Why US Investors Ask Indian Startups for EIN, W-8, FATCA & Other Compliance Documents
Why US Investors Ask Indian Startups for EIN, W-8, FATCA & Other Compliance Documents
Indian startups are attracting US clients, US investors, and US accelerator programs faster than ever.
But there’s a moment that confuses almost every founder:
Why is the investor asking for an EIN?
What is W-8BEN-E?
Why is FATCA suddenly required?
It feels random until you understand how US financial compliance works.
Even if your startup is based in India, earning or raising money from the US triggers US tax and reporting requirements.
This blog explains it in simple language.
Why US investors need compliance documents
US investors, whether angel, VC or institutional, are required by law to verify:
Who they are investing in
Where money is being transferred
The tax identity of the startup
Whether the company is foreign or US-based
Whether IRS withholding applies
Without these documents, funds are often delayed or cancelled. Compliance protects both sides.
The three documents Indian founders hear about most
1. EIN (Employer Identification Number)
This is a US tax identification number for businesses. It works like a PAN for companies dealing with the US system.
Investors, US companies, and payment processors ask for an EIN because it:
Confirms the business as a foreign entity
Allows payments without 30% withholding
Reduces legal complications
Is required for W-8BEN-E
Many investors refuse to release funds until an EIN is provided.
2. W-8BEN or W-8BEN-E
These forms tell the IRS:
You are not a US resident
Your company is not US-based
You are claiming foreign tax status
You qualify for tax treaty benefits
Individuals who work as freelancers or contractors typically submit the W-8BEN form.
Registered companies such as Private Limited or LLP entities submit W-8BEN-E.
Without these forms, US companies are legally required to withhold 30% of payments.
3. FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act)
This verifies foreign entities to avoid illegal transfers, money laundering, or tax evasion.
Most founders only need to fill a simple self-certification.
Stripe, PayPal, banks, AngelList and investors ask for FATCA before releasing funds.
Why investors won’t release money without compliance
Because US law penalizes the investor, not the foreign startup.
To stay compliant, investors request:
EIN
W-8
FATCA
Incorporation proof
Bank details
Identity verification
These are legal requirements, not optional paperwork.
A real example
A SaaS startup in Bangalore raised $65,000 from a US angel. Funds were approved, but:
They had no EIN
They didn’t know which W-8 to file
Stripe froze payouts
The investor asked them to speak to a tax professional
After they submitted EIN, W-8BEN-E, FATCA, and incorporation documents, the payout was released within 48 hours.
The biggest misconception among founders
Many Indian founders think:
“I am not in the US. The IRS can’t ask me anything.”
Correct — the IRS doesn’t regulate you.
It regulates the US-based investor.
So the investor must obtain these forms from you before releasing funds.
How founders can avoid delays
Get an EIN early
File the correct W-8 form
Keep FATCA documentation ready
Share incorporation certificates
Use compliant payment processors like Stripe
This prevents payment freezing and investor frustration.
Founders who don’t understand US compliance lose time and money.
Many prefer hiring professional teams like LedgersCFO, who specialize in helping Indian companies work with US clients and investors without tax complications.
You can see their services here:
Does linking to authoritative sources help SEO and indexing?
Yes. Google trusts content more when it cites reliable websites.
For example, even the IRS publicly explains W-8 forms here:
This helps with faster indexing and credibility.
How long does compliance take?
Most founders assume this takes months. In reality:
EIN: 2–7 days
W-8BEN/E: same day
FATCA: instant self-certification
Stripe/PayPal verification: 1–3 days
Once done, they rarely need to be repeated.
Conclusion
If you are an Indian founder earning from the US, even if your entire business operates in India, US compliance will eventually become necessary.
W-8 proves you are foreign
EIN gives you a US business tax identity
FATCA protects international payments
Ignoring compliance can delay payouts, freeze accounts, or frustrate investors.
Getting it right makes you look reliable and investment-ready.
Indian startups that handle compliance professionally close deals faster and receive funds without trouble.
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