Indian companies expanding into Türkiye face a dual compliance challenge: meeting Turkish corporate requirements locally and satisfying India’s Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) and Reserve Bank of India (RBI) regulations for Overseas Direct Investment (ODI). Missing either side of this compliance equation can trigger severe penalties under FEMA, RBI compounding proceedings, interest charges, or even repatriation demands on your overseas investments.
For Indian founders, CFOs, and financial controllers from Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, or Chennai, navigating this regulatory framework is critical. This comprehensive guide walks you through the complete FEMA and RBI compliance framework for Indian companies investing in Türkiye, covering ODI rules, reporting forms, profit repatriation, DTAA benefits, and practical compliance checklists.
Why FEMA Applies to Your Türkiye Expansion
When an Indian company or resident individual invests in a foreign entity by incorporating a subsidiary, acquiring shares, setting up a joint venture, or providing loans it constitutes Overseas Direct Investment (ODI) under FEMA. This regulatory framework is governed by three key instruments:
Regulatory Framework
| Regulation | Purpose |
|---|---|
| FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999) | Primary legislation governing all foreign exchange transactions |
| FEMA (Overseas Investment) Rules, 2022 | Replaced earlier OI Regulations; liberalized framework but maintained reporting |
| RBI Master Direction on Overseas Investment | Detailed operational guidelines for banks and investors |
The 2022 Reform Impact:
The 2022 FEMA Overseas Investment reforms significantly liberalized the framework by:
- Simplifying reporting requirements
- Removing several prior approval requirements
- Clarifying permissible sectors and activities
- Introducing clearer definitions for financial commitments
However: Compliance obligations remain stringent, and reporting timelines are strict. Technical non-compliance can create disproportionate regulatory headaches during future fundraising, audits, or exit transactions.
Overseas Direct Investment (ODI): The Basics
Under FEMA’s ODI framework, Indian companies can invest in a foreign entity (like your Turkish subsidiary) through three primary mechanisms:
Permissible Investment Methods
| Method | Description | Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Equity Investment | Share capital contribution to Turkish entity | Up to 400% of Indian company’s net worth |
| Loan to Foreign Entity | Providing loans to Turkish subsidiary | Subject to arm’s length pricing; max 400% of net worth |
| Guarantee | Guarantee on behalf of foreign entity | Max 400% of net worth; requires bank approval |
Automatic Route vs. Approval Route
| Route | Eligibility | RBI Approval Required? |
|---|---|---|
| Automatic Route | Investment up to 400% of net worth of Indian company; in permitted sectors | No — only post-facto reporting required |
| Approval Route | Investments beyond 400% of net worth; investments in financial services abroad; investments by individuals beyond USD 250,000 LRS limit | Yes — prior RBI approval mandatory |
For Most Indian Companies Investing in Türkiye:
- Technology, manufacturing, services, trading → Automatic Route applies
- No prior RBI approval needed
- Post-facto reporting through Authorized Dealer (AD) bank required
Net Worth Calculation:
Net Worth=Paid-up Capital+Reserves & Surplus−Accumulated Losses
Example:
- Indian company paid-up capital: INR 50,000,000
- Reserves & surplus: INR 30,000,000
- Accumulated losses: INR 5,000,000
- Net Worth: INR 75,000,000
- Maximum ODI Allowed (Automatic Route): 400% × INR 75,000,000 = INR 300,000,000
Step-by-Step FEMA Process for Investing in Türkiye
Open an ODI Account with Your Indian Bank
Your Indian bank specifically an AD Category I Bank (Authorized Dealer Category I) will be your primary interface with RBI for all overseas investment reporting.
What Is AD Category I Bank?
- Banks authorized by RBI to handle foreign exchange transactions
- Most major Indian banks qualify: HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, State Bank of India, Axis Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank
- Only AD Category I banks can process ODI remittances
Action Items:
- Open dedicated ODI account (separate from regular corporate account)
- Inform bank of intent to invest in Türkiye
- Request ODI compliance checklist from bank’s international banking division
- Obtain bank’s ODI reporting forms
Pro Tip: Choose a bank with international ODI experience — they’ll guide you through forms and reduce errors that cause delays.
File Form ODI-Part I Before Remittance
Critical: Before sending any funds to your Turkish entity, you must file Form ODI-Part I through your AD bank. This is the pre-investment reporting requirement.
Form ODI-Part I Details:
| Field | Information Required |
|---|---|
| Indian Company Details | Name, CIN, registered address, PAN, Aadhaar of directors |
| Foreign Entity Details | Turkish company name, address, Registration number (OGRN/VKN), sector |
| Investment Details | Amount being remitted (INR/USD/TRY), equity vs. loan breakdown |
| Purpose of Investment | Business description in Türkiye, expected activities |
| Ownership Structure | Percentage ownership, UBO details |
| Bank Details | Indian bank account details, Turkish bank account details |
Timing: File before remitting funds ideally 5–7 days before planned transfer
How to File:
- Download Form ODI-Part I from your AD bank’s website
- Complete all fields with accurate information
- Submit to AD bank along with supporting documents
- Bank verifies and forwards to RBI through ASYSTM system
- Bank provides acknowledgment receipt (keep for records)
Supporting Documents Required:
- Board resolution authorizing ODI
- Audited financial statements of Indian company (last 2 years)
- Valuation report (if equity investment exceeds certain thresholds)
- Turkish company registration documents (Trade Registry Gazette, VKN)
- Business plan for Turkish entity
Timeline: Bank typically processes within 3–5 business days
Remit Funds via Official Banking Channels
Critical Rule: All capital remittances must flow through official banking channels.
Prohibited Methods:
- ❌ Cash transfers (even if physically carried to Türkiye)
- ❌ Crypto-based capital injections (Bitcoin, USDT, etc.)
- ❌ Hawala or informal value transfer systems
- ❌ Third-party payments (paying through another company’s account)
Permissible Methods:
- ✅ SWIFT transfer from Indian corporate account to Turkish corporate account
- ✅ Bank draft (for smaller amounts, though SWIFT preferred)
- ✅ Telegraphic transfer through AD bank
Remittance Process:
- Initiate SWIFT transfer from Indian ODI account
- Specify purpose code: “ODI – Equity Investment in Turkish Subsidiary”
- Include Turkish company’s VKN and OGRN in transfer references
- Retain SWIFT confirmation receipt
- Provide copy to AD bank for ODI record
FX Conversion:
- Indian Rupee (INR) → US Dollar (USD) → Turkish Lira (TRY)
- Or INR → USD directly (if Turkish account accepts USD)
- Bank applies prevailing RBI-approved exchange rates
- Bank charges: Typically 0.5%–1% FX margin + SWIFT fees (INR 1,000–5,000)
Important: Keep all SWIFT receipts and bank statements RBI may request these during audits.
Annual Performance Report (APR) Form ODI-Part II
Mandatory Requirement: Within 60 days of your Turkish entity’s financial year-end, you must file an Annual Performance Report (APR) through your AD bank using Form ODI-Part II.
Form ODI-Part II (APR) Details
| Field | Information Required |
|---|---|
| Turkish Entity Financials | Revenue, profit/loss, total assets, total liabilities |
| Audited Financial Statements | Attach audited balance sheet, P&L, cash flow statement |
| Dividend Paid | Amount paid to Indian parent, date of payment |
| Outstanding Investment | Current equity value, outstanding loans |
| Business Activities | Summary of operations in Türkiye during the year |
| Compliance Status | Turkish tax compliance, regulatory filings status |
Timing: File within 60 days of Turkish FY close
Example Timeline:
- Turkish company FY: January 1 – December 31
- Audited financials ready: March 15
- APR filing deadline: March 31 (60 days after December 31)
Supporting Documents Required:
- Audited financial statements of Turkish subsidiary (prepared by Turkish YMM — Certified Public Accountant)
- Auditor’s report in English (or translated by certified translator)
- Board resolution approving dividend (if applicable)
- Turkish tax compliance certificate
Pro Tip: Engage Turkish CPA early to ensure audited financials are ready before 60-day deadline. Late filings trigger penalties.
Share Certificate / Proof of Investment
Mandatory Requirement: Within 6 months of share allotment in the Turkish company, you must obtain and report the share certificate (or equivalent proof of investment) to your AD bank.
What Qualifies as Proof of Investment:
| Document | Issued By | Validity |
|---|---|---|
| Share Certificate | Turkish company (OOO/Ltd. Şti.) | Primary proof |
| EGRUL Extract | FNS (Federal Tax Service) Russia / Trade Registry Türkiye | Secondary proof |
| Capital Deposit Certificate | Turkish bank confirming capital deposit | Supporting document |
| Notarized Shareholder Register | Turkish Notary | Supplemental proof |
Action Items:
- Obtain original share certificate from Turkish company after registration
- Ensure certificate includes: company name, shareholder name, number of shares, percentage ownership, date of allotment
- Get certificate translated into English by certified Turkish translator (if in Turkish)
- Submit copy to AD bank through ODI-Part I record update
- Retain original for your records
Timeline: Within 6 months of Turkish company incorporation
Why This Matters: RBI requires proof that investment actually occurred. Missing this documentation can trigger compounding proceedings.
Key FEMA Reporting Forms: Complete Overview
| Form | Purpose | Deadline | Consequence of Missing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Form ODI-Part I | Initial investment reporting | Before remittance | Remittance rejected; compounding proceedings |
| Form ODI-Part II (APR) | Annual performance reporting | 60 days after Turkish FY close | Up to 3× amount involved or INR 2 lakh penalty |
| Form ODI-Part III | Disinvestment / winding up reporting | On event (within 60 days) | Penalty for delayed reporting |
| FLA Return | Foreign Liabilities & Assets (RBI) | July 15 each year | INR 10,000–INR 1 lakh penalty |
FLA Return (Foreign Liabilities & Assets)
Who Must File: Any Indian company with outstanding overseas investment (including in Türkiye), even if no new transactions occurred during the year.
FLA Return Details:
| Field | Information Required |
|---|---|
| Outstanding ODI | Total equity + loans invested in Turkish entity |
| Foreign Assets | Value of Turkish subsidiary’s assets |
| Foreign Liabilities | Turkish subsidiary’s debts/loans |
| Dividend Received | Amount repatriated to India during the year |
| Additional Investment | Any new capital injected during the year |
| Disinvestment | Any shares sold or equity reduced during the year |
Filing Process:
- File online through RBI’s FLA Return Portal
- Requires digital signature of Company Secretary or Director
- Submit by July 15 for previous financial year (April 1 – March 31)
Example:
- Turkish FY: January 1 – December 31
- Indian FY: April 1 – March 31
- FLA Return deadline: July 15 for Indian FY ending March 31
Penalty for Late Filing: INR 10,000–INR 1 lakh depending on delay duration
Liberalized Remittance Scheme (LRS) for Indian Founders
If you are an Indian resident individual (not a company) investing personally in a Turkish entity, the Liberalized Remittance Scheme (LRS) governs your overseas investment not the ODI framework.
LRS Key Provisions
| Parameter | Limit/Requirement |
|---|---|
| LRS Limit | USD 250,000 per financial year per individual |
| Applicable To | Resident individuals only (not companies) |
| Permitted Uses | Equity investment, loans, gift, maintenance of close relatives, travel, education, medical treatment |
| Prohibited Uses | Credit card remittances, trading in foreign exchange abroad, investing in prohibited sectors |
| Reporting | Through bank via Form A2 and specific ODI reporting |
LRS Process for Personal Investment in Türkiye
- Visit Your Bank: Approach AD Category I bank for LRS remittance
- Fill Form A2: Declare purpose as “Overseas Equity Investment in Turkish Company”
- Provide Documentation:
- PAN card
- Aadhaar card
- Turkish company share certificate (if already incorporated)
- Business plan for Turkish entity
-源 of funds declaration
- Bank Processes: Bank verifies and remits USD up to USD 250,000
- Tax Deduction:TCS (Tax Collected at Source) applies:
- 20% TCS for remittances > INR 7,000,000 (for most purposes)
- 5% TCS for education/medical (not applicable to ODI)
- TCS is refundable when filing income tax return
Important Distinction:
- Companies: Use ODI framework (Form ODI-Part I, II, III, FLA Return)
- Individuals: Use LRS (USD 250,000 limit, Form A2, TCS applies)
Can Individuals Use LRS for Turkish Company Investment?
- Yes — if investing personally as individual shareholder
- No — if investing on behalf of Indian company (must use ODI framework)
Profit Repatriation from Türkiye to India
Once your Turkish subsidiary earns profits, bringing money back to India requires careful compliance on both Turkish and Indian sides.
Turkish Side: Dividend Withholding Tax
Withholding Tax Rate: 10% on dividends paid to foreign shareholders
DTAA Reduction: Under India-Türkiye DTAA, rate may be reduced to 5–10% (check current protocol)
Process:
- Turkish company declares dividend through Board Resolution
- Turkish company withholds 10% tax before payment
- Tax paid to Turkish Tax Office (GIB)
- Net dividend (90%) remitted to Indian company via SWIFT
Documentation Required:
- Board resolution approving dividend
- Turkish tax payment receipt
- Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from Indian tax authorities (to claim DTAA benefits)
- Form 15CA/15CB (Indian side see below)
Indian Side: Repatriation Compliance
Step 1: Receive SWIFT Transfer
- Turkish bank sends USD/EUR to Indian company’s account
- Bank credits account after FX conversion (if needed)
- Retain SWIFT confirmation for records
Step 2: File Form 15CA/15CB (if applicable)
When Required:
- For remittances above prescribed thresholds (typically > INR 500,000 per transaction)
- For all dividend repatriations (regardless of amount)
Form 15CA:
- Online declaration filed by Indian company
- Declares nature of remittance, tax deducted, DTAA applicability
- Filed on Income Tax Department portal
Form 15CB:
- CA certification Chartered Accountant certifies:
- Taxability of remittance in India
- DTAA benefit applicability
- Correct TDS calculation
- CA issues Form 15CB after reviewing Turkish tax payment receipt and TRC
Process:
- Engage CA to review Turkish dividend documentation
- CA issues Form 15CB (typically 2–3 days)
- File Form 15CA online with Form 15CB attached
- Bank verifies Form 15CA before crediting account
Step 3: TDS Considerations
Taxability in India:
- Income from foreign subsidiaries may be taxable in India as foreign dividend income
- Tax rate: 25% (for companies) or applicable slab rate
- Foreign Tax Credit: Turkish withholding tax (10%) can be claimed as credit against Indian tax liability
Example Calculation:
- Turkish dividend declared: USD 100,000
- Turkish withholding tax (10%): USD 10,000
- Net received: USD 90,000
- Indian tax on dividend (25%): USD 25,000
- Foreign Tax Credit: USD 10,000 (Turkish tax paid)
- Net Indian Tax Payable: USD 25,000 − USD 10,000 = USD 15,000
India Türkiye Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA)
India and Türkiye have a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) in force, preventing the same income from being taxed in both countries and reducing withholding taxes.
Key DTAA Provisions:
| Income Type | DTAA Benefit | Standard Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Dividends | Reduced withholding (5–10%) | 15% (without DTAA) |
| Royalties | 15% maximum withholding | 20% (without DTAA) |
| Technical Services | 15% maximum withholding | 20% (without DTAA) |
| Capital Gains | Source country taxing rights on immovable property | Varies |
| Interest | 10–15% maximum withholding | 20% (without DTAA) |
How to Claim DTAA Benefits
Step 1: Obtain Tax Residency Certificate (TRC)
- Apply to Indian tax authorities (Income Tax Department)
- TRC confirms Indian company is tax resident in India
- TRC valid for 1 year; renew annually
Step 2: Submit TRC to Turkish Tax Authorities
- Provide TRC to Turkish Tax Office (GIB) when receiving dividend
- Turkish Tax Office applies reduced DTAA withholding rate
Step 3: File Form 10F (if required)
- Declaration of eligibility for DTAA benefits
- Filed on Indian Income Tax portal
Step 4: Claim Foreign Tax Credit in India
- File Form 67 with Indian income tax return
- Claim credit for Turkish tax paid (withholding tax)
- Reduce Indian tax liability accordingly
Why DTAA Matters:
- Without DTAA: 15% dividend withholding in Türkiye
- With DTAA: 5–10% dividend withholding
- Savings: 5–10% on all dividend repatriations
Example:
- Dividend: USD 1,000,000
- Without DTAA (15%): USD 150,000 withholding
- With DTAA (10%): USD 100,000 withholding
- Savings: USD 50,000
Common FEMA Violations and Penalties
| Violation | Penalty |
|---|---|
| Not filing APR (Form ODI-Part II) within 60 days | Up to 3× the amount involved or INR 2 lakh, whichever is higher |
| Remitting without Form ODI-Part I | Compounding proceedings (RBI investigation + penalty) |
| Not filing FLA Return by July 15 | INR 10,000–INR 1 lakh depending on delay |
| Investment in prohibited sectors | Full reversal + penalty (up to 3× amount) |
| Late share certificate reporting | INR 50,000–INR 2 lakh |
| Incorrect valuation reporting | Compounding proceedings + penalty |
RBI Compounding Mechanism:
RBI has an online compounding mechanism for violations:
- Voluntary disclosure (before RBI enforcement) → Lower penalties
- Enforcement-triggered (after RBI investigation) → Higher penalties + reputational damage
Compounding Process:
- Submit compounding application through AD bank
- Pay penalty (typically 25–50% of maximum penalty)
- RBI issues compounding order
- Compliance status restored
Pro Tip: Always disclose violations voluntarily through AD bank penalties are significantly lower than enforcement-triggered proceedings.
Practical Compliance Checklist for Indian Companies in Türkiye
Pre-Investment (Before Remitting Funds)
✅ Engage AD Category I Bank with international ODI experience (HDFC, ICICI, SBI, Axis)
✅ Obtain Board Resolution authorizing ODI in Türkiye
✅ Get audited financial statements of Indian company (last 2 years)
✅ File Form ODI-Part I through AD bank before remittance
✅ Obtain RBI/AD bank acknowledgment for ODI-Part I
During Investment (Remittance & Setup)
✅ Remit funds via official SWIFT transfer only (no cash/crypto)
✅ Specify purpose code: “ODI – Equity Investment in Turkish Subsidiary”
✅ Retain SWIFT confirmation receipt
✅ Obtain Turkish Trade Registry Gazette and VKN documents
✅ Provide Turkish documents to AD bank for ODI record update
✅ Obtain share certificate from Turkish company within 6 months
Post-Investment (Ongoing Compliance)
✅ File Annual Performance Report (Form ODI-Part II) within 60 days of Turkish FY close
✅ File FLA Return by July 15 each year (even if no new transactions)
✅ Maintain Turkish audited financial statements (engaged Turkish YMM/CPA)
✅ Obtain Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from Indian tax authorities annually
✅ File Form 15CA/15CB for dividend repatriation
✅ Claim Foreign Tax Credit via Form 67 in Indian tax return
✅ Maintain complete ODI documentation for minimum 5 years (RBI audit requirement)
Common Mistakes Indian Companies Make
Remitting Funds Before Filing Form ODI-Part I
Problem: Sending money to Türkiye before filing ODI-Part I triggers compounding proceedings.
Solution: Always file ODI-Part I through AD bank before initiating SWIFT transfer.
Missing 60-Day APR Deadline
Problem: Turkish FY ends December 31; APR filed late (after March 31) triggers 3× penalty.
Solution: Engage Turkish CPA early; set calendar reminder for 90 days before FY close.
Not Filing FLA Return
Problem: Companies assume “no transactions = no filing.” RBI requires FLA Return every year, even with zero activity.
Solution: File FLA Return by July 15 annually regardless of activity.
Ignoring DTAA Documentation
Problem: Paying 15% Turkish withholding tax instead of 10% under DTAA.
Solution: Obtain TRC annually; submit to Turkish Tax Office before dividend payment.
Using Crypto or Cash for Capital Injection
Problem: Crypto-based capital transfers or cash carried physically trigger FEMA violations.
Solution: Use only official SWIFT transfers through AD Category I bank.
Key Takeaway
FEMA and RBI compliance for overseas investment is process-heavy but manageable with the right banking partner and a CA/CS advisor experienced in cross-border transactions.
The 2022 FEMA Overseas Investment reforms simplified several procedural aspects, but reporting timelines remain strict:
- Form ODI-Part I: Before remittance
- APR (Form ODI-Part II): 60 days after Turkish FY close
- FLA Return: July 15 annually
- Share certificate: 6 months after incorporation
Non-compliance even technical non-compliance — can create disproportionate regulatory headaches during:
- Future fundraising (investors conduct FEMA due diligence)
- Audits (RBI conducts random ODI audits)
- Exit transactions (M&A buyers require clean FEMA compliance)
- Bank account opening (Indian banks may freeze accounts for non-compliance)
For Indian founders expanding to Türkiye:
- Engage AD Category I bank with ODI experience from Day 1
- File all forms on time never miss deadlines
- Maintain complete documentation for 5+ years
- Work with CA/CS advisor specializing in cross-border ODI
- Claim DTAA benefits to maximize profit repatriation
Compliance is your competitive advantage. Clean FEMA records make future fundraising, audits, and exits significantly smoother.