- Collective power, bigger profits: Pooling resources in an FPC helps farmers negotiate better prices and reduce middlemen.
- Quick setup: With complete documents, a farm producer company can be registered in as little as 15 days.
- Affordable investment: Starting costs can be as low as ₹3–4 lakh with government support.
- Tax advantage: Agricultural income earned by an FPC is 100% tax-free under Indian law.
- Global reach: FPCs can export produce internationally with the right licences.
- Government boost: Schemes like NABARD PODF and SFAC Equity Grant can provide ₹15–25 lakh in funding.
Farmer Producer Companies (FPCs) are reshaping India’s agricultural sector, with over 9,600 FPOs registered and more than 8,600 actively engaged in farming and allied activities. Recognising their impact, the government announced in the 2019 Budget its plan to establish 10,000 additional FPOs within five years. These companies help farmers access markets, technology, and capital more efficiently, and the 2018 Budget further incentivised the model by offering a five-year tax exemption. This guide explores the fundamentals of FPCs, covering everything from their formation and registration process to strategies for profitability—serving as a valuable resource for both aspiring farmer groups and agricultural professionals.
Understanding the Farmer-Producer Company Model

The Indian Government introduced producer companies in 2002 by amending the Indian Companies Act, 1956. They added section IXA based on the Y.K. Alagh Committee’s suggestions. This new model aimed to fix the problems with traditional cooperatives and give small farmers more control over their business.
What is a producer company?
A producer company lets primary producers work together under the law to boost their income and living standards. It serves as a bridge between cooperative principles and corporate efficiency. Farmers can own and run their operations as a group.
Producer companies help farmers get better market access, new technology, and funding. Small producers can team up to get these benefits:
- Better deals when selling in bulk
- Lower costs by buying supplies together
- Better production and marketing
- Easy access to bank loans and government help
On top of that, these companies help farmers deal with broken supply chains. Middlemen often work without transparency, which leaves producers with a tiny share of what consumers pay.
How is it different from a cooperative?
Producer companies work better than traditional cooperatives. Here’s what makes them different:
- Legal Framework: The Companies Act governs producer companies, while the Cooperative Societies Act covers cooperatives.
- Operational Scope: Producer companies can handle many business goals at once. Cooperatives usually stick to one goal.
- Geographic Reach: Producer companies can work anywhere in India. Cooperatives face area restrictions.
- Autonomy: Producer companies run freely within legal limits. Government often controls cooperatives.
- Profit Distribution: Producer companies share profits based on member participation. Cooperatives give limited share dividends.
- Voting Rights: Both follow the member, one vote rule. But in cooperatives, the government and Registrar can veto decisions.
- Reserve Creation: Producer companies must save money yearly. Cooperatives save only when profitable.
- Capital Access: Producer companies borrow money easily. Cooperatives face strict limits.
Who can form a farmer-producer organisation?
Starting a farmer-producer organisation needs specific requirements:
- Primary Producers: Ten or more farmers, milk producers, or fishermen can start a producer company.
- Producer Institutions: Two or more producer groups can form a company.
- Combination: Individual producers and institutions can team up if their goals match legal needs.
- Board Composition: The organisation needs five elected board members. This includes farmer representatives and at least one woman.
- Conflict of Interest: Members cannot have competing business interests.
- Membership Criteria: Anyone who qualifies can join if they accept the member duties.
- Growth Potential: Research shows 700-1000 active producers make operations sustainable.
| Parameter | Cooperative Society | Producer Company |
|---|---|---|
| Registration | Cooperative Societies Act | Indian Companies Act |
| Objectives | Single object | Multi-object |
| Area of Operation | Restricted, discretionary | Entire Union of India |
| Membership | Individuals and cooperatives | Any individual, group, association, producer of goods or services |
| Share | Non-tradable | Commensurate withthe volume of business |
| Profit sharing | Limited dividends on shares | One member, one vote, but the Government and Registrar hold veto power |
| Voting rights | Highly patronised to the extent of interference | One member, one vote. Members not have transactions with the company cannot vote |
| Government control | Fully autonomous, self-ruled within the provisions of the Act | Minimal, limited to statutory requirements |
| Extent of Autonomy | Limited in “real-life scenario” | Fully autonomous, self-ruled within the provisions of Act |
| Reserves | Created if there are profits | Mandatory to create every year |
| Borrowing power | Restricted | More freedom and alternatives |
Legal Requirements and Registration Process
Image Source: Auriga accounting
A farm producer company needs specific legal requirements and a well-laid-out process to register. The Companies Act lays down clear guidelines to set up these farmer-owned businesses.
Minimum number of members and capital
You need to meet certain membership and capital criteria to set up a producer company:
- Membership Requirements:
- At least 10 individual primary producers (farmers, milk producers, fishermen) need to come together
- Two or more producer institutions can also form a producer company
- Members can join without any upper limit
- Most successful companies have 700-1000 active producers for green operations
- Capital Requirements:
- Minimum Authorised Capital: Rs. 5 lakh
- Minimum Paid-up Capital: Rs. 1 lakh
- Your authorised capital should cover everything mentioned in the memorandum
- Business objectives should match your capital realistically
Documents required for registration
Here’s what you need to gather before starting the registration:
- For Directors/Shareholders:
- PAN Card and photographs
- Identity proof (Aadhar card, voter ID, driving license, or passport)
- Address proof (bank statement, mobile bill, electricity bill, or landline bill)
- Producer proof (Khasra-Khatuni, ITR with agriculture income, Sarpanch letter)
- For Registered Office:
- Utility bill
- Rent agreement (if applicable)
- Property owner’s NOC
Step-by-step registration process
Here’s how you can register your company:
- Get Digital Signature Certificates (DSC) for at least one director who signs all documents
- Choose Company Name – pick up to four names in order of preference
- Apply for Name Availability using Form INC-1
- Prepare Essential Documents after name approval:
- Memorandum of Association (MOA)
- Articles of Association (AOA)
- Form INC-22 for registered office
- Form DIR-12 for directors’ appointment
- Apply for Directors’ Identification Number (DIN) for all proposed directors
- Submit Documents to ROC with affidavits by subscribers who signed in Hindi
- Get Certificate of Incorporation in Form INC-21
Time and cost involved in registration
Let’s look at how much time and money you’ll need:
- Timeframe: Registration takes about 10-15 working days
- Cost Breakdown:
- Digital Signature Certificate (DSC): Around Rs. 5,000 for 10 directors
- Name Approval: Rs. 1,000
- MOA, AOA and Incorporation Fee: The Government has waived these
- Stamp Duty (varies by state): Around Rs. 1,500
- PAN and TAN Application: Rs. 200
- Form INC-22: Rs. 300
- CA Certification: Rs. 1,500
- Professional Fees: Rs. 9,745
- GST: Rs. 1,755
- Total Cost: Around Rs. 30,500
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum Members | 10 individual producers or 2 producer institutions |
| Maximum Members | No limit |
| Sustainable Operation | Requires 700-1000 active members |
| Authorized Capital | Minimum Rs. 5 lakh |
| Paid-up Capital | Minimum Rs. 1 lakh |
| Registration Timeline | 10-15 working days |
| Total Registration Cost | Approximately Rs. 30,500 |
| Key Documents | DSC, DIN, MOA, AOA, INC-22, DIR-12 |
Key Activities and Operational Scope
A farm producer company can take up many business activities allowed under the Companies Act after registration. These operations are the foundations of how FPCs create value for their farmer-members.
Permitted business activities under the Companies Act
The Companies Act lists specific activities that farm producer companies can take up:
- Production and Harvesting: Growing, collecting, sorting, and storing agricultural produce from members
- Procurement and Marketing: Buying members’ produce and selling it to institutional buyers or retail markets
- Processing and Value Addition: Preserving, drying, distilling, brewing, canning, packaging, and other processing activities
- Input Supply: Giving seeds, fertilisers, machinery, equipment and consumables to members at better prices
- Financial Services: Providing loans for crops, equipment purchases, well construction, and pipeline installation
- Technical Support: Giving expert advice, training, research, and development that benefits members
- Insurance Services: Making crop, equipment, and life insurance available to members
- Infrastructure Development: Building warehouses, power generation, and resource management systems
Primary vs. value-added services
FPCs typically provide two types of services:
Primary Services:
- Input aggregation and supply that cuts costs through bulk purchases
- Output aggregation and direct marketing that removes middlemen
- Simple financial assistance and credit facilitation
- Technical information and extension services
Value-Added Services:
- Food processing and product transformation that creates higher-margin products
- Branding, packaging, and standardisation to capture more value
- Quality control and certification to access premium markets
- Export facilitation and institutional buyer linkages
- Specialised storage and cold chain management
Research shows that FPCs offering value-added services among primary ones achieve better business results. Mature FPCs gradually vary their business basket to boost service quality and financial sustainability.
Examples of successful FPC operations
Several FPCs have shown remarkable success:
- Maha Shakti FPO:
- Annual turnover: Rs. 15 crores
- Activities: Milk processing, value addition of spices, cereals, and pulses
- Marketing reach: Within a 150 km radius with 45% institutional sales
- Somnath Farmers Producer Company:
- Revenue: Rs. 2.46 crores from groundnut trade under Fair Trade Certificate
- Activities: Groundnut processing, cattle feed preparation, selling agri-waste
- Membership: 1,235 farmers from 30+ villages
- Banaskantha Farmers Producer Company:
- Revenue growth: From Rs. 28.36 lakhs to Rs. 312 lakhs in two years
- Profit increase: From Rs. 4,080 to Rs. 1.58 lakhs in the same period
- Activities: Input supply, produce marketing, and processing
| Activity Category | Examples | Benefits to Members |
|---|---|---|
| Input Services | Bulk procurement of seeds, fertilisers, and machinery | Lower costs, higher quality inputs |
| Output Marketing | Collective selling, institutional buyer linkages | Better prices, reduced transaction costs |
| Processing | Grading, sorting, packaging, value addition | Higher income, access to premium markets |
| Financial Services | Credit facilitation, insurance linkages | Better financial security, investment capacity |
| Technical Services | Training, market information, R&D | Improved productivity, adaptation to market needs |
Governance, Membership, and Compliance
Good governance is the backbone of every successful farm producer company that gives transparency and accountability to its members. Let’s look at how these organisations work and who manages them.
Board of directors and their roles
The Board of Directors leads the governing body of a farm producer company and makes important policy decisions. Rules state that the board must have between 5 and 15 directors. Members elect these directors, who serve for a specific term that cannot exceed five years.
Directors must meet these criteria:
- Age between 25-65 years
- Minimum education (7th standard)
- Be willing to take on responsibilities
- Be an active FPC member for at least two years
The board meets once every three months at a minimum, with at least four meetings each year. Directors review operations, approve financial decisions, and create policies for member welfare during these meetings.
Voting rights and shareholding
Farm producer companies follow democratic governance where each member has equal voting rights, whatever their shareholding. This “one member, one vote” approach means all farmer-members get an equal voice in decisions.
Membership is limited to:
- Farmers and agriculturists only
- People without conflicting business interests
- Those ready to accept membership duties
Members buy shares as their capital contribution, and their liability is limited to the unpaid amount on their shares. Notwithstanding that, unlike regular companies, members can transfer shares only to another active member after board approval.
Annual meetings and record keeping
Producer companies must hold their first Annual General Meeting (AGM) within 90 days of starting. After that, AGMs happen yearly with no more than 15 months between meetings.
Companies must follow these AGM rules:
- Send notices 14 days before the meeting
- Get financial statements, directors’ report, and auditor’s report ready
- Share minutes of previous meetings
- Keep a quorum of 1/4th of the total members
Detailed records and accounts must be available to members. The company must also keep statutory registers for directors, members, and related party transactions.
Statutory compliance and reporting
Farm producer companies must meet many compliance requirements:
- File annual financial statements (AOC-4) within 30 days of AGM
- Submit annual returns (MGT-7) within 60 days of AGM
- File director KYC (DIR-3 KYC) yearly by September 30
- Submit half-yearly MSME-1 for delayed payments
- File DPT-3 for deposits by June 30 yearly
Directors must also show their interests (MBP-1) and non-disqualification (DIR-8) in the first board meeting of each financial year.

| Governance Aspect | Requirement | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Board Size | 5-15 Directors | Throughout existence |
| Board Meetings | Minimum 4 meetings | Within 6 months of the financial year end |
| Annual General Meeting | Mandatory | Within 6 months of financial year end |
| Member Voting | One member, one vote | During general meetings |
| Financial Statements | Preparation and approval | Before AGM |
| Annual Return | MGT-7/MGT-7A | Within 60 days of AGM |
| Director KYC | DIR-3 KYC | By September 30 annually |
Funding, Profitability, and Government Support
Image Source: IAS Gyan
Money makes or breaks farm producer companies. The right financial approach can help them thrive in today’s competitive market.
Sources of funding: equity, loans, grants
Farm producer companies can get money from several sources:
- Member Equity Contributions: Farmer-members pool their share capital to build their financial foundation.
- Institutional Loans: Banks offer credit under Priority Sector Lending. Loans up to Rs. 2 crore fall under direct agriculture finance.
- Matching Equity Grants: SFAC provides matching equity grants up to Rs. 15 lakh per FPC to boost borrowing capacity.
- Government Schemes: The Central Sector Scheme supports FPOs with financial help up to Rs. 18 lakh over three years.
- Credit Guarantee Fund: This fund helps secure loans up to Rs. 2 crore without collateral from eligible lenders.
Farmer producer company benefits and tax exemptions
FPCs get better tax benefits compared to other businesses:
- Income Tax Exemption: FPCs registered as producer companies don’t pay income tax up to Rs. 100 crore under Section 80PA.
- Reduced Corporate Tax: Companies with turnover below Rs. 50 crores pay lower tax rates under Section 115BAA.
- Agricultural Income Exemption: Income from agricultural activities defined in the Income Tax Act is tax-free.
- Customs Duty Reduction: Lower customs duty on imported agricultural equipment helps producer companies save money.
Support from NABARD, SFAC, and other agencies
Many organisations help FPCs grow:
- NABARD’s Producer Organisation Development Fund (PODF): A Rs. 50 crore fund that offers loan-linked grants to promote, build capacity, and support market activities.
- SFAC Initiatives: Provides equity grants and runs a Credit Guarantee Fund to help financial institutions lend to FPCs confidently.
- Government Allocation: The government set aside Rs. 955 crores in 2023-24 to form and promote 10,000 FPOs.
- NABARD Financial Products: Matches loans at a 1:1 ratio up to Rs. 25 lakh per FPO, with Rs. 25,000 per-member limit.
How to reach the first profit: timeline and strategy
Most FPCs become profitable through these stages:
- Incubation Phase (0-2 years): Build membership, develop skills, and start simple services.
- Early Operations (2-3 years): Generate working capital through bulk input supply and output marketing.
- Growth Stage (3-5 years): Start value-added services and processing work.
- Sustainability (5+ years): Add new business activities and build stronger market connections.
| Funding Source | Maximum Amount | Key Features | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| SFAC Equity Grant | Rs. 15 lakh | Matching equity contribution | Improving creditworthiness |
| NABARD PODF | Rs. 25 lakh | 1:1 matching ratio | Capital investment |
| Credit Guarantee | Rs. 2 crore | Collateral-free loans | Working capital & infrastructure |
| Central Sector Scheme | Rs. 18 lakh | Over 3 years | Formation & initial operations |
Key Takeaways

Farm Producer Companies offer a powerful pathway for farmers to collectively improve their market position and achieve sustainable profitability. Here are the essential insights for establishing and operating a successful FPC:
• Minimum 10 farmers or 2 producer institutions can form an FPC with Rs. 5 lakh authorised capital, offering better market access than traditional cooperatives
• Registration takes 10-15 working days, costing approximately Rs. 30,500, with companies enjoying tax exemptions up to Rs. 100 crore under Section 80PA
• Start with primary services like input aggregation and output marketing, then gradually expand to value-added processing for higher profit margins
• Government support includes Rs. 18 lakh funding over 3 years, NABARD loans up to Rs. 25 lakh, and collateral-free credit up to Rs. 2 crore
• Profitability typically takes 3-5 years, requiring 700-1000 active members for sustainable operations and diversified revenue streams
The FPC model combines cooperative principles with corporate efficiency, enabling farmers to overcome fragmented value chains and intermediary exploitation. With proper governance, strategic planning, and leveraging available government support, farmer-producer companies can transform rural agricultural communities into thriving, profitable enterprises that benefit all members collectively.
Conclusion
Farm Producer Companies (FPCs) have the potential to transform India’s agricultural communities by combining cooperative values with corporate efficiency. With the government aiming to establish 10,000 more FPOs, these organisations can significantly boost rural economies if built on a foundation of proper registration, strategic planning, and strong governance. Unlike traditional cooperatives, FPCs offer farmers a structure that supports growth through input aggregation, value addition, and branding, while promoting transparency and attracting investment. Though profitability may take 3–5 years, those leveraging support from NABARD, SFAC, and government schemes—while maintaining member trust and diversified revenue—can overcome challenges and build sustainable, eco-friendly enterprises that uplift entire farming communities.
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FAQs
A farm producer company is a legal entity formed by farmers to collectively carry out production, procurement, processing, and marketing of agricultural produce. It operates like a private limited company but is owned and managed only by producers
You need a minimum of 10 individual farmers or 2 producer institutions (or a combination of both) to register a farm producer company.
There is no fixed statutory minimum capital, but practically, an authorised share capital of ₹5 lakh or more is preferred to cover registration and initial operational costs.
No. Only primary producers (farmers, fishermen, dairy farmers, etc.) or producer institutions can become members and shareholders.
If documents are complete, registration typically takes 15–30 working days from the date of application to receiving the Certificate of Incorporation.
Yes. Income earned from agricultural activities is exempt from income tax under Section 10(1) of the Income Tax Act. However, income from non-agricultural activities is taxed at regular corporate rates.
Yes. Farm producer companies can export agricultural produce and processed goods, provided they comply with export regulations and obtain necessary licences like IEC (Import Export Code).
Key documents include PAN and Aadhaar of all members, proof of registered office address, utility bill (electricity/water), and passport-size photos of directors.
Schemes like NABARD’s Producer Organisation Development Fund (PODF), SFAC’s Equity Grant Scheme, and the PM-Kisan MAA-NIDHI scheme provide financial and technical assistance.
Profits are shared among members in proportion to their participation (quantity of produce sold through the company) after setting aside reserves and fulfilling legal requirements.