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India market entry for Dutch companies

Water, ports, agri-food, semiconductors, logistics, clean energy and high technology – entering India as the Netherlands–India Strategic Partnership deepens and the EU–India Free Trade Agreement moves toward implementation.

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Gold line illustration of an Amsterdam canal with an arched bridge, a bicycle, gabled houses and a windmill representing the Netherlands
At a glance

The Netherlands is among India’s largest European export destinations and one of its largest sources of foreign investment, and India and the Netherlands have elevated ties to a Strategic Partnership with a 2026–2030 roadmap covering water, semiconductors, clean energy, agriculture, health and defence. Over 300 Dutch companies already operate in India. The market case may be clear; the execution path needs to be settled. The entry vehicle, FDI route, tax and treaty position, technology and IP model, partner route and state-level approvals should be tested before incorporation, investment or signing.

A major European destination for Indian exportsA major European market for Indian goods, and one of India’s largest sources of foreign investment.
300+ Dutch companies in IndiaAlready operating across industrial, technology, logistics, financial, food and life-science sectors.
A major FDI sourceOne of India’s largest FDI sources, with more than USD 50 billion of cumulative investment into India.
Strategic Partnership 2026–2030The roadmap focuses on water, semiconductors, clean energy, agriculture, health and defence.
EU–India FTA planningModel duties, rules of origin and tariff staging against its terms and implementation timetable.
Why India now

What the Strategic Partnership and the EU–India agreement mean for Dutch companies

The relationship has both scale and a fresh framework. India and the Netherlands have elevated ties to a Strategic Partnership and adopted a 2026–2030 roadmap across semiconductors, water, clean energy, agriculture, health and defence, supported by a Joint Trade and Investment Committee and a fast-track mechanism for investments. The roadmap is specific where Dutch capability is strongest: the Strategic Partnership on Water was renewed, with urban river management, flood resilience and the Clean Ganga programme; the maritime and renewable-energy work includes exploration of a Green and Digital Sea Corridor linking Indian clean-energy exports and Dutch port, logistics and maritime capability; and the semiconductor partnership links the Dutch competence base to the India Semiconductor Mission. The roadmap also includes customs-cooperation measures – relevant to legitimate trade facilitation, customs enforcement and documentation-heavy supply chains.

For Dutch companies the pull is India’s scale set against Dutch systems strengths – water and delta management, ports, logistics and trade infrastructure, agri-food and horticulture, semiconductors and high-tech, and clean energy. The base is already large: the Netherlands is among India’s largest European export destinations and one of its largest investors, with over 300 Dutch companies operating in India.

The EU–India Free Trade Agreement is part of the backdrop. Tariff benefits and market access depend on the final schedules, rules of origin and implementation timetable, so it is a planning input, not an operating benefit.

The entry vehicle, the FDI route and the exchange-control position are worked through on India incorporation and foreign investment and India structuring, with the FEMA and beneficial-ownership points on FEMA and exchange control. This page frames the corridor and links to the pages that carry the mechanics.

Your sector

Which sector are you in?

Agri-food, horticulture, dairy, cold chain & food systemsDutch strengths in greenhouses, seeds and starting material, dairy, food processing, food safety and circular agriculture meet Indian food processing, cold-chain and agri-value-chains.India food & agriculture entry guide → Clean energy, green hydrogen & circular economyGreen hydrogen, green ports, renewables and circular materials, aligned with the roadmap’s maritime and energy work. The structure turns on project design, offtake, approvals, tax and financing.India clean energy entry guide → Ports, maritime, logistics & green corridorsPort engineering and modernisation, dredging, maritime services, inland waterways, logistics parks, customs, warehousing and multimodal supply chains – including the proposed green and digital sea corridor linking Indian clean energy and Dutch port capability.India maritime & logistics entry guide → Semiconductors, high-tech & advanced manufacturingThe Dutch semiconductor and high-tech base meeting the India Semiconductor Mission: equipment, materials, design, R&D and supply-chain links. Structuring should cover IP, data, technology licensing, transfer pricing and incentives.India semiconductors entry guide → Water, river management & climate resilienceThe lead Dutch lane: integrated water-resource management, urban and river-basin management, flood resilience, coastal-zone management and water quality, much of it delivered with public authorities under the India–Netherlands water partnership. The work turns on the contracting model, approvals, concessions and the public-sector counterparty.India water & environment entry guide → Other Netherlands–India sectorsHealthcare and life sciences, chemicals, financial services and holding structures, IT and software, trading and metals, circular materials, defence-industrial cooperation and smart cities are also active lanes, but need closer regulatory review before choosing the route.Browse all India sector guides →
The substance

Key commercial and structuring points

Entry vehicle. A Dutch company can enter India through a distributor or agent, a liaison, branch or project office, a joint venture, an LLP or a wholly owned subsidiary. The right vehicle depends on whether you are selling, manufacturing, importing, licensing technology, delivering a project, hiring or investing for the long term. The trade-offs, and the typical sequence, are on India incorporation and foreign investment and India structuring.

FDI route. Many Dutch technology, logistics, manufacturing, clean-energy and food-processing activities may use the automatic route, but the precise activity decides it; financial services, insurance, defence, telecom, space, retail and e-commerce, and regulated healthcare or infrastructure should be checked sector by sector. Ownership chains and beneficial ownership are tested in any case. The mechanics are on FEMA and exchange control.

EU–India FTA planning. Treat the FTA as a planning input, not an operating benefit. Product classification, rules of origin, customs documentation, tariff schedules and implementation dates should be checked before India contracts are priced on assumed reductions.

Tax and repatriation. Withholding tax, royalties and fees for technical services, transfer pricing, permanent-establishment risk and dividend repatriation shape the net return. The India–Netherlands double-tax treaty (with its protocol) is relevant, but treaty benefit depends on the facts and documentation. Dutch holding, licensing or IP structures should be tested for beneficial ownership, commercial substance, anti-abuse analysis and Indian GAAR risk before treaty benefits are assumed. The detail is on India tax.

People and social security. India and the Netherlands have a social security agreement in force, so a posted employee can, on a certificate of coverage, remain in the home-country system for a limited posting period (the agreement provides for up to 60 months) and avoid double contributions; immigration, payroll, secondment terms and tax residency should still be settled before deployment.

Points to settle before execution
  • FTA timing, origin and customs classification. The EU–India FTA is a planning input, not an assumed benefit. Pricing, origin and customs classification should be settled on the current rules, not assumed reductions.
  • Water, infrastructure and public-sector contracting. Dutch water, port and infrastructure work often runs through public authorities, utilities, concessions or tenders, which shape the vehicle, the contracting model and the timeline more than a standard sale would.
  • Technology, IP, data and transfer pricing. Semiconductors, high-tech, software and R&D models need IP ownership, data, licensing, customs-valuation and transfer-pricing structuring – settled before, not after, signing.
  • Partner, distributor and public-authority diligence. Distributors, agents, JV partners and government, utility or port counterparties need diligence – beneficial ownership, sanctions screening, anti-bribery and contracting authority – before access or contracts are committed.
  • State-level execution. Manufacturing, warehousing, ports, agri-food and water projects depend on state-level land, power, approvals, incentives and labour, so the choice of state – alongside the sector – affects cost and timelines.
How ATB helps

We help Dutch management, finance, legal and business-development teams settle the India route before incorporation, investment or signing. Structuring comes first – the entry vehicle, the holding and the tax design – with the FDI route, the technology and IP model, the contracting and partner model, and the employment and regulatory workstreams built around it. Engagements usually begin with a scoping discussion – the activity, the technology and IP position, the ownership chain, the tax and treaty position, the public-sector or partner route and the timeline – before any structure is proposed. The aim is not simply to register an Indian entity, but to build a structure that supports the operating model, works under Indian law and tax rules, and is documented well enough to satisfy Dutch management, auditors, banks and counterparties. Two registered offices – Abu Dhabi and Bengaluru – with water, ports, agri-food, technology and energy experience.

Questions

Netherlands–India entry, answered

In many sectors, yes. Many activities allow 100% foreign ownership on the automatic route, but the precise activity, the sector conditions and the ownership chain still have to be checked – and some regulated and infrastructure activities need closer review.

Treat it as a planning input. Model classification, duties, rules of origin and tariff staging against its terms and implementation timetable, and price and contract on the current rules until you have confirmed how and when it applies to your products, rather than assuming benefits.

Yes. The India–Netherlands double-tax treaty (with its protocol) is relevant for dividends, interest, royalties, technical fees and permanent-establishment questions, but treaty access depends on the facts, documentation, beneficial ownership and anti-abuse analysis, including Indian GAAR.

Yes, within limits. India and the Netherlands have a social security agreement in force, so a posted employee can, on a certificate of coverage, stay in the home-country system for a limited posting period (the agreement provides for up to 60 months), subject to the conditions.

The most active lanes are water and climate resilience, agri-food and horticulture, ports, maritime and logistics, semiconductors and high-tech, and clean energy and green hydrogen, with healthcare, chemicals, financial services and smart cities as active but more regulated areas.

A wholly owned subsidiary is usually the route where control, hiring, manufacturing, IP protection or long-term scale matter. A joint venture fits where local capability, approvals or public-sector access are needed; a distributor or agent suits an early, low-commitment market test.

ATB Corporate

Planning India entry from the Netherlands?

Tell us your sector and model, and we can map the entry route, the structure, the FDI and tax position, and the execution path.

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