HomeServicesConversion & ClosureConversion Documentation & ROC / MCA Filings

Conversion & Closure · Business Conversion Services

Conversion Documentation & ROC / MCA Filings

Every entity conversion in India — Proprietorship to LLP, Partnership to LLP, LLP to Private Limited, Private to Public Limited, or any other permitted transformation — ultimately succeeds or fails on the paperwork: the right form, the right attachment, filed in the right sequence, within the right statutory window.

Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986

2,000+Clients since 1986
42 yrsCA practice
4Offices · India & UAE
24 hrsResponse time

Every entity conversion in India — Proprietorship to LLP, Partnership to LLP, LLP to Private Limited, Private to Public Limited, or any other permitted transformation — ultimately succeeds or fails on the paperwork: the right form, the right attachment, filed in the right sequence, within the right statutory window. A single missing NOC, an unregistered agreement, a cell that does not match across two filings, or a form filed one day late can stall a conversion for months or trigger penalties that dwarf the professional fee. PNPC's Conversion Documentation & ROC/MCA Filings service is the execution layer that sits underneath every conversion mandate we run: we prepare, cross-check, and file every document the Registrar of Companies requires, track every statutory clock, and stand behind the filing until the Certificate of Incorporation or Registration is in your hand. We do not treat documentation as an afterthought to the strategic conversion decision — we treat it as the discipline that determines whether that decision actually closes.

What it costs

Govt. feesGovernment & statutory fees as applicable to your case
Professional feeFixed professional fee — confirmed in writing before we start

No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.

What Conversion Documentation & ROC / MCA Filings is

Conversion Documentation & ROC/MCA Filings is the specialised compliance-execution service covering the complete paperwork trail required to convert one registered business form into another under Indian law — for example, a sole proprietorship or partnership firm converting to an LLP or Private Limited Company under the LLP Act 2008 / Companies Act 2013, an LLP converting to a Private Limited Company under Section 366 of the Companies Act 2013 read with the Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules 2014, or a Private Limited Company converting to a Public Limited Company (or vice versa) under Section 14 and Section 18 of the Companies Act 2013. Each conversion pathway has its own prescribed form (URC-1 for LLP-to-company conversions, Form 17/18 for proprietorship/firm-to-LLP conversions under the LLP Rules, INC-27 for Pvt-to-Public conversions), its own mandatory attachments (consent letters, No Objection Certificates, newspaper advertisements, statutory declarations, latest financial statements), and its own sequencing rules with the Registrar of Companies (RoC) and the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) portal.

What makes this service distinct from a general incorporation engagement is that a conversion is not a fresh start — it is a legal succession. The converting entity's assets, liabilities, contracts, employees, and often its GST and tax history must be carried forward (or formally closed and re-registered) without a break in continuity that could expose the business, its owners, or its lenders to legal or tax risk. This means the documentation work spans multiple regulators simultaneously: MCA/RoC for the entity-level conversion itself, the GST department for registration migration or cancellation, the Income Tax Department for PAN continuity or fresh PAN issuance, and in many cases the banking relationship for account transition and lender NOCs. Every one of these documents must be internally consistent — the shareholding stated in the MCA filing must match the capital contribution stated in the tax computation; the effective date of conversion stated in the newspaper advertisement must match the date used in the GST transition; the list of creditors disclosed to the RoC must reconcile with the books of account.

PNPC's role in this service is deliberately narrow and deep: we are the team that turns a conversion decision — made after strategic and tax advisory — into a completed, defensible, RoC-accepted filing. We prepare the specific statutory forms (URC-1, SPICe+, Form 17/18/URC-1 as applicable, INC-27, ADT-1, INC-20A), draft the supporting resolutions and consent letters, coordinate the mandatory newspaper advertisement and the 30-day creditor objection window where applicable, verify that all pre-conversion filings (annual returns, tax returns, GST returns) are current before submission — because RoC will reject any conversion application where the converting entity has filing arrears — and manage every query the Registrar raises until the Certificate of Incorporation or Certificate of Registration is issued. We then complete the immediate post-conversion documentation: share certificates, statutory registers, auditor appointment, and the compliance calendar for the new entity's first year.

This service sits deliberately alongside — not instead of — PNPC's broader conversion advisory work. Where our firm's conversion advisory determines whether and when a business should convert, and to which structure, this Conversion Documentation & ROC/MCA Filings service is the execution discipline that makes that decision real on the MCA register. Clients typically engage this as part of a single conversion mandate — advisory and filing together — but it is also available as a standalone execution service for businesses whose CA or legal counsel has already made the structural decision and needs a firm that will not miss a form, a date, or an attachment.

When this documentation and filing service is the right engagement

The decision to convert (Proprietorship to LLP, Partnership to LLP, LLP to Pvt Ltd, Pvt to Public, or any other permitted form) has already been made and the business now needs precise, on-time execution of every ROC/MCA form and attachment

An investor term sheet or funding timeline has created a hard deadline for the conversion to complete — every day of delay in documentation directly delays the funding round

The converting entity has a filing backlog (annual returns, GST returns, or income tax returns) that must be regularised before the Registrar will even accept the conversion application

The business has multiple partners, directors, or shareholders whose consent, KYC documents, and DIN/DPIN status all need to be verified and aligned before a single form is filed

The converting entity has outstanding secured loans, leases, or government licences that will require creditor NOCs, novation letters, or licence re-registration alongside the entity-level conversion

The business wants a single accountable team managing MCA/RoC, GST migration, and PAN/tax continuity together — rather than three separate professionals working from three separate timelines

A prior attempt at self-filing or portal-based filing has already been rejected or queried by the Registrar and the business needs a CA firm to diagnose and resolve the rejection

When a different engagement fits better

The business has not yet decided whether or into which structure to convert — start with a structural/tax advisory conversation before engaging a pure documentation and filing service

The requirement is a brand-new incorporation (no existing proprietorship, partnership, or LLP being converted) — a standard incorporation engagement (Pvt Ltd, LLP, OPC, etc.) is the correct service, not a conversion filing

The requirement is winding up or closing an entity permanently with no successor entity — this is closure and strike-off, a distinct service from conversion

The business is simply changing its name, registered office, or objects clause without changing its legal form — this is an event-based MCA filing, not a structural conversion

The business needs ongoing day-to-day compliance management (monthly GST, payroll, routine annual filings) rather than a one-time conversion filing exercise — an annual compliance retainer is the better fit

The entity conversion involves cross-border restructuring, a scheme of arrangement, or a merger/demerger under Sections 230–232 — those require NCLT-driven M&A and corporate restructuring advisory, not standard ROC conversion filings

Structure Comparison

Conversion pathways and the ROC/MCA filing regime each one triggers

Conversion PathwayGoverning LawPrimary MCA FormKey Pre-ConditionsTypical Filing Timeline
Proprietorship to LLPLLP Act 2008 + LLP Rules 2009 (Second Schedule)FiLLiP with conversion annexureNo specific RoC pre-registration of the proprietorship exists to close; PAN and GST migration handled separately3–5 weeks
Proprietorship to Private LimitedCompanies Act 2013 (fresh incorporation route; asset transfer by sale/slump sale agreement)SPICe+ (fresh incorporation, not a URC-style conversion)Slump sale or asset transfer agreement; stamp duty on transfer; GST implications on business transfer as a going concern4–6 weeks
Partnership Firm to LLPLLP Act 2008, Third ScheduleFiLLiP with Third Schedule conversion annexureAll partners must consent; firm's registration certificate (if registered under Indian Partnership Act 1932) and latest ITR/tax filings must be in order3–5 weeks
Partnership Firm to Private LimitedCompanies Act 2013, Part I Chapter XXI (Companies Authorised to Register) Section 366URC-1 + SPICe+Partnership deed, consent of all partners, newspaper advertisement, no objection from creditors6–9 weeks
LLP to Private Limited CompanyCompanies Act 2013 Section 366 + Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules 2014URC-1 + SPICe+All Form 8/Form 11 LLP filings current; consent of all partners; 30-day creditor advertisement window8–12 weeks
Private Limited to Public LimitedCompanies Act 2013 Section 14 and Section 18MGT-14 + INC-27Special resolution of shareholders; minimum 7 shareholders and 3 directors; AoA amendment to remove private company restrictions4–6 weeks
Public Limited to Private LimitedCompanies Act 2013 Section 14 and Section 18MGT-14 + INC-27 + Central Government/Tribunal approval where requiredSpecial resolution; approval from Regional Director/NCLT in specified circumstances; creditor and shareholder protection safeguards8–14 weeks
One Person Company to Private/Public LimitedCompanies Act 2013 Section 18 + Rule 6, Companies (Incorporation) Rules 2014INC-6Mandatory conversion if paid-up capital or turnover thresholds are crossed, or voluntary conversion after 2 years from incorporation (subject to current rule position)3–5 weeks

Every pathway above shares one execution discipline: no RoC will process a conversion application while the converting entity's own filings (LLP Form 8/11, company AOC-4/MGT-7, or income tax/GST returns) are in arrears. PNPC's documentation engagement always begins with a filing-status audit of the converting entity, because this is the single most common reason conversion applications stall.

How it works
#Stage & What PNPC DoesWhat Goes Wrong Without Dedicated Documentation DisciplineTimeline
1Filing-Status Audit of the Converting Entity — verify every prior MCA, GST, and income-tax filing is currentRoC rejects conversion applications outright where the converting LLP or company has outstanding Form 8/11 or AOC-4/MGT-7 filings. Businesses frequently discover arrears only after a rejection, losing weeks. PNPC checks the MCA master data, GST portal filing status, and ITR filing history before drafting a single conversion form.Week 1
2Document Collection & Verification — PAN, Aadhaar, DIN/DPIN, address proof for every partner, director, and shareholder involvedName mismatches between PAN and Aadhaar, expired address proof, or an undisclosed disqualified director are the leading causes of query and delay. PNPC cross-verifies every document against MCA and Income Tax Department records before submission.Week 1–2
3Consent & Authorisation Documentation — written consent from every partner, designated partner, or shareholder as the specific conversion pathway requiresConversions require unanimous or supermajority consent depending on the governing instrument (Partnership Deed, LLP Agreement, or Articles of Association). A missing or improperly executed consent is a ground for rejection that surfaces only at the RoC review stage if not checked earlier. PNPC reviews the governing instrument for the exact consent mechanism required and documents it formally as a filing attachment.Week 1–3
4Creditor Notice, NOC & Newspaper Advertisement (where applicable)LLP-to-company and partnership-to-company conversions require a public notice in one English and one regional-language newspaper, opening a 30-day statutory objection window that cannot be shortened. Missing this step, publishing in the wrong language edition for the registered state, or failing to retain the publisher's certificate is a common cause of URC-1 rejection. PNPC arranges the advertisement, tracks the 30-day window, and obtains creditor NOCs where material creditors exist.Week 2–6 (30-day window is the critical path)
5Name Clearance for the Successor Entity (where a new legal name is being adopted)A name available on the MCA21 search can still be blocked by an existing trademark on the IP India register, or rejected for deceptive similarity to an existing company or LLP name. PNPC runs the MCA + trademark clearance check before the name is committed to any form.Week 2–4 (parallel with Stage 4)
6Drafting of Conversion-Specific Forms & Attachments — URC-1 / FiLLiP conversion annexure / INC-27 / MGT-14 as applicable, with the full attachment setIncomplete attachments are the single largest cause of RoC queries and re-submission delays on conversion filings — far more common than on fresh incorporations, because each conversion pathway carries a distinct, easily-missed attachment list (list of creditors, list of partners with capital ratios, latest financial statements, declaration of solvency). PNPC prepares and internally cross-checks every attachment against the RoC's published requirement list before submission.Week 3–6
7MoA & AoA / LLP Agreement Drafting for the Successor EntityA converted entity that adopts a generic template constitutional document inherits the same investor-readiness gaps as a fresh incorporation using a template — pre-emption rights, drag-along/tag-along, and ESOP-enabling provisions are commonly missing and must be added later at additional cost and RoC filing time. PNPC drafts the successor entity's constitutional documents to reflect its actual business and near-term investor or governance plans.Week 3–6 (parallel with Stage 6)
8Filing Submission & RoC Query ManagementMost conversion applications receive at least one Registrar query — on name similarity, attachment completeness, or consent documentation. Response windows are time-bound; a missed or inadequate response can result in the application being treated as abandoned, forcing a fresh filing from scratch. PNPC monitors the MCA portal daily during the pendency period and drafts query responses within the response window.Week 4–10 depending on pathway
9Certificate Receipt & Predecessor Entity Closure ConfirmationWhere the conversion dissolves the predecessor entity (e.g., LLP-to-company, partnership-to-company), the predecessor's registration must show as struck off or converted on the relevant register. Businesses that skip this confirmation step sometimes continue to receive statutory notices or annual filing reminders for an entity that no longer legally exists. PNPC confirms the predecessor's status is correctly updated before closing the engagement file.Within 1 week of Certificate issuance
10PAN, TAN & GST Migration or Fresh RegistrationWhere the conversion creates a new legal entity, that entity requires its own PAN (in most conversion routes other than the s47(xiiib)-style continuity route) and, separately, its own GST registration — the predecessor's GSTIN cannot simply continue. Missing this transition creates a gap in invoicing continuity and input tax credit availability. PNPC manages the PAN/TAN activation tracking and coordinates the GST registration transition alongside the entity conversion.Week 1–3 post-Certificate
11Bank Account Transition & Lender NOCExisting bank accounts and loan facilities are held in the predecessor entity's name and do not automatically transfer. Secured lenders will usually require a formal NOC and a facility-assumption agreement with the successor entity before releasing security or continuing the facility. PNPC identifies which facilities need lender coordination and sequences this alongside the conversion so operations are not disrupted.Week 1–4 post-Certificate
12Post-Conversion Statutory Setup — INC-20A, ADT-1, share certificates, statutory registersWhere the successor is a company, INC-20A (Commencement of Business) must be filed within 180 days and ADT-1 (auditor appointment) within 30 days of incorporation — both carry defined statutory penalties if missed and are commonly overlooked once the conversion itself is complete. PNPC treats these as part of the same engagement, not a separate afterthought.Within 30–180 days of Certificate, tracked proactively
13Contract, Licence & Vendor Novation ReviewMaterial contracts, government licences, and registrations (import-export code, professional tax, shops & establishment, sector-specific licences) are often entity-specific and may require formal novation or fresh application in the successor entity's name, even though assets and liabilities transfer to the successor by operation of law under most conversion routes. PNPC prepares a prioritised novation list so nothing material is left unassigned.Week 2–8 post-Certificate
14First-Year Compliance Calendar HandoverA converted entity's compliance calendar is materially different from its predecessor's (e.g., an LLP's Form 8/11 cycle versus a company's AOC-4/MGT-7/AGM/Board meeting cycle) — businesses that do not receive a clear handover often miss their very first deadline as the new entity. PNPC hands over a populated first-year compliance calendar as the final deliverable of the documentation engagement.At Certificate issuance

Realistic timeline ranges from 3–5 weeks for a straightforward Proprietorship/Partnership-to-LLP conversion to 8–14 weeks for an LLP-to-Company or Public-to-Private conversion where a statutory newspaper advertisement and creditor objection window apply. The single largest variable is the converting entity's own filing-arrears status — a business with fully current filings moves through the fastest end of these ranges.

Document Checklist
Converting Entity's Existing Records

Constitution document of the converting entity — Partnership Deed, LLP Agreement, or Memorandum & Articles of Association, with all amendments

Registration certificate of the converting entity — Partnership Registration Certificate (if registered under the Indian Partnership Act 1932), LLP Certificate of Incorporation, or existing Company Certificate of Incorporation

PAN card of the converting entity

GST registration certificate and GSTIN of the converting entity, with filing status for the last 3 years

Latest filed financial statements (balance sheet and profit & loss) — used as the basis for the successor entity's opening balance sheet

Filing history and acknowledgements for all applicable MCA/RoC forms (Form 8, Form 11 for LLPs; AOC-4, MGT-7 for companies) for the last 3 years — must be current before a conversion application can be filed

Income tax return filing acknowledgements for the last 3 years

List of all outstanding loans, charges, or security interests registered against the entity, with lender contact details for NOC coordination

Partner / Director / Shareholder Documentation

PAN card of every partner, designated partner, director, and shareholder involved in the conversion — self-attested, name matching Aadhaar exactly

Aadhaar card of every individual involved, linked to an active mobile number for OTP-based verification steps

DIN (Director Identification Number) or DPIN (Designated Partner Identification Number) for each person who will hold that role in the successor entity — status verified as active and non-disqualified

Recent passport-sized photograph of each individual — white background, taken within the last 3 months

Proof of current residential address for each individual — utility bill or bank statement dated within the last 2 months

Written, signed consent from every partner/designated partner/shareholder to the specific conversion, in the form required by the governing instrument

For NRI or foreign national partners/directors/shareholders — passport apostilled by the Indian Embassy in their country of residence, foreign address proof notarised locally

Creditor & Public Notice Documentation (Where Applicable)

Complete and reconciled list of creditors of the converting entity, with amounts outstanding as of a specified date

Draft newspaper advertisement text — one English-language and one regional-language edition circulating in the state of the registered office

Newspaper advertisement proofs — original clippings and publisher's certificate, retained as a mandatory filing attachment

No Objection Certificates from material creditors, particularly secured lenders, confirming no objection to the conversion

Declaration confirming no objection has been received within the statutory window, or a record of how any objection received was resolved

Successor Entity Formation Documents

Proposed name(s) for the successor entity — 2–3 options, cleared against MCA21 company/LLP name database and IP India trademark register before submission

Custom-drafted Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association (for a company) or LLP Agreement (for an LLP) — objects and governance clauses aligned with the actual business and any near-term investor, ESOP, or governance requirements

Proposed registered office address for the successor entity with utility bill and No Objection Certificate from the property owner

Declaration of compliance (Form INC-9 or equivalent) signed by each proposed director or designated partner

Digital Signature Certificates (Class-3 DSC) for every individual who will sign the conversion filing — procured or verified as current before submission

Post-Conversion Registration & Setup Documents

Certificate of Incorporation or Registration of the successor entity — the primary evidence of successful conversion

PAN and TAN of the successor entity — activation status tracked

Fresh GST registration application documents for the successor entity, and cancellation/surrender application for the predecessor entity's GSTIN

Bank account opening documents for the successor entity — Certificate of Incorporation, PAN, constitutional documents, board or partner resolution authorising signatories

Board resolution or partner resolution appointing the first statutory auditor (Form ADT-1, where the successor is a company), filed within 30 days of incorporation

Share certificates (where the successor is a company) issued to initial shareholders within the statutory period following allotment

Statutory registers for the successor entity — Register of Members, Register of Directors/Designated Partners, Register of Charges — set up from the date of conversion

Contract, Licence & Vendor Transition Documents

List of material contracts, leases, and vendor agreements in the predecessor entity's name, reviewed for assignment-restriction clauses

Novation or assignment letters for contracts requiring counterparty consent to transfer to the successor entity

Applications for re-registration of entity-specific licences and registrations (Import-Export Code, Professional Tax, Shops & Establishment, sector-specific licences such as FSSAI or Udyam/MSME) in the successor entity's name

Employee communication and, where applicable, revised employment documentation reflecting the successor entity as employer of record

Vendor and client notification letters confirming the change in invoicing entity, PAN, and GSTIN

Ongoing obligations
PhaseTriggered ByPNPC's Documentation & Filing RoleRisk If Not Managed
Pre-Conversion DiagnosticDecision to convert has been taken (advisory stage complete)Filing-status audit of the converting entity across MCA, GST, and income tax; identification of any arrears that must be cleared before the conversion application can be filed; review of the governing instrument for consent requirements.RoC rejects the application outright for outstanding filings; consent mechanism misapplied and challenged later by a dissenting partner or shareholder.
Consent & NoticeFiling-status audit clear; conversion pathway confirmedFormal consent documentation from every partner/director/shareholder; newspaper advertisement (where applicable) arranged and the 30-day creditor objection window tracked; creditor NOCs obtained for material creditors.Missing or informally documented consent is a ground for later challenge; missed advertisement requirement causes outright rejection of URC-1-type filings; unresolved creditor objection blocks the conversion indefinitely.
Filing & RoC ProcessingAll pre-conditions clearedPreparation and submission of the conversion-specific form (URC-1/FiLLiP annexure/INC-27/MGT-14 as applicable) with the complete attachment set; drafting of the successor entity's MoA/AoA/LLP Agreement; response to every RoC query within the statutory window.Incomplete attachments or an unresolved query beyond the response window can cause the application to lapse, requiring a fresh filing from scratch and restarting every statutory clock.
Certificate & Immediate TransitionCertificate of Incorporation/Registration issuedConfirmation that the predecessor entity's status is correctly updated (dissolved/converted) on the MCA register; PAN/TAN activation tracking for the successor; GST registration transition initiated; bank account opening documentation prepared.Predecessor entity continues to appear as active and attract compliance notices; PAN/GST gap creates invoicing and input tax credit disruption; delayed bank account transition disrupts business operations.
Statutory Post-Conversion FilingsWithin 30–180 days of Certificate (for company successors)INC-20A (Commencement of Business) tracked and filed within 180 days; ADT-1 (auditor appointment) filed within 30 days; share certificates issued to initial shareholders; statutory registers set up.INC-20A missed: company cannot legally commence business, faces a penalty on the company plus a per-day penalty on defaulting officers under Section 10A, and risks MCA strike-off. ADT-1 missed: fixed penalty under Section 140 and unresolved audit-appointment status.
Contract & Licence NovationWeeks 2–8 post-CertificatePrioritised novation list prepared for material contracts and entity-specific licences; vendor and client notifications coordinated; employee documentation updated to reflect the successor as employer of record.Contracts with assignment-restriction clauses left unaddressed create counterparty disputes; licences not re-registered in the successor's name can be treated as invalid, exposing the business to operating without a valid licence.
First-Year Compliance HandoverAt Certificate issuancePopulated first-year compliance calendar for the successor entity's specific form — LLP Form 8/11 cycle, or company AOC-4/MGT-7/AGM/Board meeting cycle — handed over with every due date pre-identified.A converted entity that does not receive a clear compliance calendar handover routinely misses its very first deadline under the new structure, generating avoidable late fees within months of conversion.
Frequently asked
What exactly does a Conversion Documentation & ROC/MCA Filings engagement cover?

It covers the full paperwork and filing execution required to convert one registered business form into another — from verifying the converting entity's filing status, through drafting and filing the specific conversion form the pathway requires (URC-1, FiLLiP conversion annexure, INC-27, MGT-14, as applicable), to receiving the Certificate of Incorporation or Registration, and completing the immediate post-conversion documentation (PAN/GST transition, bank account setup, statutory registers, auditor appointment). It is the execution layer that sits underneath a conversion decision that has typically already been made through strategic or tax advisory.

Practitioner noteWe deliberately scope this as an execution-heavy, discipline-heavy service. The strategic question of whether and when to convert is a separate conversation — this service exists for the moment after that decision is made, when precision in paperwork determines whether the conversion actually closes on time.
Is this the same as the LLP-to-Private-Limited conversion service or the Proprietorship-to-LLP/Pvt conversion service?

It complements them rather than duplicating them. Those services describe the strategic and structural advisory for a specific conversion pathway. This service is the underlying documentation and ROC/MCA filing discipline that applies across every conversion pathway — Proprietorship-to-LLP, Partnership-to-LLP, Partnership-to-Company, LLP-to-Company, Private-to-Public, and other permitted conversions. Many clients engage the pathway-specific advisory and this documentation execution together as a single mandate; some engage this service standalone when the structural decision has already been made elsewhere.

Practitioner noteIf you are unsure which structure to convert into, start with a structural advisory conversation. If that decision is already made and you need flawless execution against statutory deadlines, this is the right engagement.
Why does the Registrar reject some conversion applications outright?

The most common reason, by a wide margin, is that the converting entity's own MCA/RoC filings (Form 8 and Form 11 for LLPs, or AOC-4 and MGT-7 for companies) are in arrears. The Registrar will not process a conversion application for an entity that is not itself current on its statutory filings. Other common rejection grounds are incomplete attachments, a name that conflicts with an existing entity or trademark, and — for pathways requiring a newspaper advertisement — a missing or improperly executed advertisement and creditor-objection record.

Practitioner noteWe run a filing-status audit before drafting a single conversion form, specifically because this is the single most common and most avoidable cause of delay we see in practice.
Do all partners or shareholders need to consent to a conversion?

Yes, in every pathway we handle, unanimous or supermajority consent (as specified by the governing instrument — the Partnership Deed, LLP Agreement, or Articles of Association) is required before a conversion application can be filed. If any partner or shareholder dissents and cannot be brought to agreement, the conversion cannot proceed through the standard route. Some governing instruments include a buyout mechanism for a dissenting party that can be used to resolve this before the conversion filing.

Practitioner noteConsent feasibility is one of the first things we assess — before advertisements are placed or forms drafted — because a dissenting partner discovered late in the process is the most disruptive and expensive point at which to discover it.
What is the newspaper advertisement requirement and which conversions need it?

Conversions that involve dissolving an existing registered entity to form a company — such as LLP-to-Private-Limited or Partnership-to-Private-Limited under Section 366 of the Companies Act 2013 and the Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules 2014 — require a public notice of the intended conversion to be published in one English-language and one regional-language newspaper circulating in the state of the registered office. This opens a 30-day window during which any creditor may object. The advertisement proofs are a mandatory filing attachment. Conversions such as Proprietorship-to-LLP or LLP-to-Company via a straightforward FiLLiP-based route generally do not carry the same public-advertisement requirement — the specific pathway determines whether this step applies.

Practitioner noteThe 30-day window is a statutory minimum that cannot be compressed regardless of urgency — we build project timelines around this from day one rather than presenting it as a surprise later.
How long does the ROC/MCA filing process for a conversion typically take?

This varies materially by pathway. A Proprietorship-to-LLP or Partnership-to-LLP conversion, which does not usually require a newspaper advertisement, can typically complete in 3–5 weeks from document collection to Certificate. An LLP-to-Private-Limited or Partnership-to-Private-Limited conversion, which does require the newspaper advertisement and 30-day creditor objection window, typically takes 8–12 weeks. A Private-to-Public (or Public-to-Private) conversion typically takes 4–14 weeks depending on whether Regional Director or NCLT approval is required in the specific circumstances. The single biggest variable within any pathway is whether the converting entity's own filings are current at the outset.

Practitioner noteWe give clients a specific timeline range at the start of the engagement based on their actual filing status and the pathway involved — not a generic industry figure that assumes a clean starting position.
What happens to the predecessor entity's PAN and GST registration after conversion?

In most conversion pathways, the successor entity is a distinct legal person and requires its own PAN (issued automatically through the incorporation process for company-successor conversions) and its own fresh GST registration — the predecessor's GSTIN does not automatically transfer and must be surrendered after final returns are filed up to the conversion date. Continuing to invoice under the predecessor's PAN or GSTIN after the conversion date creates a mismatch that both the GST and income tax systems will flag.

Practitioner noteWe manage the PAN and GST transition calendar specifically so that no transaction falls into the gap between the old and new registrations — this is one of the more operationally disruptive gaps if it is not actively managed.
Do existing contracts, leases, and licences automatically transfer to the successor entity?

Where the conversion is a statutory succession (such as an LLP-to-Company conversion under Section 366), the successor generally assumes the predecessor's assets, liabilities, and obligations by operation of law without requiring a separate deed for each asset. However, contracts with assignment-restriction clauses, and entity-specific government licences and registrations (Import-Export Code, Professional Tax, sector-specific licences), commonly require formal novation, counterparty consent, or fresh re-registration in the successor's name regardless of the general statutory succession.

Practitioner noteWe prepare a prioritised list of material contracts and licences at the start of the engagement so nothing operationally important is left unassigned after the Certificate is issued.
What is Form URC-1 and when is it required?

Form URC-1 is the specific MCA form used when an existing entity that is not itself a company — such as an LLP, a registered partnership firm, or certain other bodies — applies to be registered as a company under Part I, Chapter XXI (Section 366 onwards) of the Companies Act 2013 and the Companies (Authorised to Register) Rules 2014. It is filed alongside SPICe+ (the standard company incorporation form) and carries a distinct attachment list — list of partners with capital ratios, list of creditors, newspaper advertisement proof, the existing entity's constitutional document and registration certificate, and declarations specific to the conversion.

Practitioner noteURC-1's attachment list is longer and more specific than a standard SPICe+ filing, and incomplete attachments are the most common cause of rejection we see on this form specifically.
What is INC-20A and does it apply to a converted company?

INC-20A is the Commencement of Business Declaration, required under Section 10A of the Companies Act 2013, certifying that subscribed share capital has been paid up and confirming the registered office. It must be filed within 180 days of the Certificate of Incorporation. It applies to a company formed through a conversion in exactly the same way as it applies to a fresh incorporation — the successor company cannot legally commence business activity, and cannot borrow money, until INC-20A is filed. Missing the deadline attracts a penalty on the company plus a per-day penalty on every officer in default (subject to a specified cap) under Section 10A, and risks the company being struck off the MCA register.

Practitioner noteThis is one of the most commonly missed post-conversion steps precisely because the conversion itself feels like the finish line. We add it to the compliance calendar on the day the Certificate is issued and track it proactively rather than waiting to be asked.
What is ADT-1 and why does it matter immediately after conversion?

ADT-1 is the MCA form for reporting the appointment of a company's first statutory auditor, required to be filed within 30 days of incorporation (including incorporation via conversion). A converted company must appoint its first auditor at its first Board meeting and file ADT-1 within that window; failing to do so attracts a fixed penalty under Section 140 of the Companies Act 2013 and leaves the company without a properly appointed auditor for its first financial statements.

Practitioner noteWe file ADT-1 as a standard part of the post-conversion documentation package rather than treating it as a separate engagement the client needs to remember to ask for.
Can a conversion application be resubmitted if the Registrar rejects it?

In most cases, yes — the Registrar typically raises a query or resubmission (re-submission, 'RSUB') request rather than an outright, final rejection on the first pass, giving the applicant a defined window to correct the deficiency and resubmit. If the response window lapses without a satisfactory resubmission, the application can be treated as abandoned, requiring a fresh filing with fresh fees and a restart of any time-bound elements such as the newspaper advertisement window. PNPC monitors the MCA portal for queries during the pendency period specifically to avoid this outcome.

Practitioner noteWe treat the RoC query-response window as one of the highest-priority items in the entire engagement — a missed response window is the most expensive possible outcome, since it can mean restarting a 30-day advertisement clock from zero.
Does PNPC draft the successor entity's MoA, AoA, or LLP Agreement as part of this service, or only file existing documents?

PNPC drafts custom constitutional documents for the successor entity as part of this engagement — not templates. For a company successor, this means an objects clause aligned with the actual business being conducted and an Articles of Association that includes investor-friendly provisions (pre-emption rights, drag-along and tag-along clauses, ESOP-enabling provisions) if the conversion is being driven by an anticipated funding round. For an LLP successor, this means an LLP Agreement that reflects the actual profit-sharing, management, and exit arrangements the partners have agreed. A template document adopted purely to complete the filing typically requires amendment — at additional cost and RoC filing time — before it can support the next stage of the business.

Practitioner noteWe have amended constitutional documents for multiple clients who converted through a portal-style filing and later needed investment-ready or governance-ready documents. Getting this right at conversion, rather than amending afterward, is consistently the cheaper path.
What is the tax treatment of a conversion — does it trigger capital gains?

This depends on the specific pathway and whether the conditions for tax-neutral treatment are satisfied. For example, an LLP-to-Company conversion can qualify for capital-gains-neutral treatment under Section 47(xiiib) of the Income Tax Act 1961 if specific conditions are met — including that all assets and liabilities transfer, all partners become shareholders in the same proportion as their capital accounts, no consideration other than shares is received, and the partners retain at least 50% of voting power in the company for 5 years. If any condition is breached within that period, the exemption can be withdrawn and capital gains become taxable retrospectively. A Proprietorship or Partnership converting via a business/asset transfer route (rather than a statutory succession route) may instead trigger a taxable transfer, depending on structuring. This is a specialist tax question that should be confirmed with tax advisory before the conversion documents are finalised.

Practitioner noteWe flag the applicable tax-neutrality conditions for the specific pathway being used at the start of the engagement and coordinate with tax advisory before the conversion structure (particularly the post-conversion shareholding or capital-account allocation) is locked in — this is not something to reverse-engineer after the Certificate is issued.
Can a conversion be completed entirely online without visiting any government office?

Yes, in the great majority of cases. All MCA/RoC forms are filed electronically through the MCA21 portal. The only step commonly requiring any real-time individual action is Digital Signature Certificate (DSC) verification, which is completed through video-based verification (V-KYC) — a short online identity check rather than a physical visit. For NRI or foreign partners/directors/shareholders, document apostille is coordinated remotely through the Indian Embassy or Consulate in their country of residence.

Practitioner noteFor our UAE-based clients, we coordinate the DSC and apostille steps between our Dubai office and the individual, so no in-person visit to India is required purely to complete the conversion paperwork.
What documents does PNPC need from a converting LLP to begin the engagement?

At minimum: the LLP Agreement and any amendments, the LLP's Certificate of Incorporation, its PAN, its last three years of Form 8 and Form 11 filing acknowledgements, its latest financial statements, a list of all designated partners and partners with their DPIN/PAN/Aadhaar, and a list of outstanding creditors and secured lenders. PNPC uses these to run the filing-status audit before drafting the conversion application.

Practitioner noteWe ask for the full filing history up front rather than assuming it is current — this single step surfaces the majority of the blockers we later have to resolve before filing.
What documents does PNPC need from a converting partnership firm or proprietorship?

For a partnership firm: the Partnership Deed and amendments, the firm's Registration Certificate if registered under the Indian Partnership Act 1932, PAN of the firm, GST registration details, and the last three years of income tax filings, along with KYC documents for every partner. For a proprietorship: the proprietor's PAN, GST registration (if any), business registration documents such as Udyam/MSME or Shops & Establishment licence, and the last three years of income tax filings for the proprietor's business income.

Practitioner noteA proprietorship has no separate RoC-level registration to convert — the 'conversion' is functionally a fresh incorporation of the LLP or company combined with a transfer of the business (assets, contracts, employees) into the new entity, which changes the documentation approach materially from an LLP or partnership conversion.
How does PNPC handle a conversion where the business also has UAE operations?

PNPC has operating offices in Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai. Where a conversion coincides with or affects UAE-linked operations — for example, an Indian entity converting structure ahead of receiving investment from a UAE-based investor, or an NRI in the UAE who is a partner in the converting Indian entity — the India-side documentation and filing work is coordinated with the UAE-side requirements (trade licence status, UAE Corporate Tax registration considerations, WPS payroll continuity) under a single engagement rather than being handled by separate, uncoordinated firms in each jurisdiction.

Practitioner noteThe interaction between an Indian entity conversion and a UAE shareholder's or partner's own compliance position is a detail that is easy to lose in a handoff between two unconnected firms — we keep the same team across both sides of the file.
What if the converting entity has an active loan or a charge registered with a bank?

A secured lender is a creditor for purposes of the newspaper advertisement and NOC process (where applicable to the pathway), and will typically require the successor entity to formally assume the facility and provide equivalent security before the bank releases or continues the arrangement. This is a commercial credit process on the bank's side, separate from the RoC filing itself, and needs to be initiated in parallel rather than after the Certificate is issued.

Practitioner noteWe identify secured facilities early in the filing-status audit and start the lender coordination conversation in parallel with the RoC filing timeline, rather than waiting for the bank to raise it after conversion.
Does the successor entity need a new bank account, or can the predecessor's account continue?

The successor is a distinct legal entity (in statutory-succession conversions) or an entirely new entity receiving a transferred business (in asset-transfer conversions), so a new bank account in the successor's name is required in either case. The predecessor's account cannot simply continue to be used by the new entity. For company successors, the initial share capital must typically be received into this new account before INC-20A can be filed.

Practitioner noteWe sequence the bank account opening early in the post-Certificate phase precisely because INC-20A cannot be filed until it exists and the capital has been deposited.
How does the successor entity's compliance calendar differ from the predecessor's?

This depends entirely on which entity types are involved. Converting from a Proprietorship or Partnership (which have no MCA-level annual filing obligation) into an LLP introduces the LLP's Form 8 (Statement of Account and Solvency, generally due by 30 October) and Form 11 (Annual Return, generally due by 30 May) cycle. Converting from an LLP into a Private Limited Company introduces a materially heavier calendar — mandatory statutory audit regardless of turnover, four Board meetings a year, an Annual General Meeting, AOC-4 and MGT-7 filings, and DIR-3 KYC for every director. PNPC hands over a populated first-year calendar specific to the successor entity so the very first deadline under the new structure is not missed.

Practitioner noteWe have seen businesses miss their first LLP Form 11 or their first company AOC-4 simply because nobody explicitly told them the calendar had changed — this handover is a standard, non-negotiable part of every conversion engagement we run.
What are the mandatory filings for an LLP that a converting business should know about before choosing that structure?

An LLP must file Form 11 (Annual Return) by 30 May each year and Form 8 (Statement of Account and Solvency) by 30 October each year, regardless of whether it has conducted any business during the year. Late filing fees under the LLP (Amendment) Rules 2022 follow a slab-based structure that scales with the number of days of delay and the LLP's contribution amount, rather than a flat uncapped daily rate. A statutory audit is required only if the LLP's annual turnover exceeds ₹40 lakh or its contribution exceeds ₹25 lakh.

Practitioner noteThe LLP late-filing fee structure was revised in 2022 to a slab-based regime rather than an open-ended flat daily rate — we confirm the current fee schedule at the time of any filing rather than quoting from memory, since the applicable slab depends on the LLP's specific contribution band.
What is the maximum number of partners allowed before a partnership firm must consider a different structure?

Under Section 464 of the Companies Act 2013 read with the applicable Rules, a partnership firm (or any association or partnership of persons) is capped at 50 partners for the purpose of carrying on a business for profit — exceeding this requires the business to be registered as a company or another prescribed form. This 50-partner cap is a Companies Act provision, not a restriction under the Indian Partnership Act 1932 itself, which does not on its own prescribe a maximum partner count.

Practitioner noteThis distinction — that the cap comes from the Companies Act framework rather than the Partnership Act — is easy to state incorrectly, and we have seen it cited to the wrong statute in informal advice. We confirm the current Rules position before advising a firm that is approaching this threshold.
Is there a filing fee waiver for small-capital conversions to a company?

MCA has, in recent years, waived the RoC filing fee for company incorporations (including conversions that result in a fresh company incorporation) with authorised share capital up to a specified threshold, with a sliding scale of fees above that threshold. The precise threshold and fee schedule are subject to periodic MCA notification, so PNPC confirms the current fee schedule against the live MCA fee rules at the time of filing rather than quoting a fixed figure that may have changed.

Practitioner noteGovernment fee schedules on the MCA portal are revised periodically. Quoting a specific rupee figure with false precision in a client-facing document that outlives the fee notification is a risk we deliberately avoid — we confirm the live fee schedule at the point of filing.
Does angel tax apply to shares issued as part of a conversion-driven fundraise?

Section 56(2)(viib) of the Income-tax Act 1961 — commonly called 'angel tax' — was abolished with effect from 1 April 2025 (Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024) and no longer applies to shares issued by any company, whether to resident or non-resident investors, on or after that date. A company converting into a Private Limited structure specifically to raise its next round of equity therefore does not need to plan around angel tax risk on that fundraise. A defensible share valuation is still good practice for FEMA/FDI pricing-guideline compliance and general governance discipline, independent of the (now-repealed) angel tax provision.

Practitioner noteThis is one of the most frequently outdated pieces of advice we still see repeated in generic online guidance — we make a point of confirming the current, post-abolition position with every client who is converting ahead of a fundraise.
Do the GST rate changes from the 2025 rationalisation affect conversion documentation?

The GST Council rationalised GST rates in September 2025 into a simplified three-slab structure (broadly 5%/18%/40%, replacing the earlier four-slab 5%/12%/18%/28% structure) for most goods and services. This affects the GST returns and invoicing of the converting and successor entities generally, but does not itself change the ROC/MCA conversion filing process. PNPC ensures that the GST migration documentation for the successor entity reflects current, correctly classified rates rather than carrying forward pre-rationalisation classifications by default.

Practitioner noteWe treat GST re-registration for a successor entity as an opportunity to re-verify HSN/SAC classification and applicable rates against the current rate structure, rather than mechanically copying the predecessor's GST profile forward.
Does the auditor appointed for the predecessor entity automatically continue for the successor company?

No. A converted company must appoint its own first statutory auditor at its first Board meeting and file Form ADT-1 within 30 days of incorporation, regardless of who audited the predecessor entity. Since the Companies (Amendment) Act 2017, this first auditor holds office until the conclusion of the sixth Annual General Meeting without requiring annual shareholder ratification at each AGM — the earlier requirement for yearly re-ratification by shareholders has been removed.

Practitioner noteWe occasionally see the outdated expectation that auditor appointment needs annual AGM ratification — that requirement was removed by the 2017 amendment, and we correct this expectation explicitly with clients coming from an older frame of reference.
What happens if the converting entity's name is not available for the successor entity?

The successor entity is not automatically entitled to carry forward the predecessor's exact name if that name is unavailable on the MCA register (as a conflicting company or LLP name) or conflicts with a registered trademark on the IP India register. PNPC runs the same rigorous MCA and trademark clearance process for a conversion's successor name as it would for a fresh incorporation, and prepares 2–3 alternative name options to maximise first-attempt approval.

Practitioner noteBusinesses are sometimes surprised that their own trading name, used for years as a proprietorship or partnership, is not automatically reservable as the new company's name — we run this check early, not as a late-stage surprise.
How does PNPC price a Conversion Documentation & ROC/MCA Filings engagement?

PNPC quotes a fixed, agreed professional fee for the documentation and filing engagement, confirmed in writing before work begins, scoped to the specific conversion pathway, the number of partners/directors/shareholders involved, and whether a newspaper advertisement and creditor NOC process applies. Government fees, stamp duty, and third-party costs (newspaper advertisement charges, apostille costs for foreign documents) are itemised separately from the professional fee.

Practitioner noteWe ask clients to request a written scope and fee letter before any work begins, and we provide one as standard practice — it removes ambiguity about what is and is not included in the fixed fee.
Can PNPC take over a conversion filing that another firm or portal has already started and stalled?

Yes. PNPC regularly takes over conversion filings that have received a Registrar query, been marked for resubmission, or lapsed after a missed response window under a previous engagement. The first step is always a diagnostic review of exactly what was filed, what query (if any) was raised, and whether the response window is still open or the application must be refiled from scratch.

Practitioner noteThe most time-sensitive version of this is a lapsed application — because refiling means restarting any newspaper advertisement window from zero. We prioritise diagnosing the response-window status immediately when we take over a stalled filing.
What is the difference between this service and PNPC's Company Closure / strike-off service?

This service covers conversion — where the business continues operating under a new legal form and a successor entity is created. PNPC's Company Closure service covers the opposite scenario — where a business permanently ceases operations and the entity is formally struck off or wound up, with no successor entity continuing the business. The document trails, statutory forms, and creditor-protection mechanisms for the two scenarios are materially different, and PNPC scopes them as distinct engagements.

Practitioner noteWe ask this clarifying question explicitly at the start of every enquiry, because 'closing down the old entity' language from a client can describe either a conversion or a genuine wind-up, and the correct engagement — and the correct forms — depend entirely on which one it actually is.
Does PNPC handle the employee-related documentation when a business converts structure?

PNPC identifies where employment documentation needs updating to reflect the successor entity as the employer of record — offer letters, employment agreements, PF/ESI registration continuity, and any IP assignment or confidentiality clauses that reference the predecessor entity by name. Where the successor entity takes on all employees by operation of law (as in most statutory-succession conversions), this is primarily a documentation-hygiene exercise rather than a fresh employment contracting exercise, but it should not be skipped, since ambiguity here creates disputes on separation later.

Practitioner noteWe flag this as a lower-drama but still important workstream — it rarely blocks the conversion itself, but leaving it undone creates avoidable friction with employees months or years later.
How involved does the client need to be during the ROC/MCA filing process?

Client involvement is concentrated at specific points: providing documents and KYC details at the outset, signing consent letters and DSC-linked forms, providing any bank or lender coordination introductions where a secured facility exists, and being available for the video-based DSC verification call. PNPC manages document drafting, RoC query responses, portal monitoring, and day-to-day coordination with the Registrar without requiring the client to track the process themselves.

Practitioner noteWe aim for the client's time commitment to be measured in a handful of signing sessions and calls across the engagement, not ongoing portal-watching — that is precisely the work this engagement is meant to take off their plate.
What is the single most common mistake PNPC sees in self-managed or portal-based conversion filings?

Treating the conversion form itself as the entire task, rather than as one step in a documentation chain that also includes verifying pre-conversion filing currency, securing and formally recording every required consent, managing the statutory advertisement window where applicable, and completing the post-Certificate obligations (INC-20A, ADT-1, PAN/GST transition, bank account, licence novation). Portals and self-filers who focus only on the form itself routinely miss the surrounding obligations, and the resulting gaps — a missed INC-20A, an un-migrated GSTIN, an unassigned lease — surface as expensive problems months after the Certificate is already in hand.

Practitioner noteThis is precisely why we scope the engagement end-to-end rather than as a single form-filing task — the form is rarely where the risk actually sits.
Why PNPC Global
What You NeedPortal / Uncoordinated FilingPNPC Global
Pre-filing readiness checkNot done — conversion form filed with arrears undiscovered until rejectionFull filing-status audit across MCA, GST, and income tax before any conversion form is drafted
Consent documentationAssumed informally; not retained in filing-ready formFormally documented against the governing instrument's exact consent mechanism, retained as a filing attachment
Newspaper advertisement & creditor NOCArranged reactively, often after a first rejectionArranged proactively; 30-day window tracked; creditor NOCs coordinated with material lenders
Successor entity's constitutional documentsTemplate MoA/AoA/LLP Agreement, not aligned to the actual business or funding plansCustom-drafted objects, governance, pre-emption, and ESOP-enabling provisions from the outset
RoC query handlingClient left to interpret and respond to technical queries alone, often missing the response windowMonitored daily during pendency; queries drafted and responded to within the statutory window
PAN, GST & bank transitionLeft to the client to figure out after the Certificate arrivesSequenced and managed as part of the same engagement, immediately after Certificate issuance
Post-conversion statutory filingsNot tracked — INC-20A and ADT-1 deadlines commonly missedAdded to the compliance calendar on Day 1 of the engagement and filed proactively within the statutory window
Contract & licence novationNot identified until a counterparty or regulator raises itPrioritised novation list prepared before the Certificate is even issued
India + UAE coordinationIndia-only; UAE side handled by a separate, uncoordinated firmSingle engagement spanning our Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai offices where relevant

What the PNPC package includes

  1. 01

    Pre-conversion filing-status audit across MCA/RoC, GST, and income tax records

  2. 02

    Governing-instrument review for the exact consent mechanism required (Partnership Deed, LLP Agreement, or Articles of Association)

  3. 03

    Formal consent, resolution, and declaration drafting for every partner, designated partner, or shareholder involved

  4. 04

    Newspaper advertisement arrangement and 30-day creditor objection window tracking, where the pathway requires it

  5. 05

    Successor entity name clearance — MCA21 + IP India trademark check

  6. 06

    Custom Memorandum of Association, Articles of Association, or LLP Agreement drafting for the successor entity

  7. 07

    Preparation and filing of the specific conversion form and complete attachment set (URC-1, FiLLiP conversion annexure, INC-27, MGT-14, as applicable)

  8. 08

    Daily MCA portal monitoring and RoC query response management through to Certificate issuance

  9. 09

    Confirmation of predecessor entity's correct closure/conversion status on the relevant register

  10. 10

    PAN, TAN, and GST registration transition management for the successor entity

  11. 11

    Post-conversion statutory filings — INC-20A, ADT-1, share certificate issuance, statutory register setup

  12. 12

    Prioritised contract, licence, and vendor novation list with counterparty coordination support

  13. 13

    First-year compliance calendar handover specific to the successor entity's structure

  14. 14

    Fixed, written professional fee agreed before work begins — government fees and third-party costs itemised separately

Speak with a PNPC Chartered Accountant before your next conversion filing. We will audit your entity's readiness, tell you exactly which forms and windows apply to your specific pathway, and manage the filing end-to-end so nothing stalls between your decision to convert and your Certificate in hand.

← Back to Conversion & Closure
Talk to a CA