Where an OPC fits
A One Person Company is good for a genuine solo founder who wants limited liability and a corporate shell without taking on a co-owner, and with lighter compliance than a Pvt Ltd (no AGM, fewer board meetings). For a single-founder consulting or product business not chasing venture money, it can be a sensible start.
Why it's weak for a fundable startup
The catch: an OPC is not built for fundraising. It can have only one member, so it can’t bring in equity investors or co-founders as shareholders, and a standard ESOP doesn’t fit. To take investment it must convert to a Private Limited company first. So for a venture-track startup, the OPC just adds a conversion step. Match the structure to your funding plans.
A worked example
Example: a solo SaaS founder who plans to raise a seed round soon is better off incorporating directly as a Private Limited company (with a nominal second shareholder), avoiding an OPC-to-Pvt-Ltd conversion later. A solo consultant with no funding plans may happily use an OPC. The deciding question is whether you’ll raise equity. Our team can advise the right vehicle.