A well drafted founders agreement in India can save a startup from painful disputes, lost friendships, and legal battles. Yet many founders delay it or sign generic templates that do not match their business.
This guide explains key clauses that every founders agreement in India should have, especially for early stage tech and service startups.
Why a founders agreement matters for Indian startups
A founders agreement is a contract between co founders that covers roles, responsibilities, equity, and what happens in different scenarios like exit or disputes.
For startups in India, a clear founders agreement helps:
1. Align expectations on effort and contribution
2. Reduce ambiguity about decision making
3. Protect the company if a founder leaves early
4. Provide comfort to early investors and advisors
Equity split and vesting
The most sensitive part of a founders agreement in India is usually equity.
Equity split principles
- Reward actual and future contribution, not just ideas
- Consider time commitment, skills, and risk taken
- Avoid giving large equity to part time contributors
Vesting for founders
To protect the company, equity should vest over time. Common structures:
- 4 year vesting with 1 year cliff
- Monthly or quarterly vesting after the cliff
If a founder leaves early, unvested shares are bought back by the company or other founders at a pre agreed price.
Roles, responsibilities, and decision making
A practical founders agreement in India should clearly define:
1. Designation and primary role of each founder
2. Key areas of ownership like product, sales, tech, finance
3. Matters that require unanimous consent
4. Matters that can be decided by majority of founders or the board
Clarity here reduces day to day conflict and helps the startup move faster.
IP ownership and confidentiality
Investors expect that all intellectual property created for the startup is owned by the company, not individual founders.
Key points:
1. Assign all existing IP related to the startup to the company
2. Include future IP assignment for work done for the company
3. Strong confidentiality obligations for all founders
4. Non solicitation of key employees and customers in case of exit, subject to Indian law
Founder exit, bad leaver and good leaver provisions
A good founders agreement in India must address what happens if a founder leaves. Typical concepts:
- Good leaver: leaves due to health, genuine personal reasons, or company approved exit
- Bad leaver: leaves to start a competing business, commits fraud, or serious misconduct
Consequences may include:
- Different buy back price for shares
- Accelerated or reduced vesting
- Restrictions on competing activities for a reasonable period, subject to Indian contract law
Dispute resolution mechanism
Even with a strong founders agreement, disputes can happen. Practical steps:
1. Internal discussion and mediation between founders
2. Escalation to independent advisor or board
3. Arbitration clause with clear seat and rules, for example institutional arbitration in India
This helps avoid long court battles and keeps disputes more confidential.
Links and references
While there is no specific statute only for founders agreements in India, these areas of law are relevant:
- Indian Contract Act, 1872
- Companies Act, 2013
- SEBI regulations where applicable for listed entities
Official reference: MCA portal for company law and forms: https://www.mca.gov.in
Related: How to structure equity for co founders in Indian startups (link: /blog/equity-splits-cofounders-india)
Related: Checklist for private limited company incorporation for startups in India (link: /blog/startup-company-incorporation-checklist-india)
Related: Common legal mistakes early stage startups make in India (link: /blog/legal-mistakes-startups-india)
