Practice Areas · Compliance · Changes & Conversions · Entity conversions · Private limited → OPC

Private Limited Company to OPC

Convert a private limited company into a One Person Company where a single owner remains.

Overview

Converting a private limited to an OPC

A private limited company can convert into a One Person Company where the ownership has effectively narrowed to a single individual — simplifying the structure while keeping limited liability and corporate standing.

The conversion requires the company to meet the OPC eligibility conditions, appoint a nominee, alter its documents, and file Form INC-6.

Process

How conversion works

  1. 01

    Check eligibility

    Confirm the company qualifies to become an OPC and the member is eligible.

  2. 02

    Nominee & approvals

    Appoint a nominee (INC-3) and pass the members' resolution; obtain NOC from other members/creditors.

  3. 03

    Alter & file INC-6

    Alter the MOA/AOA to OPC form and file INC-6 with the ROC.

  4. 04

    Update records

    Update the name (adding “(OPC)”), registers, and registrations.

Why PBT

Why work with PBT

PBT converts your company to an OPC where the single-owner conditions are met.

  • Eligibility confirmed before you commit
  • Nominee, consents, and resolutions handled
  • Altered MOA/AOA and the INC-6 filing
  • Name and register updates
  • Scope, deliverables, and fees agreed in writing up front
FAQs

Frequently asked questions

  • When would a company convert to an OPC?

    Typically when the shareholding has come down to a single individual who wants the simpler OPC structure while keeping limited liability.

  • Does an OPC need a nominee?

    Yes. An OPC must name a nominee (in Form INC-3) who steps in if the sole member can no longer continue.

  • How long does it take?

    Usually about two weeks once eligibility and the nominee are confirmed.

Convert your company to an OPC

Tell us about your ownership, and we'll confirm eligibility and handle the conversion.

Send an enquiry

This page describes the nature of the firm's services and is not a solicitation or legal advice. Thresholds, timelines, and applicable registrations depend on your specific facts; engagement terms and fees are agreed in writing per assignment.

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