Table of Contents

How to register an NGO (Trust / Society / Section 8 Company)

How to register an NGO in India 2026 — RTI Wiki citizen guide

Quick answer. A non-profit in India can be registered in three legal forms: (1) Trust under the Indian Trusts Act 1882 + state Public Trust Acts (e.g., Maharashtra Public Trusts Act 1950) — minimum 2 trustees, registered with the Sub-Registrar / Charity Commissioner; (2) Society under the Societies Registration Act 1860 + state amendments — minimum 7 members, registered with the state Registrar of Societies; (3) Section 8 Company under §8 of the Companies Act 2013 — minimum 2 directors, registered at MCA via SPICe+ + INC-12 + INC-13 + INC-14. After the entity exists, apply for §12A registration (income-tax exempt status) and §80G (donor tax-deduction) on incometax.gov.in via Form 10A — provisional 3 years, renewable 5 years. After 3 years of active operations, apply for FCRA registration at fcraonline.nic.in to receive foreign donations. Section 8 Companies are now the preferred form for grant funding, CSR donor acceptance, and FCRA — but cost more in compliance.

Dr Anjali's story — "Aaradhya Foundation incorporated in 54 days, ₹25 lakh CSR cheque in Q1"

Dr Anjali Deshmukh, 41, paediatrician at a Mumbai hospital. Wanted to start an NGO focused on child nutrition in M-East ward slums. Had three potential corporate donors who insisted on Section 8 + §80G + FCRA before they would commit funds.

“I considered all three forms. A trust would have been cheapest (₹2,000-3,000 stamp duty in Maharashtra) but the corporate CSR officers I spoke to were politely insistent: 'we prefer Section 8 — easier audit trail, easier FCRA later, MCA-registered'. So I went with Section 8 Company. I worked with a CS friend who guided me through SPICe+ on mca.gov.in at near-cost — total professional fee ₹6,000 (most outside quotes were ₹15-25k). On 8 August 2024 I reserved the name 'Aaradhya Foundation' via SPICe+ Part A — approved in 2 days. Then filed INC-12 (Section 8 licence application) + INC-13 (Memorandum of Association in the prescribed format with charitable objects) + INC-14 (declaration by an advocate / CA / CS) + the SPICe+ Part B for incorporation — all together. ROC fee + stamp duty came to ₹8,500. The objects clause I drafted carefully — three specific charitable purposes (child nutrition, anaemia screening, cooked-meal supplementation), each backed by a measurable plan. ROC raised one query — wanted clarification on 'whether activities will be confined to India' — answered same day. Section 8 Licence issued 18 September 2024; Certificate of Incorporation with CIN U85100MH2024NPL… arrived 2 October 2024 — 54 days end to end. I then immediately applied Form 10A for §12A and §80G on incometax.gov.in (this is now a single combined form). Provisional approval came on 12 December 2024 — valid 3 years. With provisional 80G in hand, I approached the three corporate donors. The first one — a mid-sized pharma — wired ₹25 lakh CSR to Aaradhya Foundation's HDFC current account on 18 January 2025. Their tax team filed Form CSR-1, claimed full §80G deduction (50% in their case). We hired our first nutritionist in February 2025 and started the slum-meal pilot in M-East ward by March. Total cost of registration: ~₹14,500. Total Q1 funding raised: ₹25 lakh.

—Dr Anjali, March 2025

India has roughly 33 lakh registered NGOs (NITI Aayog Darpan database) — but only about 1.6 lakh hold §80G and only ~16,500 are FCRA-active (MHA data). The rest are dormant or non-tax-effective. The choice of legal form, and the discipline of follow-up registrations (12A, 80G, FCRA) makes the difference between a “paper NGO” and one that can actually accept funding.

What this is — and choosing your form

A non-profit “NGO” in India is not a single legal status — it is a working label for any of three statutory entities:

Side-by-side comparison:

Rule of thumb 2026:

Step-by-step process — Section 8 Company (most modern)

Step 1 — Decide directors, members, objects

Step 2 — Reserve the name (SPICe+ Part A)

Step 3 — Prepare the documents bundle

For each director / first member:

For the company:

Step 4 — File SPICe+ Part B + INC-12 + INC-13 + INC-14

After name approval:

Step 5 — ROC review

Step 6 — Open bank account + start operations

Step 7 — Apply Form 10A for §12A + §80G

Step 8 — Apply FCRA (after 3 years of operations)

Sample fee + form + timeline table

+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+
| Form                | Stage             | Fee            | Timeline  |
+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+
| Trust Deed          | Trust registration| Stamp duty:    | 7-30 days |
| (state Sub-Reg.)    |                   | 2-8% of trust  | per state |
|                     |                   | property +     |           |
|                     |                   | ₹100-1,100     |           |
|                     |                   | reg fee        |           |
+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+
| MoA + Rules         | Society           | ₹50-500 +      | 30-60 days|
| (state Registrar    | (Societies Act    | varies by state|           |
| of Societies)       | 1860)             |                |           |
+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+
| SPICe+ Part A       | Section 8 name    | ₹1,000         | 2-7 days  |
|                     | reservation       |                |           |
+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+
| SPICe+ Part B +     | Section 8         | ₹6,000-10,000  | 21-45 days|
| INC-12 + INC-13 +   | incorporation     | (ROC + stamp)  |           |
| INC-14 + INC-15     |                   |                |           |
+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+
| DSC (per director)  | Pre-requisite     | ₹1,000-1,800   | 1-2 days  |
+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+
| Form 10A            | §12A + §80G       | NIL            | 30-90 days|
| (Income Tax)        | provisional       |                |           |
+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+
| Form 10AB           | §12A + §80G       | NIL            | 60-120 dy |
|                     | regular renewal   |                |           |
+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+
| FC-3A (FCRA)        | Foreign donations | ₹3,000 - 10,000| 6-12 mo   |
|                     | regular           |                |           |
+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+
| FC-3B (Prior Permit)| One-time foreign  | ₹3,000         | 3-6 mo    |
|                     | donation          |                |           |
+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+
| RTI to PIO ROC      | Incorporation     | ₹10 by IPO.    | 30-day SLA|
|                     | stuck             | BPL = free.    |           |
+---------------------+-------------------+----------------+-----------+

Common reasons your NGO registration gets stuck

If stuck — the escalation ladder

Rung 1 — MCA helpdesk (Section 8)

Rung 2 — State Registrar of Societies / Sub-Registrar / Charity Commissioner

Rung 3 — CIT(Exemptions) for §12A / §80G issues

Rung 4 — CPGRAMS

Rung 5 — Right to Information (RTI)

ROC, MCA, CIT(Exemptions), Charity Commissioner, FCRA Wing of MHA — all are public authorities under §2(h) of the RTI Act 2005.

RTI helps here when:

See: RTI in 12 simple steps.

RTI does NOT help here when:

FAQs

Q. Trust vs Society vs Section 8 — quickest one-line decision?
For corporate funding + CSR + future FCRA: Section 8 Company. For local membership-driven body: Society. For family / religious / dynastic: Trust.

Q. Can a single person register an NGO?
No. All three forms need a minimum of 2 (Section 8 / Trust) or 7 (Society) people. There is no “one-person NGO” structure in India.

Q. Is §12A and §80G the same thing?
No. §12A is entity-level — it makes the NGO's income tax-exempt. §80G is donor-level — it lets the donor claim a tax deduction (50% or 100% of donation) in their own return. You usually need both. Form 10A now combines both applications.

Q. Can a Section 8 Company pay salaries to its directors?
Yes — provided: (a) salaries are reasonable for services rendered, (b) approved by the board, © disclosed in the annual return, and (d) the company has not declared dividend (which it cannot anyway). However, certain related-party rules apply — consult a CS/CA when paying >₹50,000/month per director.

Q. Can a foreigner be a member / director of an Indian NGO?
Yes — for Section 8, a foreign national can be a director (with DIN + DSC) and a member. For Trust and Society, depends on state law (most allow). However, FCRA imposes strict restrictions on foreign-controlled entities receiving foreign funds.

Q. My NGO is 2 years old; can I get FCRA?
No. FCRA Rules require 3 full years of operations + ₹15 lakh spent on charitable activities. Until then, use FC-3B (Prior Permission) for specific one-time foreign donations from named donors.

Q. Can my NGO accept CSR donations from companies?
Yes — but the company can only count it as CSR (under §135 Companies Act 2013) if your NGO is registered with MCA via Form CSR-1 (mandatory since 1 April 2021). File CSR-1 on mca.gov.in once your §12A is granted.

Q. Do I need separate state registrations to operate in multiple states?
For Section 8 Company: no — one CIN works PAN-India (intimate office addresses to ROC by INC-22).
For Society: yes in many states — operating in another state often needs registration there too (or at least an “All India” Society registered under multiple state acts).
For Trust: depends — if the original Trust Deed is wide enough and registered with the Charity Commissioner having pan-India recognition, may suffice; many states (like Maharashtra) require local Charity Commissioner registration.

Last reviewed: 26 April 2026 by RTI Wiki editorial team. NGO registration thresholds, stamp duty rates, and FCRA rules are revised periodically — verify on mca.gov.in / incometax.gov.in / fcraonline.nic.in or write to [email protected] if you spot a stale figure.