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Every private equity deal in India forces the same structural fork in the road: share purchase vs asset purchase. The choice reshapes the buyer’s tax position, determines which liabilities travel with the business, and dictates months of post-closing compliance work. The quick rule for PE buyers in India is straightforward, buy shares when you need operational continuity and want to give the seller a cleaner capital-gains exit; buy assets when you must isolate legacy liabilities and want a stepped-up depreciable base.
With 2025–26 Finance Act refinements to capital gains computation, evolving GST treatment of going-concern transfers, and tighter FEMA screening of share acquisitions, the calculus has shifted enough that deal teams should pressure-test the structure before signing the LOI rather than defaulting to habit.
This article is written for PE partners, deal leads, CFOs, founders and in-house counsel who are actively choosing between the two structures for a buyout, growth investment, carve-out or distressed acquisition in India. It delivers a dimension-by-dimension comparison, tax, GST and STT, liability allocation, regulatory approvals, timing, and transaction cost, followed by an explicit decision framework that names the structure you should choose for each common PE scenario.
Here is what this guide covers:
A share purchase (equity acquisition) means the buyer acquires some or all of the issued shares of the target company. The company itself, with every asset, contract, license, employee relationship and liability on its books, remains intact. Ownership changes at the shareholder level; the legal entity continues undisturbed. For PE buyers executing full buyouts or majority-stake growth deals, the share purchase is the default starting point in India for several structural reasons.
An asset purchase is a transaction in which the buyer acquires selected assets, and only the agreed liabilities, from the target entity. The seller’s corporate shell remains with the seller, along with any liabilities the buyer did not expressly assume. For PE investors in India, asset purchases are less common than share deals but become the preferred route in specific situations where liability isolation or tax efficiency for the buyer outweighs the operational complexity of transferring assets individually.
The table below maps twelve decision dimensions that PE deal teams should evaluate before choosing a structure. Use it as a pre-LOI checklist: any dimension where the two structures diverge materially for your specific deal should trigger deeper analysis with counsel.
| Dimension | Share Purchase (Equity) | Asset Purchase |
|---|---|---|
| Legal nature | Buyer buys shares, whole entity (assets & liabilities) | Buyer buys selected assets & assumed liabilities only |
| Transfer mechanics / consents | Single equity transfer; third-party consents sometimes still needed (change-of-control clauses) | Requires transfer of each asset, assignment of contracts, consents from customers, suppliers, landlords |
| Tax treatment, seller | Capital gains (often preferential); STT may apply on listed shares | Sale taxed as business income or capital gains depending on asset and holding period |
| Tax basis, buyer | No step-up in underlying asset book values (carry-over basis) | Buyer records assets at purchase price, depreciation/step-up benefits |
| GST & STT | STT on listed share sales; GST generally not applicable to share transfers | GST may apply on asset sales; BOGC exemption available if entire business transferred as going concern |
| Stamp duty | Lower in many states for equity transfers | Stamp duty on each instrument (especially immovable property), often higher aggregate |
| Liability transfer | Buyer inherits all historical liabilities unless indemnified | Only agreed assumed liabilities transfer to buyer |
| Due diligence scope & cost | Broad: corporate, tax, litigation, regulatory, contingent, high cost | Asset-level DD; narrower scope but title and transfer checks needed |
| Timing | Usually faster (single-entity transfer, subject to regulatory clearances) | Slower, multiple transfers, consents and registrations |
| Post-closing compliance | Continuity, fewer renegotiations; entity-level compliance integration | Post-transfer registrations, novations, fresh tax filings, stamp formalities |
| Enforceability / remedies | Warranties/indemnities apply; buyer steps into seller’s shoes for many obligations | Warranties can be asset-specific; indemnity caps and escrows are standard |
| Typical PE structuring levers | Holdco layer, rollover equity, purchase price adjustments, escrow/indemnity regime | Acquisition SPV, novation schedules, tax indemnities, reps & warranties insurance |
Key takeaway: The share purchase wins on speed, continuity and seller-tax treatment. The asset purchase wins on liability isolation and buyer-tax step-up. For a PE full buyout of a well-governed target with clean due diligence, shares are usually the right structure. For a carve-out, a distressed deal, or a target with material contingent liabilities, the asset route typically justifies the added complexity.
Tax treatment is frequently the single most influential factor in the share purchase vs asset purchase India decision. The two structures produce materially different outcomes for both seller and buyer.
| Tax Dimension | Share Purchase | Asset Purchase |
|---|---|---|
| Seller, classification | Capital gains under Sections 45–55 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 | Business income or capital gains, depending on asset class and holding period |
| Seller, long-term vs short-term | Unlisted shares held >24 months qualify as long-term; listed shares held >12 months | Each asset has its own holding-period threshold (immovable property >24 months; other assets vary) |
| Seller, indexation | Indexation benefit available for unlisted long-term capital gains (subject to Finance Act changes) | Indexation available for capital assets held long-term; not available if taxed as business income |
| Buyer, basis | No step-up; carry-over book values in the target entity | Buyer records assets at purchase price, higher depreciable base |
| Buyer, goodwill | No separate goodwill on buyer’s books (paid for shares, not assets) | Goodwill may arise as a separate intangible; depreciation claim restricted following Finance Act 2021 amendments |
For PE sellers, the share sale is almost always preferable: the gain is classified as a capital gain rather than business income, and the long-term rate (with indexation for unlisted shares) can be materially lower than the applicable slab rate on business profits. For PE buyers, the asset purchase delivers the step-up advantage, the ability to record acquired assets at fair market value and claim higher depreciation, which improves post-acquisition cash flow. Where the deal involves a significant real-estate component or high-value machinery, the step-up benefit can be quantitatively decisive.
Transaction taxes can add unexpected friction, or cost, to either structure. The interplay between GST and STT is a dimension PE deal teams frequently underestimate.
| Item | Share Purchase | Asset Purchase |
|---|---|---|
| Securities Transaction Tax (STT) | Applicable on sale of listed equity shares on a recognised stock exchange; generally not applicable to off-market unlisted share transfers | Not applicable |
| GST | Generally not applicable, securities are excluded from the definition of goods and services under the CGST Act, 2017 | GST applies on sale of goods, equipment and intangibles unless BOGC exemption applies |
| BOGC exemption | Not relevant (no supply of goods/services) | Entire business transferred as going concern may qualify for exemption under CGST notification, conditions include transfer of all assets, liabilities and continuation by transferee |
| Stamp duty | Varies by state; equity transfer instruments often attract lower duty | Stamp duty on each transfer instrument, immovable property registrations attract state-specific rates that can be substantial |
For PE buyers, the practical lesson is clear: if you are buying assets and the transfer qualifies as a going concern, structuring to meet the BOGC conditions can eliminate the GST cost entirely. If it does not qualify, for example, because you are cherry-picking assets rather than acquiring the entire business, GST will apply on each taxable supply, and the buyer will need to factor that cost into the purchase price or negotiate a gross-up. On the share side, STT is relevant only for listed transactions and is typically a modest cost relative to deal size.
Liability transfer is the dimension where the two structures diverge most sharply. In a share purchase, the buyer inherits every liability sitting inside the target entity, disclosed and undisclosed, quantified and contingent. That includes pending tax assessments, employee claims, environmental remediation obligations and litigation. PE buyers manage this risk through contractual protections:
In an asset purchase, the buyer’s liability exposure is limited by design, only expressly assumed liabilities transfer. However, certain statutory obligations (such as employee claims where the transfer qualifies as a “transfer of undertaking”) may follow the assets regardless of the contract terms. PE buyers should not treat liability isolation in an asset deal as absolute without confirming the position under applicable employment and environmental statutes.
A share purchase is almost always faster to execute. The transfer is completed by delivery of share transfer instruments, board approval, and regulatory filings (with the Registrar of Companies, and with SEBI or the stock exchange for listed entities). Third-party consents arise only where material contracts contain change-of-control clauses, which should be identified during due diligence.
An asset purchase, by contrast, requires individual transfer of each asset class: registered conveyance deeds for immovable property, assignment agreements for IP, novation of customer and supplier contracts, and fresh license applications where permits are non-transferable. In practice, asset deals take materially longer to close and carry higher customer-disruption risk during the novation period. For PE buyers focused on revenue continuity, particularly in B2B businesses where key-account relationships are contract-dependent, this risk can outweigh the liability-isolation benefit.
Both structures can trigger overlapping regulatory approvals, but the triggers differ:
Transaction costs diverge materially between the two structures:
| Cost Item | Share Purchase | Asset Purchase |
|---|---|---|
| Due diligence | Higher, comprehensive corporate, tax, litigation, regulatory review | Narrower in scope but requires title/transfer verification per asset |
| Stamp duty | Generally lower (equity transfer instrument) | Potentially much higher, especially if immovable property is involved |
| Legal and advisory fees | Standard M&A fee structure | Higher, multiple transfer documents, novation schedules, registration costs |
| GST / transaction tax | Minimal (STT only if listed) | GST on assets unless BOGC exemption obtained |
PE buyers use several negotiation levers to manage these costs: pricing discounts to reflect assumed liability risk (in share deals), escrow percentages calibrated to DD findings, RWI policies to bridge indemnity gaps, locked-box or completion-accounts mechanisms to allocate economic risk between signing and closing, and indemnity carve-outs for specific identified risks (pending tax assessments, key litigation).
Several 2025–26 developments have practical relevance for PE deal teams choosing between a share purchase vs asset purchase in India:
What to re-check before deciding in 2026:
Use the table below to match your deal characteristics to the recommended structure. Each row pairs a common PE priority with the structure that best serves it.
| If Your Priority Is… | Choose | Why (One Line) |
|---|---|---|
| Preserve contracts, licenses and continuity | Share purchase | Single equity transfer avoids multiple novations and consent processes |
| Avoid historical, tax or environmental liabilities | Asset purchase | Buyer can pick and choose assets; only assumed liabilities transfer |
| Seller needs capital gains treatment | Share purchase | Sellers typically achieve lower effective tax on share disposals |
| Achieve a tax basis step-up for depreciation | Asset purchase | Buyer records assets at purchase price, higher depreciation shield |
| Speed and lower operational friction | Share purchase | Fewer individual transfers, registrations and third-party consents |
| Carve-out of a business unit | Asset purchase | Easier to isolate the target business from the seller’s remaining operations |
| Distressed acquisition with material contingent liabilities | Asset purchase | Liability perimeter protects the buyer from undisclosed claims |
| Foreign PE fund subject to FEMA/FDI conditions | Share purchase (default), but verify sector caps and pricing | FEMA framework is structured around share acquisitions; asset deals may still require RBI reporting |
Choosing between a share purchase and an asset purchase is not a back-of-envelope exercise once the deal crosses certain thresholds. Engage experienced PE counsel early, ideally before the LOI, in any of the following situations:
A well-scoped engagement at this stage typically covers: a structuring memo comparing tax outcomes under both structures, a due diligence scope letter, an indemnity and escrow framework, and a regulatory-approval timeline. The cost of getting the structure wrong, in inherited liabilities, excess tax, or failed regulatory clearances, dwarfs the upfront advisory fee.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Pankaj Singla at Mulberry Law LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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