India’s GIFT City (Gujarat International Finance Tec-City) has emerged as a strategic international financial hub, attracting global and domestic fund managers with its favorable regulatory and tax landscape. The introduction of the International Financial Services Centres Authority (Fund Management) Regulations, 2022, or FME Regulations, has laid the groundwork for a streamlined and structured approach to fund management in this zone. This blog breaks down the framework for fund management entities (FMEs), various categories of fund schemes, the role and structure of Family Investment Funds (FIFs), taxation benefits under the IFSC regime, and the broader comparison with SEBI-regulated funds in India.
Background
GIFT City was declared a multi-service Special Economic Zone in 2015 and has since been positioned as an International Financial Services Centre (IFSC). The International Financial Services Centres Authority (Fund Management) Regulations, 2022, were introduced to regulate fund managers operating in the IFSC. These regulations apply to Fund Management Entities (FMEs) and not directly to the funds themselves.
FMEs need to be registered with IFSCA, and must meet specific conditions to launch schemes. GIFT City offers a range of tax and regulatory benefits that make it highly attractive for fund managers and investors alike.
Categories
Fund management in GIFT City is classified into several categories:
- Venture Capital Schemes
- Restricted (Non-Retail) Schemes
- Retail Schemes
- Portfolio Management Services
- Investment Trusts
- Family Investment Funds
- ETFs
- ESG Funds
- Special Situation Funds
Fund Management Entity
FMEs in GIFT City are categorized as:
- Authorized FMEs
- Registered FMEs (Non-Retail)
- Registered FMEs (Retail)
Key Aspects – FME Registration Categories
| Particulars | Authorized FME | Registered FME (Non-Retail) | Registered FME (Retail) |
| Regulatory Oversight | Low | High | High |
| Types of Schemes/Funds | Venture Capital, Early-stage ventures, Family Investment Fund | Venture Capital, Restricted Schemes, PMS, REIT/InvIT Managers | All types including Retail Schemes |
| Minimum Net Worth | USD 75,000 | USD 500,000 | USD 1,000,000 |
| Track Record | Experienced employees required | Holding company: 5+ years, $200M AUM, 25,000+ investors | Similar to Non-Retail plus experienced KMP |
| KMP | 1 (Principal Officer) | 2 (Principal & Compliance Officer) | 3 (Principal, Compliance, Fund Management KMP) |
| Legal Structure | Company, LLP, Branch | Company, LLP, Branch | Company, Branch |
Key Aspects – Schemes
Venture Capital Schemes
- Can be launched by any FME
- Legal structure: Company, LLP, Trust
- Corpus: USD 5M to USD 200M
- Max 50 investors
- Contribution:
- Accredited: No minimum
- Employees/Directors/Partners: USD 60,000
- Others: USD 250,000
- Close-ended, minimum 3-year tenure
- Considered AIF Category I
Non-Retail Schemes
- Launched by Registered FMEs
- Max 1,000 investors
- Corpus: Minimum USD 5M
- Similar contribution structure but lower than venture capital schemes
- Considered AIF Category based on investment mix
- Can be open or close-ended (minimum 1-year tenure)
Retail Schemes
- Launched by Registered FMEs (Retail)
- Minimum 20 investors
- One investor cannot hold more than 25%
- Corpus: Minimum USD 5M
- Close-ended schemes: Minimum USD 10,000 investment
- Considered AIF Category III
Key Aspects – Family Investment Funds (FIFs)
FIFs are self-managed funds pooling money from a single family. They can be structured as a company, LLP, or trust with identifiable beneficiaries.
Key points:
- Open or close-ended
- Can borrow or leverage as per risk policy
- No net worth requirement, but minimum corpus of USD 10M within 3 years
- “Single family” includes lineal descendants and entities controlled by them
- Must register as Authorized FME if investing in securities
- Not considered AIF for tax purposes
- Can invest in both financial and physical assets including real estate, art, bullion, etc.
IFSC Tax Implications – General Overview
Entities in IFSC:
- Are considered Indian residents for tax
- Receive 100% deduction on business profits for 10 out of 15 years
- Are subject to a concessional MAT/AMT of 9% (plus applicable surcharge)
- Face no complications under Place of Effective Management (POEM) rules
IFSC Tax Implications – Fund Management Entities
Category I & II AIFs
- Pass-through status granted under Section 115UB
- Income other than business is exempt for funds under 10(23FBA)
- Business income is taxable but eligible for 80LA deduction
- Withholding:
- 10% for residents
- Rates in force for non-residents
- For non-resident investors, offshore fund income is deemed a direct investment outside India and hence not taxable
Category III AIFs
- No pass-through status
- All income taxable in hands of fund
- 80LA deduction available on approved business income
- Specified funds (where all units are held by non-residents except sponsor/manager) get additional exemptions under 10(4D)
- In investor’s hands:
- Income taxable as per type
- Specified fund unit holders get exemption under 10(23FBC)
Exchange Control Implications – Investment in Funds in IFSC
- As per FEMA IFSC Regulations, entities in IFSC are “persons resident outside India”
- Investment by Indian residents is subject to ODI (Overseas Direct Investment) regulations
- Contributions to IFSC investment vehicles are considered OPI (Overseas Portfolio Investment)
- Indian entities not in financial services can still invest in IFSC funds
- Resident individuals can invest within LRS limit ($250,000) but cannot have downstream control outside IFSC
- ODI rules don’t apply to investments made by IFSC entities outside India
IFSC AIFs vs SEBI AIFs
| Criteria | SEBI AIF | IFSC FME |
| Regulation | Fund registration | FME registration |
| Leveraging | Limited, short-term only | Permitted with conditions |
| Investment Restrictions | Thresholds apply | No thresholds |
| Overseas Investment | Needs SEBI approval, limit reached | No restrictions or limits |
| Tax Holiday | Not available | Available for business income |
| Pass-through | Cat I & II only | Cat I & II with tax holiday |



