Learn · 4 min read
iSAFE vs SAFE: why the Indian version is a different animal
US SAFE vs Indian iSAFE
- Legal nature (US)
- A contract — neither debt nor equity until conversion
- Legal nature (India)
- Must be a security: CCPS or CCD wrapper
- Why
- Companies Act + FEMA don’t recognise “neither debt nor equity”
- Consequence
- Allotment formalities, PAS-3, valuation and FEMA rules apply NOW, not later
The Y Combinator SAFE is beloved because it defers everything: no valuation, no shares issued, just a contract that converts later. Founders in India often assume they can use the same document. They cannot — not as-is.
Indian company law does not have a "neither debt nor equity" bucket. Money coming into a company against future shares must take the form of a recognised security. So the Indian adaptation — the iSAFE — is legally wrapped as Compulsorily Convertible Preference Shares (or sometimes CCDs) carrying SAFE-style economics: a valuation cap, a discount, MFN protection.
That legal wrapper has real consequences. Issuing an iSAFE IS an allotment: private placement procedure, PAS-3 within 15 days, valuation requirements, stamp duty. If the investor is foreign, FEMA reporting (FC-GPR within 30 days) applies at issue — not at conversion. The "we’ll do the paperwork later" mental model of the US SAFE is exactly wrong here.
None of this makes iSAFEs bad — they are still fast and founder-friendly. But they are securities from day one, and the compliance clock starts at issue.
This explainer is general information, not legal or tax advice. Statutes change and facts differ — confirm decisions with a practising CS/CA.
Get the next explainer (and early access) by email: