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Founders agreement in India: Key clauses you should not ignore in 2026

Many Indian startups still begin with a handshake between friends and a basic cap table. Problems usually appear later—when the company raises capital, one founder leaves, or there is a disagreement over control.

A well‑drafted founders agreement for an Indian startup in 2026 should cover at least the following points.

1. Roles, responsibilities and time commitment

Spell out:

  • Who is responsible for product, sales, operations, finance and compliance
  • Expected time commitment (full‑time, part‑time, transition periods)
  • Rules for taking up side projects or advisory roles

Clarity on roles early prevents confusion as the team grows.

2. Equity, vesting and cliffs

Key questions:

  • How much equity does each founder hold at the start?
  • What is the **vesting schedule** (commonly 3–4 years) and is there a **cliff period**?
  • What happens to unvested and vested shares if a founder leaves?

Standard structures include reverse vesting and buy‑back rights to ensure that long‑term ownership aligns with long‑term contribution.

3. Decision‑making and deadlock

Your agreement should define:

  • Matters that require unanimous consent
  • Matters that can be decided by a simple majority
  • A mechanism to resolve deadlocks (third‑party advisor, board, buy‑sell options)

Avoid vague language like “founders will mutually decide” without a process.

4. IP ownership and assignments

All intellectual property (code, designs, content, know‑how) created for the business should be assigned to the company, not held personally by founders.

Include:

  • Clear IP assignment clauses
  • Confidentiality and non‑disclosure obligations
  • Rules for open‑source usage and contributions

This becomes critical during funding rounds and exits.

5. Exit, termination and non‑compete

A good founders agreement anticipates the possibility of exits or departures:

  • Conditions under which a founder can be asked to leave (cause vs no‑cause)
  • Treatment of shares and rights in each scenario
  • Reasonable non‑compete and non‑solicit clauses, tailored to Indian law

Being explicit reduces the scope for disputes later.

For a customised founders agreement aligned with Indian laws and investor expectations, professional drafting support can save time and prevent expensive conflicts.

Fastlegal Team

Fastlegal is an Online Legal Professional Services Provider Company providing Company Registration, LLP Registration, Nidhi Company Registration, Trademark Registration, GST Registration and Return Filing Services.

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