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Proprietorship Registration in India

The Simplest Business Structure for Individual Entrepreneurs — Quick to Start, Easy to Manage

A sole proprietorship is the simplest and most common form of business in India — a business owned and operated by a single individual where there is no legal distinction between the owner and the business. There is no specific law governing sole proprietorships, and no formal registration is required to start one. However, various registrations — GST, MSME/Udyam, Shop Act, and professional tax — are required depending on the nature and scale of the business.

Sole proprietorships are ideal for freelancers, consultants, small retailers, home-based businesses, and individual service providers who want to start quickly with minimal compliance. For structures offering limited liability and professional credibility, see our private limited company and LLP registration services.

Our Services

GST Registration

Registering the proprietorship for GST — mandatory if turnover exceeds ₹20 lakh or for inter-state supplies — establishing the business as a GST-registered entity.

MSME/Udyam Registration

Obtaining Udyam Registration for the proprietorship — providing access to MSME benefits, priority lending, government tenders, and credit guarantee schemes.

Shop & Establishment Registration

Registering under the applicable state Shop and Establishment Act — required for most commercial premises and necessary for opening a business bank account.

Professional Tax Registration

Obtaining Professional Tax Enrolment Certificate (PTEC) and Registration Certificate (PTRC) where the proprietor employs staff in states where professional tax applies.

Current Account Opening Support

Preparing the document set required to open a current bank account in the proprietorship name — GST certificate, Udyam registration, and KYC documents.

Income Tax Filing (ITR-3/ITR-4)

Filing the proprietor's income tax return — ITR-3 for regular books-based filing or ITR-4 for those under presumptive taxation — reporting business income with the personal return.

Key Features

  • No formal registration required — the business and the owner are the same legal person
  • Unlimited liability — the proprietor is personally liable for all business debts
  • No corporate tax — business income is taxed as the proprietor's personal income at slab rates
  • No audit required unless turnover exceeds the Section 44AB threshold
  • Cannot raise equity investment — suitable only for owner-funded businesses
  • Ends automatically on death or incapacity of the proprietor — no perpetual succession
  • Easy to close — no formal winding-up procedure required unlike companies and LLPs

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I register a proprietorship firm in India?
There is no single formal registration for a sole proprietorship. Instead, the business is established through a combination of registrations relevant to its nature — GST registration (if turnover exceeds the threshold), Udyam/MSME registration, Shop and Establishment registration under the applicable state Act, and a current account in the business name. The proprietor's PAN is used for all income tax purposes. Professional tax registration may also be required in applicable states.
Can a sole proprietorship open a current bank account?
Yes. Banks open current accounts for sole proprietorships. Most banks require the proprietorship to be evidenced by at least two government-issued documents in the business name — such as the GST registration certificate, Shop Act licence, Udyam registration certificate, or professional tax certificate — along with the proprietor's identity and address proof. The specific documentation varies by bank and must be confirmed with the chosen bank before registration.
What is the income tax rate for a sole proprietor?
A sole proprietor's business income is added to their other income and taxed at the individual slab rates applicable to the financial year — ranging from nil to 30% depending on total income. The proprietor can opt for presumptive taxation under Section 44AD (for businesses with turnover up to ₹3 crore) or Section 44ADA (for specified professionals with gross receipts up to ₹75 lakh) and file ITR-4. Where actual income is higher than the presumptive amount, or where turnover exceeds audit thresholds, ITR-3 is filed with full books.
When should a proprietorship be converted to a company or LLP?
Consider converting when: the business needs to raise equity capital from investors (possible only in a company); when liability protection becomes important as the business scales; when the business has multiple stakeholders wanting clear ownership documentation; when professional credibility with large clients or government tenders requires a company registration; or when the turnover and compliance requirements make a company structure more efficient from a tax and governance perspective.
Can a proprietorship have employees?
Yes. A sole proprietor can hire employees. With employees, the proprietor must comply with applicable labour laws including PF registration (if 20 or more employees), ESI registration (if 10 or more employees with wages below ₹21,000), professional tax registration, TDS on salary (Form 24Q), and payment of minimum wages as per the applicable state Act. The proprietor is personally responsible for all employer obligations.

Set Up Your Proprietorship — Quickly and Correctly

GST, Udyam, Shop Act, professional tax, and bank account support for sole proprietors.

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F.A.Q.

GSTR-9 is an annual GST return that summarizes all transactions reported during the financial year. It is required to ensure proper reconciliation and compliance with GST laws.

All regular GST-registered taxpayers are required to file GSTR-9, except composition dealers, casual taxable persons, and non-resident taxpayers.

The due date is generally 31st December following the end of the relevant financial year, unless extended by the government.

It includes details of outward supplies, inward supplies, input tax credit claimed, taxes paid, and adjustments made during the year.

GSTR-9 is mandatory for most regular taxpayers, but certain small taxpayers may get exemptions based on turnover thresholds notified by the government.

Late filing may result in penalties and late fees, along with potential compliance issues or notices from GST authorities.

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