How to register a company in Australia from India - step-by-step guide for Indian entrepreneurs 2026 - AccounTX
 

 

Written by the AccounTX Editorial Team
Reviewed by Satish Sarawagi

Australia and India share one of the most significant and rapidly growing bilateral trade relationships in the Asia-Pacific region. The Australia–India Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (AI-ECTA), which came into force in 2022, has progressively eliminated tariffs on the majority of goods traded between the two countries, opened new pathways for service providers, and simplified the conditions under which Indian businesses can establish a presence in Australia.

For Indian entrepreneurs, Australia represents a compelling market: a GDP of over AUD 2.5 trillion, a highly educated and multicultural consumer base, a mature and transparent legal system, strong ties with the wider Asia-Pacific region, and an existing Indian diaspora community of over 700,000 people that provides an established professional and cultural network for new entrants.

The good news for Indian founders is that company registration in Australia is accessible, well-structured, and can be completed entirely remotely – without ever setting foot in the country. You do not need to be an Australian citizen. You do not need an Australian visa to own an Australian company. And the process, while requiring specific compliance steps, is manageable with the right guidance.

This guide walks you through everything you need to know about registering a company in Australia from India in 2026 – the right business structure, the exact step-by-step registration process, the resident director requirement that every Indian founder must understand, the documents you need, what it all costs, and the ongoing compliance obligations you will need to meet once your Australian company is registered.

Table of Contents

Can an Indian Citizen Register a Company in Australia?

Yes – Indian citizens can legally register and fully own a company in Australia. Australia welcomes foreign investment and allows 100% foreign ownership of Australian Proprietary Limited companies in most industries. There is no citizenship or visa requirement for owning shares in an Australian company.

However, there is one important condition that every Indian entrepreneur must plan for: Australia requires every Proprietary Limited company to have at least one director who ordinarily resides in Australia. This is a statutory requirement under Section 201A of the Corporations Act 2001 – and it is the single most practical challenge for non-resident Indian founders registering a company in Australia from India.

If you do not have an Australian resident who can serve as a director of your company – a trusted business partner, a family member living in Australia, or an employee based there – you will need to use a professional nominee director service. This is a completely legal and widely used arrangement. We will cover this in detail in the section dedicated to the resident director requirement below.

Beyond the resident director requirement, company formation in Australia for foreigners follows the same process as it does for Australian residents. The entire registration can be completed online from India.

Choosing the Right Business Structure: Pty Ltd, Branch Office, or Subsidiary?

Before initiating any registration, you must decide which Australian business structure suits your goals. For Indian entrepreneurs entering the Australian market, three structures are most relevant:

Proprietary Limited Company (Pty Ltd) – The Recommended Choice for Most Indian Founders

A Proprietary Limited company – known as a Pty Ltd – is Australia’s equivalent of India’s Private Limited company. It is a separate legal entity that protects its shareholders from personal liability beyond the value of their shares. It can have between 1 and 50 non-employee shareholders, must have at least one Australian resident director, and is regulated by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) under the Corporations Act 2001.

The Pty Ltd structure is the preferred vehicle for the vast majority of Indian entrepreneurs registering in Australia – whether they are establishing a new Australian business, opening a subsidiary of their Indian company, or creating a holding entity for Australian investments. It offers full limited liability, a well-understood compliance framework, access to Australian banking, and strong credibility with Australian clients, partners, and government bodies.

Branch Office (Registered Foreign Company)

If your Indian company wants to conduct business in Australia without creating a separate legal entity, it can register as a foreign company under Part 5B.2 of the Corporations Act. This is known as a branch registration. A registered foreign company receives an Australian Registered Body Number (ARBN) from ASIC and can then apply for an ABN.

The key difference from a Pty Ltd is that a branch is not a separate legal entity – it is an extension of your Indian parent company. This means the Indian parent company is directly liable for the branch’s Australian obligations. Branch registrations are more appropriate for large Indian companies with established operations that want a lightweight Australian presence; for most Indian startups and SMEs, a Pty Ltd subsidiary is the better choice due to its liability separation.

Subsidiary (Pty Ltd owned by Indian Parent Company)

When your Indian company creates a Pty Ltd in Australia, with your Indian entity as the shareholder rather than you personally, the Australian entity is a subsidiary of your Indian parent. This is the standard structure for Indian companies expanding to Australia as part of a global group. It allows the subsidiary to be governed by Australian law, maintain separate accounts, and operate as an independent entity, while the Indian parent retains ownership and strategic control through its shareholding.

For the purposes of this guide, we will focus on the Pty Ltd registration process, as it covers both the standalone company and the subsidiary scenarios.

Why Indian Entrepreneurs Are Expanding to Australia in 2026

Beyond the proximity argument (Australia is in India’s broader time zone neighbourhood and well-connected by direct flights), several specific factors are driving Indian entrepreneur interest in Australian company registration and market entry:

  • AI-ECTA trade advantages: India-Australia trade agreement preferences have opened specific sectors – professional services, IT, education, healthcare, and financial services – to Indian operators on more favourable terms than previously available.
  • Indian diaspora market: Australia’s 700,000+ Indian-origin population represents a large, established consumer community for Indian-origin food, fashion, media, education, and services businesses.
  • IT and technology services: Australian enterprises are significant buyers of IT, software development, and digital services – and many prefer engaging Australian-registered entities for contractual and invoicing simplicity. An Australian Pty Ltd reduces friction for Indian tech companies billing Australian clients.
  • Education sector: India is one of the largest sources of international students to Australian universities. Several Indian education and test-preparation companies have established Australian entities to serve this market.
  • Healthcare and medical services: Growing bilateral cooperation in healthcare, pharmaceutical services, and wellness creates commercial opportunities for Indian businesses in the Australian healthcare market.
  • Property and investment: Indian investors with Australian investment interests often use an Australian Pty Ltd as a holding vehicle for Australian real estate or securities, subject to FIRB requirements for certain acquisition types.

How to Register a Company in Australia from India: Step-by-Step Process

Here is the complete, sequential process for company registration in Australia for foreigners, specifically designed for Indian entrepreneurs registering from India. Follow these steps in order to ensure your company is legally formed, fully compliant, and operationally ready.

Step 1: Choose Your Business Structure and Confirm Ownership Approach

Decide whether you will register a Pty Ltd in your personal name as shareholder, as a subsidiary of your Indian company, or through some other ownership arrangement. This decision affects how the company appears in the ASIC register, how dividends and profits will be distributed, and what cross-border tax reporting you will need to manage between Australia and India. Take this decision carefully – restructuring after registration is possible but administratively burdensome and can trigger tax events.

Step 2: Choose Your Company Name and Check Availability

Your Australian company name must be unique and not identical or confusingly similar to any existing registered company or business name in Australia. ASIC provides a free online name availability search tool. The company name must end with “Proprietary Limited” or “Pty Ltd” (or “Pty. Ltd.”). If your chosen name includes a restricted word – such as “Bank,” “Trust,” “Royal,” “Government,” or “University” – you will need specific approval from ASIC or the relevant authority.

If you are not ready to register immediately but want to secure your name, ASIC allows name reservations for AUD 62 for up to two months while you prepare your documentation.

Step 3: Obtain a Director ID for All Directors

Under Australian law, every company director must hold a Director ID – a unique identifier issued by the Australian Business Registry Services (ABRS) that verifies the director’s identity and prevents the use of false identities in company management. Directors must obtain their Director ID before being formally appointed to any company. If you are using a nominee director service, your provider’s nominee director will already hold their Director ID. If you are personally being appointed as a director (possible if you are an Australian resident), you will need to apply for your Director ID through the myGovID system before the registration is submitted.

Step 4: Appoint an Australian Resident Director

This is the step that most Indian founders need specific guidance on. Under Section 201A of the Corporations Act, a Pty Ltd must have at least one director who is “ordinarily resident” in Australia. Ordinary residence means regular, settled physical habitation in Australia – not merely having Australian citizenship or an Australian tax file number.

Your options as an Indian founder are:

  • A trusted Australian contact: If you have a business partner, employee, family member, or professional contact living in Australia who consents to serve as a director, this is the simplest solution. Ensure the person fully understands their director duties and liabilities under Australian law before they agree.
  • Professional nominee director service: A licensed nominee director provider appoints a qualified Australian resident to serve as a nominal director of your company. They do not control or manage the business – they simply fulfil the statutory residency requirement. Nominee director services typically cost AUD 1,200 to AUD 3,500 per year through specialist providers. This is a widely used, entirely legal arrangement for foreign-owned Australian companies.

Step 5: Prepare Your Registered Office Address

Every Australian company must have a registered office with a physical street address in Australia (not a PO Box) that is accessible during normal business hours. This is where ASIC will send all official correspondence. It does not need to be your place of business – most foreign-owned companies use their corporate services provider’s address or a professional registered office service. This is separate from the nominee director and typically costs AUD 200 to AUD 600 per year for a professional registered office service.

Step 6: Register Your Company with ASIC Using Form 201

With your company name confirmed, directors identified and Director IDs held, registered office address in place, and shareholder structure defined, you are ready to submit the registration to ASIC.

The ASIC registration form is Form 201 (Application to Register a Company). This can be submitted directly through the ASIC Connect portal or through a licensed ASIC agent or corporate services provider. The form captures:

  • Company name and proposed ACN
  • Business structure (Pty Ltd in this case)
  • Registered office address
  • Details of all directors (including their Director IDs and residential addresses)
  • Details of all shareholders and their share allocations
  • The company’s principal place of business address

The ASIC registration fee for a standard Pty Ltd in 2026 is AUD 611 (one-time fee). Standard processing takes 1 to 3 business days. Upon approval, ASIC issues your Australian Company Number (ACN) – a unique 9-digit identifier – along with your Certificate of Registration. This Certificate is your official proof of company existence in Australia.

Want expert help registering your Australian company from India?
AccounTX manages end-to-end Australia company registration for Indian entrepreneurs – from structure selection and ASIC filing to nominee director coordination, ABN registration, and ongoing compliance. Book a free 30-minute consultation with our team today.

Step 7: Obtain Your ABN, TFN, and Register for GST

Once you have your ACN from ASIC, you can apply for your Australian Business Number (ABN) and Tax File Number (TFN) through the Australian Business Register at abr.business.gov.au.

  • ABN: An 11-digit number that identifies your business for tax and GST purposes. Every company that conducts business in Australia needs an ABN to issue invoices legally, deal with the Australian Taxation Office (ATO), and register for GST. ABN applications are often processed instantly online for straightforward applications, or within 1 to 7 days for applications that require manual review.
  • TFN: Your company’s Tax File Number is issued automatically by the ATO when you complete your ABN application – you do not need a separate application process. The TFN is used for lodging annual company tax returns with the ATO.
  • GST Registration: Goods and Services Tax registration is mandatory if your Australian company’s annual turnover reaches or is expected to reach AUD 75,000. GST is a flat 10% tax on most goods and services. If your turnover will be below the threshold, you may still choose to register voluntarily – particularly if your clients are GST-registered businesses who need to claim back the GST component of your invoices. Apply for GST registration at the same time as your ABN to avoid backdated liability if your turnover grows quickly.

Step 8: Open an Australian Business Bank Account

Opening an Australian business bank account is an important post-registration step for your company’s operational credibility and tax compliance. Traditional Australian banks (ANZ, Commonwealth Bank, Westpac, NAB) typically require in-person account opening at a branch – a practical challenge for Indian founders who cannot easily visit Australia.

However, several digital banking options are available for non-resident foreign-owned Australian companies:

  • Airwallex: An Australian-founded multi-currency fintech widely used by foreign-owned Australian companies. Supports remote account opening and multi-currency transactions – particularly useful for businesses with both INR and AUD revenue streams.
  • Wise Business (formerly TransferWise): Offers an Australian bank account number, BSB, and multi-currency capability – ideal for Indian entrepreneurs needing to receive AUD payments and convert to INR efficiently.
  • Revolut Business: Available in Australia for business accounts with multi-currency features and international transfer capabilities.
  • Traditional banks through a local director: Some Indian founders open a traditional bank account with the assistance of their Australian nominee director, who can attend the branch on behalf of the company with the appropriate documents.

To open any Australian business bank account, you will typically need: your ASIC Certificate of Registration, your ACN, your ABN, the company’s Constitution or Replaceable Rules declaration, identification documents for all directors, and a completed bank application form.

Step 9: Complete Post-Registration Compliance Setup

Registering the company is just the beginning. Before your Australian company conducts any business, ensure the following are in place:

  • Company Constitution or Replaceable Rules: Every Australian Pty Ltd is governed either by a custom Constitution (a formal governance document) or by ASIC’s Replaceable Rules (default governance provisions). For most foreign-owned Pty Ltds, the Replaceable Rules are sufficient to begin, but a custom Constitution is advisable as the company grows and takes on investors or additional shareholders.
  • Share certificate issuance: Issue share certificates to all shareholders confirming their holding in the company. Maintain a register of members.
  • Business licence and permits: Depending on your industry, you may need federal, state, or local business licences. Most technology, services, and consulting businesses have minimal licensing requirements, but regulated industries (financial services, healthcare, food, construction) require specific licences.
  • Payroll Tax and Superannuation registration: If you hire Australian employees, you must register for payroll tax in your operating state, withhold and remit PAYG (Pay As You Go) tax, and pay 11.5% superannuation contributions on top of employee wages.

 

Documents Required from India for Australian Company Registration

As an Indian national registering a company in Australia, you will need to provide the following documents as part of the ASIC registration, ABN application, and banking setup processes:

  • Valid passport: A current government-issued passport is your primary identification document for all Australian registrations and banking applications.
  • Proof of Indian residential address: A recent utility bill, bank statement, or Aadhaar card confirming your current address in India.
  • Indian PAN card: Required for RBI/FEMA compliance when remitting capital from India to your Australian company through India’s Overseas Direct Investment (ODI) framework.
  • Proposed company details: Company name choices (with two alternatives), proposed business activities (for ABN application), initial share structure, and the intended registered office address in Australia.
  • If registering as a subsidiary of your Indian company: Certificate of Incorporation of your Indian entity, Memorandum and Articles of Association, and a Board Resolution authorising the establishment of an Australian subsidiary – all translated into English if in any other language.

No notarisation or apostille is required on Indian documents for standard ASIC Pty Ltd registration in most cases. Clear, current scanned copies are typically sufficient.

Cost of Registering a Company in Australia from India (2026)

Understanding all the costs involved – both one-time setup costs and ongoing annual costs – is essential before you begin. Here is a complete and realistic breakdown for 2026:

Cost Component Amount (AUD) Frequency Notes
ASIC company registration fee (Pty Ltd) AUD 611 One-time Government fee, non-negotiable. Subject to annual ASIC revision.
ASIC annual review fee AUD 329 Annual Due each year on the company’s review date to maintain registration.
Company name reservation (optional) AUD 62 One-time Optional – only if you want to reserve the name before filing.
Nominee resident director service AUD 1,200 – 3,500 Annual Required if no Australian resident director is available. Varies by provider.
Registered office address service AUD 200 – 600 Annual Physical Australian address for ASIC correspondence.
ABN and TFN registration Free One-time No government fee for ABN or TFN registration.
GST registration Free One-time No government fee for GST registration.
Company Constitution drafting AUD 300 – 800 One-time Optional but recommended for foreign-owned companies.
Annual tax return (company) AUD 800 – 2,500 Annual Professional fee for ATO annual company tax return lodgement.
BAS lodgement (quarterly, if GST registered) AUD 150 – 400/quarter Quarterly Business Activity Statement – professional fee varies by transaction volume.

Estimated first-year total (all-in): AUD 4,500 – 9,000, depending primarily on whether you use a nominee director service and the complexity of your annual accounting and tax requirements. From year two onwards, annual ongoing costs (ASIC review fee, nominee director, registered office, and tax compliance) typically range from AUD 3,000 to AUD 7,000.

Annual Compliance Obligations for Your Australian Company

Once your Australian Pty Ltd is registered, maintaining its legal standing requires consistent attention to the following annual obligations:

ASIC Annual Review

ASIC issues an annual review statement on the anniversary of your company’s registration. You have 28 days from the review date to review your company’s details, notify ASIC of any changes, and pay the annual review fee of AUD 329. Failure to pay this fee can result in your company being deregistered. Any changes to directors, shareholders, or registered address must be notified to ASIC within 28 days of the change occurring.

ATO Annual Company Tax Return

Australian companies must lodge an annual company tax return with the Australian Taxation Office (ATO). The standard corporate tax rate in Australia is 25% for base rate entities – which covers most small and medium-sized companies with a turnover below AUD 50 million – and 30% for larger companies. The deadline for lodging the annual company tax return is 31 October each year for companies lodging through a registered tax agent.

BAS Lodgement (if GST-registered)

If your company is registered for GST, you must lodge quarterly Business Activity Statements (BAS) reporting your GST collected and GST paid, and remitting the net amount to the ATO. BAS deadlines are typically 28 days after the end of each quarter. Monthly BAS lodgement may be required for high-turnover businesses.

PAYG Withholding (if employing Australian staff)

If your company employs Australian residents, you must register for Pay As You Go (PAYG) withholding, deduct income tax from employee wages, and remit it to the ATO on a regular schedule (monthly or quarterly). You must also pay 11.5% superannuation contributions into your employees’ nominated super funds.

Maintaining Company Records

Australian law requires companies to maintain accurate financial records for a minimum of 7 years and to keep those records available for ATO audit inspection. This includes bank statements, invoices, receipts, contracts, and all financial transactions.

AccounTX’s Australia accounting and tax compliance services cover all of these ongoing obligations – from annual company tax return preparation and BAS lodgement to ASIC annual review management – so your Australian company stays fully compliant without requiring your constant attention from India.

The Australian Resident Director Requirement: A Complete Guide for Indian Founders

Because the resident director requirement is the most significant practical hurdle for Indian entrepreneurs registering a company in Australia, it deserves its own detailed section.

What the Law Requires

Section 201A of the Corporations Act 2001 states that a proprietary company must have at least one director who “ordinarily resides” in Australia. The key concept is ordinary residence – meaning the person genuinely lives in Australia on a regular, settled basis. This is different from Australian citizenship, permanent residency, or tax residency. An Australian citizen living in India does not satisfy the requirement. A foreign national on a long-term visa who lives regularly in Australia does satisfy it.

Consequences of Non-Compliance

ASIC enforces the resident director requirement actively. A company that does not have an Australian resident director is in breach of the Corporations Act and can face enforcement action, including fines and potential deregistration. Banks will also verify director residency when opening company accounts, and government agencies verify compliance during licence applications. Non-compliance is not a technicality to be overlooked – it is a genuine legal risk.

Using a Nominee Director Service

A nominee director service provider appoints one of their qualified Australian resident staff members as a director of your company on paper. This person satisfies the legal residency requirement but does not actively manage your business – your company’s actual operations, strategic decisions, and day-to-day management remain entirely under your control as the shareholder.

Nominee directors operate under a director’s service agreement that clearly defines their limited role and protects both parties. The service typically costs AUD 1,200 to AUD 3,500 per year depending on the provider and the specific indemnity arrangements in place. This cost is a standard, recurring operational expense for foreign-owned Australian companies – budget for it alongside your ASIC annual review fee and registered office cost.

Common Mistakes Indian Entrepreneurs Make When Registering in Australia

  1. Ignoring the India-side RBI/FEMA obligations: When you invest capital from India into your Australian company, you are making an Overseas Direct Investment (ODI) under RBI’s framework. This requires prior approval or registration depending on the investment size, and ongoing annual reporting through form OPI (Overseas Portfolio Investment) or form APR (Annual Performance Report) as applicable. Failing to comply with India-side ODI requirements while operating an Australian company creates legal risk in India, not just Australia.
  2. Confusing ACN with ABN: The ACN is your company identifier issued by ASIC at registration. The ABN is a separate tax identifier issued by the ABR. You need both – and they serve different purposes. Your ACN must appear on certain official documents; your ABN appears on tax invoices. Many Indian entrepreneurs do not realise these are different numbers and use them interchangeably – this creates compliance issues with ASIC and the ATO.
  3. Delaying GST registration until turnover exceeds AUD 75,000: The ATO can backdate your GST registration by up to four years and hold you liable for 10% GST on all Australian sales made since the threshold was breached – even if you never charged GST in your invoices. If your turnover is likely to cross AUD 75,000, register for GST at the outset rather than waiting.
  4. Not maintaining a compliant registered office address: Using a PO Box as your registered address, or failing to update ASIC when your registered office address changes, is a compliance violation. ASIC sends legally significant notices to the registered address. Missed notices can result in your company failing to respond to regulatory requirements on time.
  5. Missing ASIC annual review fees: ASIC’s annual review fee is modest – AUD 329 – but missing it has serious consequences, including ASIC issuing a late fee notice and ultimately deregistering your company if the fee remains unpaid. Set a recurring reminder calendar entry for your company’s annual review date.
  6. Not keeping Australian financial records separately from Indian operations: Your Australian company’s financials must be maintained in Australian dollars under Australian tax and accounting standards. Mixing Australian records with your Indian entity’s books creates audit complexity and transfer pricing exposure. Maintain separate, clean Australian accounts from the first month of operation.

For Indian entrepreneurs also exploring the USA and Singapore as incorporation destinations, see our companion guides: How to Register a Company in the USA from India and our guide on Singapore company registration, which allows you to compare the processes, requirements, and costs across all three markets before deciding where to incorporate first.

Frequently Asked Questions: Company Registration in Australia for Indian Entrepreneurs

Can an Indian citizen register a company in Australia without visiting Australia?

Yes. Indian citizens can register a company in Australia entirely remotely. The ASIC registration, ABN and TFN applications, and company setup can all be completed online without visiting Australia. The key requirement to plan for is the mandatory Australian resident director – this is satisfied either through an Australian contact willing to serve as director, or through a professional nominee director service.

What is a Proprietary Limited (Pty Ltd) company in Australia?

A Pty Ltd is Australia’s most common business structure and the equivalent of India’s Private Limited company. It is a separate legal entity that limits shareholder liability to the value of their shares. It can have 1 to 50 non-employee shareholders, requires at least one Australian resident director, and is regulated by ASIC under the Corporations Act 2001. It is the standard vehicle for foreign-owned Australian companies.

What is the resident director requirement for Australian companies?

Section 201A of the Corporations Act requires every Pty Ltd to have at least one director who ordinarily resides in Australia. This means genuine regular, settled habitation in Australia – not just Australian citizenship. Indian founders who do not have an Australian resident they can appoint use professional nominee director services, which cost approximately AUD 1,200 to AUD 3,500 per year.

What is the difference between an ACN and an ABN in Australia?

An ACN (Australian Company Number) is a 9-digit identifier issued by ASIC when you register a company. An ABN (Australian Business Number) is an 11-digit identifier issued by the Australian Business Register (ABR) for tax and GST purposes. Every registered company needs both. The TFN (Tax File Number) is a separate ATO identifier issued automatically alongside the ABN application.

Do I need to register for GST in Australia?

GST registration is mandatory when your Australian company’s annual turnover reaches AUD 75,000. GST is charged at 10%. Voluntary registration is possible below the threshold and is advisable if your clients are GST-registered businesses who need to claim back GST. Register at the same time as your ABN to avoid potential backdated liability if turnover grows quickly.

What is the ASIC registration fee for an Australian company in 2026?

The ASIC registration fee for a standard Pty Ltd company in 2026 is AUD 611 (one-time). The annual ASIC review fee to maintain your registration is AUD 329 per year. These government fees are in addition to professional service fees for incorporation assistance, nominee director, and registered office services.

What is a Director ID and is it required for Australian company directors?

A Director ID is a unique identifier issued by the Australian Business Registry Services (ABRS) to verify director identity and prevent fraud. All Australian company directors must hold a Director ID before being appointed. Nominee directors hold their own Director IDs. You as the foreign owner-shareholder do not need a Director ID unless you are personally appointed as a director of the Australian company.

How long does it take to register a company in Australia?

ASIC processes Pty Ltd registrations within 1 to 3 business days. ABN registration is often instant or within 1 to 7 days. GST registration follows quickly if applied for simultaneously. Total time from start to a fully operational company with all registrations – ACN, ABN, TFN, GST – is approximately 1 to 2 weeks.

Ready to Register Your Company in Australia from India?

Company registration in Australia for Indian entrepreneurs is structurally straightforward once you understand the key requirements – particularly the resident director obligation and the distinct roles of the ACN, ABN, TFN, and GST registration. With the right guidance, the entire setup can be completed remotely from India in one to two weeks.

The ongoing compliance framework – ASIC annual reviews, ATO tax returns, BAS lodgement, and PAYG obligations – requires consistent attention but is entirely manageable with professional support. Indian founders who set up their Australian company correctly from the outset, and maintain clean Australian accounting and tax records from the start, find that the ongoing compliance overhead is modest relative to the commercial opportunities an Australian entity opens up.

AccounTX provides end-to-end Australia company registration services for Indian entrepreneurs – from structure selection and ASIC filing to nominee director coordination, ABN registration, GST setup, and ongoing accounting and tax compliance.

Our Global Desk model means we handle both sides of the equation: the Australian entity setup and compliance, and the India-side RBI/FEMA/ODI requirements that apply when you invest from India into your Australian company. You get one expert team managing both jurisdictions – eliminating the coordination gaps that arise when different advisors manage each country separately.

Schedule a free 30-minute consultation with AccounTX today. Tell us your business goals and we will recommend the right structure, walk you through the full process, and provide a clear all-in cost estimate for your Australian company setup.

About the Author

Satish Sarawagi is a Partner at AccounTX with over a decade of experience advising Indian entrepreneurs and global businesses on cross-border company formation, international taxation, and multi-jurisdiction compliance. He leads AccounTX’s Global Desk practice, which specialises in helping Indian founders register and manage companies in the USA, Australia, Singapore, the UK, and the UAE. Connect on LinkedIn.

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