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You are here: Home / *BLOG / Around the Web / Chartered Accountant (CA): A Legal Requirement or an Optional Formality?

Chartered Accountant (CA): A Legal Requirement or an Optional Formality?

April 1, 2026 By GISuser

Quick Summary

Starting a business in India has never been easier. It depends on what you’re starting, how complex your structure is, and how much hand-holding you need.. You can register a company online by applying through the MCA portal, submitting digital documents, and obtaining DIN and DSC for directors.  However, engaging a CA or professional consultant can help avoid common pitfalls, ensure compliance, and expedite registration, ultimately affecting your business decisions and timelines.

This guest post provides step-by-step guidance on how to register a company completely online while ensuring accuracy to avoid rejections or delays.

 When do you need a CA to register a company in India?

Yes, you need a CA/CS to register a company, as the MCA portal doesn’t allow direct applications. The process may involve complex legal and tax considerations. And here comes the necessity of an expert CA who can advise on the appropriate company type (Private Limited, OPC, LLP), draft a compliant MOA/AOA, and handle post-registration compliance like GST and PAN applications. This reduces risks of penalties, rejections, or future restructuring costs.

In this guest post, we explore the mandatory legal requirements of the company registration process that validate the requirement of a Chartered Accountant (CA) to ensure a seamless and compliant incorporation.

1. The Legal Mandate: Section 7(1)(b)

Under the Companies Act, 2013, specifically Section 7(1)(b), every incorporation application must be accompanied by a declaration. This declaration (usually Form INC-8) must be signed by a practising professional who can be either a Chartered Accountant, Company Secretary, or Advocate.

The Reality: The MCA portal will literally reject your application if it doesn’t carry the Digital Signature Certificate (DSC) of a practising professional certifying that all legal requirements have been met.

  1. Hiring a CA vs DIY: Taking Important Business Decisions

Hiring a CA provides strategic advice while accelerating the registration process by preempting errors that cause delays or penalties. In simple terms, a CA evaluates your business model and recommends the optimal company type, shareholding patterns, and compliance requirements. This foundational advice can affect funding options, liability, and tax obligations. Additionally, CAs manage document preparation and filings accurately, preventing costly delays or fines that could disrupt operations or investor confidence. Therefore, choosing to work with a CA isn’t just about bypassing a portal restriction. They handle the “heavy lifting” that often causes rejections:

  • Drafting the Constitution: The Memorandum (MOA) and Articles (AOA) are your company’s “DNA.” Errors here can haunt you for years.
  • Stamp Duty Management: Calculating state-specific stamp duty on authorized capital.
  • Post-Incorporation Survival: Within 180 days, you must file a “Commencement of Business” certificate.

 

  1. DIY vs CA: Mandatory Professional Documentation

Errors in digital signatures, incorrect MOA/AOA clauses, or missing documents can result in application rejections.

  1. The Memorandum and Articles. These aren’t just templates you download and sign. Your MoA defines what your company can do. Your AoA sets the internal rules such as shareholding, voting rights, transfer restrictions, and board meetings.

Most founders use generic templates without understanding what they’re signing. Then six months later, they realise they’ve locked themselves into restrictions they didn’t want, or missed clauses they desperately need.

  1. Shareholding Structure: How you split shares matters. For example, Equity dilution, founder vesting, sweat equity, and different classes of shares.
  2. Compliance Starts from Day One The moment your company is incorporated, compliance obligations begin. Annual filings, statutory registers, board meetings, and maintaining accounting standards are mandatory.
  3. Documentation Quality MCA can and does reject applications. Wrong address format, missing documents, unclear objectives, and errors in forms lead to delays and resubmissions. 

To understand where you stop and the CA starts, here is how the workload is split:

Step Can You Do It? Is a Professional Required?
Name Reservation (RUN) Yes No
Obtaining your DSC Yes No
Drafting MOA & AOA Partially Yes (Legal vetting is crucial)
Professional Certification No Mandatory (CA/CS/CMA)

 

4. DIY Vs CA: Crucial Situations during Company Registration

Here are situations where doing a company registration alone can be genuinely risky:

  • If you’re registering a Section 8 company (NGO): Section 8 registration is not straightforward. You need detailed project reports, financial sustainability plans, and clear public benefit documentation. MCA reviews these applications carefully. Rejection rates are higher. A CA experienced in NGO registration knows what MCA looks for and how to present your case properly.
  • If you’re taking outside funding, Investors generally scrutinise your corporate structue so it is crucial to maintain proper shareholder agreements, a compliant MoA/AoA. 
  • If you have multiple co-founders or complex ownership, Equity splits, vesting schedules, sweat equity, and advisory shares need to be documented correctly from day one.
  • If you’re running any existing unregistered entity: If you’ve been operating as a trust, society, or partnership and now want to incorporate, there are transition considerations, asset transfers, and continuity issues. 
  • If compliance feels overwhelming: If the thought of GST, TDS, annual returns, and board resolutions overburdens you, go for a professional help. A CA doesn’t just register your company; they set up your compliance calendar and hold your hand through year one.

Company Registration: With CA vs Without CA – Detailed Comparison

Aspect With CA Assistance Without CA (DIY) Why It Matters
Risk of Application Rejection   Low (2-5%; you pay re-filing fees each time) CA resubmits at no extra cost: High (20-30%) Each rejection delays launch by 1-2 weeks
Registration Process Complexity Guided step-by-step; CA handles paperwork Self-managed; you navigate the MCA portal alone One mistake can delay incorporation by weeks
Time to Incorporation 7-10 working days (first-time-right filing) 10-20 working days (includes potential rejections and resubmissions) Delays can cost you business opportunities or client contracts
Documentation Quality Professional drafting; customized to your needs Generic templates may not suit your business structure Wrong MoA/AoA can limit business activities or complicate funding
Name Approval CA pre-checks availability; suggests alternatives Trial and error; may face multiple rejections Each rejection adds 3-5 days
Understanding of MCA Portal Expert; knows all shortcuts and requirements Learning curve; expect confusion and errors MCA’s portal is not user-friendly; cryptic error messages

 

Take the Final Call: Should You Hire a CA?

Your Situation

Recommendation

Reasoning

Single founder, solo consultant, simple services, tight budget

DIY Possible (but get post-registration compliance support)

Low complexity; learning experience; but don’t skip compliance

2+ co-founders

Hire a CA

Equity structure and founder agreements need legal precision

Planning to raise funding (angels, VCs, banks)

Hire a CA (non-negotiable)

Investors scrutinize corporate structure; messy docs = deal killers

Section 8 / NGO registration

Hire a CA (essential)

MCA scrutiny is high; rejection risk too costly

Manufacturing, trading, or compliance-heavy industry

Hire a CA

Multiple registrations and ongoing compliance too complex

You’ve never filed ITR or dealt with the govt portals

Hire a CA

MCA portal will frustrate you; save yourself the headache

What Happens After Registration

Remember: incorporation is just the starting line. What comes after matters more.

Within the first year, you need to:

  • File INC-20A (commencement of business)
  • Conduct the first board meeting
  • Issue share certificates
  • Maintain statutory registers
  • File annual returns (even if no business activity)
  • File financial statements
  • Hold an annual general meeting

By missing any of these, you will become non-compliant and can be subjected to penalties. Penalties start at ₹10,000 and go up fast. This is where most solo founders get stuck. They successfully register the company, but forget that compliance is continuous. Six months later, they’re scrambling to hire a CA to fix the mess.

If you want to avoid delays, penalties, and ensure your company is structured for success from day one, consider consulting a qualified CA for your company registration. While online portals enable DIY registration, professional guidance saves time and safeguards your business’s future. Contact a CA consulting service like Taxlegit today to streamline your company incorporation process.

Conclusion: You can register a company completely online without a CA. But whether you should depends on your specific situation, your comfort with legal processes, and how serious you are about getting the structure right from day one.

Need help deciding what’s right for your situation? Reach out to Taxlegit’s expert CA consulting services, where we can walk you through your specific case and help you make the call that makes sense for you. Sometimes a 30-minute conversation saves you six months of headaches.

 

FAQs

 

Q1: Can I register a company completely online without visiting any government office?  

Yes, you can register a company entirely online using the MCA portal, including filing all necessary forms and obtaining approvals. However, certain states may require physical stamp duty payments, which can involve offline steps.

 

Q2: Is hiring a CA mandatory for company registration? 

No, hiring a CA is not mandatory. The MCA portal allows self-registration, but a CA can ensure accuracy, compliance, and strategic advice, reducing risks of errors and penalties.

 

Q3: What documents are required for online company registration? 

You need identity and address proofs of directors, digital signatures, a drafted MOA and AOA, and proof of registered office address. All documents must be digitally signed and uploaded to the MCA portal.

 

Q4: How long does online company registration usually take?  

Registration typically takes 7-15 working days, depending on document accuracy and processing times. Engaging a CA can expedite this by preventing rejections.

 

Q5: What penalties can occur from incorrect company registration filings? 

Penalties under the Companies Act can reach up to ₹1 lakh per default, including fines and possible prosecution for repeated non-compliance.

Filed Under: Around the Web

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