How to Get EIN Without SSN or ITIN
Yes, you can still get an EIN even if you’re a non-resident without a Social Security Number or ITIN, and…
“The best structure is the one that doesn’t break when things get real.” — Said no bureaucrat, ever. What You Can Build, What You Can’t, and How Not to Mess...
“The best structure is the one that doesn’t break when things get real.”
— Said no bureaucrat, ever.
No one tells you that the hardest part of starting a business in India as a foreigner isn’t the tax forms or the banking maze—it’s knowing which kind of company you’re even allowed to build.
You scroll through options: Pvt. Ltd., LLP, OPC, Branch Office… and somewhere between the acronyms and the assumptions, your confidence flatlines.
This guide on Company Types & Restrictions for Foreigners in India won’t drown you in definitions. It’s built for clarity—the kind you wish showed up before your first meeting with a registration agent.
We’ll show you what’s open, what’s off-limits, and what’ll trip you up when no one’s looking.
Start here. And build on something solid.
Yes, you can—and in more ways than most imagine.
Foreigners are allowed to form registered companies in India through various types of business registration, especially under sectors approved via the automatic FDI route. But there are rules:
The go-to structure for foreign founders and fast-growth businesses.
This is the most common structure foreigners choose when setting up a company in India.
Best for: Founders who want to scale
Watch out: Requires regular filings (e.g. FDI forms like FC-GPR) and financial discipline
Registered company example: Google India Pvt. Ltd. — fully foreign-owned.
What is a Wholly Owned Subsidiary (WOS)?
A WOS is simply a Private Limited Company fully owned by a foreign company. It’s often used by those looking to establish a company in India without sharing equity locally.
Great for service providers who want flexibility but still need a formal legal setup.
Ideal if you’re coming in under a government or private contract.
Just remember, this too needs sector- and project-aligned compliance—part of the broader legal requirements to start a business in India.
A favorite for companies entering FDI-restricted sectors.
You’ll need:
You can start a PLC if you are planning an IPO or a large foreign-funded entity.
Many foreigners ask, “Why do foreign companies come to India despite this?”
Simple answer: Even with the restrictions, India still offers scale, affordability, and an enormous domestic demand.
To start a company in India or open a startup company as a foreigner, your top legal requirements would be:
Your structure should match your:
Choosing wrong can lead to re-registration, shutdowns, or legal headaches.
Better to start smart than scramble later.
Most foreigners don’t get stuck because they chose India.
They get stuck because they chose the wrong structure, and found out too late that what they registered doesn’t let them operate the way they planned.
The truth is: India doesn’t block you. It just demands that you read the footnotes.
So, whether you are building slow or aiming fast, choose a setup that protects your time, your capital, and your sanity.
You’ve now seen what you can build, what you can’t, and how not to mess it up.
Everything after this? Depends on how you start.
Nope. Sole proprietorships are off-limits for foreigners. Why? Because this setup is tied to individual residency and local ID proof—and if you’re not living in India full-time (or don’t have the necessary resident status), it’s a non-starter. If you’re set on going solo, consider a Private Limited Company with one local nominee director or an LLP that still gives you legal structure and control—minus the residency drama.
FDI in India isn’t blocked, but it is filtered. Some sectors are fully open (like SaaS, logistics, B2B e-commerce). Others, like multi-brand retail, media, defense—come with caps or require government approval. And if you’re from a land-bordering country like China or Pakistan? You’ll need prior approval even for sectors that are otherwise open. No shortcuts there.
Nah. OPCs are meant for Indian citizens and Indian residents only. If you are a foreigner, OPC vs Pvt Ltd isn’t even a real choice; Pvt Ltd is your lane. It’s the closest thing to a “controlled solo setup” you can legally register here.
Yes. If you’re in a sector that permits it. LLP companies in India are great for small-scale service-based setups; think design, consulting, remote tech teams. But be aware: FDI into LLPs is allowed only in sectors where 100% FDI is permitted without performance conditions. Otherwise, go for Pvt. Ltd. and don’t overthink it.
That’s where a Branch Office, Project Office, or even a Wholly Owned Subsidiary (WOS) comes in. If you want full control and income rights in India, setting up a WOS Pvt. Ltd. is your best bet. If you are just testing the waters, a Liaison Office works—but it can’t generate income.
A few still carry the “No Entry” sign. Agriculture. Real estate trading. Lottery businesses. Chit funds. Atomic energy. These are restricted not just for moral or policy reasons—but also because they involve sensitive national interests. Best to stay away and build elsewhere.
No, not at all. But you do need to appoint at least one Indian resident director—someone who has stayed in India for 182 days in the previous year. It’s a legal bridge the government uses to ensure every foreign-backed company has some skin in the local game.
Yes, you can still get an EIN even if you’re a non-resident without a Social Security Number or ITIN, and…
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