India is now one of the world’s fastest-growing startup ecosystems, home to over 1,20,000+ registered startups.
If you’re a founder, the first step in your entrepreneurial journey is a clean, legally registered business entity.
This guide gives you everything you need to know:
- What qualifies as a startup
- How to register a company
- How to get DPIIT Startup Recognition
- Documents required
- Costs, timelines, mistakes to avoid
Let’s begin.
1. Qualify Your Startup under DPIIT
To be eligible for DPIIT Startup Recognition (very useful for tax & funding benefits):
- Your Business should be either Private Limited or LLP or Registered Partnership.
- Should be less than 10 years old.
- Turnover must be under ₹100 crore (in any financial year).
- Must be working on innovation / scalable business (not just a routine trading business).
2. Choose the Right Legal Structure
- Private Limited Company — ideal for high-growth startups, fundraising, ESOPs.
- LLP (Limited Liability Partnership) — good for service businesses, lower ongoing compliance.
- Partnership Firm — simpler, but less suitable for external investment.
3. Apply for Digital Signature Certificate
- DSC (Digital Signature Certificate): Required for all directors. Current market cost (2025): ~₹1,500–₹2,500 per DSC.
4. Name Reservation (SPICe+ Part A)
- Use the SPICe+ Part A form on MCA portal.
- The RUN (Reserve Unique Name) service (if used separately) costs ₹1,000.
- After name approval, you have 20 days to complete incorporation. However you may extend the same by paying extension fees. (Max. 40 more days)
5. Required Documents
- Objects, Capital etc. Details for INC-33 e-MOA (Memorandum of Association)
- Articles details for INC-34 e-AOA (Articles of Association)
- Proof of registered office (utility bill not older than 2 months, NOC/Leave and License Agreement)
- Director’s identity/address proof/Passport Size Photo/Personal contact details
6. File SPICe+ (Part B) and Linked Forms
Use SPICe+ Part B to file:
- Incorporation details
- PAN & TAN for the company
- EPFO / ESIC registration
- Professional Tax Registration
- GST registration (optional via AGILE-PRO)
- Bank account opening (optional through MCA integrated form)
7. Pay Fees & Stamp Duty
Government Filing Fees (MCA):
- For companies with authorised capital up to ₹10 lakh, zero SPICe+ filing fee applies. However few states are charging higher fees on AOA.
- For higher capital, MCA fee depends on the slab.
Stamp Duty:
- Depends on the state and authorised capital.
- Could be as low as a few hundred rupees or go up to several thousand.
8. Get Certificate of Incorporation (COI)
Once your SPICe+ application is approved and verified:
- The COI is issued. Along with COI, you typically receive PAN and TAN allotted through SPICe+.
9. Post-Incorporation Tasks
- Open a bank account in the company’s name (COI + MOA + AOA + board resolution required).
- Appointment of First Auditors within 30 days (form ADT-1)
- Payment of Stamp duty and Issuance of Share Certificates (within 60 days)
- If needed, apply for GST registration (if your business model or turnover demands it).
- File INC-20A (Declaration of Commencement) within 180 days of incorporation. (Important: missing this can lead to penalties or ROC striking off the company.)
10. Apply for DPIIT Recognition
- Use the NSWS (National Single Window System) portal for DPIIT Startup Recognition (2025 update).
- Required documents: COI, pitch deck / business plan, proof of innovation, founder IDs, etc.
- Cost: Free for recognition; no fee is charged by DPIIT.
- Benefit: Tax advantages (80-IAC), angel tax relief, and more.
Updated Timeline (2025)
Here’s an updated and realistic timeline based on current processes:
| Stage | Estimated Time |
| DSC Issuance | Within Few Minutes |
| DIN Generation | No Separate Application is required (through SPICe) |
| Name Reservation (SPICe+ Part A) | 2–3 working days typically |
| SPICe+ Filing & Verification | 2–3 working days |
| Certificate of Incorporation | 5–7 working days if no additional details requested by CRC |
| Total Time for Incorporation | 5–7 working days, commonly ~1–2 weeks |
| DPIIT Recognition | ~2–3 Weeks depending on application quality and documentation (varies) from Application date |
Updated Cost (2025)
Here’s a breakdown of the latest cost components for registering a Private Limited Company (2025):
| Cost Item | Estimated Range |
| Government Fees (SPICe+) | ₹2,000 for capital ≤ ₹10 lakh (Vary from time to time) Beyond that, MCA fee per capital slab. |
| Stamp Duty (MOA + AOA) & PAN TAN | Very variable — ₹643 to ~₹10,143+ depending on state and capital |
| DSC (per Director) | ~₹1,500–₹2,500 (market rate, 2025) |
| DIN | No separate fee if applied via SPICe+ for up to certain directors. |
| Professional Fees (CA / CS / Legal) | ~₹7,500–₹25,000+ depending on the service provider and complexity. |
| Trademark Registration (Optional) | ₹4,500 – ₹9,000 per class. |
Rough Total (for many early-stage startups):
₹8,000 – ₹35,000+ is a realistic ballpark if you’re using a competent service provider.
Common Mistakes & Pitfalls to Avoid
- Underestimating Stamp Duty: Many founders forget that stamp duty depends on state + authorised capital.
- Cheap Service Packages: Some very low-cost packages compromise on important documents (MOA/AOA) or miss INC-20A declaration. > “That ‘complete package’ often costs 10× more later when you fix it.”
- DSC Expiry & Misuse: Ensure DSCs are valid when used; expired or poorly managed DSCs can delay incorporation.
- Skipping DPIIT Application: Many miss the startup recognition even though it’s free and offers huge benefits.
- Missing Post-Incorporation Filings: File INC-20A, appoint auditor, maintain statutory registers to avoid future penalties.
How ComplianceDekho Helps You:
At ComplianceDekho, we guide founders through:
- Private Limited / LLP / Partnership setup
- MCA SPICe+ filing (Part A + Part B)
- DSC
- DPIIT Startup Recognition on NSWS
- Post-incorporation compliance: bank setup, INC-20A, Auditors Appointment, Share Certificates, Statutory Registers
- Legal documentation: MOA / AOA, SHA, founder agreements
Your startup’s foundation must be strong.
We build it. Silently.