As Indian business families grow wealth beyond the operating company, many reach the same inflection point: investments, taxes, succession and philanthropy scattered across advisers, with no single view and no single accountable owner. A family office is the answer to that fragmentation. Here is a practical guide to what it is, when it makes sense, and how to set one up in India.
What a family office does
A family office centralises the financial life of a wealthy family: consolidated reporting of all assets; a written investment policy and asset allocation; manager and product selection; cash-flow and liquidity management; tax coordination with the family’s CAs; estate and succession execution alongside lawyers; insurance and risk; and often governance of family education and philanthropy.
Single family office or multi-family platform?
A dedicated single family office typically becomes economical only at very large asset levels, because talent, technology and compliance are fixed costs. Most Indian families are better served by a multi-family or virtual family-office arrangement: shared infrastructure, institutional process and senior attention, at a fraction of the cost. The right choice depends on complexity as much as corpus: cross-border members, multiple operating businesses and large illiquid holdings argue for more dedicated structure.
Governance comes before products
The most successful family offices begin with governance, not portfolios: a family charter that records values and decision rights; an investment committee with defined authority; meeting cadence; and clear rules for distributions, borrowing against assets and investments into members’ ventures. Governance converts wealth from a source of friction into a system the next generation can inherit.
Succession and structuring in the Indian context
Indian families typically weigh private trusts, wills and gift deeds, partnership and holding-company structures, and nomination hygiene across demat, bank and insurance assets. Each has trade-offs in control, tax and creditor protection, and NRI members add FEMA considerations. The family office’s role is to coordinate competent legal and tax counsel and then actually execute: titles moved, nominations completed, documents stored and reviewed.
Getting started: a 90-day path
A sensible first quarter looks like this: consolidate statements and build a single balance sheet; agree an investment policy with allocation ranges; rationalise overlapping products and idle cash; fix nominations and basic estate documents; and set a quarterly review rhythm with dashboards the whole family can read. From there, deeper structuring and manager selection follow with far less noise.