A foreign manufacturer may have a confirmed Indian buyer, ready shipment, proper invoice, packing list and import documents. Still, the product can face customs delay, shipment hold or market-entry restriction if it falls under mandatory BIS certification and the manufacturer does not have valid FMCS BIS Certification.
This situation is common for overseas manufacturers exporting products such as steel products, cement, chemicals, valves, machinery, household goods, electrical equipment, building materials and other regulated items to India. The Indian importer may have GST, IEC and customs documentation, but that does not replace BIS approval.
FMCS BIS Certification is issued to the foreign manufacturing unit, not only to the Indian importer. This means the actual factory outside India must prove that its product complies with the relevant Indian Standard and that its manufacturing and testing system can consistently maintain quality.

For businesses, FMCS is not just a certificate. It directly affects import clearance, distributor confidence, legal sale, product launch timeline and brand credibility in India.
FMCS BIS Certification is the approval system through which a manufacturer located outside India can obtain a BIS licence for products manufactured at a foreign factory. Once approved, the manufacturer is allowed to use the BIS Standard Mark on certified products as per licence conditions.
The scheme applies to foreign manufacturers whose products are covered under Indian Standards. In many cases, if the product is notified under a Quality Control Order, BIS certification becomes mandatory before sale or import into India.
The licence is linked to a specific product, Indian Standard, brand, factory location and manufacturing process. A licence granted for one product or factory cannot automatically be used for another product, model, production unit or brand.
Key points:
India has strengthened product quality control across many sectors. For foreign manufacturers, this means compliance must be planned before commercial shipment. If a product is under mandatory BIS certification, importing it without a valid licence can create serious business risk.
A foreign manufacturer must prove that the factory has adequate production control, testing facilities, quality records and technical capability. BIS does not approve only on the basis of company profile or export history. The focus is on product conformity with Indian Standards.
Most delays happen because companies apply without checking the applicable Indian Standard, required testing equipment, factory readiness or Authorized Indian Representative details. Even a small mismatch in product description, model number, factory address or brand name may delay approval.
Practical business impact:
| Regulation / Framework | Requirement | Timeline / Deadline | Applicable To | Business Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BIS Act, 2016 | Product must comply with applicable Indian Standards | Before sale or import of regulated products | Foreign manufacturers and Indian importers | Market restriction or enforcement action |
| BIS Conformity Assessment Regulations, 2018 | Licence conditions, inspection and Standard Mark usage | During application and licence period | BIS applicants and licensees | Suspension or cancellation |
| FMCS Framework | Foreign manufacturer must apply for BIS licence | Before using BIS mark or supplying regulated goods | Overseas manufacturing units | Customs hold and buyer rejection |
| AIR Requirement | Authorized Indian Representative must be nominated | At application stage | Foreign manufacturer | Application delay or non-compliance |
| Factory Inspection | BIS verifies production and testing capability | Before licence grant | Manufacturing premises | Inspection objection or rejection |
| Product Testing | Samples are tested against Indian Standard | Before approval | Certified product category | Sample failure and retesting |
The key point is simple: FMCS is a factory-level approval. The foreign manufacturer must be technically ready before filing the application.
The applicant must be the actual manufacturer located outside India. A trader, distributor, buying house or Indian importer usually cannot replace the foreign factory as the applicant because BIS evaluates the manufacturing process and quality control system.
The foreign manufacturer must nominate an Authorized Indian Representative, commonly called AIR. The AIR acts as the compliance representative in India and communicates with BIS on behalf of the foreign manufacturer.
If the foreign company has an Indian branch or liaison office, a senior official may be nominated as AIR. If there is no Indian office, the manufacturer may appoint another eligible person or entity in India as per BIS requirements.
Common documents required:
The FMCS process starts with product-standard mapping. This is the most important first step because the product name used in commercial documents may not always match the exact scope of the Indian Standard.
After identifying the correct Indian Standard, the manufacturer must check whether the factory has the required testing equipment and quality control system. If the factory laboratory is incomplete, the application may face objection during inspection.
Once the application is filed, BIS reviews the documents, raises queries if required, conducts factory inspection, draws samples and sends them for testing. Licence is granted only when the application, inspection and test results are satisfactory.
Step-by-step process:
| Step | Authority / Responsible Party | Expected Timeline | Key Documents | Risk if Not Managed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Product standard mapping | Manufacturer / consultant | 3 to 7 days | Product catalogue, technical data sheet, HS code | Wrong standard selection |
| Document preparation | Manufacturer and AIR | 2 to 4 weeks | Application, factory details, test equipment records | Query or incomplete filing |
| Application submission | BIS portal / FMCD | 1 to 3 days after readiness | Forms, fees, AIR nomination | Application not recorded |
| BIS scrutiny | BIS | Variable | Submitted application file | Repeated clarification |
| Factory inspection | BIS officer | Based on scheduling | QC records, lab setup, production line | Inspection failure |
| Sample testing | BIS recognized lab | Product-dependent | Sealed samples and test request | Sample failure |
| Licence processing | BIS | Commonly around 6 months from complete stage | Fee, test report, inspection report | Delay in approval |
| Licence operation | Manufacturer and AIR | Validity period | Production and dispatch records | Suspension or cancellation |
A well-prepared application can reduce avoidable delays. In practical cases, delay usually comes from 4 areas: wrong standard selection, weak factory testing setup, incomplete AIR documents and slow query response.
Testing is one of the strongest parts of FMCS BIS Certification. The product must comply with the relevant Indian Standard, and the factory must show that it can maintain the same quality in regular production.
The manufacturer should not wait for BIS inspection to identify testing gaps. Before application, the company should check whether all required test equipment is available, calibrated and operated by trained staff.
If the product fails during independent testing, approval may be delayed and retesting may be required. This can increase cost, extend the approval timeline and affect shipment planning.
Testing readiness should include:
The Authorized Indian Representative is a key part of FMCS BIS Certification. The AIR represents the foreign manufacturer in India and is responsible for communication with BIS.
The AIR must be reliable, responsive and aware of compliance responsibilities. Many manufacturers treat AIR nomination as a basic formality, but weak AIR coordination can delay application, renewal, market sample response and licence operation.
The AIR may need to support query replies, inspection coordination, market sample communication and compliance updates. If the AIR does not cooperate, it can create serious risk for the licence.
AIR responsibilities include:
After FMCS BIS Certification is granted, the manufacturer can use the BIS Standard Mark only on the approved product. The mark must be used according to licence conditions, marking guidelines and the applicable Indian Standard.
The manufacturer must not apply the BIS mark on unapproved models, unlicensed products or products manufactured at another factory. Such misuse can lead to enforcement action, suspension or cancellation of licence.
Licence operation is a continuous responsibility. The factory must maintain quality records, testing records, production data and dispatch details. BIS may also conduct surveillance and market sample testing.
Important licence conditions:
Foreign manufacturers should plan FMCS cost properly before starting the application. The cost is not limited to application fee. It may include inspection charges, testing charges, licence fee, marking fee, bank guarantee, documentation support and factory lab preparation.
A Performance Bank Guarantee of USD 10,000 is generally required after licence grant. This is an important financial requirement and should be planned in advance.
In many cases, the biggest hidden cost is not the official fee, but delay. If the factory is not ready for inspection or testing, the approval timeline may extend by several months.
Cost planning should include:
FMCS should be treated as a compliance requirement, not only as a marketing certificate. If a regulated product enters India without valid BIS approval, the business may face shipment delay, buyer dispute, rejection or enforcement action.
Incorrect use of BIS mark is also risky. A manufacturer cannot print, emboss or claim BIS certification before licence grant. Similarly, after approval, the mark must be used only for the licensed product and approved manufacturing location.
If the product is covered under a mandatory Quality Control Order, absence of BIS certification can directly affect import clearance and sale in India.
Major risks include:
Green Permits supports foreign manufacturers and Indian importers with structured FMCS BIS Certification planning. The focus is to reduce rejection risk, avoid repeated queries and prepare the factory before BIS inspection.
Our team helps businesses understand the applicable Indian Standard, documentation needs, AIR requirement, testing readiness and licence process. This is especially useful for foreign manufacturers entering India for the first time.
Green Permits support includes:
FMCS BIS Certification is essential for foreign manufacturers planning to sell regulated products in India. It is not a simple paperwork process. It involves product-standard mapping, factory inspection, testing, Authorized Indian Representative nomination, fee payment, bank guarantee and post-licence compliance.
The cost of early compliance is usually much lower than the cost of shipment hold, product rejection, buyer cancellation or delayed India market entry. A manufacturer should start FMCS planning before commercial shipment, not after receiving a customs or buyer objection.
For smooth approval, businesses should first confirm the applicable Indian Standard, prepare the factory testing system, appoint a reliable AIR and file a complete application with correct technical documents.
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