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Commencement of Business Certificate (INC-20A)

A freshly incorporated company cannot legally start business, borrow money, or exercise any corporate power until INC-20A is filed — a fact that catches a surprising number of founders off guard, because the Certificate of Incorporation feels like the finish line when it is actually the starting gun.

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A freshly incorporated company cannot legally start business, borrow money, or exercise any corporate power until INC-20A is filed — a fact that catches a surprising number of founders off guard, because the Certificate of Incorporation feels like the finish line when it is actually the starting gun. Miss the 180-day window and the company faces a flat penalty, every officer in default is personally fined per day of continuing default, and in the worst cases the Registrar can strike the company off the register altogether. At PNPC Global, we have handled MCA filings since 1986. We do not wait for you to remember this deadline — we put it on your compliance calendar the day your Certificate of Incorporation is issued and initiate the filing proactively, well before the clock runs out.

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 Commencement of Business Certificate (INC-20A) is

INC-20A is the statutory declaration a company must file with the Registrar of Companies (RoC) to confirm that it has legally commenced business. Introduced by the Companies (Amendment) Ordinance, 2018 and now governed by Section 10A of the Companies Act 2013 read with Rule 23A of the Companies (Incorporation) Rules 2014, it applies to every company incorporated on or after 2 November 2018 that has a share capital. The declaration must be filed within 180 days of the date of incorporation and must be accompanied by proof that every subscriber to the Memorandum of Association has paid the value of the shares they agreed to take, and that the amount has actually been received into the company's bank account.

The filing exists to close a gap that the pre-2018 incorporation framework left open: a company could be incorporated on paper — receive its Certificate of Incorporation, its Corporate Identity Number (CIN), PAN and TAN — without a single rupee of subscribed capital actually being paid in. Shell companies exploited exactly this gap. Section 10A now requires the company to prove, with a bank statement as evidence, that real money moved from each subscriber into the company's account before the company is permitted to do anything that qualifies as 'commencing business' — signing contracts, raising invoices, taking loans, exercising borrowing powers, or otherwise holding itself out as an operating entity.

INC-20A is filed as an e-form on the MCA21 portal, verified by a director's Digital Signature Certificate (DSC) and certified by a practising professional — a Chartered Accountant, Company Secretary, or Cost Accountant — who confirms that the paid-up capital has genuinely been deposited. For companies that require a sectoral regulatory approval to operate — NBFC registration from RBI, insurance licensing from IRDAI, or similar — INC-20A also requires attaching proof that the relevant regulatory approval has been obtained, because 'commencement of business' in a regulated sector is contingent on that licence being in hand.

The consequence structure is deliberately layered to force compliance rather than tolerate delay. Before INC-20A is filed, the company cannot legally borrow money, and directors who sign contracts or incur obligations on the company's behalf during this window can be personally exposed to risk if the declaration is not made within time. If the declaration is not filed within 180 days of incorporation, the company is liable to a penalty of ₹50,000, and every officer in default is liable to a penalty of ₹1,000 for each day the default continues, subject to a maximum of ₹1,00,000 per officer. If, after 180 days, the Registrar has reasonable cause to believe the company is not carrying on any business or subscribed capital has still not been brought in, the Registrar may initiate the process to remove the company's name from the register of companies under Section 248 — effectively striking it off.

When INC-20A applies

Every company incorporated on or after 2 November 2018 with a share capital — Private Limited, Public Limited, OPC, Section 8 with share capital, and Producer Companies fall squarely within Section 10A

Companies that have received their Certificate of Incorporation but have not yet opened a bank account or received subscriber money — this is the trigger event PNPC tracks from Day 1

Companies planning to sign their first vendor contract, raise their first invoice, or take their first loan — none of these should happen before INC-20A is filed and the 180-day risk window is understood

Companies in regulated sectors (NBFC, insurance intermediary, and similar) where INC-20A also requires attaching the relevant sectoral regulatory approval before it can be filed

Companies that have crossed 180 days without filing and are now assessing exposure — penalty computation, compounding strategy, and Registrar correspondence all become urgent at this stage

Companies undergoing due diligence for a funding round, bank facility, or acquisition — an unfilied or late-filed INC-20A is a standard checklist item that diligence teams flag immediately

When INC-20A does not apply

Companies incorporated before 2 November 2018 — Section 10A applies prospectively only; older companies were never required to file this specific declaration

Companies incorporated without share capital — for example, certain Section 8 companies limited by guarantee with no share capital are outside the scope of Section 10A, which is tied to paid-up share capital verification

LLPs — Limited Liability Partnerships are governed by the LLP Act 2008, not the Companies Act 2013, and have no equivalent commencement-of-business declaration requirement

Partnership firms and sole proprietorships — these are unincorporated structures with no MCA registration and therefore no INC-20A obligation

A company that has already filed INC-20A successfully — the declaration is a one-time filing per company, not a recurring annual obligation like AOC-4 or MGT-7

Structure Comparison

INC-20A obligation across different company types and incorporation dates

Entity / ScenarioINC-20A Applicable?DeadlineKey Condition
Private Limited Company (incorporated on/after 2 Nov 2018)YesWithin 180 days of incorporationSubscribed capital must be paid into company bank account first
Public Limited Company (incorporated on/after 2 Nov 2018)YesWithin 180 days of incorporationSame paid-up capital verification; additional SEBI conditions if listed
One Person Company (OPC)YesWithin 180 days of incorporationSole member's subscription must be paid up before filing
Section 8 Company with share capitalYesWithin 180 days of incorporationApplies where the company has share capital; guarantee-only structures without share capital are outside Section 10A
Producer CompanyYesWithin 180 days of incorporationSame capital verification requirement as any share-capital company
Company requiring sectoral regulatory approval (NBFC, insurance intermediary, etc.)Yes — plus regulatory proofWithin 180 days of incorporationApproval from the sectoral regulator must be attached along with capital proof
Company incorporated before 2 Nov 2018NoNot applicableSection 10A applies prospectively; pre-2018 companies were never subject to this filing
LLPNoNot applicableGoverned by LLP Act 2008; no equivalent declaration exists
Partnership Firm / ProprietorshipNoNot applicableUnincorporated; no MCA registration or Section 10A applicability

This table gives directional guidance only. Whether a specific company is within scope, and the exact timeline from your date of incorporation, should be confirmed with a practising CA — particularly for Section 8 companies and any entity awaiting a sectoral regulatory licence.

How it works
#Stage & What PNPC DoesWhat Founders and Portals Often MissTimeline
1Compliance Calendar Entry — INC-20A logged the day the Certificate of Incorporation is issuedMost portals email the COI and consider the engagement complete. The 180-day clock starts running from the date of incorporation on the COI — not from when the founder gets around to opening a bank account. PNPC logs the exact due date on Day 1.Day of COI issuance
2Bank Account Opening Advisory — Documents and process guidance for the company's current accountBanks require the COI, PAN, board resolution authorising account opening, and KYC documents for authorised signatories. Delays here directly eat into the 180-day window. PNPC prepares the board resolution and signatory documentation in advance so account opening is not the bottleneck.Within 1–2 weeks of COI
3Subscriber Capital Transfer — Each subscriber deposits their agreed share valueEvery subscriber named in the Memorandum of Association must transfer the exact value of shares they subscribed to — from their own bank account, in their own name — into the company's bank account. A round-figure transfer from the 'wrong' person, or a transfer that does not match the MoA subscription amount exactly, creates a mismatch that professionals flag during certification.As soon as the bank account is active
4Bank Statement Verification — PNPC reviews the statement before drafting the declarationThe bank statement must clearly show each subscriber's name and the exact amount matching their MoA subscription. Bulk or unclear transfers, or capital routed through an intermediary account, create certification difficulty. PNPC reviews the statement line by line before proceeding.Immediately after capital is received
5Regulatory Approval Attachment (if applicable) — For NBFC, insurance intermediary, and similarly regulated companiesCompanies requiring a sectoral licence to commence business cannot file INC-20A on capital proof alone — proof of the regulatory approval itself must be attached. Missing this attachment is a common cause of resubmission for regulated-sector companies.As soon as the sectoral approval is obtained
6Professional Certification — CA/CS/CMA certifies the declarationINC-20A must be certified by a practising Chartered Accountant, Company Secretary, or Cost Accountant confirming that the paid-up capital has genuinely been received. PNPC's certifying partner reviews the full paper trail — MoA subscription list, bank statement, and (where applicable) regulatory approval — before certifying.Day the paperwork is complete
7DSC-Based e-Filing on MCA21 — INC-20A form prepared and filedThe form is filed electronically on the MCA21 portal, digitally signed by a director and the certifying professional. PNPC handles the entire electronic filing and tracks the Service Request Number (SRN) for status.Immediately after certification
8MCA Query Handling (if raised) — Responding to Registrar observationsThe RoC occasionally raises queries — a mismatch between subscription amount and bank credit, an illegible bank statement, or an incomplete attachment. Portals that only 'submit and forget' leave founders to figure out query responses alone. PNPC drafts and files the response directly.As and when raised — typically resolved within days
9Confirmation of Filing — SRN status tracked to approvalOnce approved, the company's MCA master data reflects that Section 10A compliance is complete, and the company can now legally exercise its borrowing powers and commence business activity in the true legal sense.Typically processed within a few working days of filing, subject to MCA processing timelines
10Auditor Appointment Cross-Check — ADT-1 status verified alongside INC-20AINC-20A and the first auditor appointment (Form ADT-1, due within 30 days of incorporation) are two separate but closely timed obligations. PNPC checks that ADT-1 has been filed as part of the same post-incorporation engagement, since a lapsed auditor appointment complicates first-year accounts.Cross-checked as part of the INC-20A engagement
11Late Filing Assessment (where 180 days have already passed) — Penalty computation and regularisation pathFor companies that come to PNPC after the deadline has passed, we first compute the exact penalty exposure — ₹50,000 on the company plus ₹1,000/day per officer in default (capped at ₹1,00,000 per officer) — and file the declaration along with the additional fee through the MCA portal to bring the company back into compliance.As soon as engaged — the exposure grows every day of further delay
12Strike-Off Risk Review — For companies significantly overdueIf the Registrar has reasonable cause to believe the company has not commenced business and capital remains unpaid well beyond 180 days, Section 248 strike-off proceedings can follow. PNPC assesses this risk for long-overdue cases and advises on the fastest path to regularisation or, if the company is genuinely defunct, an orderly closure instead.Assessed case by case for significantly overdue companies
13Post-Filing Advisory — What INC-20A unlocksOnce filed and approved, the company can legally sign contracts, raise invoices, exercise its borrowing powers, and operate without the Section 10A cloud over every transaction. PNPC briefs the founder on this transition and folds INC-20A completion into the annual compliance calendar going forward.Immediately after approval

Realistic timeline for a straightforward filing with capital already received: 2–5 working days from engagement to MCA submission, plus MCA's own processing time. The binding constraint is almost always how quickly the bank account is opened and subscriber capital is transferred — not the filing itself. PNPC begins tracking the 180-day deadline from Day 1 of incorporation, not from when the client reaches out.

Document Checklist
Company-Level Documents

Certificate of Incorporation (COI) — confirms the incorporation date from which the 180-day period is computed

Memorandum of Association (MoA) — showing the subscriber list and the value of shares each subscriber agreed to take

Articles of Association (AoA) — for reference on share allotment and capital-related provisions

PAN and TAN of the company — required for board resolution and banking documentation

Board resolution authorising opening of the company's bank account and naming authorised signatories

Bank Account & Capital Proof

Certificate of the bank confirming the company's current account is active, or the account opening confirmation letter

Bank statement showing credit entries for each subscriber's share capital — names and amounts must match the MoA subscription list exactly

Proof of remittance for each subscriber — if capital is transferred via NEFT/RTGS/cheque, the transaction reference should be traceable to the named subscriber

For NRI or foreign subscribers — proof that the capital was remitted through normal banking channels and, where FDI is involved, that FEMA pricing and reporting requirements are being tracked separately

Director & Signatory Documents

Digital Signature Certificate (DSC) of the director who will digitally sign the INC-20A form

DIN (Director Identification Number) of the signing director — confirmed active and not disqualified under Section 164(2)

PAN and identity proof of the signing director, consistent with MCA records

Professional Certification

Engagement of a practising Chartered Accountant, Company Secretary, or Cost Accountant to certify the declaration

Working papers supporting the certification — the certifying professional's own verification of the bank statement against the MoA subscription list

Digital Signature Certificate of the certifying professional, for co-signing the e-form

Regulatory Approval (Where Applicable)

Copy of the sectoral regulatory approval or licence — for example, RBI certificate of registration for an NBFC, or IRDAI approval for an insurance intermediary

Any correspondence confirming the approval is final and unconditional, not provisional or pending further conditions

For Late or Overdue Filings

A clear timeline of events since incorporation — when the bank account was opened, when capital was actually received, and reasons for delay, for internal record and professional assessment

Computation of additional MCA fee applicable for late filing, and any officer-level penalty exposure under Section 10A that needs to be addressed

Confirmation of current DIN and DSC status for all directors, since a long gap since incorporation sometimes coincides with a lapsed DSC or DIR-3 KYC default

Ongoing obligations
PhaseTriggered ByPNPC's RoleRisk If Ignored
Incorporation DayCertificate of Incorporation issuedINC-20A due date logged immediately — 180 days from the COI date — and added to the client's compliance calendar alongside ADT-1 (30-day auditor appointment).Founders treat COI as the finish line and lose track of the 180-day clock from Day 1.
Bank Account & Capital InfusionCompany opens its current accountBoard resolution and signatory KYC prepared in advance so account opening does not become the bottleneck. Subscribers guided on exact transfer amounts matching the MoA.Delayed account opening or mismatched capital transfers push the filing close to — or past — the deadline.
Pre-180-Day WindowCapital received, documents readyPNPC verifies the bank statement, obtains professional certification, and files INC-20A well ahead of the deadline — never in the final days when MCA portal congestion is more likely.Last-minute filing risks a missed deadline if the MCA portal is slow or a query is raised with no time to respond.
180-Day DeadlineStatutory cut-off under Section 10AFor clients on PNPC's compliance calendar, the filing is complete well before this date. For clients who engage late, PNPC assesses exposure and files immediately with the applicable additional fee.₹50,000 penalty on the company; ₹1,000/day penalty per officer in default, capped at ₹1,00,000 per officer, for continuing default.
Post-Deadline, Pre-Strike-OffCompany still has not filedPNPC computes the full penalty exposure, prepares the regularisation filing, and advises on whether a compounding application or professional representation to the Registrar is needed.Registrar may form the view the company is not carrying on business and initiate removal of the company's name under Section 248.
Post-Filing, Ongoing ComplianceINC-20A approvedINC-20A is a one-time filing — PNPC folds the company into its standard annual compliance calendar (ADT-1 already tracked, then AOC-4, MGT-7, ITR-6, DIR-3 KYC and the rest of the annual cycle).Treating INC-20A as the end of post-incorporation compliance, rather than the first item on an ongoing calendar, leads to missed annual filings later.
Frequently asked
What is INC-20A in simple terms?

It is a declaration a newly incorporated company must file with the Registrar of Companies confirming that the money its founders promised to invest as share capital has actually been paid into the company's bank account. Until this declaration is filed, the company cannot legally start business, sign binding contracts in the ordinary course, or borrow money.

Practitioner noteMany founders assume the Certificate of Incorporation means they are free to operate immediately. Legally, INC-20A is the missing piece — and it has its own hard deadline.
Which companies are required to file INC-20A?

Every company incorporated on or after 2 November 2018 that has a share capital — this covers Private Limited Companies, Public Limited Companies, One Person Companies, Section 8 companies with share capital, and Producer Companies. Companies incorporated before that date, and companies without share capital, are outside the scope of Section 10A.

Practitioner noteWe check the incorporation date first — it is the single fact that determines whether Section 10A even applies to a given company.
What is the exact deadline for filing INC-20A?

Within 180 days from the date of incorporation as shown on the Certificate of Incorporation. This is a hard statutory deadline under Section 10A of the Companies Act 2013 — there is no automatic extension, though the government has, on rare occasions, granted a general relaxation during exceptional circumstances such as system outages.

Practitioner noteWe count the 180 days from the COI date, not from any later event like bank account opening. Founders sometimes miscalculate by anchoring to the wrong start date.
What happens if a company misses the 180-day INC-20A deadline?

The company becomes liable to a penalty of ₹50,000. Every officer in default is separately liable to a penalty of ₹1,000 for each day the default continues, subject to a maximum of ₹1,00,000 per officer. Beyond the monetary penalty, the company legally cannot commence business or borrow money until the declaration is filed, and prolonged non-compliance exposes the company to the risk of the Registrar initiating strike-off proceedings.

Practitioner noteThe per-day officer penalty is what makes delay expensive — the longer a company waits after realising it has missed the deadline, the larger the exposure grows. File the moment you realise it is overdue; do not wait.
Can a company be struck off the register for not filing INC-20A?

Yes, in the worst case. If the Registrar has reasonable cause to believe, after the 180-day period, that the company is not carrying on any business or that the subscribed capital has still not been brought in, the Registrar may initiate proceedings to remove the company's name from the register of companies under Section 248 of the Companies Act 2013.

Practitioner noteIn practice this is typically reserved for companies with prolonged, unaddressed non-compliance — but it is a real risk, not a theoretical one, and we treat any client past the deadline as urgent.
What documents does INC-20A require?

The core requirement is proof that subscriber capital has been paid into the company's bank account — typically the bank statement showing each subscriber's credit matching their subscription in the Memorandum of Association. For companies requiring a sectoral regulatory approval before commencing business (such as an NBFC or insurance intermediary), proof of that approval must also be attached. The form itself is certified by a practising CA, CS, or Cost Accountant and digitally signed by a director.

Practitioner noteThe bank statement is the single most scrutinised document. We review it line by line before certifying — a mismatched name or amount is the most common reason for a query from the Registrar.
Who can certify the INC-20A declaration?

A practising Chartered Accountant, Company Secretary, or Cost Accountant must certify the declaration, confirming that they have verified the paid-up capital has genuinely been received into the company's bank account. This professional certification is a mandatory part of the e-form.

Practitioner notePNPC's certifying partners review the full paper trail before signing — capital certification is a professional representation to the Registrar and is not treated as a formality.
Is there a minimum amount of paid-up capital required before INC-20A can be filed?

No specific minimum threshold applies — since 2015 there is no statutory minimum paid-up capital requirement for incorporation. What matters for INC-20A is that whatever capital each subscriber agreed to in the Memorandum of Association has actually and fully been paid into the company's bank account. Partial payment by a subscriber does not satisfy the requirement for that subscriber's shares.

Practitioner noteWe have seen filings held up because one subscriber paid a round number that did not match their exact MoA subscription. The amount must reconcile precisely, not approximately.
Can a company operate — sign contracts, raise invoices — before filing INC-20A?

Legally, a company should not commence business or exercise borrowing powers until INC-20A is filed and the declaration confirms paid-up capital has been received. Directors who cause the company to sign contracts or incur obligations in this window before filing carry heightened compliance and personal-exposure risk. The safer and correct approach is to treat INC-20A as a precondition to any commercial activity, not a formality to complete alongside it.

Practitioner noteWe advise clients to hold off on signing their first major vendor or customer contract until INC-20A is filed — even though the 180-day window technically allows time, there is no reason to create avoidable risk when the filing itself typically takes only a few days once capital is in.
Does INC-20A need to be filed every year, like AOC-4 or MGT-7?

No. INC-20A is a one-time declaration filed once, shortly after incorporation, confirming commencement of business. It is not part of the recurring annual compliance cycle. Once approved, the company moves on to its regular annual obligations — statutory audit, AOC-4, MGT-7, ITR-6, DIR-3 KYC, and so on.

Practitioner noteWe occasionally get asked whether INC-20A needs to be refiled each year — it does not. But founders sometimes confuse it with the auditor appointment (ADT-1) or the AGM cycle, which are recurring. We are careful to distinguish the two when briefing new clients.
What is the government fee for filing INC-20A?

The MCA charges a filing fee for INC-20A based on the company's authorised share capital, on the same fee schedule that applies to other MCA e-forms. If filed after the 180-day deadline, an additional fee applies on top of the normal filing fee, calculated per day of delay under the MCA's additional fee framework. PNPC computes the exact fee applicable to your specific capital slab and filing date before submission.

Practitioner noteWe always confirm the current fee schedule at the time of filing rather than quoting from memory — MCA fee schedules are revised periodically, and a stale figure is worse than no figure.
How does INC-20A relate to the ADT-1 auditor appointment filing?

They are separate obligations that happen to fall in a similar early window. ADT-1 — the notice of appointment of the company's first statutory auditor — must be filed within 30 days of incorporation, following the auditor's appointment at the first Board meeting. INC-20A has a longer 180-day window and depends on subscriber capital actually being paid in. PNPC tracks both on the same post-incorporation compliance calendar so neither is missed while attention is on the other.

Practitioner noteWe see occasional confusion between the two because both are 'early' filings. ADT-1's 30-day window is much tighter and unrelated to capital infusion — it should never wait for INC-20A to be ready.
What if a subscriber cannot pay their share capital within 180 days?

If a subscriber genuinely cannot bring in their capital within the 180-day window, the company faces a real compliance problem — INC-20A cannot be filed truthfully without the capital being received, and the 180-day statutory clock does not pause for a subscriber's personal delay. Options in this situation include the subscriber arranging funds urgently, another party stepping in to subscribe to those shares through a formal amendment process, or the company accepting the penalty exposure while resolving the capital issue. This scenario should be flagged to your CA the moment it looks likely, not after the deadline has passed.

Practitioner noteWe ask about each subscriber's readiness to fund their subscription during the pre-incorporation consultation itself, precisely to avoid this problem arising after incorporation when options narrow.
Can INC-20A be filed if the company has not yet opened a bank account?

No. INC-20A requires proof that subscriber capital has been credited to the company's own bank account. A company cannot file the declaration until its bank account is open and the capital has actually landed in it. This makes bank account opening the practical first bottleneck in the 180-day timeline, which is why PNPC prepares the account-opening documentation immediately after incorporation rather than waiting for the client to initiate it.

Practitioner noteBank account opening can itself take one to two weeks depending on the bank's own KYC process. We start this the day the COI is issued so it never becomes the reason a filing runs late.
Does a foreign subscriber's capital contribution to INC-20A trigger any FEMA obligations?

Yes. When a person resident outside India subscribes to shares of an Indian company, that inflow constitutes Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) under FEMA, and separately from INC-20A, the company must report the share allotment to the RBI by filing Form FC-GPR on the FIRMS portal within 30 days of allotment. INC-20A and FC-GPR are distinct filings with different timelines and different authorities, but both stem from the same subscriber capital event, so PNPC tracks them together for companies with foreign subscribers.

Practitioner noteWe flag the FC-GPR requirement the moment a foreign subscriber is identified — it is easy to focus on the INC-20A deadline alone and lose sight of the separate RBI reporting obligation.
What if the RoC raises a query on the INC-20A filing?

The Registrar may raise a query if there is a mismatch — for instance, the bank credit does not match the exact subscription amount for a subscriber, the bank statement is unclear, or a required attachment (such as a sectoral regulatory approval) is missing. The company must respond within the time allowed in the query, typically by resubmitting the form with corrected information or additional documents. Repeated defective resubmissions can push the filing close to or past the 180-day deadline, so getting the first submission right matters.

Practitioner noteWe review the bank statement and subscription list against each other before the first submission specifically to avoid a resubmission cycle eating into the deadline.
Is INC-20A required for a company that raised its entire capital in cash rather than by bank transfer?

Practically speaking, no — capital contributions towards share subscription should be routed through banking channels so that the payment is verifiable on a bank statement, which is the primary evidence required for INC-20A certification. Cash contributions are difficult to evidence in a way that satisfies the certifying professional and the Registrar, and large cash transactions can separately attract scrutiny under other provisions of law. PNPC advises all subscribers to route their capital through a bank transfer, cheque, or demand draft — never cash — specifically to keep the INC-20A trail clean.

Practitioner noteThis comes up more often than people expect, especially with family-run businesses used to cash transactions. We address it directly in the pre-incorporation briefing.
Can PNPC help a company that is already past the 180-day deadline?

Yes. PNPC regularly assists companies that engage us after the deadline has already passed. The process starts with confirming exactly how late the filing is, computing the applicable additional MCA fee and the officer-level penalty exposure under Section 10A, verifying that subscriber capital has in fact been received, and then filing the declaration without further delay. The exposure only grows the longer the company waits, so we treat these engagements as urgent.

Practitioner noteWe have regularised INC-20A filings for companies that were unaware of the requirement entirely — often first-time founders who used a portal for incorporation and were never told about this deadline. The earlier we are engaged after the deadline passes, the smaller the eventual penalty exposure.
Does INC-20A apply to a company incorporated with the SPICe+ form?

Yes. SPICe+ is simply the integrated incorporation form used to obtain the Certificate of Incorporation, PAN, TAN, and other initial registrations in a single filing. It does not itself satisfy the Section 10A requirement — INC-20A is a distinct, separate filing that must be made after incorporation, once subscriber capital has actually been paid in.

Practitioner noteThis is one of the most common points of confusion we see. Founders sometimes believe that because SPICe+ was a comprehensive form, everything post-incorporation is automatically taken care of. It is not — INC-20A is a deliberate, separate step.
What proof does PNPC need that subscriber capital has been paid?

The company's bank statement showing the credit entries, clearly reflecting each subscriber's name (or a traceable payment reference) and an amount matching their subscription in the Memorandum of Association exactly. Where a payment is made by cheque or demand draft, the cleared instrument reference on the statement is generally sufficient; where made by electronic transfer, the transaction reference and remitter name should be visible.

Practitioner noteWe ask clients to share the bank statement as soon as capital is received rather than waiting until all subscribers have paid — this lets us catch a mismatched amount early, while there is still time to correct it before the deadline.
Is a fresh Digital Signature Certificate needed to file INC-20A, or can the one used for incorporation be reused?

The DSC used at incorporation can generally be reused for INC-20A, provided it is still valid and belongs to a person authorised to sign on the company's behalf, such as a director. DSCs have a validity period (commonly one to three years depending on the class and issuance) and can lapse between incorporation and the INC-20A filing if there has been a long gap. PNPC checks DSC validity before initiating any MCA filing.

Practitioner noteAn expired DSC discovered mid-filing is an avoidable delay. We verify validity as the very first step of any filing engagement, not after documents are already prepared.
Does a company with Nil business activity in its first six months still need to file INC-20A?

Yes. INC-20A is not conditional on the company having actually transacted business — it is a declaration that the company is now legally permitted to commence business, based on subscriber capital having been received. A company with genuinely no activity in its early months still needs to bring in the subscribed capital and file the declaration within 180 days; the filing obligation does not pause simply because the company has not yet started operating commercially.

Practitioner noteWe tell every new client the same thing: incorporation activity level has no bearing on the INC-20A deadline. The clock runs from the COI date regardless of whether the company has issued a single invoice.
What is the difference between 'incorporation' and 'commencement of business' under the Companies Act?

Incorporation is the legal act of the company coming into existence as a separate legal person, evidenced by the Certificate of Incorporation. Commencement of business is a distinct, later legal threshold — the point at which the company is authorised to actually exercise its corporate powers, such as entering into contracts in the ordinary course and exercising borrowing powers. Since the introduction of Section 10A in 2018, that threshold is formally marked by the successful filing of INC-20A.

Practitioner noteThis distinction is the entire reason INC-20A exists. Before 2018, incorporation alone was treated as sufficient to begin operating — which allowed shell companies to be registered and misused without ever proving real capital had come in.
Can a director be held personally liable if INC-20A is not filed?

Every officer in default — which typically includes directors responsible for compliance — is personally liable to a penalty of ₹1,000 for each day of continuing default, capped at ₹1,00,000 per officer, in addition to the ₹50,000 penalty on the company itself. Directors who cause the company to conduct business or exercise borrowing powers before the declaration is filed also carry a heightened compliance risk under Section 10A.

Practitioner noteWe make sure every director understands this is a personal exposure, not just a company-level cost. It tends to focus attention far more effectively than describing it purely as a corporate penalty.
How quickly can PNPC file INC-20A once subscriber capital is received?

Once the bank statement clearly shows the subscriber capital credited and matching the MoA subscription list, and any required regulatory approval (where applicable) is available, PNPC typically completes verification, professional certification, and MCA e-filing within a few working days. The binding constraint before that point is almost always how quickly the bank account was opened and capital was transferred — not the filing process itself.

Practitioner noteWe do not wait for every last administrative item to be perfect before filing — once the core capital-proof requirement is satisfied, we move immediately rather than let the filing sit.
If a company changes its registered office or authorised capital before filing INC-20A, does that affect the filing?

It can add complexity but does not remove the underlying obligation. Any change in registered office (Form INC-22) or authorised capital (Form SH-7) filed in the interim should be reflected correctly and consistently before INC-20A is filed, since MCA cross-checks company master data across filings. PNPC reviews the company's current MCA master data before filing INC-20A to ensure consistency across all recent filings.

Practitioner noteWe have seen filings queried simply because an intervening address change had not been properly reflected in MCA records before INC-20A was submitted. A quick master-data check avoids this.
Does PNPC track INC-20A as part of its standard incorporation engagement, or is it a separate service?

For clients who engage PNPC for incorporation, INC-20A tracking and filing is built into the standard post-incorporation engagement — logged on Day 1 of the Certificate of Incorporation and initiated proactively as capital comes in. For clients who incorporated elsewhere (through another firm or an online portal) and later engage PNPC specifically for INC-20A, it is offered as a standalone filing engagement with its own fixed, agreed fee.

Practitioner noteA meaningful share of our INC-20A engagements are exactly this second category — founders who incorporated through a portal, were never told about the 180-day requirement, and reach out only once they realise the deadline exists. We handle both scenarios regularly.
What happens to a company's ability to raise funding if INC-20A has not been filed?

An unfiled or overdue INC-20A is a standard item that investor due diligence teams check, because it directly indicates whether the company has legally commenced business and whether subscriber capital was actually received as represented in the cap table. A gap here can delay a funding round while it is resolved, and depending on how overdue the filing is, it may also require addressing accumulated penalty exposure before the round closes.

Practitioner noteWe recommend clients preparing for a funding round confirm INC-20A status early in the diligence-preparation process — it is a simple thing to check and an easy thing to fix if caught early, but an awkward last-minute discovery if it surfaces during the investor's own diligence.
Is INC-20A applicable to a wholly-owned subsidiary of a foreign parent company incorporated in India?

Yes. A wholly-owned Indian subsidiary of a foreign parent is incorporated under the Companies Act 2013 like any other Indian company with share capital, and Section 10A applies in the same way — the parent company's capital contribution must be paid into the Indian subsidiary's bank account and evidenced before INC-20A is filed within 180 days. The FDI angle adds the parallel FC-GPR reporting obligation to RBI, but does not change the INC-20A requirement itself.

Practitioner noteFor our UAE-based clients setting up an Indian subsidiary, we coordinate the parent company's capital remittance timing with the 180-day INC-20A window from the outset, so the two obligations are planned together rather than discovered as separate problems.
Why should a company use a CA firm like PNPC instead of filing INC-20A itself or through a portal?

INC-20A is a short filing on paper, but it requires professional certification by law, careful matching of bank credits against MoA subscription amounts, correct handling of any sectoral regulatory attachment, and — most importantly — proactive tracking of a 180-day deadline that portals routinely leave to the founder to remember. PNPC logs the deadline the day the Certificate of Incorporation is issued, prepares the bank account documentation in advance, verifies the capital trail before certifying, and files well ahead of the cut-off rather than in the final days.

Practitioner noteThe clients we see with INC-20A problems are almost never clients who used a CA firm from incorporation onward. They are, overwhelmingly, founders who used a portal for a low-cost incorporation and were never told this deadline existed at all.
How much does PNPC charge for INC-20A filing?

PNPC quotes a fixed, agreed professional fee for INC-20A — whether as part of a full incorporation engagement or as a standalone filing for a company incorporated elsewhere. The fee is confirmed in writing before work begins, and for overdue filings, we separately quantify the additional MCA fee and any penalty exposure so the client sees the complete cost picture upfront.

Practitioner noteWe do not add hidden charges for a query response from the Registrar within the scope of the original filing — that is treated as part of the engagement, not a separate billable event.
What is the role of the Memorandum of Association in the INC-20A filing?

The Memorandum of Association lists every original subscriber to the company's shares and the value each agreed to pay. This subscription list is the reference point against which the bank statement is checked — INC-20A essentially proves that the promises made in the MoA at incorporation have actually been honoured in cash, in the company's own bank account.

Practitioner noteWe keep a clean copy of the MoA subscription table on file specifically for this cross-check — it removes any ambiguity about who owed what before we review the bank statement.
Can INC-20A be revised or refiled after approval if an error is later discovered?

Once INC-20A is approved by the Registrar, it is not designed to be routinely refiled or revised. If a genuine error is discovered after approval — for instance, in the underlying capital records — the appropriate course of action depends on the nature of the error and may involve professional advice on rectification through the correct MCA mechanism rather than a simple resubmission. This is a low-frequency, fact-specific scenario that should be discussed directly with your CA rather than assumed to have a standard fix.

Practitioner noteWe have not seen this arise often in practice, precisely because careful pre-filing verification of the bank statement against the MoA is designed to prevent it from happening in the first place.
Why PNPC Global
What You NeedGeneric CA / PortalPNPC Global
Deadline trackingCOI emailed; 180-day clock left to the founder to rememberLogged on the compliance calendar the day the Certificate of Incorporation is issued
Bank account documentationFounder arranges independently, often after realising it is neededBoard resolution and signatory KYC prepared proactively right after incorporation
Capital verificationBank statement accepted at face valueLine-by-line match against MoA subscription list before certification
Professional certificationOutsourced or generic sign-offCertified by PNPC's own practising CA after independent verification
Sectoral approval attachmentsOften missed for NBFC/insurance-intermediary casesChecked and attached as part of the standard filing review
Query handlingLeft to the founder to interpret and respondDrafted and filed directly by PNPC on the client's behalf
Late-filing casesTreated as a standalone problem with no contextPenalty exposure computed, capital re-verified, and filed urgently as part of a full regularisation review
Post-filing continuityEngagement ends at COI or at INC-20ARolled directly into the client's ongoing annual compliance calendar — ADT-1, AOC-4, MGT-7, ITR-6, DIR-3 KYC and beyond

What the PNPC package includes

  1. 01

    INC-20A due date logged on your compliance calendar the day the Certificate of Incorporation is issued

  2. 02

    Board resolution and KYC documentation prepared in advance for bank account opening

  3. 03

    Guidance to each subscriber on the exact capital amount and payment method to avoid mismatches

  4. 04

    Line-by-line verification of the bank statement against the Memorandum of Association subscription list

  5. 05

    Attachment of sectoral regulatory approval where the company requires one (NBFC, insurance intermediary, and similar)

  6. 06

    Professional certification by a PNPC practising Chartered Accountant

  7. 07

    Complete DSC-based e-filing of INC-20A on the MCA21 portal

  8. 08

    MCA query drafting and response, handled directly with the Registrar if raised

  9. 09

    For overdue filings — full penalty computation, capital re-verification, and urgent regularisation filing

  10. 10

    Cross-check of ADT-1 (auditor appointment) status as part of the same post-incorporation engagement

  11. 11

    INC-20A completion folded directly into your ongoing annual compliance calendar

Speak with a PNPC Chartered Accountant about your INC-20A deadline — whether you have just been incorporated or are already past the 180-day window. We will confirm exactly where you stand and what needs to happen next, in writing, before any engagement begins.

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