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Business Plans › Pharma & Healthcare

Joint Care Supplement Project Report: Industry Trends, Plant Setup, Machinery, Raw Materials, Investment Opportunities, Cost and Revenue

Report Format: PDF + Excel  |  Report ID: KMR-PHX-0563  |  Pages: 217

Last reviewed: by KAMRIT research team

Article below is indicative only

This free report description below is to give you an investor-grade overview of the opportunity, CapEx range, regulatory architecture, and project economics. Specific BIS / IS standard numbers, FSSAI thresholds, licence fees, GST HSN codes, and government scheme rates change frequently and should be verified against the issuing authority before commitment. Engage KAMRIT for a verified, project-specific compliance map signed off by a named partner.

Market size, FY2026

₹25,207 crore

CAGR 2026-2033

17.8%

CapEx range

₹2.5 crore - ₹46 crore

Payback

2.6 - 5.5 yrs

Joint Care Supplement: DPR Summary

The Joint Care Supplement segment represents one of the highest-velocity growth vectors within India’s broader nutraceutical and dietary supplement economy. With the domestic market valued at ₹25,207 crore for FY2026 and a projected expansion to ₹79,556 crore by 2033, the category is advancing at a CAGR of 17.8% over the forecast horizon. This trajectory is powered by structural demand drivers including the escalating chronic disease burden, rising health-insurance penetration enabling greater out-of-pocket consumption, and the mainstreaming of preventive healthcare across Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities.

KAMRIT Financial Services LLP presents this bankable DPR for the Joint Care Supplement manufacturing project, calibrated against a CapEx envelope of ₹2.5 crore to ₹46 crore and an anticipated payback of 2.6 to 5.5 years. The competitive landscape features a private equity-backed national chain that commands premium pharmacy-shelf positioning through heavy sampling spend, a family-owned legacy business with deep regional distribution in the South and West, a fast-scaling Tier-2 player with national-ambition retail placement, and a public sector enterprise leveraging government supply chains. This 217-page report provides market intelligence, regulatory architecture, technology selection, financial modelling, and risk frameworks necessary for stakeholder approval and lender due diligence.

A 2.6 - 5.5-year payback on CapEx of ₹2.5 crore - ₹46 crore for a mid-cap MSME plant, against a 17.8% CAGR market that hits ₹79,556 crore by 2033. KAMRIT's DPR covers PLI Bulk Drug and Medical Devices and the competitive position of Private equity-backed national chain and Family-owned legacy business with strong regional presence.

The report is positioned for a mid-cap MSME entrant and is structured for direct submission to a commercial bank or NBFC for term-loan sanction under the Means of Finance set out below.

Market trajectory

₹25,207 crore in 2026, projected ₹79,556 crore by 2033 at 17.8% CAGR.

0 cr 20,829 cr 41,658 cr 62,487 cr 83,316 cr 2026: ₹25,207 cr 2027: ₹29,694 cr 2028: ₹34,979 cr 2029: ₹41,206 cr 2030: ₹48,540 cr 2031: ₹57,180 cr 2032: ₹67,359 cr 2033: ₹79,348 cr ₹79,348 cr 202620302033

Projection at constant CAGR; actual trajectory varies with macro and category shifts.

Regulatory and licence map for this joint care supplement project

Note: The regulatory items below outline the typical compliance architecture for this project type. Specific BIS / IS standard numbers, licence thresholds, GST HSN codes, and scheme rates referenced should be verified with the issuing authority (see References & primary sources at the bottom of this page). KAMRIT's compliance team confirms each item against current notifications during project engagement.

The Joint Care Supplement project operates at the intersection of food and pharmaceutical regulation, requiring dual-compliance architecture across FSSAI and CDSCO depending on product positioning and claimed therapeutic indications.

  • FSSAI State Licence or Central Licence under the Food Safety and Standards Act 2006, Form III-A (Central Licence) for manufacturing, with product approval under Food Safety and Standards (Health Supplements, Nutraceuticals, Food for Special Dietary Use) Regulations 2016. Manufacturing must comply with FSSAI Schedule 4 requirements and BIS IS 1477 standards for food-grade production hygiene.
  • CDSCO Form CT-10 import licence if any Schedule IV raw material (glucosamine HCL from animal origin, chondroitin sulphate from bovine/porcine cartilage) is sourced internationally, subject to port-of-entry inspection and NOCs from the Animal Husbandry Department.
  • Schedule M compliance under Drugs and Cosmetics Rules 1945 if any product carries therapeutic claims or is registered as an Ayurvedic proprietary medicine under Schedule TA, requiring GMP certification by State Drugs Licensing Authorities.
  • BIS Standardisation under IS 4707 for labelling of proprietary foods and IS 15549 for vitamin and mineral preparations, enabling ISI mark application for retail credibility and modern-trade onboarding requirements.
  • GST registration under the GSTN portal with HSN code classification at 2101 20 (extracts, essences and concentrates of tea or mate) or 3004 90 (medicaments) depending on FSSAI versus CDSCO product classification, determining the applicable GST slab of 5% or 12%.
  • Environmental compliance under the EIA Notification 2006, requiring CTE (Consent to Establish) from SPCB if manufacturing involves solvent-based extraction processes for curcumin or collagen hydrolysis, with CETP linkage for wastewater discharge at designated industrial clusters.
  • MSME Udyam registration for unit classification, enabling access to priority-sector lending mandates and state-specific incentive packages including capital subsidy, power tariff rebates, and stamping-fee waivers.
  • EPF and ESI registration under the Employees’ Provident Funds Act 1952 and Employees’ State Insurance Act 1948, with coverage thresholds applicable for a workforce spanning production operators, quality analysts, and packaging staff at the projected capacity levels.

KAMRIT coordinates the end-to-end regulatory filing journey from SPICe+ company incorporation through FSSAI licence application, CDSCO product registration, BIS certification, SPCB environmental consents, and GSTN activation, managing communication with authorities including SFTDC, CDCSO zonal offices, and Bureau of Indian Standards divisional directorates to ensure zero-defect filing and accelerated approval timelines.

Compliance setup process

Typical sequence to take this project from incorporation to ready-to-operate. Phases overlap in practice; durations are working-day estimates with normal MCA / state portal turnaround.

Indicative timeline: ~3 to 6 months total PHASE 1 Entity formation 2-3 weeks hover for detail PHASE 2 CDSCO + Drug L... 8-16 weeks hover for detail PHASE 3 Factory & safety 4-8 weeks hover for detail PHASE 4 Environmental 6-16 weeks hover for detail PHASE 5 Tax & schemes 2-4 weeks hover for detail Phase 1 must complete before Phases 2-5. Phases 2-5 can largely run in parallel once entity is incorporated.
Sectoral context for this joint care supplement project

Joint Care Supplements occupy a distinctive niche between Ayurvedic formulations and modern nutraceuticals, typically delivering glucosamine, chondroitin, methylsulfonylmethane (MSM), curcumin, and collagen hydrolysate in tablet, capsule, and powder formats. Unlike general vitamins or energy drinks, this category targets orthopaedic and geriatric cohorts with clinically studied ingredient combinations, driving higher average selling prices and pharmacy-channel dependence. The Indian market breaks into five identifiable sub-segments: glucosamine-based standalone formulations growing at 19-21% annually, combination-matrix products (glucosamine-chondroitin-curcumin) expanding at 22-25%, Ayurvedic-positioned joint health (ashwagandha-shallaki-guggulu) advancing at 15-17%, collagen peptide formats accelerating at 28-32% on beauty-from-within crossover demand, and sports-nutrition joint Recovery products growing at 24-26% on gym-culture penetration.

The Pharmacy channel accounts for approximately 55-60% of category value, modern trade for 18-22%, and e-commerce for 12-15% with the fastest growth gradient. Urban consumption concentrates in the 35-60 age demographic, while rural demand emerges through Jan Aushadhi and government health camps. Import substitution opportunity exists for Chinese-sourced glucosamine HCL and chondroitin sulphate, where domestic manufacturing at scale can undercut landed costs by 18-25%.

Project-specific demand drivers

  • PLI Bulk Drug and Medical Devices
  • US generics export opportunity
  • Health insurance penetration rising
  • Chronic disease burden growth
  • Hospital capex expansion in Tier-2/3
  • Telemedicine and digital health adoption
Demand drivers

Ordered by KAMRIT's view of relative importance for this category in India.

Top drivers (longer bar = stronger signal) PLI Bulk Drug and Medical Devices (relative weight ~100%) 1. PLI Bulk Drug and Medical Devices Relative weight ~100% US generics export opportunity (relative weight ~83%) 2. US generics export opportunity Relative weight ~83% Health insurance penetration rising (relative weight ~67%) 3. Health insurance penetration rising Relative weight ~67% Chronic disease burden growth (relative weight ~50%) 4. Chronic disease burden growth Relative weight ~50% Hospital capex expansion in Tier-2/3 (relative weight ~33%) 5. Hospital capex expansion in Tier-2/3 Relative weight ~33% Weights are KAMRIT's heuristic ordering, not empirical regression.
Technology and machinery benchmarks

Joint Care Supplement manufacturing centres on precision blending, compression, and encapsulation technologies that determine both yield efficiency and finished-product bioavailability. The primary production train includes a high-shear blender (200-500 litre capacity, stainless steel 316L contact surfaces) for uniform dispersion of micronised glucosamine HCL, chondroitin sulphate, and curcumin extract, followed by a granulation stage using fluid-bed or roller-compactor configuration depending on compressibility requirements. Tablet presses (rotary, 27-35 stations, output of 80,000-120,000 tablets per hour for standard 500mg cores) represent the highest CapEx line item at ₸0.8-1.5 crore per line, with coating pans (perforated, 48-72 inch) adding ₹0.3-0.6 crore for film-coating with colour-coding and enteric-release variants.

Encapsulation lines (semi-automatic to fully automatic, 40,000-60,000 capsules per hour) handle collagen peptide and combination-matrix products, priced at ₹0.6-1.2 crore. Supplier provenance matters materially: Chinese equipment from Zhejiang and Shanghai manufacturers offers 30-35% CapEx savings but carries 12-18 month delivery lead times and variable post-sales support, European lines from Bosch or IMA deliver superior tablet-die precision and faster changeover but at 2.5-3x Chinese pricing, and Indian manufacturers including Standard Process and Apex Engineering offer competitive mid-tier solutions with proximity advantage and faster spares availability. For a ₹5-15 crore CapEx deployment, a single rotary press plus encapsulation line configuration yields 25-40 million tablets and 8-15 million capsules annually, positioning the facility at ₹0.18-0.22 per tablet direct cost at current active ingredient prices (glucosamine HCL at ₹1,800-2,200 per kg, chondroitin sulphate at ₹3,500-4,200 per kg).

Energy consumption benchmarks at 180-220 kWh per million tablets produced, with natural gas or PNG-fired dryers preferred over electric for thermal steps to manage conversion cost below ₹0.12 per finished unit.

Bankable Means of Finance for this joint care supplement project

KAMRIT recommends a 70:30 debt-to-equity structure for this project within the ₹2.5-46 crore CapEx band, calibrated to the 2.6-5.5 year payback profile and sector risk grading. Term loan access through SBI, HDFC Bank, and Axis Bank pharma-desk desks offers the most competitive interest corridors (floating rate at SBI’s MCLR + 50-80 bps, translating to 8.9-9.6% effective at current rates), with IDBI Bank and BOB offering extended tenure up to 10 years with 2-year moratorium on principal. SIDBI’s SIDBI-GEM (Green Electronics and Manufacturing) refinance window and state-level MSME schemes from Gujarat (Mukhyamantri Yuva Udyami), Maharashtra (Maharashtra Industrial Development Corporation incentives), and Rajasthan provide grants and interest-subvention overlays reducing effective borrowing cost by 150-200 bps. The PLI scheme for pharma under the Production Linked Incentive Scheme (Band II) offers 5-10% incentive on incremental sales of domestically manufactured nutraceuticals, with applications filed through Invest India facilitation. Working capital requirement spans 90-120 days of operating cycle: raw material inventory (30 days at ₹1.5-2 crore per month for active ingredients), production cycle (15-20 days), and receivables from pharmacy-distributor channels (60-75 days factoring 45-day distributor credit and 30-day retailer credit). CGTMSE cover enables collateral-free credit up to ₰2 crore per borrowing entity, while MUDRA loans in the ₹10-50 lakh band support ancillary packaging or distribution enterprise tranches. Cash conversion cycle management targeting 85-90 days releases ₹1.2-1.8 crore in working capital efficiency gains annually.

CapEx allocation (indicative)

Project CapEx ranges ₹2.5 crore - ₹46 crore. Typical split for a viable, bank-ready configuration:

Plant & machinery: 45% (approx. ₹10.9 cr of ₹24.3 cr CapEx) 45% Building & civil: 22% (approx. ₹5.3 cr of ₹24.3 cr CapEx) 22% Utilities & power: 12% (approx. ₹2.9 cr of ₹24.3 cr CapEx) 12% Working capital: 14% (approx. ₹3.4 cr of ₹24.3 cr CapEx) 14% Contingency & misc: 7% (approx. ₹1.7 cr of ₹24.3 cr CapEx) AVERAGE ₹24.3 cr CapEx Plant & machinery 45% · ~₹10.9 cr Building & civil 22% · ~₹5.3 cr Utilities & power 12% · ~₹2.9 cr Working capital 14% · ~₹3.4 cr Contingency & misc 7% · ~₹1.7 cr Low ₹2.5 cr High ₹46 cr

Split is a typical mid-cap manufacturing configuration. Actual allocation varies with site, automation level, and import vs domestic equipment sourcing.

Cumulative cash position

Cumulative free cash from ₹24.3 cr CapEx, indicative breakeven by Year 4-5 at conservative utilisation assumptions.

0 ₹14.6 cr ₹-33.95 cr Year 1: negative ₹-31.52 cr cumulative (this year cash flow ₹-7.27 cr) Year 1 Year 2: negative ₹-21.82 cr cumulative (this year cash flow +₹2.4 cr) Year 2 Year 3: negative ₹-13.34 cr cumulative (this year cash flow +₹8.5 cr) Year 3 Year 4: negative ₹-2.43 cr cumulative (this year cash flow +₹10.9 cr) Year 4 Year 5: positive +₹9.7 cr cumulative (this year cash flow +₹12.1 cr) Year 5

Model assumes 60% Year 1 utilisation, ramp to 90% by Year 3, 18% EBITDA on revenue ~1.6x CapEx at maturity. Engagement scope refines these to your specific configuration.

Risks and mitigation for this project

Three primary risks require structured mitigation in the bankable DPR. First, raw material price volatility for glucosamine HCL and chondroitin sulphate (70-80% import-dependent from China and the USA) creates margin compression risk of 200-350 basis points per 15% ingredient cost inflation. Mitigation structures include forward contracts with 90-120 day price lock, strategic inventory building during trough pricing cycles targeting 60-90 days coverage, and qualification of alternate suppliers in Thailand and South Korea.

Second, regulatory re-classification risk exists if FSSAI or CDSCO tightening of health-claim substantiation requirements forces reformulation or label modifications, incurring ₹0.5-1.5 crore in re-validation costs and potential channel destocking. The mitigation includes pre-emptive CDSCO pre-meeting for novel combination approvals and maintaining a non-claim product line as regulatory buffer. Third, channel concentration risk emerges from pharmacy-distributor dependency where the top 5 distributors may represent 55-65% of revenues, creating credit and relationship risk.

Mitigation involves parallel MT channel development for modern trade and first-party e-commerce presence capturing 15-20% of revenues within 3 years of commissioning. Sensitivity analysis across ±200 bps interest rate movement and ±10% volume variance indicates IRR range of 19-26%, remaining above the 15% project hurdle rate across base and adverse scenarios.

Risk matrix

Category-typical risks plotted by impact and probability. Hover a numbered dot to see the risk.

CDSCO approval delay: impact 3/3, probability 2/3 1 GMP audit findings: impact 3/3, probability 2/3 2 API price volatility: impact 2/3, probability 3/3 3 IPR / patent challenge: impact 3/3, probability 1/3 4 Distribution channel access: impact 2/3, probability 2/3 5 Probability → Impact → Low Medium High High Medium Low
1. CDSCO approval delay
2. GMP audit findings
3. API price volatility
4. IPR / patent challenge
5. Distribution channel access

How to engage with KAMRIT on this report

KAMRIT offers three engagement tiers tailored to the decision stage of the project. Pick the tier that matches what you actually need: pricing, scope, and turnaround are summarised in the sidebar.

Key market drivers

  • PLI Bulk Drug and Medical Devices
  • US generics export opportunity
  • Health insurance penetration rising
  • Chronic disease burden growth
  • Hospital capex expansion in Tier-2/3
  • Telemedicine and digital health adoption

Competitive landscape

The Indian joint care supplement market is sized at ₹25,207 crore in 2026 and is on a 17.8% trajectory to ₹79,556 crore by 2033. Sun Pharmaceutical, Dr. Reddy's Laboratories and Cipla hold the leading positions , with Lupin, Aurobindo Pharma, Torrent Pharma, Zydus Lifesciences also profiled in this DPR. The full report benchmarks the new entrant's CapEx (₹2.5 crore - ₹46 crore) and unit economics against the listed-peer cost structure, identifies the specific competitive gap a 2.6 - 5.5-year-payback project can exploit, and includes channel-share and pricing-position analysis. Click any name to open its live profile, current stock price, and analyst note.

What's inside the Joint Care Supplement DPR

The Joint Care Supplement DPR is a 217-page PDF (Tier 2 also ships an Excel financial model) built around a mid-cap MSME entrant assumption. It covers Schedule M-compliant layout, GMP cleanroom mapping, HVAC and WFI water system sizing, QA / QC lab design, validation protocols, and dossier preparation for CDSCO and export markets. The financial side runs the full project economics for ₹2.5 crore - ₹46 crore CapEx: line-itemised CapEx with vendor quotes, OpEx build-up by cost head, 5-year revenue projection by SKU and channel, P&L / balance sheet / cash flow, ROI, NPV, IRR, working-capital cycle, break-even, three-scenario sensitivity, and the Means of Finance recommendation. Payback of 2.6 - 5.5 years is back-tested against the listed-peer cost structure of Sun Pharmaceutical and Dr. Reddy's Laboratories.

Numbers for this Joint Care Supplement project

Market, operating, and project economics at a glance

A focused view of the numbers that decide this mid-cap MSME project. The Bankable DPR breaks each of these down into the full state-by-state and vendor-by-vendor schedule.

India Joint Care Supplement Market Size FY2026

₹25,207 crore

Domestic market valuation for dietary supplements targeting joint, bone, and cartilage health across pharmacy, MT, and e-commerce channels

Projected Market Size 2033

₹79,556 crore

3.16x expansion trajectory with 17.8% CAGR driven by chronic disease burden and preventive health mainstreaming

CapEx Band

₹2.5 crore to ₹46 crore

Ranges from semi-automatic 15-20 million unit pilot to fully automated 80-120 million unit commercial scale plant

Payback Period

2.6 - 5.5 years

Dependent on capacity utilisation, product mix (tablets vs capsules), and channel development velocity

Glucosamine HCL Active Ingredient Cost

₹1,800-2,200 per kg

70-80% import-dependent; primary cost driver for tablet formulations representing 45-55% of direct material cost

Direct Conversion Cost per Tablet

₹0.18-0.22 per unit

At ₹5-15 crore CapEx deployment with rotary press and coating line configuration; energy at 180-220 kWh per million tablets

Pharmacy Channel Share of Category Value

55-60%

Joint Care Supplements skew heavily to pharmacy over modern trade due to professional recommendation and clinical positioning

PL Incentive Rate for Pharma

5-10% of incremental sales

PLI Scheme for Pharma Band II applicable for domestically manufactured nutraceuticals meeting domestic value addition thresholds

City-specific versions of this report

Setting up in your city? 20 location-specific overlays included.

Each city version of this report layers in state-specific subsidies, the local industrial land cost band, electricity tariff, distance to the nearest export port, and the closest state industrial policy headline: useful when shortlisting a location for your unit.

Table of Contents

20 chapters, 217 pages. Excel financial model included with Tier 2 and Tier 3.

Executive Summary 6 pages
Industry Overview & Market Size 14 pages
Demand & Supply Analysis 12 pages
Regulatory Framework & Licences 18 pages
Plant Setup & Location Strategy 14 pages
Manufacturing / Operating Process 16 pages
Raw Materials & Utilities 12 pages
Machinery & Equipment Specifications 18 pages
Manpower Plan & Organisation Structure 8 pages
Packaging, Branding & Distribution 10 pages
Project Cost (CapEx) & Means of Finance 14 pages
Operating Cost (OpEx) Build-Up 10 pages
Revenue Projections (5-year) 8 pages
Profitability & ROI Analysis 10 pages
Break-Even & Sensitivity Analysis 8 pages
Working Capital Requirements 6 pages
Environmental Clearance & Compliance 10 pages
Risk Assessment & Mitigation 6 pages
Competitive Landscape & Key Players 10 pages
Conclusion & Recommendations 5 pages

FAQs about this Joint Care Supplement project

What is the projected market opportunity for Joint Care Supplements in India over the report’s horizon?

The Indian Joint Care Supplement market stands at ₹25,207 crore in FY2026 and is projected to reach ₹79,556 crore by 2033, representing a 3.16x expansion over seven years at a CAGR of 17.8%. The orthobiologics and preventive orthopaedics sub-segments within this category are growing faster than the overall market, creating a ₹4,500-5,200 crore incremental annual opportunity by Year 3 of commercial operations.

What is the viable CapEx range for setting up a domestic Joint Care Supplement facility?

Viable CapEx for a domestic Joint Care Supplement manufacturing unit ranges from ₹2.5 crore for a semi-automatic, single-shift pilot facility producing 15-20 million tablets annually to ₹46 crore for a fully automated, multi-line, multi-format plant with tableting, encapsulation, and powder-sachet capability reaching 80-120 million equivalent units per annum. The sweet spot for bankable DPR purposes sits at ₹8-18 crore for a 45-60 million unit capacity facility with expansion headroom.

What regulatory approvals are mandatory before commercial production commences?

Commercial production requires an FSSAI Central Licence (Form III-A) under the Food Safety and Standards Act 2006 for nutraceutical/health supplement manufacturing, CDSCO product approval if therapeutic claims are made, BIS compliance certification for labelling standards, SPCB Consent to Establish and Consent to Operate under the Water and Air Acts, and GSTN registration for interstate supply. The timeline from application to licence receipt ranges from 90-180 days with professional filing support.

What payback period can be realistically expected and what debt-service coverage is achievable?

The project’s payback period ranges from 2.6 years at the optimal CapEx and revenue assumptions to 5.5 years under conservative scenarios with 15% volume underperformance and 8% ingredient cost escalation. At ₹12 crore CapEx with ₹3.5 crore annual EBITDA generation, DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio) of 1.45-1.72x is achievable across the loan tenor, meeting SBI and HDFC pharma-desk lending thresholds of 1.25x minimum.

How do Chinese and domestic equipment options compare for this segment?

Chinese equipment from verified suppliers (Shanghai Tianjian, Changzhou Jintan) delivers 30-35% lower CapEx than European equivalents with acceptable quality for non-premium formulations, but carries 12-18 month delivery timelines and variable post-sales support. Indian manufacturers (Standard Process Industries, Innovative Engineers) offer competitive lead times of 4-6 months with comparable 5-year warranty terms for standard blenders and tablet presses. European IMA and Bosch lines justify premium pricing for high-throughput premium-format production targeting export markets under WHO-GMP standards.

Which Indian states offer the most favourable policy ecosystem for this project?

Gujarat (GIDC Sanand and Khambhat clusters), Maharashtra (MIDC Tarapur and Ambernath), Telangana (Hyderabad pharma cluster with Mahanadi Pharma City), and Tamil Nadu (Sriperumbudur-Oragadam belt) offer the most favourable ecosystem with established excipient and active ingredient supplier proximity, trained workforce availability, and state MSME schemes providing 5-15% capital subsidy, 3-year power tariff rebates, and single-window clearance through their respective industrial development authorities.

Not sure which tier you need?

Senior Partner Vishal Ranjan or Associate Vidushi Kothari will take a 20-minute scoping call and recommend the right engagement tier for your decision stage. Response within one business day.

Regulatory references and primary sources

Claims in this report reference the following Indian regulators, Acts, and authoritative portals.

  1. Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), Government of India
  2. Companies Act 2013
  3. Income-tax Act 1961
  4. Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST) Act 2017
  5. Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Act 2006
  6. Udyam Registration Portal (Ministry of MSME)
  7. Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO)
  8. Drugs and Cosmetics Act 1940
  9. Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission (IPC)
  10. Ministry of Health and Family Welfare
  11. Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI)
  12. Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS)

References open in a new tab. KAMRIT is not affiliated with any government body listed above; we cite them as the authoritative source for the regulations referenced in this report.