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LLP Registration

Partnership flexibility with limited liability — your LLP incorporated on the MCA portal with DSCs, name approval and the LLP agreement drafted by professionals.

Starts at ₹4,999 + govt. fees & stamp duty

10–14 working days100% onlineDedicated CALawyer-drafted LLP agreement

What is LLP registration?

LLP registration is the process of incorporating a Limited Liability Partnership with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs under the LLP Act, 2008 — it costs ₹5,000–₹10,000 all-in on FilingBase (₹4,999 professional fees plus government charges) and takes 10–14 working days. An LLP combines a partnership’s operational flexibility with a company’s limited liability.

Unlike a traditional partnership firm, an LLP is a separate legal entity: it can own property and sign contracts in its own name, and one partner is not personally liable for another partner’s negligence or the firm’s debts. Unlike a private limited company, there is no mandatory statutory audit until turnover crosses ₹40 lakh or contribution crosses ₹25 lakh — which is why consultancies, agencies, family businesses and professional firms overwhelmingly pick this structure.

Incorporation runs through MCA’s FiLLiP form, followed by filing your LLP agreement in Form 3 within 30 days. FilingBase handles both — including the part most DIY founders get wrong, a properly drafted LLP agreement covering profit sharing, exit, and dispute resolution.

Why an LLP works for services and partnerships

Limited liability, real partnership

Partners are shielded from the firm’s debts and from each other’s professional negligence — personal assets stay out of reach.

No audit until ₹40 lakh

Statutory audit applies only above ₹40 lakh turnover or ₹25 lakh contribution — a real cost saving in early years.

Lighter annual compliance

Two annual filings (Form 8 and Form 11) versus a company’s heavier ROC calendar. Fewer forms, fewer penalties to trip on.

Flexible internal structure

Your LLP agreement — not a statute — decides profit split, roles and decision-making. Change it by amendment, not by court.

Separate legal entity

The LLP owns assets, borrows and contracts in its own name, with perpetual succession as partners change.

No capital floor

Start with any contribution amount. Stamp duty on the agreement scales with contribution, so most LLPs start lean.

Documents required

For partners

  • PAN card of each partner
  • Aadhaar card
  • Passport-size photograph
  • Identity proof — passport, voter ID or driving licence
  • Address proof — bank statement or utility bill (within 2 months)
  • Passport, notarised/apostilled (foreign partners)

For the registered office

  • Utility bill of the premises (within 2 months)
  • NOC from the property owner
  • Rent agreement, if rented

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The LLP incorporation sequence

  1. DSCs for designated partnersDay 1–2

    Class 3 digital signatures issued for both designated partners after a quick video KYC.

  2. Name reservation (LLP-RUN)Day 2–5

    We screen for MCA and trademark conflicts, then reserve your name with two options.

  3. FiLLiP incorporation filingDay 5–8

    Incorporation form filed with partner details, contribution and registered office proof; DPINs are allotted in the same form.

  4. Certificate of IncorporationDay 8–12

    The ROC issues your LLPIN and incorporation certificate. PAN and TAN follow automatically.

  5. LLP agreement — Form 3Within 30 days

    Our lawyers draft your LLP agreement, you execute it on stamp paper, and we file Form 3 — mandatory within 30 days of incorporation.

Transparent pricing

Basic

4,999

+ govt fees & stamp duty · 2 designated partners

  • 2 Class 3 digital signatures
  • Name reservation (LLP-RUN)
  • FiLLiP incorporation filing
  • DPIN for 2 designated partners
  • Standard LLP agreement + Form 3 filing
  • LLP PAN and TAN
  • GST registration
  • Custom agreement clauses
Choose Basic
Most popular

Standard

8,999

+ govt fees & stamp duty · ready to operate

  • Everything in Basic
  • Custom LLP agreement (profit split, exit, IP clauses)
  • GST registration
  • MSME / Udyam registration
  • Current-account opening assistance
  • Year-one compliance calendar
  • First-year Form 8 & Form 11 filings
Choose Standard

Premium

14,999

+ govt fees & stamp duty · incorporation + year-one filings

  • Everything in Standard
  • First-year Form 11 (annual return)
  • First-year Form 8 (statement of accounts)
  • DIR-3 KYC for designated partners
  • ITR-5 filing for the LLP
  • Dedicated compliance manager
Choose Premium

All prices are professional fees exclusive of GST at 18%. Government fees and stamp duty are charged at actuals and shown before you pay.

LLP vs Private Limited vs Partnership Firm

LLPPrivate LimitedPartnership Firm
Separate legal entityYesYesNo
LiabilityLimitedLimitedUnlimited, joint
AuditAbove ₹40L turnover onlyMandatory alwaysTax audit rules only
Equity fundraisingNot suitedVC standardNo
Annual MCA filingsForm 8 + Form 11AOC-4 + MGT-7A + moreNone
Credibility with clients/banksHighHighestModerate
ExploreThis pagePvt Ltd registrationPartnership firm

The LLP agreement: where DIY registrations go wrong

The FiLLiP form is the easy half. The document that actually governs your business is the LLP agreement — and the law gives you 30 days after incorporation to file it in Form 3, with a ₹100/day late fee that has no upper cap for large delays. Template agreements copied off the internet routinely miss the clauses that matter when partners disagree: how profits are split when contributions are unequal, what happens when a partner wants out, who owns client relationships and IP, and how deadlocks get resolved.

Every FilingBase LLP agreement is drafted by LexVerge LLP lawyers against your actual arrangement — not a fill-in-the-blanks template. On tax: LLPs are taxed at a flat 30% (plus surcharge and cess) like partnership firms, but there is no dividend distribution issue — profits credited to partners are exempt in their hands, and working partners can draw remuneration deductible to the LLP within Section 40(b) limits. For many service businesses this nets out cheaper than the company route once you model founder payouts; our tax planning team can run that comparison for you.

Also worth knowing: at least two designated partners are required, one of them Indian-resident; foreign nationals and body corporates can be partners; and FDI in LLPs is permitted under the automatic route in sectors where 100% FDI is allowed. If you outgrow the structure, an LLP can later be converted into a private limited company — though it is paperwork-heavy, which is why funding-bound founders should start with a company instead.

Annual obligations of an LLP

Two MCA filings anchor the year: Form 11 (annual return) by 30 May and Form 8 (statement of accounts & solvency) by 30 October. Late fees run ₹100 per day per form, uncapped for older delays — the most expensive mistake small LLPs make. Add the LLP’s ITR-5 income-tax return, DIR-3 KYC for designated partners, and GST returns if registered. Our LLP annual compliance plan covers the full calendar for a fixed fee.

Frequently asked questions

How much does LLP registration cost?

FilingBase professional fees start at ₹4,999. Government charges (name reservation, FiLLiP filing fee scaled to contribution, and stamp duty on the LLP agreement) typically add ₹1,500–₹3,000 for a standard two-partner LLP with modest contribution. The exact split is shown before you pay.

How long does LLP registration take?

Usually 10–14 working days: 1–2 days for DSCs, 2–4 for name approval, and 4–7 for the ROC to process FiLLiP. The LLP agreement is then filed within 30 days of incorporation — we schedule it so you never brush against the deadline.

Is an audit mandatory for an LLP?

No — not until turnover exceeds ₹40 lakh or partner contribution exceeds ₹25 lakh in a financial year. Below those thresholds only income-tax rules apply (a tax audit triggers at much higher turnover). This is the single biggest running-cost advantage over a private limited company, where audit is mandatory from day one.

What is the minimum contribution to start an LLP?

There is no statutory minimum — you can start an LLP with ₹1,000 if you like. Contribution affects the FiLLiP government fee slab and stamp duty on the agreement, so most small LLPs begin with ₹10,000–₹1,00,000 and increase later by amending the agreement.

Can an LLP raise venture capital?

Not in the way startups need. LLPs cannot issue shares or ESOPs, and institutional investors almost never invest in them. If you plan to raise equity, incorporate a private limited company instead — or convert later, which is possible but slow.

Do LLPs pay less tax than companies?

It depends on how much founders withdraw. LLP profit is taxed at 30% flat, but partner drawings are not taxed again, and working-partner remuneration is deductible within Section 40(b) limits. Companies pay 22–25% but distributing profits as dividend or salary adds a second layer. For founder-operated service firms, the LLP often wins — we can model both before you register.

What are Form 8 and Form 11?

The two annual MCA filings every LLP must make regardless of activity: Form 11 (annual return — partners and contribution) by 30 May, and Form 8 (statement of accounts and solvency) by 30 October. Late fees are ₹100/day each. Even a zero-revenue LLP must file both.

Can a foreign national or NRI be a partner?

Yes. Foreign nationals, NRIs and even foreign companies can be partners, provided at least one designated partner is a resident of India. Foreign partners’ documents need notarisation and apostille, and FDI must be in sectors where the automatic route permits it.

Can I convert my LLP into a private limited company later?

Yes, under Section 366 of the Companies Act — but it requires newspaper notices, ROC approvals and effectively re-papering the business, taking 2–3 months. If institutional funding is on your roadmap within a couple of years, starting as a company is usually cheaper than converting.

Reviewed by Vijay DhawanManaging Partner, LexVerge LLP · reviewed for accuracy under the Companies Act, 2013 and current MCA/GST/Income-tax rules
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