You applied for DPIIT recognition on the Startup India portal and the application came back rejected, or your tax exemption has been pending for months. This is fixable. A rejection is not the end — it usually means a document was missing or your innovation write-up was not clear. This guide explains why applications fail, how to reapply, how to chase a stuck tax exemption, and when RTI can help.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
Quick answer
A DPIIT recognition rejection is not final — you can fix the flagged gaps and reapply on the Startup India portal. Read the reason carefully, check your incorporation documents match the portal entry, and rewrite your innovation and scalability write-up in plain, specific terms. Remember that recognition and the income-tax exemption are two separate approvals; recognition only makes you eligible to apply for the exemption. If a decision is stuck, raise a portal grievance and, where you need recorded reasons or file movement, file an RTI with DPIIT.
This guide is for founders and small companies in India who applied for DPIIT recognition (the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade “recognised startup” status) through the Startup India portal and hit a wall. It is for you if:
It assumes you have already incorporated your entity — a private limited company, a registered partnership, or a limited liability partnership (LLP). If you have not yet incorporated or registered, start with our companion guide on how to register a startup and get DPIIT recognition in 2026, which walks through the eligibility basics before you apply.
One thing to be clear about from the start: DPIIT recognition and the startup tax exemption are not the same thing. Recognition is granted by DPIIT. The income-tax exemption for eligible startups is a separate approval decided by an inter-ministerial board, applied for after recognition. Many founders assume recognition automatically switches on tax benefits — it does not. We treat the two separately throughout this guide.
Log in to the Startup India portal and open your application status. Find the exact reason for rejection or the current pending stage. Take a clear screenshot of the status page, including your application reference number and the date. Save it as a PDF. This is your starting evidence.
If the portal shows only a generic line like “does not meet the criteria” without specifics, write that down — you will need it for the grievance and, if necessary, the RTI request later. Note whether the rejection mentions the innovation write-up, the documents, eligibility (entity age or turnover), or the entity structure.
Pull out your incorporation paperwork: the Certificate of Incorporation (for a company or LLP) or the partnership registration certificate, your PAN, and the authorised signatory details. Check that the entity name, incorporation date, and entity type on these documents exactly match what you entered on the portal. Even a small mismatch — a date typo, a different spelling — can cause a rejection.
Rewrite your innovation and scalability write-up. This is the single most common reason recognition is refused. The recognition team wants to see that your entity is working towards innovation, development, or improvement of products, processes, or services, or has a scalable business model with potential for employment or wealth creation. Avoid jargon. In plain sentences, explain: what problem you solve, what is new or improved about your approach, how it can scale, and who benefits. Three or four tight paragraphs beat two pages of buzzwords.
Gather your supporting evidence of innovation if you have any: a website, a product demo link, a pitch deck, patent or trademark filings, awards, letters from customers or incubators, or media coverage. You do not need all of these — but one or two concrete proofs make the write-up credible.
If your rejection was about eligibility — the entity being older than the permitted age limit, turnover crossing the prescribed threshold, or the entity having been formed by splitting up or reconstructing an existing business — check the current eligibility conditions on the official portal. These thresholds change; do not rely on memory or old blog posts. Confirm the figures on startupindia.gov.in before you reapply.
Assemble the full reapplication: corrected portal details, the rewritten innovation write-up, and the proof documents in clean PDF form (legible scans, correct file size limits as the portal specifies). Read the rejection reason one more time and make sure every point is now answered.
If the issue was a delay rather than a rejection, draft a short grievance (use the template in this guide) quoting your reference number and the date you applied. If a tax exemption is involved and real money is at stake, line up a 30-minute paid consultation with a company secretary or chartered accountant before you resubmit. Getting the framing right the first time saves weeks.
Finally, decide your escalation path for Monday: reapply on the portal, or file a grievance, or — if the reasons are still unclear — prepare an RTI to DPIIT. The rest of this guide covers each route.
| Document | What it proves | Where to get it |
|---|---|---|
| Rejection / status screenshot (PDF) | The stated reason, your reference number, and the date | Startup India portal — your application dashboard |
| Certificate of Incorporation / LLP / partnership registration | Entity legally exists; date and type of incorporation | MCA portal (company/LLP) or Registrar of Firms (partnership) |
| Entity PAN | Tax identity of the entity matches portal details | Your records / income-tax e-filing portal |
| Innovation and scalability write-up | The entity is innovative or has a scalable model | Prepared by you (the core of the application) |
| Proof of innovation (optional but strong) | Credibility — website, demo, patents, awards, customer letters | Your own materials / IP filings / incubator |
| Authorised signatory ID and authorisation | The person applying is authorised to bind the entity | Board resolution / partnership deed / your records |
| Financial statements (for tax exemption stage) | Turnover within the threshold; eligibility for exemption | Your chartered accountant |
| Self-declarations (for tax exemption stage) | The entity has not invested in restricted assets, as required | Prepared per the tax-exemption form requirements |
| Grievance acknowledgement / ticket number | You raised the issue formally and when | Startup India portal / NSWS / CPGRAMS after filing |
Open your application on the Startup India portal and locate the exact wording of the rejection or the pending stage. Do not skim it. The reason almost always falls into one of four buckets: a weak or unclear innovation write-up, a problem with incorporation documents or details not matching, an eligibility issue (entity age, turnover, or the entity being a split or reconstruction of an existing business), or an incomplete application. Identify which one applies to you, because the fix is different for each.
Compare your portal entries against your Certificate of Incorporation (or LLP/partnership registration) line by line. Entity name spelling, incorporation date, entity type, and PAN must match exactly. Upload fresh, legible PDFs that meet the portal's file format and size rules. If your entity name on the portal differs from the MCA record because of a recent change, make sure the supporting document reflects the current legal name. Mismatches are the easiest rejection to cure.
This is where most applications are won or lost. Explain, in plain language, what you do, what is genuinely new or improved about it, and how it can scale. The recognition criteria look for innovation, development, or improvement of products, processes, or services, or a scalable model with potential for employment or wealth creation. Be specific. “We use AI to optimise things” is weak. “We cut a small clinic's appointment no-shows by sending automated reminders, and the same system can serve thousands of clinics” is concrete. Attach one or two proofs of innovation where you have them.
If the rejection was about eligibility, check the current conditions on the official portal rather than relying on old figures. The startup definition has limits on the entity's age from incorporation and on annual turnover, and it excludes entities formed by splitting up or reconstructing an existing business. These thresholds have changed over the years, so verify the present numbers on startupindia.gov.in. If your entity genuinely does not meet the definition, recognition will keep failing — in that case, get professional advice on restructuring or on alternative schemes.
If you have fixed the gaps, submit a fresh application on the portal. If instead your application is simply stuck with no decision for an unusually long time, raise a grievance through the Startup India portal's contact channel and, where the issue touches business approvals, the National Single Window System helpdesk. Quote your application reference number, the date you applied, and a one-line summary. Save the acknowledgement and ticket number.
Once recognition is active, the income-tax exemption for eligible startups is a separate application, decided by an inter-ministerial board. You will need your financial statements and the required self-declarations. Read the conditions carefully — the exemption has its own eligibility tests, including limits tied to the entity's incorporation period and turnover, and restrictions on certain investments. Because real tax money is involved, this is the stage where a chartered accountant earns their fee. Do not assume recognition alone gives you any tax benefit.
If your tax exemption application sits pending for months, first confirm it is complete and that your recognition is active. Then raise a grievance on the Startup India portal and, in parallel, on CPGRAMS, selecting the relevant ministry and department. Quote your recognition number and the application date in every message. A delayed startup tax decision sometimes overlaps with a wider income-tax issue — if you have also received an income-tax notice in the meantime, see our guide on income-tax notice deadlines and replies so you do not miss a separate clock.
If the portal will not tell you why you were rejected, or you cannot find out where your file is stuck, file an RTI with DPIIT (and, for the tax exemption stage, potentially CBDT). RTI does not overturn a decision, but it forces the department to disclose the recorded reasons and the file noting. That written reason is often exactly what you need to fix the next application or to build a grievance. The RTI route is covered in detail below.
| Stage | Action | Forum / Destination | Target timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fix the flagged gaps and submit a fresh recognition application | Startup India portal (startupindia.gov.in) | Usually a few working days (varies) |
| 2 | Raise a grievance if the application is stuck or the reason is unclear | Startup India portal contact channel / NSWS helpdesk | Note ticket number; follow up |
| 3 | Escalate a pending decision to the central grievance system | CPGRAMS (pgportal.gov.in) — relevant ministry/department | Government grievance target (varies) |
| 4 | RTI application for recorded reasons / file movement | CPIO, DPIIT (and CBDT for the tax exemption stage) | 30 days (RTI Act, Section 7) |
| 5 | RTI first appeal if no reply or an unsatisfactory reply | First Appellate Authority of the concerned department | As provided under RTI Act, Section 19 |
Replace the text in square brackets with your own details before sending.
To, The Grievance Officer Startup India / Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade
Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]
Subject: Grievance regarding DPIIT recognition application
[rejected / pending] — Application Ref. No. [Your Reference Number]
Respected Sir / Madam,
1. I am [Your Name], the [Director / Designated Partner / Authorised
Signatory] of [Legal Name of Entity], [entity type: Private Limited Company / LLP / Registered Partnership], incorporated/registered on [DD/MM/YYYY], PAN [Entity PAN].
2. We submitted an application for DPIIT recognition on the Startup India
portal on [DD/MM/YYYY], vide Application Reference No. [XXXX].
3. The current status is [rejected / pending]. [If rejected: The reason
shown on the portal is "[exact wording]", which we believe we have now addressed.] [If pending: No decision has been communicated despite the usual processing period having lapsed.]
4. We have [reapplied with corrected documents and a revised innovation
write-up / submitted all required documents] and request that our application be reviewed and decided at the earliest.
5. We request a written communication of the outcome and, if any document
or clarification is still required, a specific list of what is needed.
We are available for any clarification at the contact details below.
Yours faithfully,
[Your Full Name] [Designation] [Legal Name of Entity] [Application Reference Number] [Mobile Number] [Email Address]
Enclosures: A — Portal status screenshot (dated [DD/MM/YYYY]) B — Certificate of Incorporation / registration C — Revised innovation and scalability write-up D — Proof-of-innovation documents [if any]
The Right to Information Act, 2005 applies to public authorities, and DPIIT is a department of the Government of India. The Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), which oversees the income-tax exemption side, is also a public authority. RTI is useful in a DPIIT or tax-exemption dispute in these specific situations:
To file an RTI online, see our step-by-step RTI filing guide. The prescribed fee for Central government authorities is modest — check the current amount and accepted payment modes on the official RTI portal. The CPIO must respond within the period set in the Act. If you get no reply or an inadequate one, our guide on filing a first appeal under RTI Section 19 shows the next step, and the first appeal and second appeal guide covers the full ladder. For deeper strategy on using RTI in regulatory disputes, The RTI Playbook is a useful companion.
RTI has clear limits in a DPIIT or startup tax matter:
Yes. A DPIIT rejection is not final. You can fix the gaps the recognition team flagged and submit a fresh application on the Startup India portal. Most rejections relate to weak innovation write-ups, missing incorporation documents, or an entity that does not meet the startup definition. Address each reason directly before reapplying.
Common reasons include an unclear innovation or scalability write-up, the entity being older than the permitted age limit, turnover above the prescribed threshold, the entity being formed by splitting or reconstructing an existing business, or incorporation documents that do not match the portal details. The portal usually shows a reason; if it does not, ask for it.
No. DPIIT recognition is the first step. The income-tax exemption for eligible startups is a separate approval that you apply for after recognition, and it is decided by an inter-ministerial board. Recognition makes you eligible to apply; it does not by itself grant any tax benefit. Treat them as two distinct processes.
Recognition is usually processed within a few working days once a complete application is submitted, though timelines vary. If your application is stuck well beyond the usual period, raise a grievance through the Startup India portal contact channel and the National Single Window System helpdesk, quoting your application reference number.
Yes. DPIIT is a department of the Government of India and is covered by the RTI Act, 2005. If the portal does not show a clear reason, you can file an RTI with the DPIIT Central Public Information Officer asking for the recorded reasons for rejection and copies of the noting or order on your application.
First confirm your DPIIT recognition is active and your exemption application is complete with the required declarations and financials. Then raise a grievance on the Startup India portal and through CPGRAMS, quoting your recognition number and application date. If you need the file movement records, an RTI to DPIIT or CBDT can help establish where the file is stuck.
For a simple documentation fix you can often reapply yourself. If your rejection turns on the startup definition, eligibility, or a tax exemption denial with money at stake, a company secretary, chartered accountant, or startup advisor is worth the cost. The innovation write-up and the tax exemption declarations are where professional framing helps most.