


India’s FDI policy rewards investors who understand it. Precise structuring at the outset prevents compounding compliance risk at every stage that follows.
OUR FDI ADVISORY SERVICES
India’s Foreign Direct Investment policy is governed by the Consolidated FDI Policy issued periodically by DPIIT, together with FEMA and the regulations issued thereunder by the RBI. The framework distinguishes between the automatic route — no prior government approval required — and the government route, where approval from the relevant ministry is mandatory before investment is made. Understanding which route applies, and what conditions attach to it, is the foundational question in every India FDI engagement.
India’s FDI policy prescribes sector-specific caps and route requirements across a comprehensive list of industries. Most sectors permit 100% FDI under the automatic route — including manufacturing, IT and technology, pharmaceuticals (greenfield), logistics, insurance and professional services. Certain sectors are subject to caps: defence (74% automatic, beyond that government route), banking — private sector (74%), and print media (26%). Strategic sectors including atomic energy and gambling are closed to FDI entirely. ATB Legal conducts a precise sector-specific route analysis against the latest DPIIT Consolidated FDI Policy before any investment structure is proposed. Sector misclassification is the most common and most consequential FDI error — and it is entirely preventable with precise legal advice at the outset.
All FDI transactions involving the issue or transfer of shares in Indian companies are subject to pricing guidelines under FEMA. Shares issued to a foreign investor must not be below fair market value determined by a SEBI-registered merchant banker using a recognised methodology — typically DCF or comparable transactions. On transfer from a resident to a non-resident, the price must not fall below fair market value; on transfer from a non-resident to a resident, it must not exceed fair market value. Pricing violations attract compounding penalties and can void the transaction. ATB Legal oversees valuation methodology, engages qualified valuers, and reviews all transaction documentation for full pricing compliance.
Where a foreign-invested Indian entity invests in another Indian company — a downstream investment — additional FEMA rules apply. The downstream investee must be in an FDI-eligible sector, and the investment must comply with the route and cap applicable to that sector independently. Indirect foreign investment is computed by tracing the ownership chain. ATB Legal designs multi-tier holding structures that satisfy downstream investment rules at every level, ensuring the consolidated chain is regulatorily defensible.
Every FDI transaction triggers mandatory reporting under FEMA. The Indian company must file the FC-GPR form with the RBI within 30 days of share issuance. Share transfers between residents and non-residents require an FC-TRS filing within 60 days. Annual FLA returns must be filed by 15 July each year through the RBI’s FLAIR portal. Missed or delayed filings attract compounding penalties administered by the RBI’s Enforcement Directorate. ATB Legal manages the complete FEMA compliance calendar as an integrated part of every FDI mandate.

What is the difference between the automatic route and the government route for FDI in India?
Under the automatic route, a foreign investor does not require prior approval from the Indian government — investment may be made directly, with post-facto intimation to the RBI. Under the government route, prior approval from the relevant ministry or DPIIT is mandatory before the investment is made. The applicable route depends on the sector and the quantum of investment.
Which sectors in India are open to 100% FDI under the automatic route?
Most sectors permit 100% FDI automatically, including manufacturing, IT, insurance, logistics, and professional services. Sectors with caps or government route requirements include banking, defence, media, and broadcasting. ATB Legal conducts a current sector analysis against the latest DPIIT Consolidated FDI Policy before any structure is proposed.
What are FDI pricing guidelines and why do they matter?
FEMA requires that shares issued to foreign investors or transferred between residents and non-residents are priced at fair market value — determined by a SEBI-registered merchant banker using a recognised valuation methodology. Under-pricing on issuance or over-pricing on transfer constitutes a FEMA violation, attracting compounding penalties and potential transaction voidance. All FDI transactions require a qualified valuation report generally issued by a SEBI registered merchant banker.
What is downstream investment and what rules apply to it?
Downstream investment is investment made by a foreign-invested Indian company into another Indian entity. The downstream company must be in an FDI-eligible sector, and the investment must satisfy the route and cap applicable to that sector independently. Indirect foreign investment is traced through the ownership chain, and automatic route approval at one tier does not validate downstream investment into a restricted sector.
What FEMA filings are required after an FDI transaction?
Following share issuance: FC-GPR with the RBI within 30 days. On share transfer: FC-TRS within 60 days from the date of transfer of shares or receipt of funds, whichever is earlier. Annual FLA return: filed by 15 July each year via the FLAIR portal. Delayed filings attract compounding penalties. ATB Legal manages the full compliance calendar.
Can a European company invest in India through a UAE holding structure and still access FDI benefits?
Yes, in most cases. Investment made through a UAE entity is treated as FDI from the UAE for purposes of India’s FDI policy — and where the India-UAE CEPA provides relevant investor protections, these may apply. However, the sectoral cap and route analysis must account for the ultimate beneficial ownership, and any round-tripping structures are not permitted. ATB Legal’s dual India-UAE presence enables this structuring to be designed correctly across both jurisdictions.

This website provides general information only, may not reflect current law, and should not be acted upon without professional advice.