Practice Areas · Compliance · Changes & Conversions · Entity conversions
Entity conversions
Businesses outgrow their original structure. The firm manages conversions between entity types, preserving registrations and transferring assets cleanly.
Proprietorship → company
Convert your proprietorship into a private limited company — incorporating the company, transferring the business under an agreement, and migrating the registrations — for limited liability and the ability to raise funds.
Read moreProprietorship → partnership
Convert your proprietorship into a partnership firm to bring in one or more partners — with a partnership deed, the firm's PAN and registrations, and a clean transfer of the business.
Read moreProprietorship → LLP
Convert your proprietorship into an LLP — incorporating the LLP, an agreement, and the transfer of business and registrations — for limited liability with lighter compliance than a company.
Read morePartnership → LLP
Convert your partnership firm into an LLP under the statutory route (Form 17) — keeping the business intact while gaining limited liability and a separate legal entity.
Read morePartnership → company
Convert your partnership firm into a private limited company — under the Part I / Chapter XXI route — for limited liability, equity funding, and corporate standing.
Read moreOPC → private limited
Convert your One Person Company into a private limited company — to add shareholders and directors and raise investment — with the resolutions, INC-6, and ROC filings required.
Read morePrivate limited → OPC
Convert your private limited company into a One Person Company — where it has come down to a single owner — with the member approval, nominee, and INC-6 filing required.
Read moreLLP → company
Convert your LLP into a private limited company — under the Part I / Chapter XXI route — to issue equity, bring in investors, and gain the structure the funding ecosystem expects.
Read moreCompany → LLP
Convert your private limited company into an LLP — under the LLP Act conversion route — for lighter compliance and tax efficiency, where you don't need to raise equity.
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