[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
company buybacks india

Company Buybacks in India (2026): What Founders, Boards & Investors Must Know

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Act, 2026 has redrawn the rules governing company buybacks in India, giving founders and boards more flexible tools to return capital, manage dilution and facilitate investor exits. For the first time, prescribed classes of companies may undertake up to two buyback offers in a single financial year, subject to a mandatory minimum gap and enhanced disclosure requirements. This guide translates the amended provisions of the Companies Act, 2013, particularly Section 68 and its new provisos, into a practical, step-by-step compliance checklist built for private-company founders, CFOs, general counsel and angel or venture-capital investors who need to act on these changes now.

Executive Summary, The One-Page Decision for Founders

Before diving into statutory text and filing deadlines, every founder should answer one threshold question: is a buyback the right mechanism for what I am trying to achieve? The 2026 amendments make the answer “yes” far more often than before, but the compliance burden remains significant. Here is the quick decision framework.

  • Who benefits most. Profitable private companies sitting on surplus reserves, startups needing to consolidate ESOPs after an employee departure, and VC-backed companies offering a partial liquidity event to early investors before a larger funding round.
  • When to consider a buyback. When the company has adequate free reserves or securities premium, meets the post-buyback debt-to-equity ratio test, and wants a tax-efficient alternative to dividends for returning capital to shareholders.
  • Key compliance triggers. Board resolution (and special resolution if the buyback exceeds 10 % of aggregate paid-up capital and free reserves), solvency declaration, statutory filings with the Registrar of Companies (ROC), and, for listed companies, SEBI tender-offer or open-market regulations.
  • The 2026 “second buyback” advantage. If your company falls within a prescribed class (broadly, debt-free companies meeting criteria the Central Government notifies), you may now run two buyback programmes in a single financial year, provided a minimum gap is maintained between offers. This was previously prohibited outright.

If your company cannot satisfy the solvency test or has outstanding term-loan debt that restricts share repurchases, a buyback is likely not available. In that scenario, founders should instead evaluate a closing the company or restructuring pathway.

What Changed in 2026, The Headline Buyback Rules India Must Follow

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Act, 2026, published in the Official Gazette and summarised by PRS Legislative Research, introduces targeted amendments to Section 68 and related provisions of the Companies Act, 2013. The changes are designed to reduce procedural friction for well-capitalised companies while preserving investor safeguards. Below are the headline reforms.

Statutory Citations and Effective Dates

The amendments to Section 68 take effect from the date notified by the Central Government in the Official Gazette. The Act received Presidential assent and was published in the Gazette of India, Extraordinary, Part II, Section 1. The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) is empowered to prescribe, by notification, the classes of companies eligible for enhanced limits and multiple buyback offers.

Quick Comparison, Pre-2026 vs Post-2026

Feature Pre-2026 position Post-2026 position
Maximum buyback cap 25 % of aggregate paid-up share capital and free reserves 25 % retained as default; higher limit permitted for prescribed classes of companies as notified by the Central Government
Frequency Only one buyback offer permitted per financial year Up to two buyback offers per financial year for prescribed companies, subject to a mandatory minimum gap between offers
Board-only buyback threshold Up to 10 % of paid-up capital + free reserves (board resolution sufficient) Retained at 10 %; shareholder approval by special resolution required above this threshold
Source-of-funds rules Free reserves, securities premium account or proceeds of an earlier issue of shares or other specified securities Unchanged, same permitted funding sources under Section 68(2)
Post-buyback debt-equity ratio Debt must not exceed twice the paid-up capital and free reserves after buyback Unchanged (Section 68(2)(d))
Completion timeline Buyback must be completed within 12 months from the date of the special resolution or board resolution Unchanged

The practical effect of the corporate laws amendment buyback provisions is straightforward: companies that qualify as “prescribed classes” gain significantly more flexibility to time capital returns, while the core investor safeguards, the cap, the solvency test and the post-buyback leverage ceiling, remain intact for all other companies.

Which Companies Can Use the Higher Buyback Limits and Frequency Rules

Not every company qualifies for the enhanced buyback regime. The Central Government is empowered under the amended Section 68 to prescribe, by notification, the classes of companies eligible for the higher cap and the permission to make two buyback offers in a financial year. Industry observers expect the notification to target debt-free companies with a track record of profitability, though the precise eligibility criteria will be set by MCA rules.

Private vs Public Company Differences

The private company buyback India framework differs from the listed-company regime in several important ways. Private companies are not subject to SEBI’s buyback regulations (the SEBI (Buy-back of Securities) Regulations, 2018) and instead follow the Companies Act and MCA rules exclusively. This means:

  • No tender-offer mechanics. Private companies buy back shares directly from willing shareholders, typically at a price determined by the board (often based on an independent valuation).
  • Simpler disclosure. No stock-exchange filings, no public announcements, no escrow deposits, although ROC filings remain mandatory.
  • Faster execution. Without SEBI timelines, a private-company buyback can often be structured and completed within 60–90 days from board approval, provided shareholder consent and solvency documentation are in order.

Example Scenarios

Scenario 1, Startup with ESOP dilution. A Series-B startup has granted ESOPs to 15 employees. Three have left the company and exercised their vested options. The founder wants to consolidate shareholding. A board-approved buyback of up to 10 % of paid-up capital, funded from securities premium, allows the company to repurchase the departing employees’ shares without requiring a special resolution.

Scenario 2, Profitable private company returning surplus. A bootstrapped SaaS company has accumulated ₹ 8 crore in free reserves and has no debt. The founders wish to distribute ₹ 1.5 crore to themselves and an angel investor. A buyback from free reserves, potentially structured as two separate offers under the new rules, if the company qualifies as a prescribed class, can achieve this while being more tax-efficient than a dividend in many cases.

Approvals, Filings and Timelines, Step-by-Step Buyback Compliance Checklist

This is the core actionable section. The buyback compliance checklist below follows the sequence mandated by Section 68, the Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules, and (for listed companies) SEBI regulations.

Board and Shareholder Approvals

  1. Board resolution (mandatory for all buybacks). The board must pass a resolution authorising the buyback, specifying the maximum number and price of shares to be bought back, the exact source of funds, and the time frame for completion. The resolution must also record that the company satisfies the solvency and debt-equity conditions.
  2. Special resolution by shareholders. Required if the buyback exceeds 10 % of aggregate paid-up share capital and free reserves. For private companies this is passed at an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) or by postal ballot. Listed companies must comply with SEBI timelines for shareholder approval.
  3. Declaration of solvency. The board must file a declaration of solvency in the prescribed form (Form SH-9 equivalent), verified by an affidavit, stating that the company is able to meet its debts as they fall due and will not be rendered insolvent by the buyback. This must be filed with the ROC before or simultaneously with the other buyback filings.

Tender Offer vs Open Market, Listed Companies

Listed companies must choose between two SEBI-regulated routes. The tender-offer route requires a letter of offer to all shareholders, an escrow deposit, and a fixed timetable. The open-market route operates through stock-exchange purchases over a defined period. Both routes require filings with SEBI and the relevant stock exchange. Private companies are not subject to these SEBI mechanics and instead negotiate directly with participating shareholders.

Filings with ROC and MCA

All companies, listed and unlisted, must file prescribed forms with the Registrar of Companies. Key filings include the return of buyback (previously filed using Form SH-11 or its digital equivalent on the MCA portal), the declaration of solvency, and the compliance certificate from the company secretary or a practising company secretary confirming that the buyback complies with Section 68. For details on MCA corporate forms, see What is Form 27 in India for context on form-filing procedures.

Payments and Extinguishment

Once shares are bought back, the company must extinguish and physically destroy (or electronically cancel) the repurchased shares within seven days of the last date of completion of the buyback. The corresponding reduction in share capital must be reflected in the company’s statutory registers and financial statements.

Minimum Gap and Timing Rules for a Second Buyback

Under the 2026 amendments, prescribed companies may make a second buyback offer in the same financial year, provided a mandatory minimum gap, as will be specified in the MCA notification, is maintained between the closing of the first offer and the opening of the second. Early indications suggest this gap is likely to be set at not less than 90 days, though the final number will be confirmed by rule. The total value of both offers combined must not exceed the applicable cap.

Key Forms, Filings and Timelines

Filing / action Responsible party Deadline / timeline
Board resolution authorising buyback Board of directors Before any public announcement or shareholder communication
Special resolution (if buyback exceeds 10 % cap) Shareholders (EGM / postal ballot) Before commencement of buyback
Declaration of solvency (Form SH-9) Board (verified by affidavit) Filed with ROC before buyback opens
Letter of offer (listed companies, tender route) Company / merchant banker Per SEBI timelines (within specified days of board resolution)
Return of buyback (Form SH-11 / MCA digital form) Company secretary Within 30 days of completion of buyback
Extinguishment of shares Company Within 7 days of last date of buyback completion
Completion of entire buyback process Company Within 12 months from date of resolution

Reporting Obligations by Entity Type

Entity type Required approvals Primary filings
Private company (buyback ≤ 10 %) Board resolution only Declaration of solvency + Return of buyback with ROC
Private company (buyback > 10 %) Board resolution + special resolution Declaration of solvency + Return of buyback with ROC
Listed company (tender offer) Board resolution + special resolution (if > 10 %) + SEBI compliance SEBI filings + stock-exchange disclosures + ROC filings
Listed company (open market) Board resolution (if ≤ 10 %) + SEBI compliance SEBI filings + stock-exchange disclosures + ROC filings

Sample Board Resolution Language

The following is a simplified excerpt that founders and company secretaries can adapt:

“RESOLVED THAT pursuant to Section 68 and all other applicable provisions of the Companies Act, 2013 (as amended by the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Act, 2026), and the rules made thereunder, and subject to such approvals as may be necessary, the Company hereby approves the buyback of up to [number] fully paid-up equity shares of ₹ [face value] each, at a price not exceeding ₹ [maximum price] per share, from the [free reserves / securities premium account] of the Company, for an aggregate amount not exceeding ₹ [amount], representing [X] % of the aggregate of the paid-up share capital and free reserves of the Company as at [date of latest audited balance sheet].”

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ruby Singh Ahuja at Karanjawala & Company Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Funding Sources, Solvency and Financial Compliances, What Auditors and Boards Must Check

Under Section 68(2) of the Companies Act, a buyback can only be funded from three permissible sources: free reserves, the securities premium account, or the proceeds of an earlier issue of shares or other specified securities (but not from the proceeds of an earlier issue of the same kind of shares or securities). Companies may not fund buybacks from borrowed money or working capital facilities.

Before authorising the buyback, the board must satisfy itself, and formally record, the following financial compliances:

  • Solvency declaration. A declaration that the company will remain able to meet its debts as they fall due for at least one year after the buyback, verified by an affidavit of at least two directors (including the managing director, if any).
  • Debt-equity ratio test. After the buyback, the ratio of the aggregate debts owed by the company to its paid-up capital and free reserves must not exceed 2:1. Companies with outstanding term loans or debentures should model this ratio carefully before proceeding.
  • Auditor certificate. While not always a statutory requirement for private companies, it is best practice, and may be required under specific MCA rules, for the statutory auditor to provide a certificate confirming that the buyback is within permissible limits and funded from eligible sources.
  • Working-capital adequacy. The CFO should prepare a cash-flow projection demonstrating that the company can fund the buyback without jeopardising ongoing operations, payroll or vendor commitments.

If the company has outstanding secured debt, the terms of the lending agreements should be reviewed for any restrictive covenants that may prohibit or require lender consent for share repurchases. Companies approaching insolvency thresholds should not proceed with a buyback, as doing so could trigger directorial liability.

Buyback Tax India, Company and Shareholder Level Consequences

Tax treatment is often the decisive factor when founders weigh company buybacks in India against dividends or private transfers. The framework has evolved significantly since the Finance Act, 2018 introduced buyback tax for unlisted companies, and was subsequently extended to listed companies by the Finance Act, 2019. Key principles as of 2026 are set out below, drawing on provisions administered by the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) and the Income Tax Department.

  • Company-level tax (Section 115QA of the Income-tax Act, 1961). The company is liable to pay an additional income-tax on the distributed income, computed as the consideration paid on buyback minus the amount received by the company on original issuance of those shares. This tax is payable by the company, not the shareholder.
  • Shareholder-level exemption (Section 10(34A)). Income received by the shareholder on a buyback is exempt in the shareholder’s hands, provided the company has paid the buyback tax under Section 115QA. This makes the buyback effectively “tax-paid” at the company level.
  • Listed-company extension. From the assessment year 2020-21 onwards, listed companies are also subject to buyback tax under Section 115QA. Shareholders of listed companies similarly receive the income tax-free under Section 10(34A).

Worked Example, Private Company Founder

A founder originally subscribed to 10,000 shares at ₹ 10 each (total cost: ₹ 1,00,000). The company buys back 5,000 shares at ₹ 200 per share (total consideration: ₹ 10,00,000). The distributed income for Section 115QA purposes is ₹ 10,00,000 minus ₹ 50,000 (original issuance price for those 5,000 shares) = ₹ 9,50,000. The company pays buyback tax at the applicable rate (currently 23.296 %, inclusive of surcharge and cess) on ₹ 9,50,000. The founder receives ₹ 10,00,000 tax-free.

This structure is frequently more efficient than a dividend, where the shareholder would pay income tax at their marginal rate. However, the effective tax rate depends on the specific gap between issuance price and buyback price, and founders should model both scenarios with their tax adviser before committing.

Investor Protections, Minority Rights and Promoter Buyback Restrictions

Buybacks directly reduce outstanding share capital, which makes minority shareholder protection a critical governance concern. The Companies Act and SEBI regulations build in several safeguards that boards must respect.

  • Equal treatment. The buyback must be offered to all shareholders on a proportionate basis (for listed companies, through a tender offer at a uniform price). For private companies, proportionate offers are not always mandatory, but shareholders’ agreements frequently require equal treatment or right-of-first-refusal provisions that effectively mandate proportionality.
  • Promoter restrictions. Promoters and persons in control are subject to additional scrutiny. Under SEBI regulations for listed companies, promoters may participate in the tender offer but cannot sell more than their proportionate entitlement, and their participation must be disclosed. For private companies, shareholders’ agreements should address whether promoters are permitted to tender shares, and if so, whether independent director approval or a fairness opinion is required.
  • Independent valuation. While the Companies Act does not mandate an independent valuation for buyback pricing, it is considered best practice, particularly where promoter participation is involved, for the board to obtain a fair-value opinion from a registered valuer or an independent chartered accountant.
  • Lock-in on subsequent issues. Section 68(8) provides that where a company buys back its shares, it cannot issue shares of the same kind within six months of the buyback completion, except by way of bonus shares or discharge of subsisting obligations. This prevents companies from repurchasing cheaply and reissuing at a premium.

Investors negotiating term sheets should consider embedding buyback-specific protections, such as minimum pricing floors, tag-along rights during promoter buybacks, and ESOP carve-outs, directly into the shareholders’ agreement.

Company Buybacks in India vs Dividends vs Share Transfers, Which Is Right?

The decision between a buyback, a dividend and a private share transfer depends on tax efficiency, speed, governance complexity and the specific needs of each shareholder class. The comparison table below summarises the key trade-offs.

Measure Buyback Dividend Share transfer
Typical approval required Board resolution (≤ 10 %); special resolution (> 10 %) Board recommendation + shareholder approval at AGM Board approval + compliance with articles of association and any pre-emption rights
Tax for shareholder Exempt under Section 10(34A) if company pays buyback tax Taxable at shareholder’s marginal income-tax rate (post-DDT abolition) Capital gains tax (short-term or long-term depending on holding period)
Tax for company Buyback tax under Section 115QA on distributed income No company-level tax (DDT abolished from AY 2021-22) No company-level tax
Speed of execution 60–90 days (private); up to 6 months (listed tender) Declared and paid within 30 days of AGM Days to weeks (subject to agreement and board approval)
Effect on share capital Share capital reduced; shares extinguished No change to share capital No change to share capital; ownership shifts
Investor preference Preferred when investors want a partial exit at a known price Preferred for regular income returns Preferred when a specific buyer is identified (secondary sale)
Governance complexity Moderate, solvency test, ROC filings, SEBI (if listed) Low, board and AGM approval Low to moderate, depends on articles and shareholders’ agreement restrictions

Decision flow for founders. If the goal is returning surplus cash to all shareholders tax-efficiently, a buyback is typically superior to a dividend. If the goal is facilitating one specific investor’s exit, a negotiated share transfer is faster and simpler. If the company needs to maintain maximum flexibility for future fundraising, a dividend avoids the six-month restriction on new share issuance that follows a buyback.

Practical Templates and Board Minutes, Compliance Checklist and Sample Language

Executing a buyback correctly requires precision in corporate documentation. Below are high-value template components that founders and company secretaries can use as starting points.

  • Board minutes checklist. Record attendance and quorum; note interested directors (if promoters are participating); confirm solvency declaration has been reviewed; record the exact source of funds; specify the maximum number and price of shares; note the debt-equity ratio post-buyback; and authorise the company secretary to file returns with the ROC.
  • Special resolution language. “RESOLVED THAT pursuant to Section 68 read with Section 69 and all applicable provisions of the Companies Act, 2013 (as amended), and the Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules, the consent of the members be and is hereby accorded for the buyback by the Company of up to [number] fully paid-up equity shares of ₹ [face value] each at a price not exceeding ₹ [price] per share, payable in cash, from the [free reserves / securities premium account], for an aggregate amount not exceeding ₹ [amount].”
  • Shareholder communication template. A letter to shareholders setting out the rationale for the buyback, the record date (if applicable), the price and number of shares, the proportionate entitlement of each shareholder, the timeline for acceptance, and the dispute-resolution mechanism. For companies with institutional investors, this letter should also confirm compliance with investment agreement provisions and any required consents.

Companies may wish to engage a practising company secretary to certify compliance. Detailed procedural guidance is available from the Institute of Company Secretaries of India (ICSI), and founders seeking to understand the broader landscape of company formation and registration compliance may also refer to guidance on registering an NBFC in India for analogous MCA filing procedures.

Conclusion

The 2026 amendments to India’s buyback rules represent the most significant relaxation of share-repurchase regulation in over a decade, giving qualifying companies the flexibility to deploy multiple buyback offers in a single year while retaining robust solvency and investor-protection guardrails. Founders, boards and investors evaluating company buybacks in India should start with the compliance checklist above, model the tax comparison against dividends and share transfers, and engage qualified legal and tax advisers to structure the transaction correctly. For access to experienced company law practitioners in India, the Global Law Experts directory provides a curated starting point.

Sources

  1. The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Act, 2026, Official Gazette of India
  2. PRS Legislative Research, The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026
  3. Ministry of Corporate Affairs, Companies Act, 2013 and Notifications
  4. SEBI, Buy-back of Securities Regulations and Filings
  5. Income Tax Department / CBDT, Buyback Taxation Guidance
  6. Institute of Company Secretaries of India (ICSI), Procedural Guidance

FAQs

1. What are the key buyback changes under the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Act, 2026?
The 2026 Act permits prescribed classes of companies to make up to two buyback offers per financial year, introduces the possibility of a higher buyback cap for such companies, and mandates a minimum gap between successive offers. Core protections, the solvency test, debt-equity ceiling and 12-month completion rule, remain unchanged under Section 68 of the Companies Act, 2013.
Yes, if the private company falls within a prescribed class as notified by the Central Government under the amended Section 68. The company must maintain the mandatory minimum gap between the two offers and ensure that the aggregate value of both offers does not exceed the applicable buyback cap.
The Central Government is empowered to prescribe eligible classes by notification. Industry observers expect the criteria to include debt-free status and a demonstrated profitability track record. The precise eligibility requirements will be confirmed when the MCA issues the implementing notification.
A board resolution is mandatory for every buyback. A special resolution passed by shareholders is required if the buyback exceeds 10 % of aggregate paid-up share capital and free reserves. The company must file a declaration of solvency and a return of buyback with the ROC, and extinguish the repurchased shares within seven days of completion.
The company pays buyback tax under Section 115QA of the Income-tax Act on the distributed income (consideration minus original issuance price). The shareholder receives the buyback proceeds tax-free under Section 10(34A). This framework applies to both listed and unlisted companies.
For listed companies, SEBI regulations restrict promoter participation to their proportionate entitlement in a tender offer, and full disclosure of promoter participation is mandatory. For private companies, restrictions typically arise from the shareholders’ agreement rather than statute, founders should check whether independent director approval or a fairness opinion is required.
A buyback is best when the company wants to consolidate shareholding across multiple departing ESOP holders and has adequate free reserves. A direct share transfer is faster for a single investor exit. The tax treatment differs: buybacks are taxed at the company level (shareholder receives income tax-free), while share transfers attract capital gains tax in the seller’s hands. Model both scenarios with a tax adviser before deciding.
student visa vs work visa Greece
By Global Law Experts

posted 39 minutes ago

By Mandy Simpson

posted 41 minutes ago

work permit race 2026 winning place
By Global Law Experts

posted 2 hours ago

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.

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

GLE

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

Company Buybacks in India (2026): What Founders, Boards & Investors Must Know

Send welcome message

Custom Message