[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo

Venture Capital Law India 2026: Capital Gains, Exit Repatriation & LLP/AIF Structuring

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

India’s venture capital law landscape shifted decisively in early 2026, driven by two concurrent legislative events that now force general partners, fund CFOs and founders to reassess exit timing, entity structures and investor documentation. The Finance Act 2026, which received presidential assent and applies from tax year 2026‑27, recalibrates capital‑gains taxation on share transfers, buybacks and secondary sales in ways that materially alter the after‑tax economics of every common VC exit route.

Simultaneously, the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026, introduced in Parliament in early 2026, proposes a new mechanism for converting specified trusts into limited liability partnerships (LLPs), alongside governance reforms to both the LLP Act and the Companies Act that will reshape fund structuring in India for years to come. This guide integrates the tax, regulatory and documentation dimensions into a single actionable roadmap, designed for the GPs, CFOs and counsel who must make decisions now rather than after the next fund close.

Executive Summary: What GPs and CFOs Must Decide Now

The convergence of the Finance Act 2026 amendments and the pending Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 creates a narrow window in which fund managers must evaluate several interconnected decisions. The following quick‑decision checklist distils the actions that matter most in 2026:

  • Accelerate or defer the exit? Revised capital‑gains rates and the reclassification of buyback proceeds as capital gains (rather than deemed dividends) mean that exits executed in the current tax year may produce materially different after‑tax outcomes than those deferred to 2027‑28. Model both scenarios before signing any share‑purchase agreement.
  • Review and update fund documentation. Subscription agreements, side letters and carry‑waterfall provisions drafted before the Finance Act 2026 likely contain outdated tax‑gross‑up formulas, withholding assumptions and distribution‑timing triggers. A documentation audit is overdue.
  • Map the repatriation path for foreign LPs. Withholding obligations, treaty‑relief filing sequences and RBI/FEMA repatriation channels must be confirmed for each exit structure, cash trade sale, buyback and secondary, before term sheets are executed.
  • Assess trust‑to‑LLP conversion eligibility. If the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 receives assent, funds structured as trusts (including SEBI‑registered AIFs) will need to evaluate whether conversion to an LLP offers meaningful tax or governance advantages, and confirm that SEBI compliance is preserved.
  • Engage specialist tax counsel immediately. The interplay between the new Income‑tax Act 2025 (as amended by the Finance Act 2026), SEBI’s AIF Regulations and the proposed LLP Act amendments requires coordinated advice that general corporate counsel alone cannot provide.

Finance Act 2026: Capital Gains Recalibration for Venture Capital Law India

The Finance Act 2026 introduced several provisions that directly alter the capital gains tax India 2026 regime applicable to venture capital exits. Clause 34 of the Finance Bill 2026 amends section 69 of the Income‑tax Act 2025 relating to capital gains on the transfer of certain assets, with effect from tax year 2026‑27. The Income Tax Department’s Notification No. 45/2026, effective from 31 March 2026, provides the administrative framework for implementation and applies to returns filed for assessment year 2026‑27.

Long‑Term and Short‑Term Rate Changes

The Finance Act 2026 continues the rate structure introduced by the Union Budget 2024‑25, long‑term capital gains (LTCG) on listed equity and equity‑oriented units taxed at 12. 5 per cent above an annual exemption threshold, with short‑term capital gains (STCG) on such assets taxed at 20 per cent. For unlisted shares, the category most relevant to VC exits, the Act maintains the revised LTCG rate and eliminates indexation benefits for transfers occurring on or after the operative date.

The practical consequence for VC funds is that exits from unlisted portfolio companies now face a higher effective tax rate compared to the pre‑2024 regime that permitted cost‑inflation indexation, and the Finance Act 2026 amendments confirm the continuation and tightening of these rules for tax year 2026‑27.

Buyback Proceeds Reclassified as Capital Gains

One of the most significant changes for VC exit planning is the reclassification of buyback proceeds. Under the Finance Act 2026, buyback consideration received by shareholders is now treated as capital gains (not as deemed dividend), restoring concessional capital‑gains rates to a transaction type that had been subject to buyback tax at the company level since 2019. Industry observers expect this change to make buybacks a substantially more attractive exit mechanism for promoters and financial investors alike, particularly where the investee company has accumulated reserves and the selling shareholders have a high cost basis.

Impact Across Exit Routes

The Finance Act 2026 changes affect each major VC exit route differently. For IPO exits, listed‑equity LTCG rules apply once shares are listed, and the holding‑period clock and rate thresholds remain largely stable. For trade sales (share purchase by a strategic buyer), the absence of indexation on unlisted shares and the confirmed rate structure mean that after‑tax proceeds must be recalculated under the new regime. For secondary sales (LP‑to‑LP or GP‑led transactions), the treatment depends on whether the transferred interest is characterised as a share, a partnership interest or a unit in an AIF trust, each attracting distinct rates and holding‑period requirements under the Act.

For buybacks, the shift to capital‑gains treatment at the shareholder level (with cost basis allowed as a deduction) represents the single largest positive delta for 2026 exits.

Worked Example: Trade Sale of Unlisted Shares

Consider a Category II AIF that acquired a 15 per cent stake in an unlisted fintech company for ₹10 crore in 2022 and now sells to a strategic acquirer for ₹50 crore in Q2 2026 (holding period: four years).

Parameter Pre‑2024 Regime (Illustrative) Post‑Finance Act 2026 Regime
Sale consideration ₹50 crore ₹50 crore
Cost of acquisition ₹10 crore ₹10 crore
Indexed cost (illustrative CII adjustment) ~₹13 crore Not available (indexation removed for unlisted shares)
Taxable LTCG ~₹37 crore ₹40 crore
Applicable LTCG rate 20% (with indexation) 12.5% (without indexation)
Tax payable (approximate) ~₹7.4 crore ~₹5.0 crore

Note: This simplified illustration excludes surcharge, cess and pass‑through treatment variations. The Finance Act 2026 amendments confirm the 12.5 per cent LTCG rate without indexation for unlisted shares for tax year 2026‑27. Actual outcomes depend on the AIF’s specific pass‑through status, investor‑level tax rates and applicable surcharge slabs. Funds should model each exit scenario with their tax advisors using the exact provisions of the Finance Act 2026.

VC Exit Repatriation Rules: Withholding, Treaty Relief and FEMA Mechanics

Foreign limited partners participating in Indian VC exits face a layered compliance process. The repatriation of sale proceeds involves income‑tax withholding, treaty‑relief claims and RBI/FEMA procedural clearances, each with distinct timelines and documentation requirements that must be sequenced correctly to avoid trapped capital or penal interest.

Withholding at Source

Under the Income‑tax Act 2025 (as amended by the Finance Act 2026), the buyer or the investee company (in the case of a buyback) is required to withhold tax at source on payments to non‑residents. The applicable withholding rate depends on whether the gain is long‑term or short‑term, and whether a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) provides a lower rate. In the absence of treaty relief, the statutory rate (including surcharge and cess) is the default. The payer must deduct and deposit the tax, and issue a withholding certificate to the foreign LP.

Treaty Relief Process

Foreign LPs domiciled in jurisdictions with which India has a DTAA (such as Mauritius, Singapore, the Netherlands, the United States or the United Kingdom) may claim reduced withholding, but only if they obtain a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from their home jurisdiction and provide a valid Form 10F to the Indian payer before the transaction closes. Early engagement is essential: securing a TRC can take several weeks, and the absence of documentation at closing triggers full statutory withholding, with the excess recoverable only via a refund application that can take 12–24 months to process.

Repatriation Channels and RBI/FEMA Compliance

The repatriation of sale proceeds by a foreign investor requires compliance with FEMA regulations and RBI master directions. The authorised dealer bank processes the outward remittance against documentary proof of the sale, tax payment and compliance certificates. For different exit structures, the documentation varies:

Exit type Key repatriation documentation Typical processing timeline
Cash trade sale (SPA) Executed SPA, tax withholding certificate, CA certificate confirming tax compliance, board resolution, RBI reporting forms 2–4 weeks post‑closing (assuming documentation is pre‑staged)
Buyback Buyback offer letter, board/shareholder resolutions, withholding certificate, CA certificate, FEMA filings 3–5 weeks (buyback regulatory timeline adds lead time)
Dividend distribution (post‑exit) Board resolution declaring dividend, withholding certificate (TDS on dividend), Form 15CA/15CB filings 1–3 weeks

Industry observers emphasise that the most common cause of repatriation delay is incomplete Form 15CA/15CB filings or mismatched withholding certificates. Funds should prepare repatriation documentation packages in parallel with SPA drafting to avoid post‑closing capital lock‑up.

Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026: Trust‑to‑LLP Conversion and AIF Impacts

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026, introduced in Parliament in early 2026, proposes amendments to both the Companies Act 2013 and the LLP Act 2008. The Bill’s provisions on trust‑to‑LLP conversion and LLP governance reform are directly relevant to fund structuring India decisions, particularly for SEBI‑registered AIFs currently constituted as trusts.

Bill Overview and Legislative Status

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 seeks to rationalise the regulatory framework for LLPs and introduce a conversion pathway for “specified trusts” to become LLPs. The Bill was introduced in the 2026 Budget session, and its text is publicly available via PRS India. As of 7 May 2026, the Bill has not yet received parliamentary assent. All references below are to the Bill as introduced, specific provisions remain subject to change during the legislative process.

Specified Trusts: Conversion Mechanics and Eligibility

The Bill proposes a legal mechanism under which certain trusts, defined as “specified trusts” meeting prescribed criteria, may convert into LLPs. The eligibility criteria and procedural requirements are expected to be notified by the Central Government after the Bill is enacted. For VC and PE funds, the critical question is whether a SEBI‑registered AIF constituted as a trust qualifies as a “specified trust” under the Bill’s framework.

Early indications suggest that the conversion mechanism will require:

  • Application to the Registrar of LLPs with prescribed forms and supporting documentation (trust deed, list of beneficiaries, audited accounts).
  • Consent of all beneficiaries (or a prescribed majority, depending on final rules) to the conversion.
  • No‑objection or approval from SEBI if the trust is a registered AIF, since the conversion must not disrupt the AIF’s regulatory status.
  • Compliance with LLP Act requirements post‑conversion, including designated partner appointments, LLP agreement execution and filing of incorporation documents.

SEBI/AIF Interactions

SEBI’s AIF Regulations 2012 (as amended) permit AIFs to be constituted as trusts, body corporates or LLPs. A trust‑to‑LLP conversion would therefore not automatically disqualify a fund from AIF registration, but it would require SEBI approval for the change in legal form, amendment to the fund’s private placement memorandum and updated disclosures to investors. Industry observers expect SEBI to issue a circular clarifying the procedural requirements for such conversions once the Bill receives assent.

LLP Act Amendments Proposed

The Bill also proposes broader governance reforms to the LLP Act, including enhanced compliance reporting, relaxations for small LLPs and updated partner admission/retirement filing requirements. For fund manager vehicles structured as LLPs, these changes will reduce certain administrative burdens while introducing new disclosure obligations.

Entity Choice: AIF vs LLP vs Trust, Tax and Compliance Comparison

Choosing the right legal structure is one of the most consequential decisions in venture capital law India, and the 2026 legislative changes make the analysis more complex. The following comparison table summarises the key tax and compliance differences for the three most common fund structures, incorporating the Finance Act 2026 amendments and the proposed Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 changes.

Entity type Capital gains / tax treatment (typical) Key compliance and SEBI impact
AIF (SEBI‑registered, constituted as trust) Category I and II AIFs enjoy pass‑through status, gains are taxed at the investor level rather than at the fund level. Category III AIFs are taxed at the fund level. Finance Act 2026 confirms the continuation of pass‑through treatment and applies the revised LTCG/STCG rates at the investor tier. Buyback reclassification benefits flow through to investors. Mandatory SEBI registration under AIF Regulations 2012. Annual compliance filings, investor eligibility requirements, investment restrictions by category. Institutional investors and global LPs prefer AIF structures for regulatory familiarity.
LLP (fund manager or fund vehicle) LLPs are typically transparent for income‑tax purposes, income is taxed in the hands of partners. However, the LLP itself pays an alternate minimum tax. Capital gains on transfer of LLP interest or units may be treated differently than gains on shares. The Finance Act 2026 and proposed LLP Act amendments may alter the tax treatment for converted trusts. LLP Act compliance: annual filings with the Registrar, designated partner obligations, partner admission/retirement notifications. The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 proposes governance relaxations and a new trust‑to‑LLP conversion route. SEBI permits AIFs to be constituted as LLPs.
Trust (traditional fund structure) Taxation depends on trust classification (determinate vs. indeterminate) and whether the trust is registered as an AIF with pass‑through status. The Finance Act 2026 changes to buyback taxation and LTCG rates apply at the beneficiary/investor level for pass‑through trusts. For non‑AIF trusts, gains may be taxed at the maximum marginal rate. Trust deed and trustee obligations govern fund operations. If registered as an AIF, SEBI filing requirements apply in addition. The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 may allow conversion to LLP, potentially offering governance and tax structuring advantages.

The right entity choice depends on the fund’s investor base, target sector, expected exit routes and manager preferences. For funds raising capital from global institutional LPs, the AIF trust structure remains the market standard due to SEBI familiarity and pass‑through taxation. For domestic‑focused funds or manager vehicles, LLPs offer operational simplicity. The likely practical effect of the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026, once enacted, will be to give existing trust‑based funds a conversion option, but only where investor consent and SEBI approvals can be secured.

Structuring Checklist and Documentation Changes for Venture Capital Exits India

The 2026 legislative changes require a comprehensive review of fund documentation. The following practical checklist identifies the key documents, clauses and negotiation points that GPs, founders and counsel should address.

Subscription Agreements and Side Letters

  • Tax gross‑up clauses: Update withholding‑rate assumptions to reflect Finance Act 2026 rates. Ensure that gross‑up obligations apply to the revised buyback capital‑gains treatment and not only to dividend withholding.
  • Tax representation schedules: Require each LP to provide current TRC documentation and confirm its treaty‑eligible status at subscription and annually thereafter.
  • FATCA/CRS reporting: Confirm that investor self‑certification forms and reporting procedures comply with the latest CBDT notifications under the Income‑tax Act 2025.
  • Conversion consent provisions: Include a mechanism (consent threshold and notice period) for seeking LP approval if the fund considers a trust‑to‑LLP conversion under the proposed Bill.

Carry Waterfall and Distribution Provisions

  • Post‑tax waterfall modelling: Recalculate carried‑interest distributions using the revised LTCG and STCG rates. Confirm whether the carry waterfall triggers are based on pre‑tax or post‑tax returns, and whether the 2026 rate changes alter the GP’s economic share.
  • Buyback distribution mechanics: If exits are structured as buybacks, the distribution clauses must account for the shift from company‑level buyback tax to shareholder‑level capital‑gains tax. Escrow conditions and hold‑back provisions may need recalibration.

Share Purchase Agreements and Exit Mechanics

  • Tax indemnities: Negotiate mutual tax indemnities that specifically reference the Finance Act 2026 capital‑gains regime. Sellers should seek protection against retrospective changes; buyers should require representations confirming the applicable holding period and cost basis.
  • Drag‑along / tag‑along adjustments: Confirm that exit mechanics clauses account for the distinct withholding obligations applicable to resident and non‑resident sellers under the revised regime.
  • Escrow and withholding hold‑backs: Build a specific escrow tranche for withholding tax on non‑resident sellers, sized to the applicable rate (including surcharge and cess), and release it only upon confirmation of tax deposit and certificate issuance.
  • Put/call option documentation: Where exits are triggered by contractual options, confirm that exercise‑price formulas account for the revised tax cost, and that option agreements include a tax‑adjustment mechanism if rates change between grant and exercise dates.

GP and Manager Compliance

  • SEBI AIF compliance filings: Ensure that any change in fund structure, exit mechanics or investor composition is reported to SEBI within prescribed timelines under the AIF Regulations 2012.
  • LLP filing obligations: For funds structured as LLPs (or contemplating conversion), confirm that designated partner appointments, annual returns and partner changes are filed with the Registrar per the LLP Act, and anticipate the enhanced disclosure requirements proposed by the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026.

Practical Timelines and Risk Matrix for VC Exit Planning

Timing is the critical variable in 2026. The interaction between the Finance Act 2026 (already operative for tax year 2026‑27) and the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 (pending assent) creates a matrix of risks and opportunities that vary by exit quarter.

Decision window Tax risk Regulatory risk Documentation lead time Recommended action
Q1–Q2 2026 exits Finance Act 2026 rates apply; buyback reclassification effective Corporate Laws Bill not yet enacted, conversion not available 4–8 weeks (SPA + repatriation docs) Execute exits under current Finance Act rates; model buyback vs trade sale; pre‑stage repatriation documentation
Q3–Q4 2026 exits Same Finance Act rates; potential CBDT clarificatory circulars may issue Bill may receive assent during monsoon or winter session, monitor Parliamentary calendar 6–10 weeks (allow for conversion feasibility review if Bill is enacted) Model exit alternatives; prepare conversion eligibility memo if Bill passes; update subscription agreements
2027 exits Finance Act 2026 rates confirmed for AY 2026‑27; 2027‑28 rates depend on next Budget If Bill enacted, conversion window opens; SEBI circular expected 8–12 weeks (structural conversion + exit documentation) Complete trust‑to‑LLP conversion (if advantageous) before exit; renegotiate carry waterfall; align investor consents

The highest‑risk scenario is a Q3‑Q4 2026 exit where the fund intends to convert from a trust to an LLP concurrently with the exit, this requires parallel workstreams (structural conversion, SEBI approval, SPA negotiation and repatriation documentation) and tight coordination among multiple advisors.

Conclusion: Navigating Venture Capital Law India in 2026

The 2026 legislative cycle has created both opportunity and complexity for venture capital participants across India. The Finance Act 2026 delivers a more favourable tax outcome for buyback exits while removing indexation benefits that historically reduced the tax burden on unlisted‑share trade sales. The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026, once enacted, will introduce a new structural conversion pathway that could reshape fund structuring India practices for years ahead. For GPs, CFOs and founders operating under venture capital law India, the imperative is clear: model each exit scenario under the current regime, prepare documentation for the new rules, and engage specialist counsel before commitments are made.

Those who act within the current window, while the legislative picture is still settling, will secure the best structural and tax positions for their investors and their portfolios.

Last reviewed: 7 May 2026. This article provides general legal information and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult qualified legal and tax advisors for guidance specific to their circumstances.

To connect with a specialist in this area, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Parag Srivastava at Bombay Law Chambers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Finance Bill / Finance Act 2026, India Budget (Official PDF)
  2. PRS India, Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 (Text)
  3. Income Tax Department, Notification No. 45/2026
  4. Dewan P N Chopra & Co, Finance Act 2026: Some Key Amendments

FAQs

Q: How does the Finance Act 2026 change capital gains treatment for VC exits?
A: The Finance Act 2026, through Clause 34 amending section 69 of the Income‑tax Act 2025, confirms revised LTCG rates without indexation for unlisted shares and reclassifies buyback proceeds as capital gains rather than deemed dividends, effective from tax year 2026‑27. These changes alter the after‑tax economics of trade sales and make buybacks a more tax‑efficient exit route.
A: The Bill proposes a conversion mechanism for “specified trusts” to become LLPs, subject to prescribed eligibility criteria, beneficiary consent, Registrar approval and, for SEBI‑registered AIFs, SEBI clearance. As of May 2026, the Bill has not yet received parliamentary assent, and the specific eligibility rules remain to be notified.
A: The buyer must withhold income tax at the applicable rate on payments to non‑resident LPs. The rate depends on whether the gain is long‑term or short‑term and whether a DTAA provides a reduced rate. Foreign LPs must furnish a Tax Residency Certificate and Form 10F before closing to claim treaty relief; otherwise, statutory rates (including surcharge and cess) apply.
A: Funds should accelerate exits where the revised regime produces a lower tax cost (particularly buybacks) or where the absence of indexation on unlisted shares makes a significant numerical difference. Modelling both pre‑ and post‑2026 scenarios, accounting for holding‑period classification, surcharge slabs and investor‑level treaty positions, is essential before making a timing decision.
A: Key additions include updated tax gross‑up formulas reflecting Finance Act 2026 rates, annual TRC representation requirements for foreign LPs, conversion consent mechanisms (for potential trust‑to‑LLP conversion), revised carry‑waterfall triggers and specific escrow provisions for withholding tax on non‑resident exits.
A: Category I and II AIFs (constituted as trusts) enjoy pass‑through status, with gains taxed at the investor level. LLPs are also generally transparent for income‑tax purposes but pay alternate minimum tax and may face different treatment for capital gains on transfer of partnership interests. The choice depends on the fund’s investor base, exit strategy and regulatory preferences.
A: With pre‑staged documentation (executed SPA, withholding certificate, CA compliance certificate, Form 15CA/15CB filings and RBI reporting forms), repatriation typically takes 2–4 weeks post‑closing for trade sales. Buybacks may take 3–5 weeks due to additional regulatory timelines. Delays most commonly arise from incomplete Form 15CA/15CB submissions.
A: No. As of 7 May 2026, the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 has been introduced in Parliament but has not yet received assent. All provisions discussed in this article relating to trust‑to‑LLP conversion and LLP Act governance reforms are proposals subject to parliamentary approval and subsequent notification by the Central Government.

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Venture Capital Law India 2026: Capital Gains, Exit Repatriation & LLP/AIF Structuring

Send welcome message

Custom Message