Joint Venture Registration in Nepal: What the Process Describes and What It Does Not Resolve

FITTA 2019 · Companies Act 2006 · DoI · OCR · NRB · 2026

Joint Venture Registration in Nepal: What the Process Describes and What It Does Not Resolve

Joint ventures in Nepal are well-documented in law. The approval pathway is clearly laid out. The required clauses are listed in DoI's own template. None of that means the agreement you sign will protect you in the way you expect it to.

📋 FITTA 2019 + Companies Act 2006⏱ 18-min read🗓 Updated: June 2026
⚡ 60-Second Summary
JV is one of 5 permitted FDI forms under FITTA 2019 — requires DoI approval before incorporation
JVA must be submitted to DoI and then filed with OCR within 15 days — the clock is tighter than it sounds
Minimum NPR 20M foreign equity threshold (IT sector: zero since Feb 2026)
DoI has a template JVA — using it as-is leaves most commercial protections undrafted
Deadlock provisions are almost never in first drafts — and almost always needed later
AoA must align with JVA — when they conflict, courts decide which governs
How to Use This Guide

This article explains how joint ventures work in Nepal, what the registration process requires, and which clauses matter most. It is accurate and comprehensive on the legal framework.

It cannot tell you which clause structure protects your specific equity position, whether your JVA is consistent with your proposed AoA, or how DoI currently treats your specific partner combination. Those determinations require a Nepal-registered advocate — not additional reading.

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Joint Venture Registration Nepal 2026: Legal Process, JVA Requirements & What Gets Missed

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Complete guide to joint venture registration in Nepal — FITTA 2019 framework, JVA requirements, DoI approval steps, 15-day filing rules, capital structure, and the clauses most investors forget to negotiate.

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joint venture registration Nepal · joint venture agreement Nepal · JV Nepal foreign investor · FITTA 2019 joint venture · shareholders agreement Nepal · Nepal JV company formation

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Executive Summary

A joint venture in Nepal is simultaneously a commercial partnership, a regulatory submission, and — if things go wrong — a legal document whose enforceability depends entirely on how it was drafted, filed, and aligned with the company's constitutional documents. Most investors focus on the first function and underestimate the second and third.

Under FITTA 2019 and the Companies Act 2006, a foreign-invested joint venture must be approved by the Department of Industry (DoI) or Investment Board Nepal (IBN), incorporated at the Office of the Company Registrar (OCR), and have its joint venture agreement (JVA) filed within a 15-day statutory window that begins before the company legally exists.

The legal framework is clear. The implementation requires judgment at every step — which clauses to negotiate, how to align the JVA with the AoA, which governance provisions survive a dispute, and how to structure capital contributions so that repatriation rights attach to every tranche. That judgment is where professional counsel earns its value.

NPR 20MMin. foreign equity (non-IT)
15 daysJVA filing clock from execution
7–30 daysDoI approval (auto / manual)
100%Max foreign equity — open sectors
4 lawsGoverning one JV simultaneously
3 tiersDispute resolution framework

I. What Is a Joint Venture in Nepal?Reference Level

A joint venture (JV) in Nepal is a private limited company formed by two or more parties — at least one of which is a foreign investor — sharing equity, risk, and operational responsibility in a Nepal-registered entity. It is formally recognized as one of five permitted forms of foreign investment under Section 2(a) of FITTA 2019, alongside equity investment, technology transfer, foreign loan, and branch office establishment.

JVs are most common where one of three conditions exists: the sector has foreign equity caps requiring a local partner; the business depends on land, licenses, or community relationships that a Nepali partner provides; or risk-sharing on a capital-intensive project justifies co-ownership. In sectors fully open to 100% foreign equity, a JV is optional — and whether it is strategically preferable to a wholly foreign-owned structure is a question of commercial judgment, not legal necessity.

JV vs. Shareholders' Agreement — A Distinction That MattersIn Nepal's legal context, the terms "joint venture agreement" and "shareholders' agreement" are often used interchangeably. They are not the same document. A JVA governs the formation of the JV company and is submitted to DoI as part of the approval application. A shareholders' agreement governs ongoing governance, exit rights, and dispute resolution between partners after incorporation. Nepali legal practice increasingly recommends both — the JVA for regulatory compliance and the shareholders' agreement for commercial protection. Whether DoI and OCR treat them as equivalent for filing purposes varies and should be confirmed.

No single statute fully governs a Nepal joint venture. FITTA 2019 determines who may invest and under what conditions. The Companies Act 2006 governs the JV company's structure and the filing obligations for the JVA itself. The Industrial Enterprises Act 2020 determines incentive eligibility. NRB's Foreign Investment and Foreign Loan Management Bylaws 2021 control how capital flows in and out of the country. All four apply to every JV transaction simultaneously.

LawWhat It Governs in a JV ContextAdministered By
FITTA 2019Investment eligibility, sector permissions, minimum thresholds, repatriation rightsDoI / IBN
Companies Act 2006Incorporation structure, MoA/AoA, JVA filing obligations (Section 187), shareholder rightsOCR
Industrial Enterprises Act 2020Industry classification, operating license, tax incentive eligibilityDoI
NRB Bylaws 2021Capital inflow recording, foreign loan registration, repatriation authorizationNepal Rastra Bank
Muluki Civil Code 2017General contract law validity, enforceability, signatory requirementsCourts
A JVA satisfying FITTA's approval requirements but failing to align with the Companies Act's structural provisions is not a compliant agreement — both layers must be addressed simultaneously, which is the primary reason template adaptation is insufficient.

The interaction between these laws creates a specific drafting challenge: a clause that is commercially protective under contract law may conflict with the Companies Act's baseline governance rules, making it enforceable between partners but unenforceable against the company itself. Where that line falls for specific clause types is a legal interpretation question, not a general rule.

III. Joint Venture Registration: The Steps and Where They StallLegal Confirmation Required

1

Draft and Execute the Joint Venture Agreement

The JVA must be drafted, negotiated, and signed by all parties before submission to DoI. It must be notarized — or, for foreign parties, consular-authenticated or apostilled depending on their home country. Company parties require authorized signatory board resolutions specifying Nepal as the investment destination. The 15-day filing clock under the Companies Act starts from this date.

15-day clock starts the moment this is signed
Process Trap #1
2

The 15-Day Clock — On a Company That Does Not Exist Yet

Section 187 of the Companies Act requires: (a) shareholders submit the JVA to the JV company within 15 days of execution; (b) the company then files it with OCR within 15 days of receipt. The sequencing problem is structural — the JVA is executed before the company is incorporated, meaning the entity that must receive the first filing does not yet legally exist.

Legal advisors handle this timing gap in different ways: pre-incorporation consensus agreements, provisional filings, or simultaneous execution at incorporation. Which approach OCR currently treats as compliant is something the statute does not specify — and different practitioners describe differently.

How to handle the sequencing gap requires legal guidance — not statutory inference
3

Submit FDI Application to DoI or IBN

Apply via IMIS portal (DoI) for projects below NPR 6 billion, or via IBN for larger or national priority projects. The application package must include the executed JVA, project feasibility report, financial credibility certificate from the foreign investor's home bank (recent — within 3–6 months), passport copies of all investors, foreign entity incorporation documents (apostilled), and draft MoA/AoA consistent with the JVA's equity structure.

Auto route: 7 days · Manual review: 15–30 days · IBN: 1–3 months
Process Trap #2
4

Company Incorporation at OCR — and the AoA Alignment Requirement

The MoA and AoA must reflect the exact equity structure approved in the DoI decision. Governance provisions in the JVA — veto rights, board appointment formulas, minority protections — must be mirrored in the AoA to be enforceable through corporate mechanisms rather than only contractually between partners.

The AoA is a public document. The JVA, in many formulations, is not. Provisions you rely on for governance protection but did not incorporate into the AoA are contractual rights between signatories — not rights enforceable against the company in court proceedings. Most investors discover this distinction when they try to exercise a JVA right the company's board disputes.

JVA governance provisions not mirrored in AoA are legally weaker than investors expect
Process Trap #3
5

NRB Capital Recording, Tax Registration, and Industry License

All foreign capital must pass through a licensed commercial bank with NRB recording at each tranche. PAN and VAT registration follows at IRD. Industry registration at DoI activates the tax incentive clock — the holiday starts from this date, not from FDI approval or company incorporation.

These three steps are often treated as administrative formalities completed after setup. They are not. NRB recording determines whether repatriation rights attach to each capital tranche. Industry registration determines when the tax holiday starts. Both are irreversible in the sense that errors at this stage are expensive and slow to correct retroactively.

Tax holiday clock and repatriation rights both depend on these steps being done correctly — not just done
DoI publishes a model Joint Venture Agreement template that is available to investors as a starting point. It is useful for one purpose: confirming which clauses the department expects to see. It contains no deadlock mechanism. It has no exit provisions. It does not address what happens when one partner's financial circumstances change materially, when a partner dies or becomes incapacitated, or when partners disagree on a capital call. Investors who customize the DoI template lightly — changing the names and equity percentages but leaving the structure intact — routinely discover that what they filed as a JVA is, functionally, a governance document for a company that has no procedure for the scenarios that matter most.

IV. JVA Clauses: What Regulators Check and What Protects YouVerify Per Structure

DoI reviews a JVA for regulatory compliance — equity ratios consistent with FITTA, sector eligibility, capital contribution structure, and governance provisions not prohibited by law. That review confirms legal permissibility. It does not assess whether the agreement adequately protects either party's commercial interests.

Mandatory — DoI Will Check

Parties & Shareholding Ratios

Exact equity split in percentages and NPR. Must match the proposed MoA/AoA precisely.

Mandatory — DoI Will Check

Capital Contribution Method

Cash, machinery, or technology. In-kind contributions require separate valuation. Injection timeline must be specified — and the figures sources describe are not consistent.

Mandatory — DoI Will Check

Governance & Board Composition

Director appointment formula, voting thresholds. Must comply with Companies Act directorship eligibility rules independently of what the JVA states.

Mandatory — DoI Will Check

Profit Distribution & Dividend Policy

Distribution mechanism tied to equity or agreed milestones. Dividend repatriation requires NRB compliance regardless of what the JVA says.

Critical — Almost Never in First Drafts

Deadlock Provisions

What happens when partners cannot agree on a major decision. Without this, operational paralysis has no contractual resolution and Nepali courts are slow.

Critical — Almost Never in First Drafts

Exit & Share Transfer Mechanism

Pre-emptive rights, tag-along, drag-along, buy-sell provisions. OCR must register all share transfers — an exit without this mechanism becomes an administrative ordeal.

Strongly Recommended

Dispute Resolution — Tiered

Negotiation → mediation → arbitration. For cross-border JVs: specify international arbitral institution (SIAC, ICC) and neutral seat. Enforceability in Nepali courts is supported but subject to public policy review.

Strongly Recommended

Technology Transfer Terms

Where the foreign partner contributes IP or know-how: licensing scope, royalty rate. FITTA caps royalties — the current operative cap requires DoI confirmation, not reliance on published summaries.

The DoI template tells you what a JVA must contain to receive approval. It does not tell you what a JVA must contain to protect you when the partnership encounters stress — and every long-running partnership eventually does.— Editorial synthesis from DoI template analysis and Companies Act 2006 practitioner commentary

V. Capital Structure and Financing: What the Numbers Do Not SettleVerify with DoI Approval

The foreign equity contribution in a Nepal JV must meet the NPR 20 million minimum per foreign investor (IT sector: zero, post-February 2026). That threshold applies to the foreign party's contribution — not to total project capitalization. How in-kind contributions such as machinery or intellectual property are valued for threshold compliance purposes requires DoI's current operational guidance, which varies from what published legal summaries describe.

The Capital Injection Schedule — Where Sources Disagree

Source A — Specific Percentages

25% of approved capital before OCR registration; 70% before commercial operations; remaining 30% within 2 years of commercial launch. Note: 25 + 70 + 30 = 125%. The arithmetic does not balance and no published analysis reconciles the error.

Source B — Negotiated Terms

Capital injection timeline is described as "as per the DoI approval certificate" — negotiated rather than fixed by statute. No standard percentages cited. The operative schedule is determined by the specific approval document, not by general published figures.

The practical implication is that the injection schedule for any specific JV is determined by the DoI approval certificate for that investment. Investors who build international cash management plans around published percentage figures — without confirming the schedule in their own approval document — regularly encounter compliance mismatches. NRB recording must accompany each tranche at the time of remittance; there is no retroactive option.

Domestic Financing and the Banking Concentration DynamicNepali commercial banks finance JV working capital and trade facilities. Total domestic bank exposure to large-scale infrastructure has reached figures between NPR 447 billion and NPR 871 billion across different source compilations — the discrepancy reflects different scope definitions that no secondary analysis has reconciled. For JV investors, this means local debt is available but priced to reflect existing sectoral concentration. Blended structures using development finance institution (DFI) credit lines for the long-term tranche and local banks for working capital are increasingly standard for projects above NPR 500 million.

VI. Risks: The Ones in the Statute and the Ones That Are NotExpert Level

Nepal's JV legal framework identifies and partially mitigates several standard investment risks. Protection from arbitrary nationalization exists under FITTA. Dispute resolution via international arbitration is legally supported. Repatriation rights are guaranteed. Each of these protections has a prerequisite that the statute does not automatically fulfill — they must be correctly invoked through properly drafted documents and properly executed procedures.

RiskWhat the Law ProvidesWhat the Law Does Not Provide
Partner dispute / deadlockCourts and arbitration available as remediesA resolution timeline faster than years; a mechanism the JVA did not include
Minority partner squeeze-outCompanies Act baseline shareholder rightsVeto rights or anti-dilution protection not in the AoA
Repatriation blockageSection 20 FITTA guarantee for registered FDIRecording of capital that was remitted informally or without NRB notation
Regulatory changeFITTA non-discrimination protectionsPredictability on sector-specific rule changes; immunity from gazette-level amendments
Partner insolvencyCompanies Act dissolution proceduresJVA provisions on what happens to shares if a partner becomes insolvent — absent from most templates
Land dispute (JV-held land)Registered lease protectionsClean title guarantee; historical encumbrance verification; boundary dispute resolution
The most damaging risks in Nepal JV practice are not the ones the statute addresses — they are the ones that arise from what the JVA does not contain.
The Governance Gap That Most JVs Carry Into Year TwoInvestors spend the most time negotiating equity percentages and the least time negotiating decision thresholds — specifically, which decisions require unanimous consent versus simple majority versus supermajority. That omission is inconsequential in year one when partners agree. It becomes the central problem in year two when they do not. By that point, the JVA has been signed, filed, and incorporated into a company structure that is expensive to amend.

What This Article Cannot Tell YouRequires Legal Counsel

These 8 questions require primary legal or regulatory confirmation — not this article
Whether your specific partner combination and equity structure satisfies current DoI review criteria
Which governance provisions in your JVA must be mirrored in the AoA to be judicially enforceable
How DoI currently treats the 15-day filing window when the company is not yet incorporated at execution
The operative royalty cap for your specific type of technology transfer under current DoI guidance
Whether your proposed deadlock mechanism is enforceable under Nepali contract and company law as drafted
The specific capital injection schedule that will appear in your DoI approval certificate
Whether international arbitration clauses in your JVA satisfy Nepal's public policy standard for enforcement
How NRB currently treats in-kind capital contributions for formal recording purposes

Suggested Images and Figures

Figure 1: JV registration flowchart — from JVA execution through DoI approval, OCR incorporation, NRB recording, and industry license. Each node shows: responsible agency, required input document, timeline range, and the most common failure mode at that step.

Figure 2: JVA vs. AoA coverage diagram — two overlapping circles showing which provisions appear in each document, which are in both, and which exist only in the JVA (contractually binding but not company-law enforceable without AoA mirroring).

Figure 3: Dispute resolution tier diagram — three levels (negotiation → mediation → arbitration) with: governing law at each level, timeline estimate, binding vs. non-binding status, and international seat options for the arbitration tier.

Figure 4: Capital injection timeline — two scenarios side-by-side: (a) correctly NRB-recorded tranches activating repatriation rights at each stage; (b) informally remitted capital with no NRB record and no repatriation pathway.

Figure 5: Clause coverage comparison — DoI template JVA vs. professionally drafted JVA vs. JVA + shareholders' agreement, showing which commercial protections each configuration provides and which it leaves unaddressed.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a joint venture in Nepal and how does it work under FITTA 2019?
A joint venture in Nepal is a private limited company formed by a foreign investor and a Nepali partner — or two foreign parties — sharing equity and governance in a Nepal-registered entity. It is one of five permitted FDI forms under FITTA 2019. The joint venture is governed by both the JVA submitted to DoI and the company's MoA/AoA registered at OCR. Where these two documents address the same issue differently, which one a Nepali court would prioritize depends on the specific clause type and the nature of the dispute — a question that requires legal analysis, not general principles.
Is a Joint Venture Agreement mandatory for FDI approval in Nepal?
In practice, yes — for multi-party foreign investment structures. DoI's approval process mandatorily requires submission of a JVA or pre-incorporation shareholders' agreement as part of the application package. DoI reviews the agreement for internal consistency, compliance with FITTA sector restrictions, and alignment with the proposed company structure. Applications without a compliant JVA are returned for correction, resetting the approval timeline. For wholly foreign-owned companies with no local partner, a JVA is not applicable — but other constitutional and structural documents are.
What is the 15-day filing rule for JVAs in Nepal?
Section 187 of the Companies Act 2006 requires shareholders to submit the executed JVA to the JV company within 15 days of signing, and the company must file it with OCR within 15 days of receipt. The timing challenge is that JVAs are typically executed before the JV company is incorporated — meaning the entity required to receive the first filing does not yet legally exist at the time the clock starts. Different legal advisors handle this sequencing problem differently, and OCR's current operational treatment of pre-incorporation filings is not explicitly specified in the statute. Confirming the approach before execution — not after — avoids the most common filing failure.
Can a foreign investor hold majority control in a Nepal JV?
Yes — in sectors outside FITTA's negative list, foreign investors can hold up to 100% equity, making majority positions in JVs legally permissible. In regulated sectors — banking, insurance, certain telecom segments — foreign equity caps limit the foreign partner's maximum shareholding regardless of what the JVA specifies. Whether majority control is available in a specific sector requires confirmation against both FITTA and sector-specific regulations. The JVA's equity structure must comply with these caps before DoI will approve the investment.
What happens if a Nepal JV agreement does not include deadlock provisions?
Without a deadlock mechanism, a JV in which partners cannot reach consensus on a material decision has no contractual resolution pathway. The Companies Act provides limited shareholder remedies, and Nepali courts process commercial disputes slowly. The practical result is operational paralysis for however long the dispute persists — which, in a 50:50 JV with no contractual resolution mechanism, can be indefinite. What deadlock provisions should contain for a given JV depends on the equity structure, governance design, and sector — making legal drafting, not template adaptation, the only appropriate approach.

References

  1. LawAxion / Axion Partners. Joint Venture Process in Nepal: A Lawyer's Guide. lawaxion.com
  2. CompanyNP. Joint Venture Agreement Registration Process in Nepal. companynp.com
  3. Neupane Law Associates. Shareholders' Agreements in Nepal: Formalities and Requirements. neupanelegal.com
  4. Department of Industry (DoI). Foreign Investment Guidelines; JVA Template; FDI Application Notices. doind.gov.np
  5. Niti Partners. FDI Legal Requirements Nepal; Joint Venture Company Nepal for Foreign Investors. nitipartners.com
  6. Foreign Investment and Technology Transfer Act (FITTA) 2019. Government of Nepal.
  7. Companies Act 2006 (2063 BS). Government of Nepal.
  8. Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB). Foreign Investment and Foreign Loan Management Bylaws 2021. nrb.org.np
  9. Law Imperial Associates. FITTA 2019 Nepal: Macro Overview. lawimperial.com

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"FDI approval Nepal 2026" → main FDI hub · "Nepal SEZ benefits foreign investors" → SEZ spoke · "NRB capital recording Nepal" → NRB guide · "company registration Nepal foreigner" → incorporation guide · "shareholders agreement Nepal Companies Act" → shareholders agreement article · "dispute resolution Nepal foreign investors" → arbitration guide.

External Backlink Targets

DoI (doind.gov.np) official JVA template · NRB bylaws · Nepal Bar Council practitioner directory · World Bank Nepal investment competitiveness report · ADB investment climate Nepal · Chambers and Partners / Legal 500 Nepal country listings for law firm citations.

Outreach Ideas

Co-publish "JV structuring checklist for Nepal" with a Nepal Bar Council firm for embassy commercial section distribution · Guest post "Nepal Joint Venture — 5 Clauses That Most Agreements Miss" for South Asian FDI publications · Submit JV guide as resource link to bilateral chamber of commerce websites (India-Nepal, US-Nepal, EU-Nepal).