Two massive central government schemes are currently dominating the Indian startup ecosystem in 2026. The first is SISFS (Startup India Seed Fund Scheme), a massive ₹945 crore initiative offering up to ₹20 Lakh in pure, non-dilutive grants plus ₹50 Lakh in founder-friendly debt [10]. The second is SAMRIDH (Startup Accelerator of MeitY for Product Innovation, Development & Growth), an aggressive acceleration program that just reported in February 2026 that it has successfully funded hundreds of tech startups with up to ₹40 Lakh in matching equity investments [17]. Both schemes want to put money in your bank account. Both can dramatically change the trajectory of your business. But they are built for entirely different stages of your startup journey. If you apply for the wrong one at the wrong time, you risk losing out on free grant money or giving away your company’s equity way too early. Here is the ultimate playbook to navigate, choose, and even stack these two powerhouse programs.
The Catch-22 of Early-Stage Startup Funding
Every first-time founder eventually runs into the exact same wall. You have a brilliant idea, maybe a few basic wireframes, and a burning desire to build. You take your pitch deck to angel investors or Venture Capitalists (VCs), and they all give you the exact same polite rejection: “We love the market. We love the enthusiasm. Come back when you have a working product and some paying customers.”
But let’s be real for a second. How are you supposed to build a working technology product, run pilot tests, and get your first paying customers without any money to hire developers or pay for server costs? It is the classic “chicken and egg” problem of the startup world, often referred to as the Valley of Death.
To bridge this gap, the Indian government has stepped in with significant capital. But in doing so, they have inadvertently created a confusing maze of portals, acronyms, and guidelines. The two most talked-about names in this space right now are SISFS and SAMRIDH.
While founders often mention them in the same breath, treating them as interchangeable “government funds,” doing so is a massive mistake. One is designed to help you build your very first prototype without taking a single slice of your company pie. The other is designed to inject serious growth capital into your business in exchange for equity, helping you scale across the country. Let’s break down exactly what they are and when you should use them.
SISFS Explained: The “0-to-1” Playbook
SISFS stands for the Startup India Seed Fund Scheme. Spearheaded by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), this is arguably the most important safety net for a brand-new founder [10]. The government has set aside a massive corpus of ₹945 crore for this scheme, aiming to support roughly 3,600 entrepreneurs through a network of over 300 approved incubators across the country [15].
Think of SISFS as your “0-to-1” money. It is built specifically for founders who are at the very beginning of their journey. The funding here is split into two distinct buckets:
- The Grant (Up to ₹20 Lakh): This is arguably the best money you will ever receive. It is a pure grant meant for building your proof of concept, developing a prototype, or running early product trials [10]. You do not have to pay this money back, and you do not have to give up any ownership (equity) in your company to get it. It is entirely non-dilutive.
- The Growth Capital (Up to ₹50 Lakh): Once your prototype is ready and you need to launch it into the market, SISFS offers up to ₹50 Lakh [10]. However, this is not a free grant. It comes as debt or a convertible instrument. In simple terms, it acts like a founder-friendly loan that either needs to be repaid over time without massive interest, or it can convert into shares later down the line when your company is more valuable.
Who is the ideal fit? You are the perfect candidate for SISFS if your startup is less than two years old, you have a clear technology-led solution, and you are pre-revenue [10]. You need cash to build the product and run your first pilot tests, but you want to avoid giving away control of your company before you’ve even launched.
SAMRIDH Explained: The “1-to-10” Growth Engine
On the other side of the ring is SAMRIDH, which stands for Startup Accelerator of MeitY for Product Innovation, Development, and Growth. Run by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), this scheme is an entirely different beast.
The numbers coming out of this program are phenomenal. According to official data released in February 2026, the SAMRIDH programme has already provided intensive support to 373 startups through 43 top-tier accelerators across India [17]. Out of those, 241 startups successfully secured matching funding, resulting in over ₹93.75 crore being disbursed so far [19]. This is a highly active, fast-moving program.
Think of SAMRIDH as your “1-to-10” money. It is not built for someone with just an idea on a napkin. It is designed for IT and digital product startups (like SaaS, healthtech, fintech, and agritech) that already have a working product, some early users, and perhaps even some initial revenue [17]. Now, they need to step on the gas pedal.
Here is how the money works:
- The Co-Investment Model: SAMRIDH provides up to ₹40 Lakh per startup [17]. However, the catch is that it is a “matching” fund. This means the accelerator or a private investor must put in money first, and the government will match it, rupee for rupee, up to ₹40 Lakh. So, if an accelerator invests ₹30 Lakh, the government adds another ₹30 Lakh, giving you ₹60 Lakh in total growth capital.
- The Accelerator Experience: Unlike SISFS, which is routed through incubators focused on lab space and early hand-holding, SAMRIDH puts you through a rigorous 4-to-6 month accelerator program [12]. You get direct connections to global customers, intense mentorship on your go-to-market strategy, and warm introductions to major VC firms.
Because this is serious growth capital, it is an actual investment. The funding usually comes through instruments like SAFE notes (Simple Agreement for Future Equity) or CCPS (Compulsory Convertible Preference Shares) [7]. In plain English: you are giving up a piece of your company in exchange for the money and the accelerator’s heavy-hitting network.
The Equity Question: To Dilute or Not to Dilute?
This brings us to the most critical decision a founder has to make: the equity question. A mistake here can cost you millions later.
When you are at the idea stage, the valuation of your company is practically zero. If an investor gives you ₹20 Lakh at this stage, they are taking a massive risk, which means they will demand a huge chunk of your company—sometimes 15% to 20%. Giving away a fifth of your company before you’ve even written the code is a terrible deal.
This is why SISFS is your shield. By giving you ₹20 Lakh as a pure, non-dilutive grant, the government allows you to build the product and prove it works while retaining 100% of your ownership [10]. You get to build value without dilution.
However, once you have a working product and early customers, your company’s value goes up significantly. At this stage, giving away a small percentage of your company to an accelerator under SAMRIDH makes absolute sense. You are trading a small slice of a more valuable pie in exchange for the exact resources—capital, sales networks, and investor introductions—that will help you scale massively.
The Golden Sequence: How to Stack Both Schemes
So, can you get the best of both worlds? Can you take the free grant from SISFS and later take the growth capital from SAMRIDH? Yes, absolutely. But the order in which you apply is the most important rule of the game.
Many founders get blinded by the larger ₹40 Lakh ticket size of SAMRIDH and apply for it immediately. Here is the trap: SISFS has a very strict eligibility rule. To qualify for SISFS, your startup must not have already received more than ₹10 Lakh in monetary support from any other central or state government scheme [18].
If you successfully get into SAMRIDH first and take their ₹40 Lakh investment, you instantly violate the SISFS rule. You will be permanently locked out of the SISFS program, meaning you just threw away the chance to get ₹20 Lakh in free, non-dilutive grant money.
The Golden Playbook for First-Time Founders:
Step 1: Get DPIIT Recognized. This is the golden ticket. It is a free, simple online process on the Startup India portal that officially registers you as a recognized startup. You cannot apply for either scheme without this [10, 13].
Step 2: Apply to SISFS via an Incubator. Use the Startup India portal to find an incubator that matches your industry. Apply for the ₹20 Lakh grant. Use this money to build your prototype, run your first pilot tests, and secure your first few paying customers [10]. You still own 100% of your company.
Step 3: Apply to a SAMRIDH Accelerator. Now that you have a working product and traction, track the SAMRIDH cohorts being announced by top accelerators on the MeitY Startup Hub. Apply for their matching funding. Use the up to ₹40 Lakh from the government (plus the matching funds from the accelerator) to scale your sales, refine your go-to-market strategy, and prepare for a massive VC funding round [17].
How the Money Actually Reaches Your Bank Account
One final reality check: the government does not just wire you the full amount on day one so you can go rent a fancy office. Both of these schemes operate on strict accountability models.
Under SISFS, the ₹20 Lakh grant is disbursed in milestone-based tranches [10]. When you apply, you sit down with your incubator and define technical milestones—for example, “Month 3: Complete back-end architecture,” or “Month 6: Launch beta test with 50 users.” You get the first slice of money upon signing the agreement, but the next slice only comes when you prove you hit your milestone.
Under SAMRIDH, the money comes as part of your induction into an intensive accelerator cohort [12]. You will be expected to attend weekly mentorship sessions, hit aggressive growth targets, and actively pitch to investors during “Demo Days.” The funding is tied directly to your active participation in scaling the business.
This structure might feel a bit bureaucratic at first, but it is deeply beneficial. It forces early-stage founders to build with discipline, report on metrics, and stay laser-focused on their goals. By the time you finish either of these programs, you will be operating with the exact kind of professional rigor that traditional Venture Capitalists love to see.
The Bottom Line
The days of complaining that “investors only want traction but won’t fund the prototype” are over. The capital is available, and it is entirely up to you to claim it correctly.
If you are pre-revenue, less than two years old, and need cash to build your very first working product without giving away your company, SISFS is your destination. Find an incubator, pitch your vision, and grab that non-dilutive grant.
If you already have a product, early traction, and you are ready to play in the big leagues by raising a structured round with the backing of a hardcore accelerator, SAMRIDH is waiting for you.
Just remember the golden rule: secure your free seed money before you start giving away equity. Start with your DPIIT recognition today, map out your milestones for the next six months, and get to building. The money is out there.