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Setting up a business in India is way more affordable than most people think. For most of the businesses like, LLPs, OPCs, and private limited companies, there is hardly any legal minimum capital required. Only specialized entities like Nidhi/Producer companies or banks and NBFCs have significant capital requirements.
It is a generally held belief that starting a business in India requires a big fat bank account. From finding the ideal location to acquiring the right contracts and hiring the first batch or recruits. Everything is associated by a price tag.
But the reality on the ground is very different. Indian laws have made it very affordable to start a business. Over the past few years, the government has significantly reduced the minimum capital required to get setup for a private limited company, sole proprietorship or any other business structure you want. In most of the cases, all you need is some bare essentials to get off the ground.
In this blog, we break the myths around minimum capital required to start business in India. We look at specific figures that will enable you setup your business legally and with the right amount of capital that will ensure that you stay profitable in the long run. But to get started, let’s cover some of the basics:
Before diving into the figures, let’s be clear on what the term ‘minimum capital’ implies for different business setups.
While registering a company in India, you declare an ‘authorised capital’. This term refers to the maximum number of shares your company is allowed to issue. Then there is another term known as ‘paid-up capital’. This is the money that shareholders have invested in the company.
Earlier, Indian laws required that businesses have some minimum paid-up capital before they go in for registration. That rule is almost done away with now. But people still confuse authorised capital with what they need to spend.
So, when someone says, ‘minimum capital,’ they could mean any of the following:
All of these are different and significant in their own way.
A private limited company is the first choice for most startups and serious small business owners. It gives them credibility, protects their personal assets, and makes it easy for them to raise money later.
The legal minimum paid-up capital for a private limited company is Rs 0. Yes, you read that right.
After The Companies Act 2013 was introduced, it removed the earlier requirement of Rs 1 lakh as minimum paid-up capital for private limited companies. You can now even register with Re 1 as paid-up capital.
| Period | Minimum Paid-Up Capital for Pvt Ltd |
|---|---|
| Before Companies Act 2013 | ₹1 lakh |
| After Companies Act 2013 | Requirement removed |
| 2026 | No minimum requirement |
However, it is important to remember that you still need to declare an authorised capital. The government will charge stamp duty and registration fees based on that number. People usually go ahead with Rs 1 lakh as minimum authorised capital.
For a private limited company with Rs 1 lakh authorised capital, the total cost of registration comes to roughly Rs 6,000 to Rs 15,000. This includes government fees, stamp duty, and a professional like a CA or CS to handle the paperwork depending on which Indian state you are in.
While some states like Maharashtra have higher stamp duty, states like Delhi are cheaper. But in general, you need under Rs 15,000 to legally register a company in your name.
If you want to go alone and are not looking for a co-founder merely for the sake of registration, the One Person Company structure is the right fit for you.
The minimum paid-up capital required is Rs 0. The registration cost is around Rs 5,000 to Rs 12,000 which is almost similar to that for a private limited company,
The OPC is regarded as a brilliant addition to India’s company law as it gave solo entrepreneurs the protection of limited liability. Thus, doing away with the need to bring in another director or shareholder entirely for the purpose of meeting a legal requirement.
However, it must be noted that earlier, OPCs had a turnover cap of Rs 2 crore. If you went beyond that limit you had to convert to a private limited company. This cap was removed in 2021. Therefore, now you can scale your OPC as much as you want.
Many small service businesses, consultants, and architects often prefer the LLP structure. This is because it offers the flexibility of a partnership with the protection of limited liability.
There is no minimum capital requirement for setting up an LLP.
The registration cost is around Rs 3,000 to Rs 8,000 in government fees. Add to this, the charges of professionals you’ll hire.
As their compliance requirements are lesser, LLPs are also cheaper to maintain annually compared to private limited companies. There are no mandatory board meetings, neither the need to file so many forms, and the audit requirement comes in only above a certain threshold.
If you and your friend are planning to start a consulting business, an LLP can be a very relevant and cost-effective choice.
| Requirement | LLP | Private Limited Company |
|---|---|---|
| Annual Return Filing | Yes | Yes |
| Board Meetings | No | Yes |
| Statutory Audit | Above threshold | Generally mandatory |
| ROC Filings | Limited | More extensive |
| Compliance Cost | Lower | Higher |
A sole proprietorship is meant for a single business owner, doing business under a name. It is ideal for those individuals who want to start a business with minimum investment, control over operations and lesser legal formalities.
Minimum capital required is technically zero. A sole proprietorship is not registered the way you register a company.
You require:
*View table for GST registration threshold
| Business Type | GST Threshold |
|---|---|
| Goods Suppliers | ₹40 lakh (most states) |
| Service Providers | ₹20 lakh |
| Special Category States | ₹10 lakh-₹20 lakh |
The total cost for all these essentials is often, under Rs 5,000. At times, it can even be just a few hundred rupees.
However, there is a catch! Your personal assets are not different from your business assets. This means that all the profits, losses, and liabilities belong exclusively to the proprietor (you). And if your business goes into debt, your personal savings and properties are at risk. This is the reason why sole proprietorships work best for very small operations with low risk.
These are more specialized entities. Nidhi companies are a kind of NBFC used for borrowing and lending among members. It encourages the habit of saving among its members and works along the lines of mutual benefit. These companies are mostly found in the southern part of the country. As it does not need to receive the licence from RBI, Nidhi Company is easy to form.
A producer company is a legally recognized body of farmers or agriculturists with the purpose of improving the standard of their living. Producer companies are mostly for farmers and artisans who want to run a business collectively. A producer company brings together the features of a cooperative society and a private limited business to give its member producers’ collective benefits under a clear legal structure.
Producer Companies no longer have a statutory minimum paid-up capital requirement. However, most producer companies begin operations with sufficient member contributions to fund working capital and operational expenses.
Under current Nidhi Rules:
| Entity | Minimum Capital Requirement |
|---|---|
| Nidhi Company | ₹10 lakh paid-up capital |
| Producer Company | No statutory minimum |
These might not be the ideal structures for most entrepreneurs. But they are worth knowing if your business is in these specific areas.
If you want to start a bank or a non-banking financial company, the capital requirements are completely different.
To receive a universal bank licence from the RBI, you need a minimum capital of Rs 500 crore. For a small finance bank, you require Rs 200 crore. And a payment bank needs Rs 100 crore at the time of its establishment.
For NBFCs, the minimum net owned fund is Rs 10 crore for most categories. This was increased from Rs 2 crore in 2021.
These are clearly not for first-time founders. They are for large financial groups and institutions.
You can easily register a private limited company for Rs 15,000. But for the coming six months while you are trying to gain customers, you would also be needing an office, employees, inventory, marketing, and working capital. The real number could be anywhere from Rs 2 lakh to Rs 50 lakh depending on what you are building.
The legal minimum capital to register a company is one thing. The money you actually need to run the business is a completely different thing. The legal structure is the most inexpensive part of starting a business in India. The expensive part is running the actual business.
| Business Type | Suggested Starting Capital |
|---|---|
| Freelancer / Consultant | ₹50,000 – ₹2 lakh |
| Small Retail Store | ₹2 lakh – ₹10 lakh |
| E-commerce Business | ₹3 lakh – ₹15 lakh |
| Professional Services Firm | ₹2 lakh – ₹8 lakh |
| Manufacturing Unit | ₹10 lakh – ₹50 lakh+ |
| Tech Startup | ₹5 lakh – ₹50 lakh+ |
So before concerning yourself with minimum capital rules, it is advisable to spend some time on a financial model. Ask yourself:
This exercise will shed light on your real capital requirement, which has nothing to do with the Companies Act.
| Business Structure | Minimum Capital Requirement | Liability Protection | Separate Legal Entity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sole Proprietorship | None | No | No |
| LLP | None | Yes | Yes |
| OPC | None | Yes | Yes |
| Private Limited Company | None | Yes | Yes |
| Producer Company | None | Yes | Yes |
| Nidhi Company | ₹10 lakh | Yes | Yes |
| NBFC | ₹10 crore | Yes | Yes |
It is now easier than ever to start a legally registered business. The minimum capital requirement for most structures is around zero and most of the paperwork is online.
It is not the minimum capital that stops people from starting the business. It is the fear of not having sufficient funds to keep on running the business while it gains ground.
You can start with an idea. Keep your costs minimum in the early months. In case you need funding take assistance from government’s startup schemes and credit guarantee programmes. As compared to the past, there are multiple options available for first-time founders in India today. If you are unsure of which business type is most suitable for you, you can reach out to Stratrich consulting. We help businesses in establishing their presence and building a strong foundation for long-term growth.