ESOP Pool for Private Limited Companies in India — Setup, Legal Framework, Accounting and Vesting Explained

ESOP  ·  Private Limited Company Section 62(1)(b) · Rule 12 · Ind AS 102 Updated June 2026 · Pune

ESOP Pool for Private Limited Companies in India — Setup, Legal Framework, Accounting and Vesting Explained

An Employee Stock Option Plan is one of the most powerful tools a Private Limited Company has for attracting and retaining talent — and one of the most frequently set up incorrectly. This guide covers the complete framework: legal basis under the Companies Act, 2013, how to create and size an ESOP pool, the vesting-exercise-sale lifecycle, accounting treatment under Ind AS 102, and how we help established Private Limited Companies set this up correctly.

ESOP Pool Creation Section 62(1)(b) Rule 12 — Companies (Share Capital & Debentures) Rules, 2014 Vesting & Exercise Ind AS 102 Accounting ESOP Taxation Pune & PCMC

An Employee Stock Option Plan (ESOP) gives eligible employees, directors, or consultants the right — but not the obligation — to purchase shares of the company at a predetermined price, called the exercise price, after a defined vesting period. The employee does not receive shares at the time of grant. They receive an option that becomes a right to acquire shares only once vesting conditions are satisfied.

For a well-established Private Limited Company in Pune, an ESOP is rarely the first compliance item that comes to mind. It is, however, one of the most consequential — affecting talent retention, the company’s profit and loss statement, future fundraising negotiations, and the personal tax position of every employee who receives options. Getting the ESOP scheme document, the pool size, the vesting schedule, and the accounting treatment right at the outset prevents a disproportionate amount of cleanup work later — particularly during due diligence for an investment round.

This guide covers the complete picture: the legal framework under the Companies Act, 2013, how an ESOP pool is created and sized, the four-stage lifecycle every option goes through, the accounting treatment under Ind AS 102, the tax treatment for employees, and the specific ways we help established companies set this up correctly. If your company has not yet been incorporated, our registration and first-year compliance roadmap covers the foundational steps that precede ESOP planning.

An ESOP scheme is not a benefit a company switches on. It is a legal instrument, an accounting policy, and a tax event for every employee who holds it — all governed by the same document.


Legal Framework — What Governs ESOPs for a Private Limited Company

The legal framework for ESOPs issued by unlisted Private Limited Companies in India rests on the following provisions:

ProvisionWhat It Governs
Section 62(1)(b), Companies Act, 2013The enabling provision authorising a company to issue shares to employees under an ESOP scheme, subject to a special resolution passed by shareholders.
Rule 12, Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules, 2014The core operational rule — prescribes eligibility, the minimum one-year vesting period, disclosure requirements in the explanatory statement, and conditions for grants to directors and large individual allocations.
Section 17(2)(vi), Income Tax Act, 1961Treats the difference between fair market value and exercise price, at the time of exercise, as a perquisite taxable in the employee’s hands.
Ind AS 102 / ICAI Guidance Note on Share-Based PaymentsThe accounting standard governing how ESOP cost is measured and recognised in the company’s financial statements.
FEMA RegulationsApplicable where options are granted to employees who are foreign nationals, NRIs, or where the company has foreign shareholding.

What the ESOP Scheme Document Must Define

The ESOP Scheme is the foundational document — every operational aspect of the plan flows from it. At minimum, it must clearly define:

Eligibility Criteria

Which employees, directors, or consultants qualify. Under Rule 12, a director holding more than 10% of the company’s equity is generally not eligible to participate, with limited exceptions for certain start-ups.

Total Option Pool

Expressed as a percentage of the fully diluted share capital — discussed in detail in the next section.

Exercise Price

The price at which the employee can purchase shares once vested. The Companies Act does not prescribe a minimum pricing formula, but the methodology must be clearly disclosed in the explanatory statement to shareholders.

Vesting Schedule

The timeline and conditions under which options become exercisable. Rule 12 mandates a minimum gap of one year between the date of grant and the date of vesting — this is the statutory “cliff.”

Procedural Requirements Under Rule 12

Approval of an ESOP scheme requires a special resolution passed by shareholders in a general meeting, following a board resolution recommending the scheme. Form MGT-14 must be filed with the Registrar of Companies within 30 days of passing the special resolution. Separate shareholder approval is additionally required where the annual grant to a single employee equals or exceeds 1% of the company’s issued share capital, and where options are extended to employees of a holding, subsidiary, or associate company. Upon exercise and allotment of shares, Form PAS-3 (return of allotment) must be filed with the ROC.


Creating and Sizing the ESOP Pool

The “ESOP pool” refers to the portion of a company’s fully diluted share capital reserved for issuance under the ESOP scheme. Creating this pool involves both a legal step (shareholder approval under Section 62(1)(b)) and a capital structuring decision (how much equity to set aside, and when).

How the Pool Is Created

The process begins with the board recommending an ESOP scheme — including the proposed pool size — to shareholders. Shareholders approve the scheme and the pool size via special resolution. The pool itself does not result in immediate share issuance or dilution; it represents authorised headroom from which options can be granted over time. Dilution occurs only as and when options are exercised and shares are actually allotted.

How Large Should the Pool Be?

There is no statutory minimum or maximum pool size under the Companies Act, 2013 — this is a commercial decision. In practice, for Indian startups and growth-stage companies, an ESOP pool of approximately 10% to 15% of fully diluted share capital is the commonly observed range. The right figure for a specific company depends on hiring plans, the seniority of roles being targeted, and — critically — the company’s fundraising trajectory.

Timing the Pool Relative to Fundraising

One of the most important — and most frequently overlooked — structuring decisions is when the ESOP pool is created relative to an investment round. If the pool is created or expanded as part of the pre-money capitalisation (before an investor’s shares are issued), the dilution from the pool is borne by existing shareholders — typically the founders. If the pool is created post-money, the dilution is shared proportionally with the incoming investor. Investors frequently negotiate for the pool to be sized and created pre-money specifically for this reason. Founders who are unaware of this distinction often find a larger-than-expected dilution has occurred by the time the round closes — not because the headline ownership percentages were misrepresented, but because the ESOP pool mechanics were not factored into the founder’s own calculations beforehand.


The Four-Stage Lifecycle: Grant, Vest, Exercise, Sale

Every stock option granted under an ESOP scheme moves through four distinct stages. Understanding each stage — and what happens (legally, financially, and from a tax perspective) at each one — is essential for the company, the employee, and anyone preparing the company’s financial statements.

1 Grant The company formally offers an employee a specific number of options at a defined exercise price, subject to the vesting schedule. No shares change hands. No tax event occurs at this stage.
2 Vest The employee earns the right to exercise a portion of the granted options, based on continued service over time (and sometimes performance conditions). A minimum one-year cliff from grant date is mandatory under Rule 12. No tax event occurs at this stage either.
3 Exercise The employee pays the exercise price and the company allots shares. This is the first taxable event — the difference between the fair market value of the shares and the exercise price is taxed as a perquisite under Section 17(2)(vi).
4 Sale The employee sells the allotted shares. This is the second taxable event — any gain between the sale price and the fair market value at exercise is taxed as a capital gain, classified as short-term or long-term based on the holding period.

The Standard Vesting Schedule

While Rule 12 mandates only a minimum one-year gap between grant and the first vesting event, the schedule most commonly adopted in India follows the pattern widely used internationally: a four-year vesting period with a one-year cliff — 25% of the granted options vest at the end of year one, with the remaining 75% vesting in equal instalments (often monthly or quarterly) over the subsequent three years. This is a market convention rather than a statutory requirement, and companies are free to adopt a different schedule provided the one-year minimum cliff is respected.


Accounting Treatment Under Ind AS 102

For companies preparing financial statements under Indian Accounting Standards (Ind AS), ESOPs are accounted for under Ind AS 102 (Share-Based Payment). Companies following Indian GAAP (not Ind AS) apply the corresponding ICAI Guidance Note on Accounting for Employee Share-Based Payments. The core principle under both frameworks is the same: ESOPs are an employee compensation expense, not a cost-free benefit — and this expense must be recognised in the profit and loss statement.

How the Expense Is Calculated and Recognised

1

Fair Value Determined at Grant Date

The fair value of each option is estimated as of the grant date, using an option pricing model — typically Black-Scholes or a Binomial model. Ind AS 102 does not mandate a specific model but prescribes the parameters that must be factored in, including the exercise price, expected volatility, expected life of the option, expected dividends, and the risk-free interest rate.

2

Total Fair Value Spread Across the Vesting Period

The total fair value of the options granted is recognised as an expense over the vesting period — not as a single charge at grant date or exercise date. This means the cost of an ESOP grant flows through the company’s P&L gradually, over the same period during which the employee earns the right to exercise.

3

Graded Vesting Is Treated as Separate Tranches

Where the vesting schedule is graded — for example, 25% per year over four years — each tranche is treated as a separate grant for accounting purposes, each with its own expense recognition timeline. This results in a front-loaded expense pattern in the early years of a graded vesting schedule.

The Practical Implication for Established Companies

A common assumption among founders of well-established companies is that ESOPs are “free” because no cash leaves the company at the time of grant. Under Ind AS 102, this is not how it is reflected in the financial statements. A large ESOP pool with a low exercise price results in a higher recognised compensation expense — reducing reported profit, even though no cash has changed hands. Finance teams should factor this into quarterly and annual financial statement preparation, particularly in the periods leading up to a statutory audit or a fundraising round, where investors will scrutinise the P&L impact of outstanding ESOP grants as part of due diligence.


Tax Treatment for Employees — The Two-Stage Tax Event

ESOPs are taxed in the hands of the employee at two separate stages — a structure that surprises many first-time recipients of options, who often assume tax arises only when shares are eventually sold.

StageTax Treatment
GrantNo tax event. The employee holds an option, not a share, and no income has arisen.
VestingNo tax event. Vesting confirms the employee’s right to exercise but does not itself constitute a transfer of any asset or receipt of income.
ExerciseTaxable as a perquisite under Section 17(2)(vi) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. The difference between the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise and the exercise price paid by the employee is added to the employee’s salary income and taxed at applicable slab rates. The employer is required to deduct TDS on this perquisite value.
SaleTaxable as capital gains. The gain is computed as the difference between the sale price and the fair market value at the time of exercise (which becomes the cost base for capital gains purposes). Whether the gain is short-term or long-term depends on the holding period from the date of exercise to the date of sale.
Note on DPIIT-Recognised Startups

Eligible start-ups holding DPIIT recognition under the Startup India programme have, at various points, been provided relief mechanisms that defer the timing of TDS deduction on ESOP perquisites (rather than requiring deduction immediately at exercise) for a specified period or until specified trigger events. The applicability and current status of any such deferral mechanism should be confirmed for the relevant assessment year before being relied upon, as these provisions have been subject to periodic legislative review. This is a separate question from the Section 80-IAC income tax exemption covered in our DPIIT recognition guide.


How We Help Established Private Limited Companies Set Up ESOP Pools

For a well-established Private Limited Company in Pune considering an ESOP for the first time — or reviewing an existing scheme ahead of a fundraising round — the work spans legal documentation, capital structuring, accounting policy, and tax compliance. We assist with each of these as part of a coordinated engagement:

ESOP Scheme Drafting

Drafting the ESOP Scheme document covering eligibility, pool size, exercise price methodology, and vesting schedule — aligned with Rule 12 requirements and the explanatory statement disclosures needed for shareholder approval.

Board and Shareholder Resolutions

Preparing the board resolution recommending the scheme, the special resolution for shareholder approval, and filing Form MGT-14 with the ROC within the statutory 30-day window.

Pool Sizing and Cap Table Modelling

Working through pool size scenarios against the company’s fully diluted capitalisation table, including pre-money versus post-money pool creation implications ahead of an investment round.

Ind AS 102 Expense Computation

Coordinating fair value computation (Black-Scholes or Binomial, as appropriate) and the resulting periodic expense recognition for incorporation into the company’s financial statements ahead of statutory audit.

Exercise and Allotment Compliance

Managing the allotment process on exercise, including Form PAS-3 filing with the ROC and updating the register of members and statutory registers.

TDS and Employee Tax Guidance

Advising on TDS deduction obligations at the time of exercise under Section 17(2)(vi), and guidance for employees on the capital gains implications at the time of sale.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can an LLP issue ESOPs to its employees?

No. ESOPs, as governed by Section 62(1)(b) of the Companies Act, 2013 and Rule 12 of the Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules, 2014, apply to companies — Private Limited and Public Limited — which have share capital and the legal mechanism to issue equity shares. An LLP has no share capital and no equivalent statutory ESOP framework. This is one of the structural reasons growth-stage businesses choose a Private Limited Company structure, discussed further in our guide to LLP-to-company conversion.

Does creating an ESOP pool immediately dilute existing shareholders?

Not immediately. Creating the pool establishes authorised headroom for future option grants — it does not itself result in share issuance. Dilution occurs progressively as options are exercised and shares are actually allotted to employees. However, the pool size is factored into “fully diluted” ownership calculations from the time it is created, which is relevant for investor negotiations even before any options are exercised.

Can ESOPs be granted to consultants or only to employees?

The ESOP framework under Rule 12 is generally structured around employees, directors, and officers of the company (and, with separate approval, employees of holding, subsidiary, or associate companies). Arrangements with independent consultants who are not employees are typically structured differently — often as sweat equity shares under Section 54 of the Companies Act, 2013, which carry a distinct legal and tax framework. The appropriate structure depends on the nature of the relationship and should be assessed individually.

What happens to unvested options if an employee resigns before the cliff?

This is governed by the terms of the ESOP scheme document and the individual grant letter, not by a default statutory rule — which is precisely why these terms must be drafted clearly at the outset. Commonly, unvested options lapse entirely on resignation before the one-year cliff, while vested-but-unexercised options may be subject to a defined exercise window post-resignation as specified in the scheme. Ambiguity in the scheme document on this point is a frequent source of disputes between departing employees and companies.

How is the fair market value determined for taxation at the time of exercise, for an unlisted company?

For an unlisted company, the fair market value at the time of exercise is determined based on a valuation by a merchant banker or an accountant, as prescribed under the relevant Income Tax Rules. This valuation is distinct from — though sometimes informed by — the fair value computation used for Ind AS 102 accounting purposes, which uses option pricing models such as Black-Scholes. Companies should ensure both valuations are obtained through properly documented processes, as both are subject to scrutiny — the accounting fair value during statutory audit, and the tax fair market value during income tax assessment of the employee.

Akhil Amit And Associates · Chartered Accountants, Pune

Considering an ESOP pool for your company, or reviewing an existing scheme before a fundraise?

We assist established Private Limited Companies with ESOP scheme drafting, pool sizing against the cap table, board and shareholder resolutions, Ind AS 102 expense computation, and the exercise-and-allotment compliance cycle — coordinated as part of your existing audit and compliance engagement. 250+ companies managed across Chinchwad, Wakad, and Ravet-Kiwale, Pune.

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The Real Cost of Running a Private Limited Company in Pune — Every Rupee Explained

Transparency Report  ·  Company Compliance Real Numbers · No Hidden Fees FY 2025-26 · Pune

The Real Cost of Running a Private Limited Company in Pune — Every Rupee Explained

Most CA firms will not publish their fees. We are publishing ours — along with every government fee, every penalty trap, and the honest math of what a Private Limited Company actually costs per year. Because a founder who knows the real numbers makes better decisions.

Registration Cost Annual Compliance Cost Government Fees Penalty Math Pvt Ltd vs LLP Cost Pune & PCMC 2025-26

Ask ten CA firms in Pune what it costs to run a Private Limited Company for a year and you will get ten versions of “it depends — contact us.” This article exists because that answer is not good enough.

We manage compliance for over 250 Private Limited Companies across Pune and Pimpri Chinchwad. We know exactly what these companies spend — on government fees, on professional fees, on the penalties they pay when something is missed. This article lays out all of it: the one-time costs, the recurring annual costs, the conditional costs that apply only in specific situations, and the penalty mathematics that most founders discover only after the damage is done.

If you are deciding whether to incorporate, start with our founder’s guide to Private Limited Company registration. This article assumes you have decided — and want to know what you are signing up for financially.

A Private Limited Company is not expensive to run. It is expensive to run badly. The difference between the two is roughly ₹75,000 a year in avoidable penalties.


Part 1 — One-Time Cost: Incorporation

The incorporation cost has two components: government charges (identical no matter who you hire) and professional fees (which vary by firm). Here is the complete breakdown for a standard two-director company with ₹1 lakh authorised capital, registered office in Maharashtra:

ItemWho Receives ItAmount
Digital Signature Certificate (DSC) × 2 directorsClass 3, 2-year validityCertifying Authority₹2,400–5,000
SPICe+ government filing feeFor authorised capital up to ₹15 lakh, MCA fee is nil; linked form charges applyMCA₹0–1,500
Stamp duty on MOA + AOAMaharashtra rates, ₹1 lakh authorised capitalState Government₹1,300–2,000
Name reservation (included in SPICe+ Part A)₹1,000 if filed separately via RUNMCA₹0–1,000
PAN + TANIssued automatically with SPICe+Income Tax DeptIncluded
Professional fees — complete incorporationMarket range in Pune for a CA-led engagement incl. MOA drafting, SPICe+, INC-20A guidanceCA Firm₹6,000–15,000
Realistic all-in incorporation cost₹10,000–22,000
What the ₹1,999 portals do not include

Heavily advertised “₹1,999 company registration” packages typically exclude: DSC charges, stamp duty, INC-20A filing (mandatory within 180 days), first auditor appointment (ADT-1), Shop Act licence (mandatory in Maharashtra), and GST registration. Each is billed as an “add-on” after you have paid. The final invoice routinely crosses ₹15,000 — without the MOA being drafted for your specific business. Compare the total cost, not the headline price.


Part 2 — The Recurring Annual Cost

This is the number founders actually need before incorporating — and the one almost nobody publishes. For a small operating Private Limited Company (turnover under ₹2 crore, under 10 employees, no international transactions), the annual compliance stack looks like this:

Compliance ItemFrequencyAnnual Cost Range
Accounting & bookkeepingMonthly entries, reconciliations, ledgersMonthly₹24,000–60,000
GST returns — GSTR-1 + GSTR-3BIncl. GSTR-2B reconciliation; GSTR-9 if turnover > ₹2 CrMonthly₹12,000–36,000
TDS complianceMonthly deposits + quarterly 26Q/24Q returns + Form 16AMonthly + Quarterly₹6,000–18,000
Statutory auditMandatory regardless of turnover — Section 139Annual₹10,000–35,000
ROC annual filingsAOC-4, MGT-7/7A, ADT-1, DPT-3, DIR-3 KYC × 2 directorsAnnual₹6,000–15,000
Income tax return — ITR-6Plus directors’ personal ITRs in many engagementsAnnual₹5,000–15,000
Government filing feesMCA normal fees for AOC-4, MGT-7 etc. for small companyAnnual₹1,200–3,000
Realistic total annual cost (done right, on time)₹65,000–1,80,000

Bundled retainers are cheaper than itemised billing. A firm managing your complete stack — accounting, GST, TDS, ROC, audit coordination, ITR — under one monthly retainer typically lands a small company between ₹7,000 and ₹12,000 per month, all-inclusive except government fees. That is the honest market number in Pune in 2025-26.

₹7–12kMonthly retainer
full compliance stack
₹0Late fees if managed
proactively
30 minFounder time required
per month

Part 3 — Conditional Costs (Only If They Apply to You)

SituationWhat It TriggersCost
Turnover crosses ₹1 crore(₹10 Cr with 95%+ digital receipts)Tax audit u/s 44AB₹15,000–40,000/yr
Transactions with foreign related partyTransfer Pricing audit — Form 3CEB₹25,000–75,000/yr
Turnover crosses ₹2 croreGSTR-9 annual return₹5,000–15,000/yr
Turnover crosses ₹5 croreE-invoicing setup + GSTR-9C₹10,000–25,000 one-time + annual
20+ employeesEPF + ESIC registration & monthly compliance₹12,000–30,000/yr
Director changes, capital increase, address changeEvent-based ROC filings (DIR-12, SH-7, INC-22)₹2,000–8,000 per event

Part 4 — The Penalty Math Nobody Shows You

This is where compliance cost stops being theoretical. Every figure below is the statutory penalty under the Companies Act, 2013 or the relevant tax law — not an estimate:

What Was MissedPenalty RuleCost of 1 Year of Delay
AOC-4 (financial statements)₹100/day, no cap — Section 137₹36,500
MGT-7 (annual return)₹100/day, no cap — Section 92₹36,500
INC-20A (commencement declaration)₹50,000 company + ₹1,000/day per director (max ₹1,00,000 each)₹1,50,000+
DIR-3 KYC (per director)DIN deactivated; ₹5,000 to reactivate₹10,000 (2 directors)
GSTR-3B (per month)₹50/day (₹20 nil) capped per return + 18% interest on tax₹10,000+ per return
One year of neglected compliance₹2,40,000+

Read those two tables together and the conclusion writes itself: a year of professional compliance management costs less than half of what one year of neglect costs in penalties alone — before counting director disqualification risk under Section 164(2), which bars directors from all Indian companies for five years after three consecutive years of non-filing.

If your company already has a backlog — act before July 15, 2026

The MCA’s Companies Compliance Facilitation Scheme, 2026 (CCFS 2026) — applicable to companies under the Companies Act, 2013 — is active until July 15, 2026. Eligible defaulting companies can file all overdue forms by paying only 10% of accumulated additional fees. A company carrying ₹2 lakh in accumulated penalties can settle for roughly ₹20,000. After July 15, the full amount applies again. If this is you, the window is closing.


Part 5 — Honest Comparison: Pvt Ltd vs LLP Annual Cost

Cost HeadPrivate LimitedLLP
Statutory auditMandatory — any turnoverOnly above ₹40 lakh turnover / ₹25 lakh contribution
Annual ROC filingsAOC-4 + MGT-7 + DPT-3 + ADT-1Form 8 + Form 11 only
Board meetingsMinimum 4/year with minutesNot required
Typical annual compliance cost₹65,000–1,80,000₹25,000–60,000

An LLP is genuinely cheaper to run. So why do funded startups and growth businesses still choose a Private Limited Company? Because an LLP cannot issue equity shares, cannot grant ESOPs, and is excluded from the Section 80-IAC tax exemption. The ₹40,000–1,00,000 annual cost difference buys access to equity capital, employee stock options, and three potential tax-free years. For a stable professional practice with no funding plans, the LLP saves real money — our LLP guide and LLP-to-company conversion guide cover both directions of that decision.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the minimum annual cost to keep a Private Limited Company compliant in Pune?

For a company with zero or minimal activity, the bare minimum — nil-activity accounting, statutory audit, AOC-4, MGT-7, DIR-3 KYC, DPT-3, and ITR-6 — realistically costs ₹25,000 to ₹40,000 per year including government fees. There is no legal way to spend zero: statutory audit and ROC filings are mandatory even for a dormant company unless formal dormant status under Section 455 is obtained.

Why do CA quotes for the same company vary from ₹5,000 to ₹20,000 per month?

Scope. The ₹5,000 quote usually covers filing only — you do the accounting, chase the deadlines, and answer notices yourself. The higher quotes include bookkeeping, reconciliations, advance reminders, notice handling, and directors’ personal ITRs. When comparing quotes, ask for the exclusion list, not the inclusion list — that is where the real difference hides.

Are government fees included in CA retainers?

Almost never, and rightly so — government fees (MCA filing fees, late fees, stamp duty) are statutory amounts paid to the government and vary by event. A transparent firm bills them at actuals with receipts. Treat any quote that says “all government fees included” with suspicion: either the fees are padded into the price, or the scope is narrower than you think.

Is it cheaper to use an online portal than a local CA firm?

For the incorporation alone, marginally — until the add-ons. For ongoing compliance, the comparison changes: portals operate on ticket-based support with rotating staff, while a local firm carries continuous knowledge of your business. The expensive part of compliance is not the filing fee — it is the missed deadline, the wrongly claimed ITC, or the unanswered notice. Those risks scale down with proximity and accountability, not with discounts.

What does Akhil Amit And Associates charge?

For a small operating Private Limited Company, our complete-stack retainer — accounting, GST, TDS, ROC, audit coordination, company and directors’ ITRs, advance deadline reminders — typically falls in the ₹7,000–12,000 per month range depending on transaction volume, plus government fees at actuals. First-year engagements are usually at the lower end. We publish this range because pricing transparency filters for the kind of long-term client relationships we want.

Akhil Amit And Associates · Chartered Accountants, Pune

Want an exact quote instead of a range?

Tell us your turnover, transaction volume, and current compliance status — we will send a line-item quote within one working day. No “contact us to discuss” loops. 250+ companies managed across Chinchwad, Wakad, and Ravet-Kiwale. If your company has a penalty backlog, ask us about CCFS 2026 before July 15.

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Conversion of LLP to Private Limited Company in India — Legal Process, Advantages, and Complete Guide

Section 366 · Companies Act 2013 Updated June 2026

Conversion of LLP to Private Limited Company in India — Legal Process, Advantages, and Complete Guide

A step-by-step legal guide to converting a Limited Liability Partnership to a Private Limited Company under Section 366 of the Companies Act, 2013 — when to do it, how to do it, and the critical points most guides miss.

Section 366 Form URC-1 LLP to Company Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules, 2014 DPIIT Recognition Angel Tax Pune & PCMC

An LLP is an excellent starting structure for professionals, consultants, and service businesses. Its lower compliance burden, flexible profit-sharing, and partnership flexibility make it a logical first choice. But LLPs have structural limitations that become binding constraints the moment a business begins to scale, seeks external investment, or requires equity-based employee compensation.

Conversion from an LLP to a Private Limited Company is provided for under Section 366 of the Companies Act, 2013 read with the Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules, 2014. It is a formal legal process — not merely a re-registration — that results in the LLP being dissolved by operation of law and a new Private Limited Company being incorporated with the same assets, liabilities, and business continuity.

This guide covers the complete picture: the legal basis, eligibility conditions, the advantages of conversion, the specific triggers that indicate conversion is necessary, the step-by-step process including Form URC-1, documents required, post-conversion compliance obligations, tax implications, and the common mistakes that cause complications.

If you are still evaluating whether to start as an LLP or Private Limited Company, our LLP Registration and Compliance Guide covers that decision comprehensively.

Legal Basis

Section 366 of the Companies Act, 2013 read with Part I of Schedule III and the Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules, 2014 provide the legal framework for the conversion of an LLP into a Private Limited Company. The conversion is effected through registration of the LLP as a company — the LLP does not need to be separately wound up. Upon issuance of the Certificate of Incorporation by the Registrar of Companies, the LLP stands dissolved by operation of law.


Eligibility Conditions for Conversion

Not every LLP can convert to a Private Limited Company. The Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules, 2014 prescribe specific eligibility conditions that must be satisfied before an application for conversion can be filed.

1
Minimum two partners: The LLP must have at least two partners at the time of conversion. The resulting Private Limited Company requires a minimum of two directors and two shareholders, both of which are satisfied by the converting LLP’s partners. An LLP with only one partner cannot convert directly.
2
Unanimous consent of all partners: Every partner of the LLP must consent to the conversion in writing. There is no provision for majority-based conversion — it requires 100% partner consent. A dissenting partner prevents the conversion until the dispute is resolved or the partner exits the LLP.
3
No partner declared insolvent: No partner of the LLP should have been adjudicated insolvent or should have applied for adjudication as insolvent. This condition must be declared by the designated partners as part of the conversion application.
4
LLP not in process of winding up: The LLP must not be in the process of being wound up or dissolved at the time of application. An LLP that has initiated winding up proceedings cannot convert under Section 366.
5
All compliance filings current: While not explicitly stated as a bar in the Rules, the ROC will scrutinise the LLP’s compliance record. Pending Form 8 (Statement of Accounts and Solvency) or Form 11 (Annual Return) filings should ideally be brought current before initiating the conversion process to avoid delays in ROC scrutiny.
6
Publication of intention: The LLP must publish a notice of its intention to convert in a prescribed manner (discussed in the process section below) and provide an opportunity for creditors to raise objections before the ROC processes the application.
On LLP Compliance Before Converting

If your LLP has overdue Form 8 or Form 11 filings, these must be regularised by paying the accumulated late fees under the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008 before initiating conversion. The late fee for delayed filing of Form 8 and Form 11 is Rs. 100 per day per form from the due date. It is important to note that the Companies Compliance Facilitation Scheme, 2026 (CCFS 2026) is a scheme under the Companies Act, 2013 and applies exclusively to companies registered under that Act. It does not apply to LLPs, which are governed by the LLP Act, 2008. There is currently no equivalent condonation scheme for LLP late filings. All overdue LLP compliance must be cleared in full before initiating the conversion process to avoid complications during ROC scrutiny of Form URC-1.


Why Convert? The Advantages of Private Limited Company Over LLP

The decision to convert from an LLP to a Private Limited Company is almost always driven by one or more structural limitations of the LLP that have become constraints on business growth. Here are the substantive advantages of conversion:

Ability to Raise Equity Investment

An LLP cannot issue equity shares or accept investment from angel investors, venture capital, or private equity. A Private Limited Company can issue equity shares to investors, enabling structured investment rounds with proper documentation of ownership, rights, and liquidation preferences.

ESOP for Employees

Employee Stock Option Plans are not legally available to LLPs. A Private Limited Company can establish an ESOP scheme under the Companies Act, 2013, enabling equity compensation for key talent — critical for startups competing with larger companies for experienced professionals.

DPIIT Recognition and Section 80-IAC

While LLPs can receive DPIIT recognition under the Startup India programme, the Section 80-IAC income tax exemption — three consecutive tax-free years — is available only to companies incorporated as Private Limited Companies or Public Limited Companies. This benefit is not available to LLPs.

Angel Tax Exemption

The Section 56(2)(viib) angel tax exemption for DPIIT-recognised startups applies to investments in companies. An LLP structure does not provide the same protection against angel tax on investments received at a premium.

Foreign Direct Investment

FDI under the automatic route is available to Private Limited Companies in most sectors with established FEMA compliance frameworks. LLPs have restrictions on FDI in several sectors and the compliance structure for LLP-based foreign investment is more complex.

Credibility with Corporate Clients

Large Indian and multinational companies frequently have vendor onboarding policies that require suppliers to be Private Limited Companies. Some procurement and compliance functions specifically prefer dealing with companies rather than LLPs for contractual certainty.

Separation of Ownership and Management

A Private Limited Company allows cleaner separation between shareholders (investors) and directors (management). Board governance, shareholder agreements, and management rights can be structured with greater legal clarity than in an LLP, which is important for multi-party business relationships.

Exit and M&A Readiness

Share transfers in a Private Limited Company are straightforward with established legal frameworks for acquisition, merger, and exit. Transferring interest in an LLP for M&A purposes is structurally more complex and less familiar to acquirers and institutional investors.

An LLP is an excellent structure for a stable professional services firm. It becomes a structural constraint the moment you need external capital, equity-based talent retention, or international investment.


When Should You Convert? — The Specific Triggers

Conversion has costs — legal fees, time, and the operational disruption of updating all registrations. It should be done when the business has reached a stage where the LLP structure’s limitations are actively constraining growth, not preemptively or as a formality.

Convert Now
Wait or Stay as LLP
Angel investor or VC has expressed interest in investing
Business is stable with no plans for external investment
You want to launch an ESOP scheme for key employees
Small team with no plans for equity-based compensation
DPIIT recognition with Section 80-IAC is desired and company is within 10 years of incorporation
Business is not innovation-led or does not qualify for DPIIT
Corporate clients are specifically requesting Private Limited status for vendor onboarding
Clients are comfortable with LLP structure
FDI from foreign investors is being planned
Operations are purely domestic with no international investment
M&A or acquisition is on the horizon within 3–5 years
Long-term professional partnership with no exit plans

Step-by-Step Process for Conversion

The conversion process is governed by the Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules, 2014 and is conducted through the MCA21 portal. The process involves three stages: preparation, publication, and ROC filing.

1

Pass a Resolution of All Partners Consenting to Conversion

A resolution signed by all partners of the LLP must be passed confirming their consent to the conversion. This is required under the Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules, 2014. There is no provision for a majority decision — unanimous consent is mandatory. The resolution should specify the proposed name of the company and the intended share capital structure. All designated partners must affix their digital signatures to this resolution.

2

Prepare Statement of Accounts

A statement of assets and liabilities of the LLP must be prepared and certified by a Chartered Accountant. Critically, this statement must not be older than 6 days from the date of filing Form URC-1. This is a tight window that requires careful timing between CA certification and actual ROC filing. The statement must show the complete financial position including all creditors, secured and unsecured.

3

Publish Notice of Intention to Convert in Newspapers

Under Rule 5 of the Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules, 2014, the LLP must publish a notice of its intention to convert in two newspapers — one in English and one in the vernacular language circulating in the district of the LLP’s registered office. The notice must invite objections from creditors and interested parties within a specified period. Proof of publication (newspaper clippings) must be filed with Form URC-1.

4

Obtain NOC from Secured Creditors

If the LLP has any secured creditors (banks, financial institutions, or any other party holding a charge on LLP assets), a No Objection Certificate must be obtained from each secured creditor before filing Form URC-1. Secured creditors must explicitly confirm they have no objection to the conversion of the LLP to a company and that their security interests will continue in the converted entity.

5

File Form URC-1 on MCA21 Portal

Form URC-1 (Application for Conversion of Firm/LLP/Association of Persons into a Company) is filed on the MCA21 portal. This is the primary application form for conversion. It must be accompanied by all required documents (listed in the next section) and digitally signed by the designated partners. The government filing fee for Form URC-1 depends on the proposed authorised share capital of the resulting company.

6

File Form No. 14 with the LLP Registrar

Simultaneously with or immediately after filing Form URC-1, a notice in Form No. 14 must be filed by the LLP with the Registrar of LLPs under the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008, informing them of the pending conversion. This ensures the LLP’s records are updated with the conversion proceedings.

7

ROC Scrutiny and Issuance of Certificate of Incorporation

The Registrar of Companies scrutinises Form URC-1 and all accompanying documents. If the ROC is satisfied and no valid objections have been received, the Certificate of Incorporation is issued. Upon issuance of the Certificate of Incorporation, the LLP stands dissolved by operation of law under Section 366 of the Companies Act, 2013. No separate dissolution order is required for the LLP. The company acquires a CIN (Corporate Identity Number).

8

Post-Conversion Compliance

Multiple registrations and administrative actions must be completed after the Certificate of Incorporation is received. These are covered in detail in the post-conversion section below.


Documents Required for Form URC-1

Rule 4 of the Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules, 2014 specifies the documents that must be annexed to Form URC-1. Incomplete documentation is the most common reason for delays in ROC scrutiny.

Complete Document Checklist for Form URC-1

1. List of partners with names, addresses, occupations, and shareholding/contribution details

2. Consent of all partners to the conversion, individually signed

3. List of creditors of the LLP with names, addresses, and amounts outstanding, signed by the designated partners

4. Declaration by designated partners that the list of creditors is complete and accurate, and that no partner has been adjudicated insolvent

5. Statement of assets and liabilities prepared by a Chartered Accountant — not older than 6 days from the date of filing Form URC-1

6. Copy of the LLP Agreement along with all amendments, if any

7. LLP Incorporation Certificate issued by the Registrar of LLPs

8. Copy of the most recent Income Tax Return filed by the LLP

9. NOC from secured creditors (if any secured liabilities exist)

10. Newspaper publication proof — both English and vernacular newspaper clippings with date

11. Certificate from a Practising CA/CS/Cost Accountant certifying that all requirements under Section 366 and the Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules, 2014 have been complied with

12. MOA and AOA of the proposed Private Limited Company

13. DSC of all proposed directors for signing the application

Critical Timing Requirement

The statement of assets and liabilities must not be older than 6 days from the date of filing Form URC-1. This means the CA must certify the statement and the URC-1 must be filed within a 6-day window. Plan the filing date carefully and coordinate with your CA to ensure the certification date and filing date are aligned.


Post-Conversion Compliance and Administrative Actions

The conversion process does not end with the Certificate of Incorporation. A series of administrative and compliance actions must be completed promptly to ensure the converted company is operational and legally compliant.

Immediate Actions (Within First 30 Days)

!
Apply for new company PAN: The PAN of the LLP does not transfer to the company. A new PAN must be applied for in the name of the Private Limited Company immediately after the Certificate of Incorporation is received. Until a new PAN is obtained, the company cannot file tax returns or enter into taxable transactions.
!
Apply for new TAN: A new Tax Deduction Account Number must be obtained for the company. TDS obligations continue from the date of conversion and must be discharged under the company’s new TAN.
3
Form INC-20A: If this is a fresh incorporation through conversion (which it technically is), the requirement of filing Form INC-20A (Declaration of Commencement of Business) within 180 days of the date of incorporation applies to the converted company. This must be filed within 180 days of the Certificate of Incorporation.
4
Appoint first statutory auditor: The Board of Directors must appoint the first Statutory Auditor within 30 days of the date of incorporation (Certificate of Incorporation) under Section 139(6) of the Companies Act, 2013. File Form ADT-1 within 15 days of appointment.
5
Hold first Board Meeting: Within 30 days of the date of incorporation, the first Board Meeting must be held with proper notice and a quorum as required under Section 173.

Update All Registrations and Contracts

6
GST registration update: The existing LLP GST registration must be surrendered/cancelled. A new GST registration must be obtained in the name of the Private Limited Company. All outstanding GST returns for the LLP must be filed before cancellation. Transition the GSTIN and update vendor and client records.
7
Bank account update: All LLP bank accounts must be converted to company accounts. This requires submitting the Certificate of Incorporation, updated KYC, MOA, AOA, and Board Resolution to each bank. Until updated, the bank account continues in the LLP’s name and must not be used for company transactions.
8
Contract and agreement novation: All existing contracts entered into by the LLP technically continue to bind the converted company (by operation of law). However, it is good practice to execute a novation or an acknowledgement letter with key clients and vendors informing them of the conversion and updating the legal name. Purchase orders, service agreements, and NDAs should be updated.
9
Intellectual property transfer: Trademarks, patents, copyrights, and domain names registered in the name of the LLP must be transferred to or re-registered in the name of the company. This involves separate filings with the IP India trademark registry and other relevant authorities.
10
Employment contracts: Employees of the LLP continue with the company without break in service. However, updated appointment letters or service confirmation letters should be issued on company letterhead. EPF and ESIC registrations must be updated to reflect the company name.
11
Other licences and registrations: Shop Act licence, Udyam (MSME) registration, Import Export Code (IEC), professional licences, and any sector-specific registrations held in the LLP’s name must be updated to reflect the new company name and legal entity.

Tax Implications of Conversion

The tax treatment of LLP to company conversion is an area that requires careful assessment based on the specific facts and current provisions of the Income Tax Act, 1961. The following are the key considerations.

Important Disclaimer

Tax provisions and their interpretations can change. The following represents the general framework as understood at the time of writing. A specific tax assessment for your LLP’s situation by a Chartered Accountant is essential before proceeding with conversion. Do not rely solely on this guide for tax decisions.

1. Transfer of Assets on Conversion

The conversion of an LLP to a company under Section 366 involves the transfer of all assets and liabilities of the LLP to the company by operation of law. The question of whether this constitutes a “transfer” for capital gains purposes under Section 2(47) of the Income Tax Act requires careful examination. The Income Tax Act, 1961 under Section 47 lists transactions that are not treated as transfers for capital gains purposes. Section 47(xiiib) specifically exempts the transfer of assets by a private company or unlisted public company to an LLP in a qualifying conversion — this applies to company to LLP conversion, not LLP to company. There is no equivalent specific exemption under Section 47 for the reverse conversion (LLP to company).

Given this, the conversion of an LLP to a company may have capital gains tax implications depending on the nature of assets involved, their book value, and the consideration received. This must be assessed by a CA in the context of the specific LLP’s asset base.

2. Carry Forward of Losses

The carry forward and set-off of business losses and unabsorbed depreciation accumulated at the LLP level to the converted company requires examination under Sections 72 and 32(2) of the Income Tax Act. The conversion being a statutory process under Section 366 of the Companies Act does not automatically guarantee the transfer of accumulated tax losses to the company. Specific advice is needed on this point.

3. GST on Transfer of Assets

The transfer of assets from the LLP to the company as part of conversion may have GST implications depending on whether the transaction qualifies as a “supply” under Section 7 of the CGST Act, 2017 and whether any applicable exemptions apply. A GST assessment is necessary, particularly for LLPs holding significant moveable or immoveable assets.

4. Stamp Duty

Stamp duty implications on the transfer of assets (particularly immoveable property) vary by state. In Maharashtra, the stamp duty implications of business restructuring involving asset transfers must be assessed under the Maharashtra Stamp Act. This is a state-specific determination.


Common Mistakes and Points to Keep in Mind

1. Not bringing LLP compliance current before converting. Pending Form 8 or Form 11 filings create complications during ROC scrutiny of the URC-1 application. Clear all outstanding LLP compliance before initiating conversion.

2. Missing the 6-day window for the statement of accounts. The CA-certified statement of assets and liabilities must be dated not more than 6 days before the date of URC-1 filing. This is the most common technical error that causes applications to be returned or deficiency notices to be issued.

3. Assuming the LLP PAN transfers automatically. It does not. A new company PAN must be applied for immediately. Operating without a valid company PAN after conversion creates TDS and tax compliance issues.

4. Failing to update contracts and licences promptly. The conversion takes effect legally upon the Certificate of Incorporation. But clients, banks, and government authorities continue to have records in the LLP’s name. Delay in updating creates operational disruptions, rejected invoices, and compliance issues.

5. Not planning the share capital structure before conversion. The URC-1 application requires specifying the MOA and AOA of the proposed company including share capital. The shareholding structure of the company (how LLP contributions convert to equity shares) must be clearly decided and documented before filing. Post-conversion restructuring is possible but involves additional filings and costs.

6. Ignoring the INC-20A requirement. The converted company must file Form INC-20A (Declaration of Commencement of Business) within 180 days of the Certificate of Incorporation. This is a critical filing that many conversions miss because the business was already operational as an LLP and the founders assume no commencement declaration is needed.

7. Not assessing the tax implications before conversion. As discussed in the tax section above, the conversion may have capital gains tax and GST implications depending on the LLP’s asset base. These must be assessed before conversion, not after.


Our Experience in LLP and Company Compliance

250+ Private Limited Companies Managed
10+ Years Practising Company Law
50+ Foreign Director Incorporations
3 Offices Across Pune & PCMC

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the LLP need to be wound up before converting to a Private Limited Company?

No. This is the most common misconception about the conversion process. Under Section 366 of the Companies Act, 2013, the LLP is converted by registration as a company. Upon issuance of the Certificate of Incorporation, the LLP stands dissolved by operation of law automatically. No separate winding-up proceedings are required.

How long does the conversion process take?

The conversion process typically takes 4 to 8 weeks from the date of initiating the process to the Certificate of Incorporation. The newspaper publication and the mandatory waiting period for creditor objections are the primary variables. ROC processing of Form URC-1 typically takes 2 to 4 weeks after submission of a complete application.

Do employees of the LLP lose their employment on conversion?

No. Employees continue with the converted company without break in service. The conversion by operation of law preserves employment continuity. Their provident fund, gratuity, and other statutory benefits are preserved. Updated appointment letters should be issued on company letterhead as a matter of good practice.

Can an LLP with bank loans convert to a Private Limited Company?

Yes, but the banks (as secured creditors) must provide a No Objection Certificate before the conversion application is filed. Banks will assess the conversion request and typically require that their security interest continues to be recognised by the resulting company. The company will take over the loan obligations of the LLP. This should be coordinated with your bank relationship manager well in advance of initiating the conversion process.

What is the difference between conversion under Section 366 and simply closing the LLP and incorporating a new company?

Conversion under Section 366 ensures business continuity — all contracts, relationships, assets, and liabilities transfer by operation of law to the company. The company is treated as the same legal entity continuing the LLP’s business. A fresh incorporation involves starting a new legal entity, requiring all contracts to be re-entered, all assets to be formally transferred (with potential stamp duty and tax implications), and all customer and vendor relationships to be re-established. Conversion under Section 366 is the legally cleaner and commercially less disruptive path.

Can a single-member LLP convert to a Private Limited Company?

This question does not arise under Indian law because a single-member LLP is not a legally valid entity in India. Section 6 of the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008 mandates that every LLP must have a minimum of two designated partners at all times. An LLP with only one partner cannot legally exist. If the number of designated partners of an LLP falls below two and the LLP continues to operate for more than 6 months in that condition, the remaining partner becomes personally liable for all obligations contracted during that period under Section 6(2) of the LLP Act, 2008. The question of a single-member LLP converting to a Private Limited Company therefore does not arise. If you are a sole proprietor or individual wishing to incorporate a Private Limited Company directly, you may do so with a second director and second shareholder as required under the Companies Act, 2013 — the second person does not need to be a business partner in any substantive sense.

Akhil Amit And Associates  ·  Chartered Accountants, Pune

Planning to convert your LLP to a Private Limited Company?

We manage the complete LLP-to-company conversion process including Form URC-1, newspaper publication coordination, CA-certified statement of accounts, ROC filing, and all post-conversion compliance — new PAN, GST update, INC-20A, first auditor appointment, and contract update guidance. Three offices across Chinchwad, Wakad, and Ravet-Kiwale, Pune.

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GST Registration for Private Limited Companies in Pune — The Complete Guide

Complete Guide  ·  Akhil Amit And Associates, Pune

GST Registration for Private Limited Companies in Pune — The Complete Guide

When to register, what documents you need, how the process works on the GST portal, and what the compliance calendar looks like after you get your GSTIN — everything a Private Limited Company founder in Pune needs to know.

GST Registration Private Limited Company Pune & Pimpri Chinchwad GSTR-1 · GSTR-3B · GSTR-9

Most founders who incorporate a Private Limited Company in Pune focus on getting the Certificate of Incorporation. What they often underestimate is the step that must follow immediately after — GST registration — and the ongoing compliance obligations that begin the moment a GSTIN is issued.

GST registration for a Private Limited Company is not optional once you begin operations. It is mandatory at specific turnover thresholds, mandatory regardless of turnover in certain transaction types, and practically essential for corporate client onboarding even when you are technically below the threshold. A company that raises its first invoice to a corporate client without a GSTIN will almost always be rejected at the vendor onboarding stage.

This guide covers the complete picture — when GST registration is mandatory, the documents required for a Private Limited Company, the step-by-step registration process, and the monthly and annual compliance calendar that follows. If you are still at the stage of deciding whether to incorporate, start with our Private Limited Company Registration Guide for Pune Founders.

When is GST Registration Mandatory for a Private Limited Company?

GST registration is governed by the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017. The registration obligation arises either through crossing a turnover threshold or through the nature of the transactions your company undertakes — irrespective of turnover.

Threshold-Based Mandatory Registration

Type of Supply Threshold (Most States incl. Maharashtra) Special Category States
Services ₹20 lakh per year ₹10 lakh per year
Supply of Goods ₹40 lakh per year ₹20 lakh per year
Mixed Supply (Goods + Services) ₹20 lakh per year ₹10 lakh per year

Special Category States: Manipur, Mizoram, Nagaland, Tripura (lower thresholds apply). Maharashtra is NOT a special category state — the standard thresholds above apply.

Mandatory Registration Regardless of Turnover

These categories require GST registration from the first transaction, regardless of annual turnover:

Inter-State Supply of Goods

If your company sells goods to a buyer in a different state, GST registration is mandatory from the first transaction under Section 24 of the CGST Act, 2017. No turnover threshold applies.

E-Commerce Sellers (Amazon, Flipkart, Meesho, etc.)

Any company selling goods through an e-commerce operator must register for GST regardless of turnover. The e-commerce operator will also deduct TCS (Tax Collected at Source) under Section 52 of the CGST Act.

Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM) Transactions

Where a company is the recipient of specified services and is liable to pay GST under reverse charge (e.g., legal services from advocates, import of services from overseas), GST registration is mandatory.

TDS Deduction under GST (Section 51)

Companies required to deduct TDS under the GST Act (government entities, PSUs, and notified entities) must be registered regardless of turnover.

Casual Taxable Person

If a company supplies goods or services in a state or territory where it does not have a fixed place of business (e.g., participating in an exhibition), it must register as a Casual Taxable Person before the supply.

The Practical Reality for Pune Companies — Below Threshold Does Not Mean Unregistered

Most corporate clients — IT companies, manufacturers, multinationals operating in Pune and Pimpri Chinchwad — require a GSTIN for vendor onboarding, regardless of your annual turnover. Without a GSTIN, your invoice will be rejected by their accounts payable team. For any Private Limited Company that plans to serve corporate clients, registering for GST voluntarily before the first invoice is the professional standard, not an optional step.

Documents Required for GST Registration of a Private Limited Company

The document requirements for a Private Limited Company are more extensive than for a proprietorship or partnership. Ensure all documents are current and valid before initiating the application on the GST portal.

Company Documents

✓ Certificate of Incorporation (CoI)
✓ PAN Card of the Company
✓ Memorandum of Association (MOA)
✓ Articles of Association (AOA)
✓ Board Resolution authorising the GST signatory

Registered Office Proof

✓ Electricity bill / property tax receipt (not older than 2 months)
✓ Rent agreement (if premises is rented)
✓ NOC from property owner (if rented or owned by another person)
✓ Complete address with PIN code matching CoI

Authorised Signatory (Director)

✓ PAN Card of the authorised signatory
✓ Aadhaar Card of the authorised signatory
✓ Passport-size photograph
✓ DSC (Digital Signature Certificate) of the director

Bank Account Details

✓ Cancelled cheque (showing company name, account number, IFSC)
✓ OR First page of bank passbook
✓ OR Bank statement (most recent, showing name and account details)

Important: Bank Account Must be in the Company’s Name

The bank account submitted as proof during GST registration must be in the name of the Private Limited Company — not in the personal name of a director. If your company has not yet opened a business current account, open one first. Most banks in Pune require the GST registration or Shop Act licence as part of current account KYC — which creates a chicken-and-egg situation. The resolution: apply for GST registration using the CoI and address proof, get your GSTIN, and then use it for bank account opening.

Step-by-Step GST Registration Process on the GST Portal

GST registration is done entirely online at gst.gov.in through Form GST REG-01. With complete documentation, approval is typically received within 7 working days. Applications that require verification of the premises may take up to 30 days.

GST Registration Process — 8 Steps

1

Visit gst.gov.in → Register Now

Go to gst.gov.in → Services → Registration → New Registration. Select Taxpayer as the type. Fill Part A of Form GST REG-01 with the company’s PAN, email address, and mobile number.

2

OTP Verification

Verify the email and mobile number via OTP. A Temporary Reference Number (TRN) is generated. This TRN is used to access Part B of the application and is valid for 15 days.

3

Fill Part B — Business Details

Login using the TRN and fill Part B which includes: business details, principal place of business, additional places of business (if any), HSN/SAC codes for goods and services, bank account details, and details of promoters/partners/directors.

4

Select HSN / SAC Code Correctly

Select the correct Harmonised System of Nomenclature (HSN) code for goods or Service Accounting Code (SAC) for services. Incorrect HSN/SAC selection is one of the most common errors at this stage and can cause application rejection or compliance issues later.

5

Upload All Documents

Upload all documents listed in the previous section — CoI, PAN, MOA, AOA, address proof, director details, bank proof, and Board Resolution. Documents must be in PDF or JPEG format within the specified file size limits.

6

Submit with DSC of Authorised Director

For a Private Limited Company, the application must be submitted using the Digital Signature Certificate (DSC) of an authorised director. EVC (Aadhaar OTP) submission is not available for companies; DSC is mandatory.

7

GST Officer Verification

The application is assigned to a GST officer for verification. If the officer is satisfied, the registration is approved. If clarification is sought, a notice in Form GST REG-03 is issued and the applicant must respond within 7 working days via Form GST REG-04.

8

GSTIN Issued — Form GST REG-06

Upon approval, the GSTIN (GST Identification Number) is issued in Form GST REG-06. The GSTIN is a 15-digit number: the first 2 digits represent the state code (Maharashtra = 27), followed by the 10-digit PAN of the company, followed by entity-specific identifiers.

Special Cases: Export of Services, E-Commerce, and RCM

1. Export of Services — LUT is Essential

If your Private Limited Company provides services to clients outside India — IT services, consulting, software development, or any other service — these qualify as zero-rated supplies under Section 16 of the IGST Act, 2017. You can export services without paying IGST by filing a Letter of Undertaking (LUT) in Form RFD-11 on the GST portal before raising the first export invoice of each financial year.

LUT Filing Rule — Do This Before Your First Export Invoice

LUT must be filed at the start of each financial year (or before the first export invoice, whichever comes first). Without a valid LUT, you must charge IGST on export invoices and then claim a refund — which ties up your working capital. For IT companies and software exporters in Pune, this is the first thing to do after GST registration. Read our detailed guide for IT companies and startups in Pune for more on export compliance.

2. E-Commerce Sellers — TCS and Mandatory Registration

Private Limited Companies selling on Amazon, Flipkart, Myntra, or any other e-commerce platform must register for GST regardless of turnover. The e-commerce operator deducts TCS (Tax Collected at Source) at 1% on the net taxable supplies made through the platform. This TCS is available as input credit in your GST returns. Your GSTIN must be linked with the e-commerce platform’s seller portal.

3. Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM)

Under RCM, the recipient of certain services is liable to pay GST instead of the supplier. Common RCM transactions for Private Limited Companies include: legal services from advocates, services from a GTA (Goods Transport Agency), import of services from outside India, and specified categories of services from unregistered suppliers. RCM liability must be self-assessed and paid directly by the company, even if the supplier has not charged GST.

Post-Registration GST Compliance Calendar

Once registered, your Private Limited Company has ongoing monthly and annual GST compliance obligations. Missing return due dates attracts a late fee of ₹50 per day per return (₹20 per day for nil returns), subject to a maximum of ₹10,000 per return per month.

Return / Compliance Frequency Due Date What It Contains
GSTR-1 Monthly / Quarterly 11th of following month Details of all outward taxable supplies (sales) made during the period
GSTR-2B Monthly 14th of following month Auto-populated ITC statement from suppliers’ GSTR-1 filings. Must be reconciled with purchase register before filing GSTR-3B.
GSTR-3B Monthly 20th of following month Summary return of outward supplies, ITC claimed, and net tax liability for the period. Tax must be paid before or with this return.
GSTR-9 Annual 31st December Annual return summarising all monthly returns for the financial year. Mandatory for all registered taxpayers with turnover above ₹2 crore.
GSTR-9C Annual 31st December Reconciliation statement between annual return and audited financial statements. Mandatory if annual turnover exceeds ₹5 crore.

E-Invoicing — Is It Mandatory for Your Company?

E-invoicing under the GST framework requires specified businesses to generate invoices through the Invoice Registration Portal (IRP) and obtain an IRN (Invoice Reference Number) before issuing invoices to B2B customers. As of the current threshold, e-invoicing is mandatory for companies with an aggregate turnover exceeding ₹5 crore in any preceding financial year.

If your Private Limited Company crosses this threshold, every B2B invoice must be generated through the IRP. Non-compliance results in the invoice being treated as invalid, and the buyer cannot claim ITC on a non-compliant invoice.

5 Common GST Mistakes Private Limited Companies Make in Pune

1

Registering after the first B2B invoice

The most common mistake. A company onboards a corporate client, issues the first invoice, and the client’s accounts team rejects it for missing GSTIN. GST registration should happen before the first invoice — not after.

2

Not filing LUT before export invoices

IT companies and service exporters in Pune regularly miss this. Without a valid LUT, the first export invoice charges IGST which then has to be claimed as a refund. Filing LUT takes 10 minutes on the GST portal and avoids this entirely.

3

Not reconciling GSTR-2B before claiming ITC

Input Tax Credit (ITC) can only be claimed on purchases that appear in GSTR-2B (auto-populated from suppliers’ GSTR-1 filings). Claiming ITC without GSTR-2B reconciliation leads to mismatches and GST notices under Section 61.

4

Missing GSTR-9 annual return

Many small companies with below ₹2 crore turnover assume GSTR-9 is not applicable. It is mandatory for all registered taxpayers with turnover above ₹2 crore. The late fee is ₹200 per day, subject to a maximum of 0.25% of turnover in the state.

5

Ignoring RCM liability on imports and legal services

Companies that use overseas software subscriptions (AWS, Google Workspace, Zoom, etc.) or receive services from foreign entities are liable to pay GST under RCM on the import of services. This is commonly missed and surfaces during GST audits.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a newly incorporated Private Limited Company register for GST before starting operations?

Yes. Voluntary GST registration is permitted even before crossing the mandatory threshold or commencing operations. This is advisable for companies expecting corporate clients who require GSTIN at vendor onboarding. Registration also makes you eligible to claim ITC on purchases made after the effective date of registration, including pre-launch expenses.

What is the Composition Scheme and can a Private Limited Company opt for it?

The Composition Scheme under Section 10 of the CGST Act allows eligible taxpayers to pay GST at a flat rate on turnover instead of the standard rate, with simplified compliance. A Private Limited Company with turnover up to ₹1.5 crore can opt for the scheme. However, composition taxpayers cannot issue tax invoices, cannot claim ITC, and cannot make inter-state supplies. For most Private Limited Companies serving corporate B2B clients or making inter-state supplies, the regular scheme is more appropriate.

What is the QRMP scheme and who should use it?

The Quarterly Return Monthly Payment (QRMP) scheme allows eligible taxpayers with annual turnover up to ₹5 crore to file GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B quarterly instead of monthly, while making monthly tax payments through a challan. This reduces the number of return filings from 24 (monthly) to 8 (quarterly) per year. It is well-suited for smaller companies with consistent monthly turnover and minimal ITC mismatch issues.

Can GST registration be done at a registered office that is a residential address?

Yes. A residential address can be used as the registered office and principal place of business for GST registration purposes, provided adequate address proof (electricity bill or property tax receipt not older than 2 months) and an NOC from the property owner are provided. This is common for newly incorporated companies in Pune and PCMC that have not yet taken up a commercial office.

Is GST registration different for a company’s branch office in another state?

Yes. GST is a state-level registration. A Private Limited Company operating from multiple states — for example, with a registered office in Pune (Maharashtra) and a branch in Bengaluru (Karnataka) — must obtain a separate GSTIN for each state. Both registrations are linked to the same company PAN but carry different state codes (Maharashtra = 27, Karnataka = 29).

Akhil Amit And Associates — Chartered Accountants, Pune

Need help with GST registration or compliance for your Private Limited Company?

We handle complete GST registration, monthly GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filing, GSTR-2B reconciliation, annual GSTR-9, LUT filing for exporters, and RCM compliance for Private Limited Companies across Pune and Pimpri Chinchwad. Three offices — Chinchwad, Wakad, and Ravet-Kiwale.

LLP Registration and Annual Compliance in Pune — The Complete Guide for Professionals, Consultancies and Service Businesses

Complete Guide  ·  Akhil Amit And Associates

LLP Registration and Annual Compliance in Pune — The Complete Guide for Professionals, Consultancies and Service Businesses

From choosing LLP over Private Limited Company to filing Form 8 and Form 11 every year without penalties — everything a founder or professional in Pune needs to know before and after incorporation.

LLP Registration Annual Compliance Pune & Pimpri Chinchwad Form 8 & Form 11

Every year, hundreds of professionals, consultants, and service business owners in Pune choose to register a Limited Liability Partnership instead of a Private Limited Company. Some make this decision correctly, for the right reasons. Many make it for the wrong ones.

The most common wrong reason: “LLP has less compliance, so it is simpler.” This is partially true and dangerously incomplete. An LLP has fewer annual ROC filings than a Private Limited Company — but the penalties for missing those filings have no upper limit. A Private Limited Company that files Form AOC-4 late pays ₹100 per day capped at a fixed amount. An LLP that misses Form 8 or Form 11 pays ₹100 per day with no maximum cap. Founders who chose LLP for simplicity have paid lakhs in penalties for missing two forms.

This guide covers the complete picture — when an LLP is the right choice, how registration works in Pune, what the annual compliance calendar looks like, and where the penalties hide. Written specifically for professionals, IT consultancies, service businesses, and growing firms in Pune and Pimpri Chinchwad.

What is an LLP and How is it Different?

A Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) is a hybrid business structure introduced under the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008. It combines the flexibility of a partnership — managed by partners with shared ownership — with the limited liability protection of a company. Each partner’s liability is limited to their agreed contribution, and partners are not personally liable for the acts of other partners.

Like a Private Limited Company, an LLP has separate legal entity status and can own assets, enter contracts, and sue or be sued in its own name. Unlike a Private Limited Company, it cannot issue equity shares, create an ESOP for employees, or raise institutional venture capital.

“An LLP is not a simpler Private Limited Company. It is a fundamentally different structure — better for some businesses, unsuitable for others.”

LLP vs Private Limited Company — The Honest Comparison

The right structure depends entirely on where you are taking the business. Here is the complete head-to-head for the factors that actually matter:

Factor LLP Private Limited Company
Raise equity funding ✗ Not possible ✓ Yes
Issue ESOPs to employees ✗ Not possible ✓ Yes
Foreign Direct Investment ⚠ Approval route only ✓ Automatic route
Limited liability for partners ✓ Yes ✓ Yes
Corporate tax rate 30% + surcharge 22% (existing) / 15% (new mfg.)
Annual ROC filings 2 forms (Form 8 + Form 11) 3+ forms (AOC-4, MGT-7, ADT-1)
Statutory audit requirement Only if turnover > ₹40L or contribution > ₹25L Mandatory every year
Late filing penalty ₹100/day — NO upper limit ₹100/day (with caps)
Flexibility in profit sharing ✓ As per LLP Agreement As per shareholding only
M&A and exit suitability Limited ✓ Highest

For a deeper analysis of which structure is right for your specific business, read our Private Limited Company Founder’s Playbook.

Who Should Choose an LLP in Pune?

An LLP is the right structure for businesses that will not raise external equity, do not need ESOP for talent retention, and value flexibility in profit sharing over corporate governance formality. Specifically:

💼 Professional Service Firms

CA firms, law firms, architecture practices, design consultancies — professionals who want to formalise a partnership without the full compliance overhead of a Private Limited Company.

💻 IT Consultancies Without VC Plans

IT service companies, technology consultancies, and software agencies in Hinjewadi, Kharadi, and Wakad that do not intend to raise institutional funding and value operational flexibility.

📊 Management and Business Consultancies

Strategy, HR, marketing, and financial advisory firms where two or more partners want shared ownership with flexible profit-sharing arrangements defined in the LLP Agreement.

🏠 Family-Owned Service Businesses

Service or trading businesses in Pune run by family members who want limited liability protection without the governance structure of a Private Limited Company.

Do NOT choose an LLP if…

  • ✗ You plan to raise angel, seed, or institutional funding — investors require equity shares
  • ✗ You want to give ESOP to senior employees — LLPs cannot issue stock options
  • ✗ You expect foreign investment — FDI in LLPs requires government approval
  • ✗ You are planning an exit or M&A transaction within 5 years — Private Limited structure is significantly more flexible

LLP Registration Process in Pune — Step by Step

LLP registration in India is handled through the MCA21 portal. With complete documentation and a clear name, the Certificate of Incorporation is typically issued within 10 to 15 working days. Here is the complete process:

LLP Registration Process — 7 Steps

1

Obtain Digital Signature Certificate (DSC)

Every Designated Partner must obtain a Class 3 DSC from a licensed Certifying Authority. DSC is required for all digital filings on the MCA21 portal. Takes 1–2 working days. Required documents: PAN, Aadhaar, photograph, and email/mobile verification.

2

Apply for Designated Partner Identification Number (DPIN)

DPIN is the equivalent of DIN for LLP partners. If a Designated Partner already holds a DIN (as a director of any company), the same number can be used as DPIN. New applicants apply via Form DIR-3. Takes 1 working day once DSC is available.

3

Reserve LLP Name via RUN-LLP

Submit 2 name preferences in order of priority via the RUN-LLP (Reserve Unique Name — LLP) service on MCA21. The name must end in “LLP” or “Limited Liability Partnership” and must not be identical or deceptively similar to an existing company, LLP, or trademark. Approval takes 2–5 working days.

4

Draft and Execute the LLP Agreement

The LLP Agreement is the constitutional document — it defines capital contributions, profit-sharing ratios, roles of Designated Partners, addition and removal of partners, decision-making, and dispute resolution. It must be executed on stamp paper of the appropriate value (varies by state; in Maharashtra, stamp duty depends on the total capital contribution). This is the most important document in an LLP and must be drafted carefully.

5

File FiLLiP Form on MCA21

FiLLiP (Form for Incorporation of Limited Liability Partnership) is the single integrated incorporation form. It combines name reservation, DPIN allocation, and incorporation into one filing. Attachments include: identity and address proof of all partners, registered office proof, LLP Agreement, and consent of Designated Partners.

6

Certificate of Incorporation

Upon approval of the FiLLiP filing, the Registrar of Companies issues the Certificate of Incorporation. The LLP is legally incorporated from the date mentioned on this certificate. The LLPIN (Limited Liability Partnership Identification Number) is issued with the certificate.

7

PAN and TAN Application

Apply for PAN (Permanent Account Number) and TAN (Tax Deduction Account Number) for the LLP immediately after receiving the Certificate of Incorporation. These are required for bank account opening, GST registration, and all statutory filings. Both are applied online and typically received within 7–10 working days.

Documents Required for LLP Registration in Pune

For Each Partner

  • ✓ PAN Card (mandatory)
  • ✓ Aadhaar Card
  • ✓ Passport-size photograph
  • ✓ Address proof (bank statement / utility bill)
  • ✓ Email ID and mobile number

For Registered Office

  • ✓ Electricity bill or property tax receipt (not older than 2 months)
  • ✓ NOC from property owner (if rented)
  • ✓ Rent agreement (if applicable)
  • ✓ Address proof showing full address with PIN code

Post-Incorporation Registrations for LLP in Pune

Getting the Certificate of Incorporation is not the finish line. Before your LLP can invoice clients, open a bank account, or onboard corporate vendors, you need the following:

ESSENTIAL

GST Registration

Mandatory before your first B2B invoice. Corporate clients require a GSTIN for vendor onboarding regardless of your turnover. For LLPs with export clients, GST registration is required to file the LUT for zero-rated export invoices.

ESSENTIAL

Shop Act Licence (Gumasta)

Mandatory for all businesses operating in Maharashtra — including LLPs. Required for bank account opening and vendor onboarding. Apply on Aaple Sarkar portal. Takes 7–15 working days in Pune and Pimpri Chinchwad.

RECOMMENDED

Udyam Registration (MSME)

Most LLPs in the service sector qualify as Small Enterprises. Udyam registration unlocks collateral-free lending under CGTMSE and payment protection rights against delayed corporate clients. Takes 1–2 working days and is free.

IF APPLICABLE

PTRC Registration (Profession Tax)

Required if you employ staff. The LLP must register for Profession Tax Registration Certificate (PTRC) and deduct profession tax from employee salaries. Also register for PTEC for the LLP itself under the Maharashtra Profession Tax Act.

LLP Annual Compliance Calendar — Every Deadline, Every Penalty

This is where many LLP owners get a nasty surprise. The LLP Act mandates two annual ROC filings — Form 8 and Form 11. Missing either of them carries a penalty of ₹100 per day with no maximum cap. An LLP that misses Form 8 by 300 days has a ₹30,000 penalty on that one form alone. The compliance calendar must be managed proactively, not reactively.

May 30 Form 11 due date
(Annual Return)
Oct 30 Form 8 due date
(Accounts & Solvency)
₹100 Per day late fee
No upper limit
Filing / Compliance Due Date Details Late Penalty
Form 11 — Annual Return May 30 Details of all partners, changes in partners during the year, contribution summary ₹100/day
Form 8 — Statement of Accounts & Solvency Oct 30 Statement of assets and liabilities, income and expenditure, solvency declaration by Designated Partners ₹100/day
Income Tax Return (ITR-5) July 31 / Oct 31 (if audit) ITR-5 for LLP. October 31 if books are required to be audited under the LLP Act or Income Tax Act ₹5,000 + interest
Statutory Audit Before Oct 31 Mandatory only if turnover exceeds ₹40 lakh OR if contribution exceeds ₹25 lakh. Otherwise voluntary
GST Returns (GSTR-1, GSTR-3B) Monthly / Quarterly Same obligations as a Private Limited Company. Monthly for turnover above ₹5 crore, quarterly otherwise ₹50–200/day
TDS Returns Quarterly Form 24Q, 26Q as applicable. Same TDS obligations as a company — deduction and deposit by 7th of following month 1.5%/month
Profession Tax (PTRC) Annual / Monthly PTRC return and payment as per Maharashtra Profession Tax Act. Required if the LLP has employees.

The Form 8 Trap — Why LLPs Pay More Penalties Than Companies

Form 8 must be filed by October 30 every year. Unlike most company forms, the LLP Act specifies no maximum penalty cap — it is strictly ₹100 per day from the day after the due date. An LLP that discovers it missed Form 8 for 2 consecutive years is looking at penalties of ₹73,000+ on Form 8 alone before the filing is even regularised. Many LLPs incorporated in Pune discover this only when trying to close the LLP or when a bank asks for updated compliance certificates. The only solution is a CA firm that manages your compliance calendar proactively.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the minimum number of partners required to form an LLP in India?

An LLP requires a minimum of 2 partners and 2 Designated Partners. There is no maximum limit on the number of partners. At least one Designated Partner must be a resident of India (present in India for at least 182 days in the preceding calendar year). For foreign nationals, LLP registration requires prior FIPB approval in most sectors.

Can an LLP be converted to a Private Limited Company later?

Yes. Under Section 366 of the Companies Act, 2013, an LLP can be converted to a Private Limited Company. The conversion is not simple — it requires filing with both the ROC and MCA, transfer of assets and liabilities, shareholder agreement restructuring, and updated registrations. If you anticipate raising equity funding within 3–5 years, it is generally better to incorporate as a Private Limited Company from the start rather than converting later. Read our Private Limited Company guide for comparison.

What happens if an LLP does not file Form 8 or Form 11 on time?

A penalty of ₹100 per day applies from the day after the due date, with no upper cap under the LLP Act. Both Designated Partners and the LLP entity are liable. Delays can also result in the LLP being marked as “Non-Compliant” on the MCA portal, which affects banking relationships, vendor onboarding, and the ability to make filings for other changes (like adding a partner). There is a compounding option available under the LLP Act but it is not automatic and requires a separate application.

Does an LLP need to get its accounts audited?

A statutory audit is mandatory for an LLP only if its annual turnover exceeds ₹40 lakh OR if the total contribution of partners exceeds ₹25 lakh in a financial year. Below these thresholds, an LLP can self-certify its accounts in Form 8. However, a tax audit under Section 44AB of the Income Tax Act may be required separately if turnover exceeds ₹1 crore (or ₹10 crore with 95% digital transactions).

What is the cost of LLP registration in Pune?

Government fees for LLP registration depend on the total contribution amount — starting from ₹500 for contribution up to ₹1 lakh, and increasing in slabs. Stamp duty on the LLP Agreement varies by state — in Maharashtra, it is charged based on the contribution amount. Professional CA fees for the complete registration process (DSC, DPIN, name reservation, drafting the LLP Agreement, FiLLiP filing, PAN/TAN) are charged separately. Contact us on +91 8918900780 for a specific cost estimate for your registration.

Akhil Amit And Associates

Ready to register your LLP in Pune?

We handle complete LLP registration — DSC, DPIN, name reservation, LLP Agreement drafting, FiLLiP filing, PAN/TAN, GST, and Shop Act — and provide ongoing annual compliance management for Form 8, Form 11, and all statutory filings. Three offices across Pune and Pimpri Chinchwad.