How to Register a Branch Office in India from the USA
A Branch Office (BO) is an extension of the foreign parent company in India, not a separate legal entity. For large US corporations that want a direct presence in India without creating a subsidiary, the branch office structure provides a straightforward way to conduct business. The BO operates under the parent company's name and can engage in specific commercial activities approved by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
Unlike a Wholly Owned Subsidiary or a Private Limited Company, a branch office is not an independent Indian entity. It functions as a legal extension of the US parent, meaning all liabilities of the branch office extend to the parent company. This structure is most common among large US multinationals in consulting, engineering, IT services, and export-import operations where the parent company wants to maintain direct control.
For US companies deciding between entity types, our Branch Office vs. Subsidiary and Branch Office vs. Liaison Office comparisons provide detailed analysis of tax treatment, permitted activities, and operational flexibility.
FDI Route and Regulatory Requirements
Setting up a branch office in India requires prior approval from the RBI, obtained by filing Form FNC through an Authorized Dealer (AD) Category-I bank. Unlike a Pvt Ltd or LLP where FDI flows under the automatic route, a branch office follows a separate regulatory pathway since it is not classified as FDI but rather as inward remittance for the establishment of a place of business.
The approval route depends on the parent company's principal business:
- AD Bank route (faster): If the parent company's principal business falls in sectors where 100% FDI is allowed under the automatic route, the AD Bank can approve the branch office directly without forwarding the application to the RBI
- RBI approval route: If the parent company's sector involves government approval route sectors, defense, telecom, or financial services, the application must be forwarded by the AD Bank to the RBI for specific approval
Key eligibility requirements for the US parent company:
- A profit-making track record during the immediately preceding five financial years
- Net worth of not less than USD 100,000 or its equivalent
- The parent company must not be from a country sharing a land border with India (not applicable to US companies)
Permitted Activities
A branch office in India is strictly limited to the activities approved by the RBI. The following activities are generally permitted:
- Export and import of goods
- Rendering professional or consultancy services
- Carrying out research work in areas of the parent company's interest
- Promoting technical or financial collaborations between Indian and foreign companies
- Representing the parent company in India and acting as a buying or selling agent
- Rendering IT services and software development
- Providing technical support for products supplied by the parent company
Critical restriction: A branch office cannot directly undertake manufacturing activities in India. However, it may outsource manufacturing to an Indian manufacturer under a contract manufacturing arrangement. A branch office also cannot engage in retail trading activities. If your US company needs to manufacture or engage in retail, a Private Limited Company or Wholly Owned Subsidiary is the appropriate structure.
DTAA Benefits for US Companies
The India-USA Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement, in force since 1989, is particularly relevant for branch offices because the branch creates a Permanent Establishment (PE) in India. This means the profits attributable to the branch office are taxable in India.
Key tax implications under the treaty:
- Corporate tax on branch profits: A branch office of a foreign company is taxed at 35% (reduced from 40% effective April 2024) on profits attributable to the Indian PE, plus surcharge (2% if income is INR 1-10 crore; 5% if above INR 10 crore) and 4% health and education cess. The effective rate ranges from 38.22% to 39.35%.
- No branch profit remittance tax: India does not levy a separate branch profit remittance tax (unlike some other jurisdictions), so after-tax profits can be remitted to the US parent without additional withholding
- Interest: 10% on bank loans; 15% on other interest (versus 20% domestic rate)
- Royalties: 10% for equipment use; 15% for copyrights and patents
- FTS: 15% under the treaty
The US parent claims a Foreign Tax Credit on its US tax return for taxes paid in India by the branch office. Since the branch is not a separate entity, its income is consolidated into the US parent's global income for US tax purposes. Proper documentation of the branch's attributable profits is essential using transfer pricing principles under both OECD guidelines and Indian regulations.
Document Requirements and Authentication
Since both the USA and India are members of the Hague Apostille Convention, all documents follow the apostille process. See our Apostille vs. Embassy Attestation guide for details.
The US parent company must prepare the following documents for the Form FNC application:
- Board resolution of the US parent company approving the establishment of a branch office in India, specifying the proposed activities and the authorized representative
- Certificate of incorporation of the US parent company (apostilled)
- Memorandum and Articles of Association or equivalent constitutional documents (apostilled)
- Audited financial statements of the US parent for the last five years (attested by a CPA and apostilled)
- Banker's certificate from the US parent's bank confirming the company's financial standing
- Power of Attorney in favor of an Indian representative authorized to act on behalf of the branch office
- Details of the proposed activities and a business plan for the Indian branch
- Passport copies and address proof of the authorized signatories (notarized and apostilled)
Apostilles are issued by the Secretary of State of the relevant US state for state documents, or by the US Department of State for federal documents. Processing takes 5-10 business days for state-level apostilles.
Step-by-Step Registration Process
The branch office registration involves a two-stage process: RBI approval followed by ROC registration.
- Select an Authorized Dealer Bank: Choose an AD Category-I bank in India (such as SBI, HDFC, ICICI, or Axis) that will process your branch office application. The AD Bank acts as the intermediary between your company and the RBI.
- Prepare and file Form FNC: Submit the completed Form FNC with all supporting documents to the AD Bank. The AD Bank reviews the application for completeness.
- AD Bank / RBI Approval: If the US parent operates in a sector eligible for automatic route FDI, the AD Bank can approve the application directly. Otherwise, the AD Bank forwards the application to the RBI for approval. Timeline: 4-8 weeks.
- Obtain Unique Identification Number (UIN): Upon approval, the RBI issues a UIN for the branch office.
- ROC Registration (Form FC-1): Within 30 days of RBI approval, file Form FC-1 with the Registrar of Companies to register the branch office as a place of business of a foreign company in India. Timeline: 5-7 business days.
- PAN and TAN application: Apply for a Permanent Account Number (PAN) and Tax Deduction Account Number (TAN) for the branch office.
- Open a bank account: Open an Indian bank account in the name of the branch office with the same AD Bank. Timeline: 1-2 weeks.
- GST registration: Apply for GST registration if the branch office will be providing taxable services or engaging in import/export activities.
Timeline and Costs
The end-to-end timeline for a US company to establish a branch office in India is typically 6-10 weeks, depending on the approval route:
| Step | Timeline |
|---|---|
| Document preparation and apostille in the US | 7-14 days |
| Form FNC submission to AD Bank | 1-2 days |
| AD Bank/RBI approval | 4-8 weeks |
| Form FC-1 filing with ROC | 5-7 days |
| PAN and TAN application | 5-7 days |
| Bank account opening | 7-14 days |
| GST registration | 3-7 days |
Estimated costs include:
- RBI application fee: No government fee for Form FNC itself, but the AD Bank may charge a processing fee
- ROC filing fee (Form FC-1): INR 2,000-6,000 depending on the parent company's share capital
- PAN application: INR 107
- Professional fees: INR 30,000-75,000 for a CA/CS firm handling the application
- Apostille fees in the US: USD 10-25 per document (varies by state)
- Registered office rent: Varies by city; branch offices typically maintain leased office space
Post-Registration Compliance
Branch offices face significant ongoing compliance requirements since they are treated as foreign companies under Indian law. Key annual obligations include:
- Annual accounts: File Form FC-3 (financial statements of the Indian branch) and Form FC-4 (financial statements of the parent company) with the ROC annually
- Annual Activity Certificate (AAC): A Chartered Accountant-certified AAC must be submitted to the AD Bank and forwarded to the RBI, confirming that the branch operated within its permitted activities. Failure to file for 3 consecutive years triggers closure proceedings.
- Income tax return: File as a foreign company with the Indian Income Tax Department by October 31
- Transfer pricing documentation: Maintain documentation for all transactions between the branch and the US parent, as these are deemed international transactions under Section 92B of the Income Tax Act
- GST returns: Monthly or quarterly filings if GST-registered
- Form 15CA/15CB: Required for each profit remittance or payment to the US parent. Form 15CA is filed online, and Form 15CB is a CA certificate
- Withholding tax compliance: TDS on payments to Indian vendors, employees, and contractors
Common Challenges for US Companies
Setting up a branch office in India from the US involves several practical challenges that companies should anticipate:
- Activity restrictions: The branch office can only perform activities specifically approved by the RBI. Any deviation requires a fresh approval. US companies accustomed to flexible operations must plan their activity list carefully at the application stage.
- No manufacturing: Branch offices cannot manufacture products directly in India. US manufacturers must either set up a subsidiary or use contract manufacturing arrangements, which introduces transfer pricing complexities.
- Higher tax rate: Foreign companies (including branch offices) are taxed at 35% (effective ~38-39%) compared to the 22-25% available to domestic Indian companies. This makes a subsidiary structure more tax-efficient for many operations.
- Profit remittance documentation: Each remittance of profits to the US parent requires a CA certificate confirming the remittable amount, that profits were earned from permitted activities, and that no revaluation gains are included.
- Five-year profitability track record: The parent company must demonstrate five consecutive years of profitability. Startups and younger companies may not qualify for this route. Note: Draft 2025 RBI regulations propose removing this requirement.
- Closure complexity: Closing a branch office requires RBI permission, settlement of all Indian liabilities, CA certification of nil-liabilities, and ROC de-registration. The process can take 6-12 months. See our guide on Closing a Branch vs. Closing a Liaison Office.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a US company's Branch Office in India generate revenue independently?
Yes, but only from permitted activities. A branch office can earn revenue from export/import, consultancy, IT services, R&D, and other RBI-approved activities. It cannot engage in manufacturing or retail trading. All revenue earned in India is taxable as the income of a foreign company at 35% plus surcharge and cess.
Does a Branch Office need a minimum investment in India?
There is no fixed minimum investment required for the branch office itself. However, the US parent company must have a net worth of at least USD 100,000 and a five-year profit track record. The parent must also remit sufficient funds to cover the branch's initial setup and operating expenses.
How are profits remitted from an Indian Branch Office to the US parent?
Profits are remitted through the Authorized Dealer (AD) bank after deducting Indian taxes and obtaining a CA certificate confirming the remittable amount. Form 15CA must be filed online and Form 15CB (CA certificate) must be obtained before each remittance. There is no separate branch profit remittance tax in India.
Is a Branch Office considered a Permanent Establishment under the India-US DTAA?
Yes. A branch office constitutes a Permanent Establishment (PE) under Article 5 of the India-US DTAA. This means India has the right to tax the profits attributable to the branch office. The US parent can claim a Foreign Tax Credit for Indian taxes paid to avoid double taxation.
Can a Branch Office be converted into a subsidiary later?
Not directly. A branch office cannot be "converted" into a subsidiary. The US parent would need to incorporate a new Indian subsidiary (Pvt Ltd or LLP), transfer assets and contracts from the branch to the subsidiary, and then close the branch office with RBI permission. See our guide on Converting a Branch to a Subsidiary.
What happens if the Branch Office engages in activities not approved by the RBI?
Engaging in unapproved activities is a FEMA violation that can result in penalties up to three times the amount involved or INR 2 lakh (whichever is greater), plus INR 5,000 per day for continuing violations. The RBI may also revoke the branch office's permission, requiring closure. Strict adherence to the approved activity list is essential.
Are there any recent regulatory changes affecting US Branch Offices in India?
Yes. In October 2025, the RBI released draft Foreign Exchange Management (Establishment in India of a Branch or Office) Regulations, 2025, proposing significant changes including removal of the five-year profitability and minimum net worth requirements, and replacing the fixed list of permitted activities with a principle-based framework. These draft regulations are under public consultation and may take effect in 2026.