after the RBI approves the application and the office has a physical address in India. Under the Companies (Registration of Foreign Companies) Amendment Rules, 2024, Form FC-1 must reach the Registrar, Central Registration Centre within 30 days of that establishment. This filing is what puts the branch formally on record in the Indian corporate system. The 30-day limit is firm. Missing it attracts penalties under the Companies Act, and there is no provision to quietly let it slide.
The FNC application for establishing branch office has a detailed document requirement, and the RBI does not move forward if anything is missing. A single gap in the file can stall the entire process, sometimes by weeks.
A standard application includes:
One area that catches companies off guard is the handling of foreign documents. Documents originating outside India typically need to be notarised or legalised through the Indian Embassy or Mission in the country where the parent is incorporated. Where the Hague Convention applies, an apostille serves the same purpose. The exact requirement varies by country, so this should be checked and sorted before the application goes in, not after.
India taxes the branch just as it taxes the foreign parent. There is no separate rate for the Indian office because, legally, there is no separate Indian office. For AY 2025-26 and AY 2026-27, the rate on income other than royalties and fees for technical services is 40 percent. Surcharge and health and education cess come on top of this.
On the other hand, an existing Indian entity pays 22 percent. A new manufacturing company that qualifies under Section 115BAB of the Income Tax Act can pay as little as 15 percent. That gap is not a technicality. It is a real number that should be part of the structural conversation before any incorporation decision is made.
Two other tax areas need attention once the branch is running are:
Once the branch is operational, compliance runs across three parallel tracks:
Key annual obligations include:
The most serious compliance risk is a mismatch between the activity the RBI approved and what the branch actually undertakes. That can attract FEMA penalties, tax consequences, and in some cases requires regularisation through the FEMA compounding mechanism.
A foreign company branch office India setup works when the business case is well-defined, and the regulatory process is handled correctly. Companies evaluating a foreign company branch office in India should assess permitted activities, taxation, and compliance obligations before choosing this structure. None of that disqualifies the structure; it simply means going in with clarity about what the branch can do and what it cannot.
The companies that get the most from this structure are usually the ones that treated the approval process as a planning exercise, not an administrative formality. If a branch office is part of your India conversations, Stratrich can help you work through the structure, the application, and the compliance framework. Reach out to our team to get started.