India

Co-production treaty signed 2014. The world's most prolific film industry. One of Canada's largest diasporas. Low corridor volume with significant structural potential.

India produces roughly two thousand feature films per year — more than any other country on earth — across a dozen major language industries, each with its own stars, studios, and audiences. The Canada-India co-production treaty has been active since 2014, but formal treaty usage remains modest, driven primarily by Indo-Canadian producers and streaming-backed projects rather than mainstream commercial volume. The structural potential is significant: a national rebate of up to 30% on qualifying Indian expenditure, a production infrastructure scaled for epic period filmmaking, and a diaspora of nearly two million people bridging the two countries.

Canadian Federal Credit (CPTC) 25% tax credit on qualified Canadian labour expenditure
Indian Co-production Incentive Up to 30% reimbursement on qualifying production expenditure (QPE) incurred in India for official treaty co-productions. Cap ₹300 million (~USD 3.6M) per project.
Minimum Indian Spend ₹3 crore (~USD 360K) for features, web series, and series. ₹1 crore for animation and VFX. No minimum for documentaries.
State-Level Incentives Several states offer incentives that can stack with the national rebate — Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, and Kerala among them — through production subsidies, tax rebates, and location discounts. Specific terms change annually.
CBFC Certification All films intended for theatrical release in India require Central Board of Film Certification approval, including co-productions. No exemption for treaty status.
Minimum Contribution Per Party — Bilateral 20% of total production budget
Minimum Contribution Per Party — Multipartite 10% per producer
Third-Party Coproducers Permitted if the third country has a co-production treaty or MoU with at least one party
Indian Administering Body Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) via India Cine Hub (ICH) under the National Film Development Corporation (NFDC)
Canadian Administering Body Telefilm Canada
Pre-shoot Submission No fixed statutory timeline in the treaty. Projects follow Telefilm's standard co-production submission process and Indian-side approvals via ICH/NFDC.

The official co-production incentive reimburses up to 30% of qualifying Indian expenditure, capped at ₹300 million, administered first-come, first-served within annual budgets. India operates a separate incentive for foreign service productions — those shooting in India outside the treaty structure — that reaches up to 40% (a 30% base plus 5% for employing at least 15% Indian manpower and 5% for significant Indian content); a producer weighing a pure-shoot project against a treaty co-production should compare both routes. State incentives vary significantly and should be researched for the specific shooting location. Canadian CPTC and provincial credits apply to eligible Canadian expenditure. Eurimages is not available for this corridor.

India's production infrastructure operates at an enormous scale. Ramoji Film City in Hyderabad is the world's largest film studio complex — roughly two thousand acres with forty-seven sound stages, permanent sets spanning forests to palaces, full production services, and on-site accommodation. Film City Mumbai in Goregaon is the traditional hub of Hindi-language cinema. Specialized VFX and animation facilities in Hyderabad and Bangalore — including major international operations like DNEG and Prime Focus — have made India a global centre for post-production and visual effects work.

The crew base is deep, technically skilled, and operates at volume. In the major production hubs — Mumbai, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Chennai — English is the standard working language for technical and international-facing roles. India's strength in period and historical production is well established, with elaborate set construction, costume, and large-scale production management being particular specializations. Crew availability is rarely a constraint given the industry's scale.

The NFDC (National Film Development Corporation) operates the India Cine Hub — the one-stop facilitation office for international shoots and co-productions, handling permits, approvals, and logistical coordination. NFDC also runs Film Bazaar, India's premier co-production market, held annually alongside the International Film Festival of India in Goa. Film Bazaar is the most structured co-production matchmaking event available for this corridor — the place where Canadian and Indian producers find each other.

The financing landscape has been transformed by streaming platforms. Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Disney+ Hotstar have invested billions in original Indian content, fundamentally changing the economics of independent and mid-budget production. For co-productions, streaming platforms increasingly function as co-financiers and global distributors, making projects viable that would have struggled to close financing through traditional Indian theatrical distribution alone.

Indian production companies with international co-production experience span the full range from mainstream commercial houses — Yash Raj Films, Dharma Productions, Excel Entertainment — to independent and festival-circuit producers like Sikhya Entertainment (led by Guneet Monga, two-time Academy Award–winning producer) and Drishyam Films. The independent sector is where the treaty corridor's potential is most immediately relevant — producers with festival ambitions and international taste who understand co-production as a financing and creative tool.

Why this corridor

India is one of the largest production ecosystems in the world — roughly two thousand features a year across a dozen language industries — and the corridor's structural potential is correspondingly large. A national rebate of up to 30% on qualifying Indian spend, combined with Canadian CPTC, gives a bilateral project a serious financing base, and the production infrastructure, scaled for epic period filmmaking, can absorb ambition on a scale few countries match. What the corridor has lacked is volume: formal treaty usage has been modest, driven mostly by Indo-Canadian producers and streaming-backed projects rather than mainstream commercial flow.

The independent and festival sector is where the treaty's potential is most immediately live — producers with international taste who treat co-production as a financing and creative tool rather than a formality. Indian documentary in particular has had a strong run on the international stage in recent years, and producers like Guneet Monga's Sikhya Entertainment work exactly the festival-and-streaming space a bilateral project would occupy. The corridor's most natural activators, though, are already in Canada: the Indo-Canadian community's linguistic and familial connection to India is a structural advantage no amount of research replicates. Rubedo is looking for Indian and Indo-Canadian producers with festival ambition and the bicultural fluency to navigate both sides of the corridor.

Where to start

If you're a researcher, student, or early-career filmmaker interested in this corridor, here's what we know about where to begin.

Film Bazaar

Film Bazaar, run by the NFDC alongside the International Film Festival of India in Goa each November, is the most structured entry point into the Canada-India co-production corridor. It is a dedicated co-production market with project pitching, producer matchmaking, and industry networking designed specifically for international collaboration. If you have a project with genuine India potential, this is where the relationship starts. Applications open months in advance through the NFDC website.

India Cine Hub

The India Cine Hub (ICH), operated by the NFDC under the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, is the one-stop facilitation office for international shoots and co-productions. It handles permits, shooting approvals, logistical coordination, and co-production status applications on the Indian side. This is the institutional equivalent of Screen Ireland's inward production team or Film France — the office whose job is to help international producers work in India.

For Indo-Canadian students and producers

The Canada-India corridor's most natural activators are already in Canada. The Indo-Canadian community represents a depth of linguistic, cultural, and familial connection to India that no amount of research can replicate.

Indo-Canadian producers have been the primary users of this corridor since the treaty was signed. The pathway is proven. What has been less explored is the corridor's potential for younger Indo-Canadian creatives — students and early-career filmmakers who may not yet think of their bilingual, bicultural position as a structural production advantage. It is. The ability to navigate Indian production bureaucracy, to correspond with NFDC and state film offices, to build relationships with Indian producers in Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, or any of India's major languages — these are skills that make this corridor accessible at a level that monolingual Canadian producers cannot reach.

Streaming as entry point

The streaming platforms' massive investment in Indian content has created new pathways into co-production that didn't exist when the treaty was signed in 2014. Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Disney+ Hotstar are actively financing original Indian series and features, and they frequently co-finance or acquire treaty-eligible projects. For a Canadian producer exploring this corridor, understanding what the platforms are buying in India — and how co-production structures can serve platform acquisition — is increasingly as important as understanding the traditional theatrical financing model.

Canadian institutions

The Indian High Commission and consulates across Canada maintain cultural programming. Canadian universities with South Asian and Indian Studies programs — including departments at the University of Toronto, UBC, York, and others — offer language, history, and cultural resources relevant to this corridor.

The Indian Film Festival of Toronto and similar events in other Canadian cities showcase Indian cinema and provide networking opportunities. These are not dedicated co-production markets like Film Bazaar, but they are accessible ground-level entry points for building familiarity with the Indian film landscape from Canada.

Indo-Canadian producers including Deepa Mehta and Richie Mehta have worked across the Canada-India corridor and represent an established bridge between the two industries. Their track records demonstrate that the corridor works — the infrastructure for cross-border collaboration exists on both sides.

If you're a filmmaker, producer, researcher, or institution in India — or anywhere — and any of this is interesting to you, we'd like to hear from you.

contact@rubedo.ca