OverviewA Producer Company is a special type of company created under Section 581 of the Companies Act, exclusively for farmers, agriculturists, and producers. It allows groups of primary producers to collectively process, store, market, and sell their produce while enjoying corporate benefits like limited liability, tax exemptions, and institutional funding. Start Bharat registers your Producer Company with expert legal drafting, ROC filings, and post-incorporation advisory — so your farmer collective gets a strong legal foundation.
Who Is This For?Start Bharat’s Producer Company Registration is ideal for groups engaged in agriculture, animal husbandry, or rural production.
Farmer Groups & Rural Collectives
Small and marginal farmers coming together to process and market their produce under one legal entity.
Agri-Tech or Agri-Supply Chains
Founders launching storage, cold chain, or processing ventures serving farmer networks.
Dairy, Poultry & Fisheries Communities
Producers engaged in milk, poultry, aquaculture, and related allied activities.
NGOs & Development Agencies
Organizations formalizing self-help groups or co-ops into government-recognized companies.
Village-Based Micro Enterprise Clusters
Local artisans, forest product gatherers, and handicraft makers organizing for value addition and scale.
Solutions OfferedStart Bharat’s 360° Producer Company package covers everything from incorporation to compliance.
- Digital Signature Certificate (DSC)
- Director Identification Number (DIN)
- Name Reservation via RUN
- MoA & AoA Drafting with Special Provisions
- Incorporation via SPICe+
- Initial Capital Structuring & Producer Definition Drafting
- Post-Incorporation Legal Toolkit
- Compliance Orientation for Rural Teams
Benefits Producer Companies offer legal empowerment and financial access for the backbone of India — its farmers and rural producers.
Collective Legal Identity for Farmers
Convert informal cooperatives or FPOs into registered companies — owned and run by producers themselves.
Limited Liability + Corporate Protection
Safeguard members from personal financial exposure while giving them access to company-level governance.
Eligible for Government Schemes & NABARD Funding
Recognized Producer Companies can apply for soft loans, grants, and cluster-level subsidies.
Tax Deductions under Section 10(1)
Income from agri-related activities may be exempt from tax depending on structure and assessment.
Market Linkage & Tender Access
Bid for large supply contracts, government procurement, and open trade credit facilities in the company’s name.
Shared Infrastructure & Capital Pooling
Members can share tractors, processing units, storage, and earn dividends — legally and fairly.
Step-by-Step ProcessStart Bharat’s dedicated compliance team helps you form your Producer Company in 4 easy steps.
Collect Farmer & Member Details
We collect PAN, Aadhaar, photos, contribution info, and business objectives from all 10+ producers.
Reservation & Document Drafting
We apply for a name, prepare your MoA and AoA, and define your shareholding and management rules.
SPICe+ Filing & Certificate Issuance
We complete incorporation through MCA — including PAN, TAN, DINs, and COI delivery.
Receive Legal Kit & Farmer Onboarding Docs
You get your compliance pack, membership forms, and initial resolutions to begin operations and open your current account.
Frequently Asked Questions
We’ve amassed a large number of frequently asked questions (FAQs)
A minimum of 10 individual producers or 2 producer institutions are required. All must be actively engaged in farming or allied sectors.
Yes. NGOs can facilitate formation, and SHG members can become shareholders — as long as they qualify as “producers.”
In spirit, yes — but legally, a Producer Company is a private limited structure with compliance under Companies Act instead of Cooperative Societies Act.
They are regulated by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, not RBI or NABARD — but they are eligible for schemes from both.
Income earned from primary agricultural activity is exempt under Section 10(1). Other income is taxed at standard corporate rates.
Not directly. Shareholding is limited to producers. However, institutional partnerships and grants can be accepted.