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Lawyers for Company Formation in India

Expert Legal Counsel for Company Incorporation, Shareholders' Agreements, and Corporate Documentation

Forming a company is not merely an administrative process — it involves legal decisions that shape the company's governance, shareholding structure, liability, and future fundraising ability. The MOA and AOA are constitutional documents that determine what the company can do and how it is governed; the shareholders' agreement protects the rights of founders and investors; and the right choice of structure determines the tax and regulatory framework applicable to the business.

Our legal support for company formation covers the full spectrum — from pre-incorporation structuring advice and MOA/AOA drafting to shareholder agreements, founder vesting schedules, and ESOP frameworks. We work alongside our incorporation consultant services to ensure legal documentation matches the regulatory filing. See also our private limited company and Indian subsidiary services.

Our Legal Services for Company Formation

Pre-Incorporation Structuring

Advising on the legal structure — company vs LLP vs trust — shareholding architecture, nominee arrangements, and the legal implications of the proposed ownership structure.

MOA & AOA Drafting

Drafting the Memorandum and Articles of Association with appropriate objects, governance provisions, share transfer restrictions, and investor protection clauses.

Shareholders' Agreement

Drafting a comprehensive Shareholders' Agreement covering voting rights, anti-dilution provisions, pre-emption rights, drag-along/tag-along rights, and exit mechanisms.

Founder Vesting Schedules

Structuring founder share vesting arrangements — typically 4-year vesting with a 1-year cliff — to align founder incentives and protect the company in case of early founder exit.

ESOP Framework

Drafting the ESOP (Employee Stock Option Plan) scheme under the Companies Act and SEBI regulations — including grant letters, exercise price, vesting schedule, and scheme administration.

Due Diligence & Compliance Review

Conducting legal due diligence on the incorporation documents, statutory registers, and compliance records — for investors, acquirers, or founders reviewing existing company structures.

Key Legal Documents in Company Formation

  • Memorandum of Association (MOA) — defines the company's objects, authorised capital, and liability
  • Articles of Association (AOA) — governs internal management, voting, board powers, and share transfer
  • Shareholders' Agreement (SHA) — contractual rights of shareholders outside the AOA framework
  • Subscription Agreement — investment terms on which new shares are subscribed by investors
  • Founder Vesting Agreement — schedules founder share vesting to align long-term commitment
  • ESOP Scheme — framework for granting employee stock options under Section 62(1)(b)
  • Non-Disclosure and Non-Compete Agreements — protecting confidential information and business interests

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a lawyer to incorporate a company in India?
Technically, a company can be incorporated without a lawyer — the SPICe+ process on the MCA portal can be completed by a Chartered Accountant or Company Secretary. However, for businesses with multiple founders, investor involvement, or complex ownership structures, legal counsel is strongly advisable. Key documents — especially the AOA, shareholders' agreement, and founder agreements — have long-term legal consequences that non-lawyers may not fully anticipate. Getting these right at formation is far cheaper than correcting them later.
What is a Shareholders' Agreement and is it legally required?
A Shareholders' Agreement (SHA) is a private contract between the shareholders governing their rights, obligations, and the management of the company — covering matters not addressed or not suitable for the public AOA. It is not legally required under the Companies Act but is strongly recommended for companies with multiple founders or investors. It typically addresses voting rights, board composition, information rights, anti-dilution protection, pre-emption rights on share transfers, drag-along and tag-along rights, and dispute resolution.
What is founder vesting and why is it important?
Founder vesting is a mechanism where founders earn their shares over time rather than holding them outright from day one. A typical arrangement is 4-year vesting with a 1-year cliff — meaning no shares vest in the first year, 25% vest at the end of year 1, and the remaining 75% vest monthly over the next 3 years. This protects the company and other founders if one founder leaves early — the unvested shares return to the company pool. Investors also require vesting as a condition of investment to ensure founder commitment.
What is an ESOP and when should a company implement one?
An ESOP (Employee Stock Option Plan) grants employees the right to purchase shares in the company at a predetermined price (exercise price) after a vesting period. It is a powerful tool for attracting and retaining talent, especially for startups that cannot compete with large companies on cash salary. The ESOP scheme must be approved by shareholders in a special resolution and is governed by the Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules for unlisted companies. Listed companies must also comply with SEBI's ESOP regulations.
What legal issues should I be aware of before incorporating a company?
Key legal issues to address before incorporation include: intellectual property ownership — ensuring all IP is transferred to the company and not held by individual founders; founder agreement — documenting roles, equity splits, and vesting before incorporation; regulatory approvals — certain businesses require sector-specific licences before commencing operations; FDI compliance — if foreign investment is expected, the structure must comply with FEMA from the outset; and shareholding structure — getting the cap table right from the start avoids expensive restructuring later.

Legal Counsel for Your Company Formation — From Structure to Signing

MOA/AOA drafting, shareholders' agreements, ESOP frameworks, and legal due diligence for founders and investors.

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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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