Form 5471: CFC reporting from India in 2026
By Yashvi Lakhotia & Aryan Talwar · · Global
KAMRIT runs global engagements end to end with senior expert accountability and transparent fixed-fee pricing across India.
A practitioner's view
Most articles on form 5471 reproduce the statute. This one walks through the practical position from KAMRIT live global engagements in Delhi, Noida, and pan-India. Each section pairs the rule with the operational implication so that the reader, whether a founder, CFO, or accountant, can act on it the same day.
What Form 5471 is
The cleanest framework for what form 5471 is is the one the appellate authorities themselves use. Establish the facts, identify the statutory provision, and apply the leading interpretation. Where the rule is principle-based, KAMRIT tests it against the most recent precedents.
Who must file
Most teams trip up on who must file for a simple reason: they treat it as a one-time exercise. In 2026, with the regulator increasingly using AI-driven scrutiny on the global side, the position needs to be documented contemporaneously. KAMRIT files maintain that paper trail.
Categories of filers
On categories of filers, the practical position changed in the last twelve months. Indian regulators (CBDT, CBIC, MCA, RBI) issued multiple notifications affecting how this is treated for global engagements. The right approach in 2026 is to document the position, retain the evidence, and revisit when the next circular drops.
Schedules and disclosures
Schedules and disclosures, in practice, splits into two camps: businesses that document the position contemporaneously, and businesses that try to reconstruct it after a notice. The first camp wins almost every time. The second camp pays late fees, interest, and often penalty.
Penalties for non-filing
Practitioner tip on penalties for non-filing: the regulator's most recent guidance is rarely identical to the textbook position. We track every relevant notification and flag the change when it affects an active client. If your business has unusual fact patterns, the standard answer often does not apply.
Where KAMRIT can help
KAMRIT runs global engagements end to end. Browse the full global catalogue for fixed-fee packages, or start a conversation and a senior partner will reply within one business day.
Co-Author - Aryan Talwar, Associate Partner, India Entry & FEMA
Frequently asked
How much does form 5471 cost in 2026?
Pricing varies with scope. KAMRIT publishes fixed-fee starting prices on every service page. For Global engagements the typical fee starts in the low thousands of rupees for routine compliance work and scales up for transactional advisory. See the related KAMRIT service page for the latest fee.
What documents will KAMRIT need?
Document requirements depend on the specific service. KAMRIT shares a precise checklist on the kickoff call. Typical documents include identity and address proof of directors, the latest financial statements, and any existing registrations.
How long does the process take?
End to end timelines depend on regulator processing. KAMRIT initiates filings within one business day of receiving complete documents and tracks every notification. Most India-based filings complete within 7 to 21 working days.
Does KAMRIT serve clients outside Delhi and Noida?
Yes. KAMRIT serves clients across India and globally. The team is headquartered at 1372, Kashmere Gate, Delhi and at 4th Floor, C130, Sector 2, Noida, with engagement teams across Mumbai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, and Pune.
Can KAMRIT also handle ongoing compliance after this?
Yes. KAMRIT supports the entire compliance lifecycle. Most clients move to a fixed-fee monthly retainer covering GST, TDS, ROC, payroll, and FEMA after the initial registration is complete.
Ready to act on this?
A senior KAMRIT partner reviews every enquiry within one business day. Pricing is fixed-fee and transparent.