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How to apply for Startup India Seed Fund Scheme — complete 2026 guide
Quick answer. The Startup India Seed Fund Scheme (SISFS) gives DPIIT-recognised early-stage startups up to ₹50 lakh through empanelled incubators. Apply at https://seedfund.startupindia.gov.in — but you don't apply to DPIIT directly. You apply to one (or up to three) empanelled incubators of your choice. The incubator's Evaluation & Advisory Committee (EAC) screens, shortlists, calls you for a pitch, and decides. If selected, funds come as (a) grant up to ₹20 lakh for proof-of-concept / prototype / product trials and (b) up to ₹50 lakh as convertible debentures or debt-linked instruments for market entry / commercialisation / scaling — milestone-based. Total scheme corpus through 2025-26: ₹945 crore. Eligible: Indian companies (Pvt Ltd, LLP, registered partnership) less than 2 years old at application, with a product/service/tech innovation core to the business model.
Karthik's story — "₹35 lakh in two tranches, but the second one waited five months"
Karthik Subramanian, 32, co-founder of an AgriTech startup in Bengaluru building a low-cost soil-NPK sensor + farmer advisory app. DPIIT-recognised in March 2024. Applied for SISFS in late 2024 through T-Hub Hyderabad after the EAC there showed interest at a demo day.
“We thought DPIIT was the funder — wrong. The incubator is the funder. We applied to T-Hub Hyderabad, IIIT-H Foundation, and IIM-B NSRCEL — three at the same time, which the portal allows. T-Hub's EAC called us first. The pitch was 12 minutes + 8 minutes Q&A, mostly about unit economics, not the tech. They sanctioned ₹35 lakh — ₹15 lakh as grant for prototype refinement and field trials, ₹20 lakh as convertible debenture for the first 200-village commercial pilot. The grant tranche came in 38 days. But the second tranche — convertible debenture — needed three milestones: incorporation of a wholly-owned subsidiary in the pilot district, hiring two field engineers, and an MoU with the Karnataka Watershed Department. We hit all three by July 2025. Then nothing for five months. T-Hub kept saying 'pending DPIIT review'. I sent an RTI by Speed Post on 12 December 2025 to the PIO at DPIIT, Udyog Bhawan, New Delhi — ₹10 IPO + ₹52 Speed Post. Reply came in 22 days: 'Tranche 2 release pending utilization certificate format compliance — UC submitted by incubator on 8 Aug 2025 was on old format; revised format issued via SISFS-EAC-CIRC-04/2025 dated 1 July 2025 must be used.' Nobody had told us. Reformatted UC, money came in 11 days. The RTI cost ₹62. The 'consultant' my co-founder almost hired wanted ₹40,000.”
—Karthik, March 2026
By end of FY 2025-26, SISFS had committed funds to over 2,800 startups through 210+ empanelled incubators in 31 states/UTs (DPIIT dashboard, March 2026). Roughly one in five disbursements got delayed beyond the 60-day SLA — almost always over UC (utilization certificate) format issues, milestone documentation, or incubator-side bandwidth — most resolvable with one targeted RTI to DPIIT or to the incubator's host institution.
What this is — and who can apply
The Startup India Seed Fund Scheme (SISFS) was approved by the Union Cabinet in January 2021 with a ₹945 crore outlay over four years (later extended through 2025-26). The scheme aims to bridge the “valley of death” between an idea/MVP and a Series-A round — the stage where banks and angels both hesitate.
Funds flow DPIIT → empanelled incubator → startup. The incubator gets up to ₹5 crore from DPIIT, which it then disburses to startups it has selected through its own EAC.
You are eligible to apply if all the following are true:
- Your entity is DPIIT-recognised as a startup (apply free at startupindia.gov.in if you aren't — see Register Startup DPIIT — full guide).
- Incorporation date is less than 2 years at the time of application (private limited, LLP, or registered partnership; sole proprietorships and OPCs are not eligible).
- The startup has an innovation in product/service/process/business model — not a copy-paste of an existing service.
- Indian shareholding ≥ 51% as on application date.
- The startup has not received more than ₹10 lakh in monetary government support (excluding awards, prizes, sub-Rs-10-lakh schemes like NIDHI-PRAYAS).
- Use of funds aligns with one of: proof of concept, prototype, product trials, market entry, or commercialisation.
You cannot apply if you've already received SISFS funding from another incubator (one shot per startup), or if your startup is in a sector explicitly barred (gambling, tobacco, alcohol, certain restricted defence categories).
Step-by-step process
Step 1 — Get DPIIT recognition
Without DPIIT recognition there is no SISFS. Recognition is free and the form is short.
- Go to https://www.startupindia.gov.in → Register → fill 12 fields (CIN/LLPIN, sector, brief description, founder details).
- Upload one supporting doc: incorporation cert + a brief on what makes your offering innovative.
- Recognition number issued in 2-15 days by email.
See the dedicated guide: Register Startup with DPIIT — step by step.
Step 2 — Pick incubators (up to 3)
This is the most strategically important step and most founders rush it.
- Visit https://seedfund.startupindia.gov.in → “Incubators” → filter by state, sector, stage.
- Look at each incubator's portfolio, selection rate, and average ticket size (some are conservative ₹10-20 lakh givers, some go to full ₹50 lakh).
- Sector fit beats prestige. An IIM-B incubator may be top-ranked, but if your product is rural agri-hardware, a state agri university incubator might fund faster and mentor better.
- You can apply to a maximum of three incubators in parallel through the same SISFS portal — but only one can fund you.
Step 3 — Build the application package
You'll fill the SISFS form online — it's the same form across all incubators you apply to. Have these ready:
- Pitch deck (PDF, ≤ 10 MB): problem, solution, market size, traction so far, team, ask, use of funds.
- Business plan / DPR: 12-24 months milestones, monthly burn, hiring plan.
- Audited / provisional financials: if you have any revenue, even ₹10,000.
- Founder CVs + cap table.
- Innovation note: 1-2 pages on what is novel — IP filed, prior art search, or differentiation.
- Use of funds: itemised — typically split between prototype materials, hiring, vendor payments, IP filing, marketing pilots.
- Bank account details of the company (current account; no proprietorship account allowed).
Step 4 — Submit on the SISFS portal
- https://seedfund.startupindia.gov.in → “Apply Now” → log in via Startup India credentials.
- Tag your DPIIT recognition number — most fields auto-pull.
- Choose up to 3 incubators (you can rank them).
- Submit. You'll get an application reference ID per incubator.
Step 5 — EAC screening + pitch
Each chosen incubator's Evaluation & Advisory Committee (EAC) independently reviews. EACs are typically 5-7 members: 1-2 from the incubator, 2-3 industry/investor experts, 1 academic, and 1 nominee from a state-government body.
- Shortlist call in 2-6 weeks (sector-dependent — fintech moves faster, agri/biotech slower).
- Pitch: 10-15 minutes presentation + 10-20 minutes Q&A. Either in person at the incubator or on Zoom/Teams.
- EAC asks about: revenue model, team gaps, customer validation, why-now, what-after-this-funding (i.e., follow-on plan).
- Outcome: Sanction (with amount + grant/convertible split + milestones) / Rejection (with reason) / Hold (more info needed).
Step 6 — Sanction letter + agreement
If sanctioned:
- Sanction letter from the incubator within 7-21 days of EAC.
- Tripartite agreement — DPIIT (via incubator) + incubator + startup. Read it carefully — it covers convertible terms (typical: 5-9 years tenure, simple interest cap, conversion at next priced round at a specified discount or valuation cap).
- Open an escrow account if asked, OR allow the incubator to disburse to your existing current account on receipt of milestones.
Step 7 — Tranche release + milestones
Disbursement happens in 2-3 tranches — never lump-sum.
- Tranche 1 (40-50% of grant portion): released on signing the agreement, usually within 30-60 days.
- Tranche 2: on hitting the first set of milestones (prototype demo, first paying customer, hiring closed). Submit a Utilisation Certificate (UC) in the prescribed SISFS format (verify the latest circular — formats change). Karthik's story above shows what happens if you use an old format.
- Tranche 3 / convertible debenture release: on commercial milestones — letter of intent from a customer, pilot revenue, regulatory approval, etc.
Step 8 — Reporting throughout
- Quarterly progress reports to the incubator for the first 12-18 months.
- Annual financial reporting + annual UC.
- If you raise a follow-on priced round, the convertible portion converts per agreement terms — track this carefully or you'll over-dilute.
Sample fee + ticket-size + timeline table
+----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | DPIIT recognition fee | NIL (free) | +----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | SISFS application fee | NIL — no fee at DPIIT or incubator | | | (any "consultant" charging you to | | | "submit" is a red flag) | +----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | Grant portion | Up to ₹20 lakh (proof of concept, | | | prototype, product trials, market | | | research, early-stage tech dev) | +----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | Convertible / debt-linked | Up to ₹50 lakh (market entry, | | | commercialisation, scaling) | | Combined cap | Total per startup ≤ ₹50 lakh | +----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | Equity dilution (grant portion) | NIL — pure grant | | Equity dilution (convertible) | Per agreement — typically converts | | | at next priced round at 10-25% | | | discount or pre-agreed valuation cap | +----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | Incubator's management fee | 5% of disbursed amount (paid to | | | incubator by DPIIT, not by startup) | +----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | Application-to-sanction time | 60-150 days (sector / incubator vary)| | Sanction-to-1st-tranche | 30-60 days | | Tranche-2 SLA after milestone+UC | 60 days (often slips) | +----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | RTI to DPIIT for stuck tranche | ₹10 by IPO. BPL = free. | +----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
Common reasons your SISFS application gets stuck
- Not DPIIT-recognised at the time of submission. The portal won't even let you proceed; do recognition first.
- Incorporation > 2 years at application. Hard cut-off — no waiver. Even one day over and the application is rejected.
- Wrong entity type. Sole proprietorships, OPCs, and HUFs are not eligible. Convert to Pvt Ltd or LLP first.
- Multiple government-funding overlaps. If you've taken over ₹10 lakh from NIDHI-EIR, BIRAC-BIG, MeitY TIDE, etc., declare it — non-disclosure is a recovery trigger.
- Pitch focused on tech, not unit economics. EACs in 2025-26 are far more revenue-focused than in 2021-22; “we'll figure out monetisation later” no longer flies.
- Incubator's empanelment cap exhausted. Each incubator has a DPIIT-set cap (₹5 cr typical). If a popular incubator has hit it, your application can sit indefinitely. Always apply to incubators with fresh capacity — check the incubator dashboard for “Funds available”.
- UC format mismatch. As Karthik found — DPIIT periodically issues new UC templates via SISFS-EAC circulars. Always download the latest before submitting.
- Milestone definitions too vague. Incubators sometimes write milestones like “achieve product-market fit” — undefinable. Push at agreement stage to make them measurable: “deploy at 5 customers”, “earn ₹5 lakh GMV”, etc.
- Founder dilution / cap-table changes mid-tranche without informing the incubator. Triggers a hold and renegotiation.
If stuck — the escalation ladder
Rung 1 — Incubator's SISFS Programme Manager
Every empanelled incubator has a designated SISFS Programme Manager — first port of call. Email + phone. Quote your application reference ID.
Rung 2 — Startup India Hub helpdesk
- 1800-115-565 (toll-free, 10 am – 5:30 pm Mon-Fri).
- Email: dipp-startups@nic.in / startupindia@dpiit.gov.in.
- Web grievance: https://www.startupindia.gov.in → “Resolve” → file query.
Rung 3 — DPIIT Grievance Cell
- https://dpiit.gov.in → “Grievance” → Public Grievance Officer.
- Postal: Public Grievance Officer, DPIIT, Vanijya Bhawan, 1 Sansad Marg, New Delhi 110001.
- 30-day SLA, departmental.
Rung 4 — CPGRAMS
- https://pgportal.gov.in → ministry “Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade”.
- Goes higher up the chain; useful when departmental grievance has been silent past 30 days.
Rung 5 — Right to Information (RTI)
The SISFS-EAC, DPIIT, and the empanelled incubator (if hosted by an academic/government institution like an IIT/IIM/state agri university) are public authorities under §2(h) of the RTI Act, 2005. Private incubators (e.g., a corporate-run accelerator) are NOT public authorities — RTI on them won't fly; you'd file on DPIIT instead.
RTI helps here when:
- Your application is past the EAC's stated SLA and the incubator gives no written status — RTI to PIO DPIIT for the EAC submission status / pending review log.
- Tranche 2 / 3 has been “approved” by the incubator but DPIIT is silent — RTI to DPIIT PIO for date of fund release order, UC compliance status, and any noting in file (Karthik's case).
- You were rejected without a reason in writing — RTI for the EAC minutes of the meeting where your application was discussed (you have a right to extracts pertaining to your file).
- The incubator's published “Funds available” status is unclear — RTI to DPIIT for the incubator's drawdown vs sanction.
- Convertible terms in your agreement seem inconsistent with the SISFS guidelines — RTI for the latest SISFS Operational Guidelines (also publicly available, but RTI gets you the version-with-amendments certified).
PIO address: Central Public Information Officer, Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), Vanijya Bhawan, 1 Sansad Marg, New Delhi 110001. ₹10 IPO. Reply within 30 days under §7.
RTI does NOT help here when:
- Your application was rejected on merit — RTI gets you the recorded reason, but it does not re-open the merit decision. EAC discretion is wide.
- You want a private incubator forced to fund you — RTI doesn't compel a sanctioning decision.
- You want investor introductions or Series-A help — that's not “information held”; it's professional support.
- You want an interpretation of clauses in your tripartite agreement — that's a contract-law question; consult a startup lawyer.
- You're trying to use RTI as a re-pitch route — “send me their objections so I can rebut” works only inside the formal review window, not via RTI months later.
See the dedicated guide: RTI for stuck SISFS / Startup India funding — copy-ready template.
FAQs
Q. Can I apply to SISFS if I've already raised angel funding?
Yes — SISFS does not bar private angel/VC funding. The bar is on prior government monetary support over ₹10 lakh. Disclose any angel raise on the form; it actually helps your case (shows external validation).
Q. We're a 2-year-old startup. Are we still eligible?
Tight call. The cut-off is “less than 2 years from incorporation at the date of application”. If your DOI is, say, 15 May 2024, you must apply on or before 14 May 2026. Day late = ineligible.
Q. Can a sole-founder startup apply?
Yes, single-founder Pvt Ltd is eligible. But EACs do flag founder-bus-factor risk — you'll be asked about co-founder hiring plans.
Q. We're an LLP. Are we eligible?
Yes — LLPs are eligible. Convertible-debenture instruments are structured slightly differently for LLPs (typically as compulsorily-convertible sweat-loan or restructured into a Pvt Ltd before tranche 2). Check with your incubator at agreement stage.
Q. Does grant portion attract income tax?
The grant is treated as a capital receipt (not taxable) only if the conditions in the sanction letter restrict its use to capital expenditure / R&D — and the entity is DPIIT-recognised. Revenue-use grants may be taxable. Get a CA opinion before booking.
Q. What happens if our startup fails before tranche 3?
Grant portion: typically not recoverable if utilised per terms and proper UCs filed. Convertible portion: a debt — incubator can recall, but in practice, on bona-fide failure with full reporting, most incubators write off rather than litigate.
Q. Can a startup outside India's metros realistically get SISFS?
Yes — over 65% of SISFS-funded startups in 2024-25 came from Tier-2/3 cities (DPIIT data). State-level incubators (Kerala Startup Mission, MeitY-CoE Bhubaneswar, T-Hub Hyderabad satellite centres, ASCI, etc.) actively prioritise their state's founders.
Related on RTI Wiki
Last reviewed: 26 April 2026 by RTI Wiki editorial team. SISFS guidelines are revised periodically by DPIIT — verify the latest circular at seedfund.startupindia.gov.in or write to admin@bighelpers.in if you spot a stale figure.

