Aaddress.in is now Address.co: A new name with the same promise of trust

New Delhi, India, [22 Oct] – The name of the company that helped thousands of Indian business owners create their brand is now different. Address.co is the new name for Aaddress.in. This is a new step in their journey to make virtual office addresses easy, cheap, and available all over India.

Aaddress.in has quietly helped more than 20,000 businesses over the years, including startups, freelancers, MSMEs, and online sellers, by giving them a verified business address without the need to rent physical space. The company is changing its name to Address.co as part of its plan to update its brand and better serve India’s growing number of digital-first entrepreneurs.

Ankur Goel, the founder of Address.co, says that the new name fits with the company’s plans for the future.

“When we first started, we wanted to help small business owners who couldn’t afford to set up expensive offices. It started out as a simple idea, but it has grown into a platform that people all over the country can use. Address.co is more than just a shorter name; it’s a step towards meeting the needs of our customers.”

Why Address.co?

Moving to Address.co is more than just getting a new web address. It shows how dedicated the brand is to giving its users a better, tech-based experience. The company is still adding to its network of virtual offices in all of India’s major cities, such as Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune, and Chennai.

The new platform still offers services like:

  • For GST, MCA, and business registration, verified virtual office addresses are available.
  • Taking calls and handling packages for firms that work from home.
  • High-end commercial sites all around India.
  • Plans that are easy on the wallet cost at least ₹999* a month.

Address.co is one of the most reliable virtual office providers in India since they check every address on their site to make sure it is legal.

What This Means for Customers Right Now

People who already use Aaddress.in won’t have any problems with their services. All current contracts, registrations, and mail handling will continue as usual. The only thing that has changed is the new website, www.address.co. Now, it’s the company’s principal web home.

Goel said,

“Our customers’ trust has always been what has helped us grow. We want to use that same trust to make things even better with Address.co: faster onboarding, smarter tools, and better support for every entrepreneur who chooses us.”

Looking Ahead

As India gets closer to digital entrepreneurship, the requirement for legal business addresses is expanding swiftly. Address.co intends to keep ahead of the competition by integrating AI-powered verification tools, automated document processing, and smarter location discovery services to let users receive their virtual office address in only a few clicks.

About Address.co

Address.co (formerly Aaddress.in) is India’s most popular virtual office address provider. It helps businesses create professional identities for GST, MCA, and other government registrations. The company has helped more than 20,000 businesses in India since it started in 2019. Startups, consultants, and online merchants who want to look good without spending a lot of money on office space appreciate it since it has confirmed locations, transparent rates, and is straightforward to set up.

Address.co wants to sign up 300,000 new clients by 2030 since more and more startups, entrepreneurs, established businesses, small and medium-sized businesses (SMEs), and micro and small businesses (MSMEs) in India want Virtual Offices.

35 Fresh Business Ideas for Small Towns in India with low investment

A) Low to Medium Investment: Food, Retail, and Services

1. Evening Chai-Snacks Stand 2.0: Place carts near bus stops and colleges, accept UPI, run a WhatsApp catalogue, and list combos on ONDC buyer apps through a seller partner. ONDC stands for Open Network for Digital Commerce.

2. Tiffin and Corporate Lunch Dabba: Centralise prep at home or in a ghost kitchen, deliver with local bikers, collect payments through UPI, and test your reach by posting menus on ONDC.

3. Micro-bakery that takes pre-orders: Bake twice a day, sell through ONDC and local WhatsApp groups, and offer festival hampers as extras.

4. A corner for fresh-cut vegetables and millet: Get seasonal fruits and vegetables and millets from farms near you. Try out weekly subscription boxes.

5. Thrift & Tailoring Studio (Women first): Add textile upcycling workshops and sell tote bags made from clothes that people have given away. Combine alterations with thrift (kids/ethnic). (See rural upcycling pilots for ideas.)

6. Budget Salon for Families: Concentrate on cleanliness, set price cards, and monthly memberships. Work with local schools to hold “back-to-school” grooming drives.

7. Laundry and steam press with pickup at home: Bundle with rental uniforms for schools and coaching centres.

8. Two-Wheeler Care Bay: Quick repairs, flat tires, and cleaning; prepaid “monsoon care” packs.

9. Fixing phones and getting new ones: Set up a kiosk at weekly markets to install screen guards, and work with buyback traders.

10. Print and Stationery Hub: Offer cheap A4/A3 prints, lamination, photos for forms, and help with filling out forms online; try to sell school kits.

11. Kids Activity Studio: After-school art, phonics, and abacus classes; festival camps; UPI autopay for monthly plans.

12. Local Handymen for Home Services: Choose electricians, plumbers, and carpenters; set prices; accept UPI; and take a cut of each job.

13. Services that run errands for seniors: Picking up medicine, paying bills, and taking people to the hospital; families who live far away can sign up for a subscription.

14. Things you need for a wedding: Lights, decorations, dhol/tasha teams, vanity vans (tie-ups), and basic stage sets are all available for rent.

15. Agro-Input Advisory Kiosk: You can sell seeds, organic inputs, soil-testing ties, and micro-workshops for farmers.

B) Digital and IT Services

16. Local Creator Studio: They make short videos for shops, homestays, and tutors. They charge simple monthly fees and add services to ONDC-services pilots as they grow.

17. Setting up WhatsApp Commerce for Stores: Help kiranas, boutiques, and bakeries make catalogues, set up UPI QR codes, and get ONDC set up (through a network partner). ONDC stands for Open Network for Digital Commerce.

18. School fees and test prep Micro-Center: A hybrid model with recorded lessons and doubt rooms, as well as UPI subscriptions.

19. Government Form-Fill and DigiLocker Helpdesk: Updates for PAN and Aadhaar, scholarship and entrance forms; make money by charging per form and printing.

20. Local Jobs and Skills Board (Hyperlocal): Connect job seekers with employers like salons, garages, and stores; charge a fee to list jobs.

C) Travel, Community, and Lifestyle

21. Physical therapy and micro-gym Tie-up: 700–900 square feet with lower rates during off-peak hours; work with a physiotherapist to make rehab packages.

22. Club for Cycling and Adventure: Weekend rides, rentals, a basic repair station, and the sale of merchandise and drinks.

23. Rural Experiences and Homestay Network: Add 5 to 10 family homestays; as tourism pilots on OTAs and ONDC grow, list them there.

24. Event Venue on a Plot: Temporary tensile structure for birthdays and kitties; sell decorations and food on top of that.

D) Green, Round, and Useful

25. Market Waste-to-Compost/CBG Partnership: Work with mandi/APMC on organic waste. Start with compost and work your way up to CBG through PPP as the town grows.

26. ATM for RO Water and Solar Energy: Set up in wards where there are problems with water; prepaid UPI wallets for people who use a lot of it.

27. Drives to collect dry and electronic waste: Monthly drives by ward; sell to recyclers; work with schools to raise awareness.

28. Detergent/Handwash Refill Station: Refills for bring-your-own-bottle; loyalty cards with QR codes.

E) Moving around and the last mile

29. Hyperlocal Delivery Hub (Spoke): Deliver food and medicine within a 2–3 km radius and work with ONDC buyer apps as a delivery partner.

30. Workers can rent EV two-wheelers: Daily or weekly plans; charge by the kilometre; work with workshops to keep things running.

31. Micro-Logistics for Small and Medium-Sized Businesses: Same-day runs for bakeries and boutiques; combine routes between towns on set days.

F) Craft and agriculture-related

32. Cold-pressed Oils and Flour Mill (Atta Chakki): Subscription Packs; sell multi-grain blends through ONDC.

33. Pickles/Papad/Namkeen Collective: Women-led SHG production; brand and label; list assortments online.

34. Bamboo & Cane Craft Studio: Makes things for the home and for tourists to do in workshops.

35. Local Plant Nursery and Landscape Kits: Kits for balconies and kitchen gardens; workshops on the weekends.

Final Words

Small towns aren’t “smaller” markets; they’re tighter markets where people trust each other. You can build a long-lasting, growing business with low costs and strong community loyalty if you solve a common problem, make it easy to find (ONDC), and make it easy to pay (UPI). Add government support like PMEGP to reduce upfront cost, and you’ve got a runway to scale.