FEMA & RBI · FDI & ODI Compliance
FC-GPR, FC-TRS & FIRMS Portal Reporting
FC-GPR and FC-TRS are not paperwork you file after a deal closes — they are the mandatory RBI record that makes a foreign investment legally recognised in India.
Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986
FC-GPR and FC-TRS are not paperwork you file after a deal closes — they are the mandatory RBI record that makes a foreign investment legally recognised in India. Miss the 30-day window, misreport the pricing, or use the wrong form, and the investment sits in a compliance grey zone that surfaces at the worst possible moment: your next funding round's due diligence, a bank's KYC refresh, or an RBI compounding notice years later. PNPC Global has filed FIRMS portal reports for founders, NRIs, foreign parents, and funds across India and the UAE since 1986. We treat the filing as the last mile of a transaction we understood from day one — not a form we fill in isolation.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
FC-GPR (Foreign Currency-Gross Provisional Return) and FC-TRS (Foreign Currency-Transfer of Shares) are the two most common reporting forms under the Foreign Exchange Management (Mode of Payment and Reporting of Non-Debt Instruments) Regulations, 2019, filed by Indian companies on the RBI's FIRMS (Foreign Investment Reporting and Management System) portal. FC-GPR reports a fresh issue of equity shares, compulsorily convertible preference shares, or compulsorily convertible debentures to a person resident outside India — in other words, whenever a company allots new capital instruments to a foreign investor, whether a VC fund, an NRI, an OCI, or a foreign parent. FC-TRS reports the transfer of existing capital instruments between a resident and a non-resident — a foreign investor buying shares from an Indian shareholder, an Indian buyer acquiring shares from a foreign shareholder, or a transfer between two non-resident holders where at least one side of the transaction changes the residential status mix on the register. Both forms exist to give RBI a real-time, transaction-level record of every rupee of foreign equity capital entering or moving within an Indian company, feeding into the country's external sector data and enabling RBI to monitor sectoral caps, pricing compliance, and repatriation exposure.
The FIRMS portal itself is the single-window reporting system RBI introduced to replace the earlier physical and Ebiz-based filing process. Every Indian company that has ever received FDI, or intends to, must first complete a one-time Entity Master registration on FIRMS before any transaction-specific form (FC-GPR, FC-TRS, and others such as LLP-I, LLP-II, CN, ESOP, DRR, InVI) can be filed against it. This Entity Master captures the company's basic details, sector classification, and authorised signatory information, and is a prerequisite step that is frequently underestimated in the filing timeline — a company that has never filed on FIRMS before must budget time for entity registration and approval before the transaction form itself can even be opened. Both forms require a Unique Identification Number (UIN) to be generated by RBI upon successful submission; the UIN is the definitive proof that a specific tranche of foreign investment has been reported and accepted, and its absence is one of the first things a due diligence team checks in a subsequent funding round or acquisition.
The reporting deadline is strict and mechanical, but the substance behind the filing is where genuine advisory work happens. FC-GPR must be filed within 30 days of the date of allotment of shares — not 30 days from receipt of funds, not 30 days from the Board resolution, but from the date the company's Board (or a delegated committee) actually allots and records the shares in its statutory registers. FC-TRS must be filed within 60 days of the date of receipt of the amount of consideration for the transfer, or the date of transfer itself, whichever is earlier under the prescribed timeline, and the form requires the mandatory involvement of an Authorised Dealer (AD) Category-I bank as the reporting conduit — the transferee (in a resident-to-non-resident or non-resident-to-non-resident sale) submits the form through the bank, which reviews supporting documents before forwarding it on FIRMS. Both filings require a Chartered Accountant's certificate confirming that the pricing complies with FEMA's pricing guidelines (fair value not breached in the relevant direction), and the underlying valuation report, KYC of the remitting bank, and the FIRC (Foreign Inward Remittance Certificate) or equivalent proof of funds inflow through normal banking channels via an AD Category-I bank.
Delay or omission carries real consequence: a late FC-GPR or FC-TRS filing does not, by itself, invalidate the share allotment or transfer under company law, but it constitutes a contravention of FEMA reporting requirements that must be regularised through the Late Submission Fee (LSF) framework introduced by RBI, or in more serious or aged cases, through a formal compounding application to the Regional Office of RBI or the Compounding Authority under Section 15 of FEMA, 1999. The LSF is a graded, formula-based fee tied to the amount of the transaction and the number of days of delay, designed as an administrative alternative to compounding for straightforward late filings; more complex contraventions — wrong pricing, wrong route, unreported downstream investment — typically still require compounding, which involves a written application, supporting documents, and payment of a compounding amount determined by RBI after considering the nature and gravity of the contravention. A pattern of unreported or late-reported FDI transactions is one of the most common issues that surfaces during investor due diligence, bank KYC refresh, or a strategic acquirer's legal review — and it is materially more expensive, in fees and management time, to regularise after the fact than to file correctly and on time in the first place.
When you need FC-GPR / FC-TRS / FIRMS reporting
Your company has allotted (or is about to allot) equity shares, CCPS, or CCDs to a foreign investor, NRI, or OCI — FC-GPR is due within 30 days of the allotment date, and the clock starts regardless of whether the paperwork is ready
An existing foreign shareholder is selling shares to a resident buyer, or a resident is selling shares to a foreign buyer, or shares are moving between two non-resident holders — FC-TRS is required and must route through an AD Category-I bank
Your company has never filed on the RBI FIRMS portal before and needs Entity Master registration completed before any transaction-specific form can be filed — this is a prerequisite step, not an optional one
You have discovered a foreign investment tranche from a prior year that was never reported to RBI, and need to assess whether Late Submission Fee regularisation or a full compounding application is the appropriate route
An investor's due diligence team, or a bank's periodic KYC refresh, has flagged a missing UIN (Unique Identification Number) against a share allotment or transfer on your cap table
You are preparing for a funding round and want your FEMA reporting position fully clean and verifiable before a new investor's legal team reviews the company
Your company has received investment under a compulsorily convertible instrument and now needs to report the conversion into equity, which triggers its own reporting requirement distinct from the original FC-GPR
An NRI or foreign national is both a director and a shareholder, and their share subscription needs FC-GPR filing coordinated alongside the incorporation or allotment paperwork
When this may not be the right engagement
Your investment structure, sector eligibility, and pricing methodology are not yet finalised — that upstream question is FDI structuring advisory, and should be resolved before the mechanical FC-GPR/FC-TRS filing is engaged
You are investing out of India into a foreign entity rather than receiving inbound investment — that is Overseas Direct Investment (ODI), reported via the OPI/ODI forms on FIRMS, a different filing track from FC-GPR/FC-TRS
Your company needs to file the Annual Return on Foreign Liabilities and Assets (FLA return) for an existing foreign investment — that is a distinct annual RBI filing (due 15 July each year) rather than a transaction-triggered report, though PNPC also handles this as part of an ongoing FEMA compliance retainer
You are an LLP receiving foreign capital contribution — that uses LLP-I and LLP-II reporting forms on FIRMS, a related but separate filing track from the company-specific FC-GPR/FC-TRS
The foreign investment is structured as an optionally convertible or redeemable instrument rather than equity or a compulsorily convertible instrument — that is treated as External Commercial Borrowing (ECB) under a different FEMA framework entirely, not FDI reporting
You are only exploring whether to accept foreign investment and have no term sheet, allotment date, or transfer agreement yet — there is nothing to report until an actual allotment or transfer takes place
FC-GPR vs FC-TRS vs related FIRMS portal reports
| Feature | FC-GPR | FC-TRS | FLA Return | LLP-I / LLP-II |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| What it reports | Fresh issue/allotment of equity, CCPS, or CCDs to a non-resident | Transfer of existing shares between resident and non-resident (either direction) | Annual stock position of all foreign assets and liabilities of the company | Foreign capital contribution into or transfer of an LLP's contribution |
| Filing trigger | Allotment of shares/instruments to a non-resident investor | Sale/purchase/gift of shares involving a change in resident/non-resident holding | Existence of any foreign investment or overseas asset as on 31 March | Foreign contribution received by, or capital transfer within, an LLP |
| Statutory deadline | Within 30 days of the date of allotment | Within 60 days of receipt of consideration or transfer, whichever is earlier | By 15 July every year (based on unaudited figures if audit is pending) | Within 30 days of receipt (LLP-I) or transfer (LLP-II) |
| Filed by | The Indian investee company, via its authorised signatory on FIRMS | The resident transferee (or transferor, depending on transaction direction) through an AD Category-I bank | The Indian company directly on the RBI FLAIR portal (a separate system from FIRMS) | The LLP, via its designated partner |
| AD bank involvement | Reporting company deals directly with RBI via FIRMS; AD bank confirms KYC/FIRC of remittance | Mandatory — form is routed through and reviewed by an AD Category-I bank before RBI acceptance | Not applicable — filed directly on FLAIR | Similar AD bank routing as FC-TRS in most cases |
| CA certificate required | Yes — pricing/valuation compliance certificate from a CA or Merchant Banker | Yes — pricing compliance certificate confirming fair value floor is respected | Not applicable — self-certified financial data | Yes, in most transaction scenarios |
| Outcome of successful filing | RBI-generated Unique Identification Number (UIN) against the allotment | RBI acknowledgment recorded against the transfer on FIRMS | Acknowledgment receipt from FLAIR; no UIN concept | Acknowledgment on FIRMS |
| Consequence of delay | Late Submission Fee (graded by transaction value and delay) or compounding for aged/complex cases | Late Submission Fee or compounding, same framework as FC-GPR | Compounding exposure for non-filing; recurring annual obligation independent of transaction activity | Similar LSF/compounding exposure as FC-GPR/FC-TRS |
This table gives directional guidance only. The RBI periodically updates the FIRMS user manual, Master Direction on Reporting under FEMA, and the Late Submission Fee framework — always confirm current forms, fields, and fee formulas before filing. A pre-filing review with a practising CA is essential, particularly for transfers involving pricing at the fair value boundary or investors connected to a land-border country.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | CA Advice Portals Never Give | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Transaction Intake & Classification — Confirm which form actually applies | We start by confirming the transaction is genuinely a fresh allotment (FC-GPR) versus a transfer of existing shares (FC-TRS) versus a conversion of an already-reported instrument — founders sometimes describe a transaction informally in a way that maps to the wrong form entirely, and filing the wrong form is rejected only after review time is lost. | Day 1–2 |
| 2 | FIRMS Entity Master Check — Is the company already registered on the portal? | If your company has never received foreign investment before, Entity Master registration on FIRMS is a prerequisite that must be completed and approved before any transaction form can be opened. We check this first — a company assuming it can file FC-GPR directly discovers this gap only when the portal blocks the transaction form. | Day 1–3 if new registration is needed; immediate if already registered |
| 3 | Allotment or Transfer Date Verification — The 30-day/60-day clock starts here, precisely | For FC-GPR, the clock runs from the date the Board (or a duly authorised committee) actually allots the shares and the allotment is recorded in the Register of Members — not from the date funds were received, not from the date of the Board resolution authorising the allotment in principle. For FC-TRS, we confirm whether the earlier of receipt-of-consideration or transfer-date governs the specific transaction. Getting this date wrong understates or overstates the delay in every subsequent calculation. | Day 1 — verified before any drafting begins |
| 4 | Pricing Compliance Review — Fair value floor, in the correct direction | We confirm the direction of the pricing test that applies: on a fresh issue to a non-resident, the issue price cannot be below fair value; on a resident-to-non-resident transfer, the transfer price cannot be below fair value; on a non-resident-to-resident transfer, the price cannot exceed fair value. We review the valuation report (typically under Rule 11UA of the Income-tax Rules, or an internationally accepted methodology from a SEBI-registered Merchant Banker) before it is relied upon in the filing — errors discovered after submission require a corrected filing or compounding. | Day 2–5, dependent on valuation report availability |
| 5 | Documentation Assembly — FIRC, KYC, Board resolutions, share certificates | We assemble the Foreign Inward Remittance Certificate (or equivalent proof of inward remittance through normal banking channels), the remitting bank's KYC report in RBI's prescribed format, the Board resolution for allotment (FC-GPR) or the transfer instrument and consent documentation (FC-TRS), and the statutory register extracts evidencing the transaction — the complete document set RBI and the AD bank expect to see attached to the filing. | Day 3–7 |
| 6 | CA Valuation/Pricing Certificate — The mandatory professional certification | A practising Chartered Accountant (or, depending on the transaction, a SEBI-registered Merchant Banker) certifies that the pricing complies with FEMA's pricing guidelines. This certificate is a mandatory attachment on both FC-GPR and FC-TRS — PNPC prepares this as part of the engagement, cross-checked against the underlying valuation methodology. | Day 5–8 |
| 7 | FC-GPR / FC-TRS Filing on FIRMS — Submission and AD bank coordination | For FC-GPR, we file directly on the FIRMS portal against the company's Entity Master. For FC-TRS, we coordinate with the transacting parties' AD Category-I bank, since the bank reviews the form and supporting documents before forwarding it to RBI on FIRMS — a step that adds bank-dependent turnaround time outside the filer's direct control. | Day 7–12 for FC-GPR (direct filing); Day 10–20 for FC-TRS (dependent on AD bank turnaround) |
| 8 | RBI Query Handling — Responding to portal or bank-raised queries | RBI (or the AD bank, for FC-TRS) may raise queries on documentation, pricing basis, or classification before accepting the filing. We manage this correspondence and resubmission — most delays beyond the initial filing arise here, and unresolved queries can push a filing past the point where Late Submission Fee exposure begins to accrue if the original transaction date has already passed the deadline. | Variable — typically 5–15 additional days if queries are raised |
| 9 | UIN Generation & Record-Keeping — The definitive proof of compliance | Once accepted, RBI generates a Unique Identification Number (UIN) against the FC-GPR allotment (FC-TRS filings are similarly acknowledged on FIRMS). We retain the UIN, acknowledgment, and full supporting document set in the client's permanent compliance file — this is precisely what a due diligence team or bank KYC refresh asks to see, often years later. | Immediate upon acceptance |
| 10 | Late Filing Assessment, if applicable — LSF versus compounding | If the 30-day (FC-GPR) or 60-day (FC-TRS) window has already lapsed by the time we are engaged, we assess whether the delay and transaction profile qualify for the RBI's Late Submission Fee framework — a formula-based administrative fee tied to transaction value and days of delay — or whether the nature of the contravention (wrong pricing, wrong route, unreported for several years) requires a formal compounding application under Section 15 of FEMA to the Compounding Authority. | Assessment: 2–4 days; LSF processing or compounding application: weeks to a few months depending on complexity |
| 11 | Downstream & Conversion Reporting — Where applicable | If the instrument reported was a compulsorily convertible preference share or debenture, its subsequent conversion into equity triggers its own reporting step. If the investee company itself makes a downstream investment using the foreign capital received, that downstream investment carries its own FDI-policy classification and reporting obligations we flag proactively. | As triggered by subsequent corporate events |
| 12 | Ongoing FEMA Compliance Handoff — FLA return and future transaction readiness | Once FC-GPR/FC-TRS is filed and the UIN is in hand, we flag the annual FLA return obligation (due 15 July each year, for as long as the company holds foreign investment) and keep the client's FIRMS Entity Master and cap table records current for the next transaction, whether a subsequent funding round, secondary sale, or exit. | Ongoing — reviewed at each subsequent transaction and annually for FLA |
Realistic timeline for a straightforward, well-documented FC-GPR with existing FIRMS registration: 7–12 working days from engagement to UIN. FC-TRS typically takes longer — 10–20 working days — because of mandatory AD bank review. Government-route or Press Note 3-affected transactions, or filings addressing a multi-year historical gap, extend meaningfully beyond these ranges and depend on factors outside PNPC's direct control, including AD bank turnaround and RBI query cycles.
Board resolution approving the allotment of shares/CCPS/CCDs to the non-resident investor, with the exact allotment date recorded
Foreign Inward Remittance Certificate (FIRC) or equivalent proof of the investment amount received through normal banking channels via an AD Category-I bank
KYC report of the remitting bank/investor, in the format prescribed by RBI, obtained through the investor's or remitting bank's own bank
Valuation report supporting the issue price (typically under Rule 11UA of the Income-tax Rules or an internationally accepted methodology, from a SEBI-registered Merchant Banker or practising Chartered Accountant)
Chartered Accountant's certificate confirming the issue price is not below the FEMA-prescribed fair value floor
Statutory auditor's certificate or Company Secretary's certificate confirming compliance with the applicable sectoral cap and FDI policy conditions, where required
Updated Register of Members / statutory registers reflecting the fresh allotment
Company's PAN, CIN, and FIRMS Entity Master login credentials (or details to complete Entity Master registration if not already done)
Details of the investing entity — full legal name, country of incorporation or residence, and (where relevant) beneficial ownership chain for Press Note 3 screening
Share transfer form / instrument of transfer (Form SH-4 for the domestic share register, alongside the FC-TRS filing) executed by transferor and transferee
Consideration payment proof — FIRC/bank realisation certificate for the transfer amount, routed through normal banking channels
Chartered Accountant's certificate confirming the transfer price complies with the applicable FEMA pricing direction (not below fair value for resident-to-non-resident; not above fair value for non-resident-to-resident)
Valuation report supporting the transfer price
Copy of the share purchase agreement or transfer agreement setting out the commercial terms
KYC of both transferor and transferee, including entity/individual identification documents
Declaration confirming the transferor/transferee's residential status and, if applicable, sectoral cap and Press Note 3 screening for the incoming non-resident
AD Category-I bank details through which the FC-TRS will be routed and reviewed before FIRMS submission
Company's Certificate of Incorporation, PAN, and CIN
Details of the company's authorised signatory who will operate the FIRMS portal login on the company's behalf
Sector/business activity classification of the company for FDI policy mapping
Details of any prior foreign investment received (if the Entity Master is being set up retrospectively for a company that received FDI before ever registering on FIRMS)
Digital Signature Certificate or portal login credentials as required by the current FIRMS registration process
Complete transaction history — every allotment or transfer of shares to/from non-residents since the company's incorporation, with dates and amounts
Any prior RBI correspondence, UINs, or acknowledgments already on record for related transactions
Board minutes and statutory registers evidencing each historical allotment or transfer
Bank statements and FIRCs evidencing the original inward remittance for each transaction being regularised
A candid summary of why the filing was missed or delayed — relevant to assessing whether Late Submission Fee treatment or a compounding application is the appropriate route
Original FC-GPR UIN and terms of the CCPS/CCD being converted, including the conversion ratio and trigger event
Board resolution recording the conversion into equity shares
Details of any downstream investment made by the investee company using the foreign capital received, including the downstream entity's sector classification
Latest available balance sheet figures (audited if available by 15 July; provisional/unaudited figures if the audit is not yet complete, with a revised filing once audited figures are ready)
Details of all foreign liabilities (foreign equity/debt held by non-residents in the company) and foreign assets (the company's investments abroad, if any) as on 31 March
FLAIR portal registration and login credentials (a separate RBI system from FIRMS, specifically for the FLA return)
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Filing Structuring | Term sheet signed or transfer agreed | Confirm sector/route eligibility, pricing direction, and instrument classification before allotment or transfer is executed — this determines which form applies and what fair-value test governs the transaction. | Wrong instrument or route assumption discovered only at filing stage, requiring restructuring after funds have already moved. |
| FC-GPR Filing Window | Allotment date recorded in Board minutes | File within 30 days of allotment — Entity Master check, valuation certificate, FIRC, and KYC assembled and submitted on FIRMS with UIN confirmation. | Late Submission Fee exposure begins accruing from day 31; complex or aged delays may require formal compounding under Section 15 of FEMA, involving cost and RBI Regional Office correspondence. |
| FC-TRS Filing Window | Consideration received or transfer executed, whichever is earlier | File within 60 days through the AD Category-I bank, with pricing certificate confirming the correct fair-value direction for the specific transfer type. | Missed deadline triggers Late Submission Fee or compounding; incorrect pricing direction (e.g., transfer below fair value to a non-resident) is a substantive FEMA contravention, not a mere paperwork delay. |
| Annual FLA Cycle | 31 March year-end, for any company holding foreign investment | File the FLA return by 15 July every year on the FLAIR portal for as long as foreign investment is outstanding on the books — independent of whether any new transaction occurred that year. | Non-filing is treated as a standalone FEMA contravention and can attract compounding exposure even with no new transaction in the relevant year. |
| Conversion of Convertible Instruments | CCPS/CCD conversion trigger (time-based or event-based) | Track the conversion terms from the original FC-GPR and file the appropriate follow-on reporting once conversion into equity occurs. | Untracked conversions create a mismatch between the company's actual cap table and its FIRMS-reported instrument position, surfacing at the next round's diligence. |
| Subsequent Funding Round | New investor term sheet | Review the FIRMS reporting position (UINs, Entity Master status) from all prior rounds before the new round closes — cleaning up any gap now is materially cheaper than during the new investor's legal diligence. | A missing or incomplete FIRMS history is one of the most common issues raised in funding-round due diligence, and can delay or complicate closing. |
| Exit or Share Transfer | Founder/investor exit, M&A, or secondary sale involving a non-resident party | FC-TRS filed correctly for the specific direction of transfer, with pricing certificate matching the applicable fair-value test for that direction. | Incorrectly filed or unfiled FC-TRS on an exit transaction can delay fund repatriation and create FEMA exposure for both transacting parties. |
| Historical Non-Compliance Discovery | Internal review, bank KYC refresh, or acquirer/investor diligence flags a gap | Assess the full transaction history, determine whether Late Submission Fee treatment applies or a compounding application is required, and manage the regularisation process end to end. | Unregularised historical gaps compound in complexity and cost the longer they remain unaddressed, and can block a pending transaction until resolved. |
What is FC-GPR in simple terms?
FC-GPR is the RBI form that reports a fresh issue of shares (or CCPS/CCDs) by an Indian company to a foreign investor — an NRI, OCI, foreign national, or overseas fund. It must be filed on the RBI's FIRMS portal within 30 days of the date the shares are actually allotted. Once accepted, RBI issues a Unique Identification Number (UIN) that is the official proof that this particular investment tranche has been reported.
What is FC-TRS and how is it different from FC-GPR?
FC-TRS reports the transfer of existing shares between a resident and a non-resident — for example, a foreign investor buying shares from an existing Indian shareholder, or an NRI selling shares back to a resident buyer. FC-GPR is for fresh share issuance; FC-TRS is for a change of hands in shares that already exist. FC-TRS must be filed within 60 days of receipt of consideration or the transfer date, whichever is earlier, and it is routed through an Authorised Dealer (AD) Category-I bank rather than filed directly by the company.
What is the FIRMS portal?
FIRMS (Foreign Investment Reporting and Management System) is RBI's single-window online portal for all foreign investment reporting by Indian entities — FC-GPR, FC-TRS, and related forms such as LLP-I, LLP-II, CN (convertible notes), ESOP reporting, DRR, and downstream investment reporting. It replaced the earlier manual and Ebiz-based reporting mechanisms. Every company must first complete a one-time Entity Master registration on FIRMS before it can file any transaction-specific form.
What happens if we miss the 30-day FC-GPR deadline?
Missing the deadline does not undo the share allotment itself under company law, but it is a contravention of FEMA reporting requirements. RBI's Late Submission Fee (LSF) framework allows regularisation of straightforward late filings through a graded, formula-based fee tied to the transaction value and the number of days of delay. More serious or complex contraventions — for example, incorrect pricing or a long-unreported historical gap — typically require a formal compounding application under Section 15 of FEMA, 1999 to the Compounding Authority, which involves a written application, documentation, and a compounding amount determined by RBI.
What is a Unique Identification Number (UIN) and why does it matter?
The UIN is the number RBI generates once a FC-GPR filing is successfully accepted on FIRMS. It is the definitive, checkable proof that a specific tranche of foreign share allotment has been reported to and accepted by RBI. Investors, acquirers, and banks routinely ask for the UIN against every foreign-invested tranche on a company's cap table during due diligence or KYC refresh.
Do we need a Chartered Accountant's certificate for FC-GPR and FC-TRS?
Yes. Both forms require a Chartered Accountant's certificate (or, in some cases, a certificate from a SEBI-registered Merchant Banker) confirming that the transaction price complies with FEMA's pricing guidelines — that the issue or transfer price respects the applicable fair value floor or ceiling depending on the direction of the transaction. This certificate is a mandatory attachment, not an optional add-on.
What is the pricing guideline under FEMA and how does it affect FC-GPR/FC-TRS?
Under FEMA, equity instruments issued to or transferred from a person resident outside India cannot be priced below fair value (as determined under an internationally accepted pricing methodology, commonly evidenced through a valuation report under Rule 11UA of the Income-tax Rules or an equivalent methodology from a SEBI-registered Merchant Banker or practising CA). On a fresh issue to a non-resident, the issue price cannot be below this fair value floor. On a resident-to-non-resident transfer, the transfer price similarly cannot be below fair value. On a non-resident-to-resident transfer, the price cannot exceed fair value. FC-GPR and FC-TRS both require the valuation and CA certificate confirming this test is met before RBI will accept the filing.
Can a company file FC-GPR before receiving RBI's Entity Master approval on FIRMS?
No. Entity Master registration is a mandatory, one-time prerequisite on the FIRMS portal for every company before any transaction-specific form (FC-GPR, FC-TRS, and others) can be filed against it. A company that has never previously received foreign investment, or has never used FIRMS, must complete Entity Master registration first — this adds a preliminary step to the timeline that is frequently underestimated by founders assuming they can file the transaction form immediately.
What documents does the AD Category-I bank need to process an FC-TRS filing?
The bank typically requires the share transfer form/instrument of transfer, proof of consideration payment through normal banking channels (FIRC or bank realisation certificate), the Chartered Accountant's pricing compliance certificate, the valuation report, KYC of both transacting parties, and the share purchase or transfer agreement setting out commercial terms. The bank reviews this documentation before forwarding the FC-TRS filing to RBI on FIRMS — it does not simply pass the form through without scrutiny.
Who is responsible for filing FC-TRS — the buyer or the seller?
Depending on the direction of the transaction, either the resident transferee (buying shares from a non-resident) or the resident transferor (selling shares to a non-resident) is typically responsible for routing the filing through their AD Category-I bank, following RBI's prescribed reporting framework for the specific transaction type. In practice, the party that maintains the banking relationship relevant to the transaction usually initiates the filing, and both parties' KYC and consent are required regardless of who formally submits it.
Does FC-GPR apply to compulsorily convertible preference shares (CCPS) and debentures (CCDs)?
Yes. FC-GPR applies to the allotment of equity shares as well as compulsorily convertible preference shares and compulsorily convertible debentures issued to a non-resident, since these instruments are classified as equity/FDI-eligible capital under the FEMA Non-Debt Instruments Rules, 2019. Optionally convertible or redeemable preference shares and debentures, by contrast, are treated as debt instruments and fall under the External Commercial Borrowing (ECB) framework — a different reporting regime entirely, not FC-GPR.
What happens when a CCPS or CCD converts into equity shares — is a fresh FC-GPR needed?
The conversion of a compulsorily convertible instrument into equity shares, in accordance with the terms already reported at the time of the original FC-GPR, is generally tracked as a follow-on reporting step rather than requiring the full original FC-GPR process to be repeated, since the instrument was already reported as FDI-eligible capital at issuance. The specific reporting mechanics depend on the terms of the original filing and current FIRMS portal requirements at the time of conversion.
Is FC-GPR required if the investor is an NRI investing on a non-repatriation basis?
Investment by an NRI on a non-repatriation basis is generally treated as domestic investment for many FEMA purposes and may fall outside certain FDI reporting requirements that apply to repatriable foreign investment — but the precise treatment depends on the specific instrument, sector, and the exact non-repatriation conditions being relied upon. This determination should be confirmed for the specific transaction rather than assumed, since an incorrectly assumed non-repatriation exemption is itself a reporting risk.
What is Press Note 3 and how does it affect FC-GPR filing?
Press Note 3 of 2020 requires prior government approval for any investment, direct or indirect (through beneficial ownership), from an entity based in or a citizen of a country sharing a land border with India (Bangladesh, China, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, Afghanistan) — regardless of the sector's own automatic-route status. If this applies, the investment cannot proceed to allotment (and therefore FC-GPR filing) until government approval is obtained via the Foreign Investment Facilitation Portal. Filing FC-GPR for an allotment that should have gone through government-route approval, but did not, is a substantive FEMA contravention.
How much does PNPC charge for FC-GPR / FC-TRS filing?
PNPC charges a fixed, agreed professional fee for FC-GPR and FC-TRS filings, confirmed in writing before work begins. The fee depends on transaction complexity — a straightforward, well-documented, on-time FC-GPR costs materially less than a historical regularisation involving multiple missed tranches, Late Submission Fee assessment, or a compounding application. Government fees, if any, and any RBI-prescribed Late Submission Fee are separate from PNPC's professional fee and are the client's direct payment to RBI.
Can FC-GPR and FC-TRS be filed without an Indian bank account?
No. The underlying transaction requires funds to be received (for FC-GPR) or consideration to be paid (for FC-TRS) through normal banking channels via an Authorised Dealer (AD) Category-I bank, and the FIRC or bank realisation certificate evidencing this is a mandatory supporting document for the filing. A transaction where funds moved outside normal banking channels cannot be reported through the standard FC-GPR/FC-TRS process and raises separate and more serious FEMA compliance concerns.
What is the Late Submission Fee (LSF) and how is it calculated?
The Late Submission Fee is RBI's graded, formula-based administrative fee framework that allows regularisation of late FC-GPR, FC-TRS, and other FIRMS reporting without requiring a full compounding application, for straightforward delays. The fee is calculated based on the transaction value and the number of days of delay beyond the statutory deadline, following the specific formula and slabs prescribed in RBI's LSF framework, which is periodically updated. Not every late filing qualifies for LSF treatment — more complex contraventions (wrong pricing, wrong route, or unreported multi-year gaps) may still require formal compounding.
What is compounding under FEMA, and when is it needed instead of LSF?
Compounding is a formal application process under Section 15 of FEMA, 1999, by which a person who has contravened FEMA regulations applies to the Compounding Authority (typically an RBI Regional Office, or the Enforcement Directorate for certain categories) to have the contravention resolved through payment of a compounding amount, in lieu of further enforcement proceedings. Compounding is generally the appropriate route for contraventions more substantive than a simple late filing — incorrect pricing, unreported multi-year gaps, transactions that bypassed the correct route or approval, or contraventions RBI's LSF framework does not cover.
Does a foreign director's personal share subscription in the company also require FC-GPR?
Yes. If a foreign national or NRI director subscribes to shares in their personal capacity — for example, as a founder or co-founder — that subscription is a foreign investment and requires FC-GPR filing within 30 days of allotment, exactly as it would for any other foreign investor. The person's role as a director does not exempt the transaction from FDI reporting.
What if the foreign investment was received in tranches over several months before any shares were allotted?
Where advance funds are received from a foreign investor ahead of formal share allotment, this is typically structured and reported as Share Application Money pending allotment, and the FEMA framework prescribes conditions on how long such money can remain unallotted before it must either be allotted, refunded, or otherwise regularised. FC-GPR is then filed once the actual allotment takes place, with the 30-day clock running from that allotment date — but the pending-allotment period itself carries its own compliance conditions that should be reviewed rather than assumed to be open-ended.
Can PNPC help if we discover several years of unreported FDI transactions during a due diligence process?
Yes. We regularly assist companies that discover, typically during investor due diligence, an acquisition process, or an internal review, that one or more historical FDI transactions were never reported to RBI. We reconstruct the full transaction history, assess whether Late Submission Fee treatment is available or a formal compounding application is required, prepare the necessary documentation, and manage the regularisation process with RBI through to resolution.
Does the FC-GPR/FC-TRS process differ for an LLP receiving foreign capital?
Yes. LLPs receiving foreign capital contribution report through LLP-I (for the initial contribution) and LLP-II (for transfer of contribution or profit share), rather than FC-GPR/FC-TRS, which apply specifically to companies. LLP reporting sits under a related but separate framework within FEMA's Non-Debt Instruments Rules, with its own sectoral and pricing conditions, since LLPs are eligible to receive FDI only in sectors where 100% FDI is permitted under the automatic route and no FDI-linked performance conditions apply.
What is the FLA return and how is it different from FC-GPR/FC-TRS?
The Annual Return on Foreign Liabilities and Assets (FLA return) is a distinct, recurring annual RBI filing — due by 15 July every year — required from every Indian company that has foreign investment (as a liability) or holds overseas investment (as an asset) as on 31 March of the relevant year. Unlike FC-GPR/FC-TRS, which are transaction-triggered filings due within a fixed number of days of a specific event, the FLA return is a standing annual obligation that continues every year for as long as the foreign investment position exists on the books — even in a year with no new transaction at all. It is filed on RBI's FLAIR portal, a separate system from FIRMS.
Can we file FC-GPR ourselves without a CA firm's involvement?
Technically, the company's authorised signatory can file directly on the FIRMS portal. In practice, the substantive requirements — correct sector and route classification, a defensible valuation and pricing certificate in the correct direction, complete KYC and FIRC documentation, and correct handling of any Press Note 3 or beneficial-ownership screening — require professional judgment that goes well beyond form-filling. Errors are typically discovered only when RBI queries the filing, a bank flags a KYC mismatch, or a future investor's due diligence surfaces the gap — at which point correction is materially more expensive than getting it right the first time.
What happens if the sectoral cap is breached because of this share allotment?
If a proposed allotment or transfer would result in foreign shareholding exceeding the sectoral cap prescribed under the Consolidated FDI Policy for that sector, the transaction cannot proceed as structured — the excess portion cannot be validly allotted or transferred to the non-resident under the automatic route, and government-route approval (where available for that sector above the cap) would need to be obtained first, or the structure revised. Filing FC-GPR for an allotment that breaches the sectoral cap does not cure the underlying breach and compounds the compliance exposure rather than resolving it.
Is a fresh valuation report needed for every FC-GPR filing, or can we reuse an earlier one?
The valuation supporting the pricing compliance certificate must be current and relevant to the specific allotment date and transaction being reported — a stale valuation from a much earlier round, or one prepared for a different purpose, generally will not stand up to RBI or a diligence team's scrutiny for a fresh allotment. Whether a very recent valuation from a closely preceding round can be relied upon for a subsequent, closely-timed tranche is a judgment call that depends on the facts and the time gap involved.
What is a downstream investment and why does it matter for FC-GPR compliance?
A downstream investment occurs when an Indian company that has itself received foreign investment (and is therefore classified in a particular ownership/control category under the FDI policy) makes an investment into another Indian entity. That downstream investment is subject to the sectoral conditions applicable to the sector of the ultimate investee entity, and carries its own reporting obligations distinct from the original FC-GPR that brought foreign capital into the investing company. Companies structuring group entities sometimes overlook that this classification cascades down through multiple layers of Indian entities.
How does PNPC handle FC-GPR/FC-TRS for clients with both India and UAE operations?
PNPC has operating offices in Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai. For clients where the foreign investor is based in the UAE, or where an Indian company with UAE-based promoters or a UAE parent entity is receiving investment, we coordinate the India-side FEMA reporting (FC-GPR/FC-TRS, FIRMS Entity Master, pricing certification) alongside the UAE-side considerations (UAE Corporate Tax implications of the investment structure, entity documentation apostille/notarisation requirements) under one engagement, rather than splitting the matter across two disconnected advisors.
What is the difference between FC-GPR and the older FCGPR/Advance Reporting Form process?
Historically, foreign investment reporting involved an Advance Reporting Form (for reporting receipt of funds) followed by a separate FC-GPR filing (for reporting the subsequent allotment), submitted through a largely manual or Ebiz-portal-based process. The current framework, following the FEMA (Mode of Payment and Reporting of Non-Debt Instruments) Regulations, 2019 and the FIRMS portal, consolidates and streamlines this into a single FC-GPR filing tied to the allotment date, submitted electronically on FIRMS with mandatory Entity Master registration.
Do FC-GPR and FC-TRS apply to investment through the government route as well as the automatic route?
Yes. Regardless of whether the investment required prior government approval (government route) or did not (automatic route), the post-facto reporting obligation — FC-GPR for fresh allotment, FC-TRS for a transfer — applies equally once the investment is actually made. Government-route approval is a precondition to the transaction proceeding at all in a restricted sector or for a restricted investor category; it does not substitute for or exempt the subsequent RBI reporting requirement.
What is the role of the Authorised Dealer (AD) Category-I bank in these filings?
For FC-GPR, the company files directly on FIRMS, though the underlying inward remittance must have come through an AD Category-I bank, whose KYC report and FIRC form part of the supporting documentation. For FC-TRS, the AD Category-I bank plays a more direct procedural role — the form and supporting documents are submitted to the bank, which reviews them for compliance before forwarding the filing to RBI on FIRMS. The bank effectively acts as the first line of review for FC-TRS filings.
Can FC-GPR be revised or corrected after submission if an error is discovered?
Yes, corrections to an already-filed FC-GPR or FC-TRS are possible through the FIRMS portal's revision or resubmission mechanism, though the specific process depends on the nature of the error and whether the original filing has already been accepted and a UIN issued. Material errors — particularly around pricing or classification — are better addressed proactively through a formal correction or, where the original filing itself constituted a contravention, through the Late Submission Fee or compounding route as appropriate, rather than left unaddressed.
Why should we engage PNPC rather than handle FC-GPR/FC-TRS filing ourselves or through a generic compliance portal?
A generic filing service completes the form and submits it — it does not verify that the transaction is correctly classified, that the pricing certificate reflects the correct fair-value direction, that Press Note 3 doesn't apply to your specific investor, or that your Entity Master and prior filings are clean before this one goes in. PNPC is a practising CA firm that has advised on FEMA and FDI structuring since 1986. We are engaged from the structuring conversation through to the UIN in hand, and remain available for every subsequent round, transfer, or FLA return for the life of your company's foreign investment position.
What does PNPC's FC-GPR/FC-TRS engagement actually include?
Transaction classification (confirming FC-GPR versus FC-TRS versus another FIRMS form applies), FIRMS Entity Master check and registration if needed, allotment/transfer date verification, pricing and valuation review, assembly of FIRC/KYC/Board resolution documentation, preparation of the Chartered Accountant's pricing compliance certificate, filing on FIRMS (or coordination through the AD Category-I bank for FC-TRS), RBI/bank query handling through to UIN or acknowledgment, and — where applicable — Late Submission Fee assessment or compounding application support for historical gaps. We also flag the annual FLA return obligation and keep the client's FIRMS records current for future transactions.
PNPC Global vs typical filing portals for FC-GPR/FC-TRS
| Dimension | PNPC Global (Practising CA Firm) | Generic Filing Portal |
|---|---|---|
| Transaction classification review | Confirms FC-GPR vs FC-TRS vs LLP-I/II vs conversion reporting before filing begins | Assumes the client has already identified the correct form |
| Pricing direction verification | Confirms fair-value test direction matches the specific transaction type before the CA certificate is issued | Processes whatever pricing figure the client provides without independent review |
| Press Note 3 / beneficial ownership screening | Traces investor's full ownership chain for land-border-country exposure | Not typically offered as part of a standard filing package |
| FIRMS Entity Master status check | Verified and completed proactively before the transaction deadline is at risk | Often discovered only when the portal blocks the transaction filing |
| Historical gap / compounding support | Full assessment and RBI compounding application support if needed | Rarely offered; most portals handle only straightforward, current, on-time filings |
| Ongoing FEMA relationship | Available for every subsequent round, transfer, and the annual FLA return, for the life of the company | Transaction-by-transaction; no continuity between filings |
| Cross-border (India-UAE) coordination | Dubai and India offices coordinate under one engagement for cross-border cap tables | Single-jurisdiction service only |
This comparison reflects PNPC's typical engagement scope versus a standard online filing service; individual portals vary in what they offer.
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Transaction classification and FIRMS form determination (FC-GPR, FC-TRS, or related form)
- 02
FIRMS Entity Master registration or status verification
- 03
Allotment/transfer date confirmation and deadline tracking
- 04
Pricing guideline review and valuation coordination
- 05
Chartered Accountant's pricing compliance certificate
- 06
Complete documentation assembly — FIRC, KYC, Board resolutions, transfer instruments
- 07
FIRMS filing and AD Category-I bank coordination (for FC-TRS)
- 08
RBI/bank query handling through to UIN or acknowledgment
- 09
Press Note 3 and beneficial-ownership screening for foreign investors
- 10
Late Submission Fee assessment or compounding application support for historical or delayed filings
- 11
Annual FLA return flagging and ongoing FEMA compliance calendar management
Whether you have a term sheet closing this week or discovered a missed filing from three years ago, talk to PNPC before you file — not after RBI, a bank, or an investor's diligence team asks the question first.