Share Transfer in Private Company: Procedure, Valuation & FEMA Rules
Transfer of Shares — A voluntary act by a shareholder to convey their title in the shares to another person through a transfer deed (Section 56).
Transmission of Shares — Transfer of title by operation of law (death, insolvency, succession) — not through a voluntary deed (Section 56(2)).
Form SH-4 — The prescribed share transfer deed under Rule 11 of the Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules, 2014.
Fair Market Value (FMV) — For unlisted equity shares, determined under Rule 11UA of the Income Tax Rules, 1962 using the Net Asset Value (NAV) method or Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) method as certified by a merchant banker or Chartered Accountant.
FC-TRS — Foreign Currency Transfer of Shares reporting form, filed with RBI through the Authorised Dealer bank for share transfers involving foreign investment.
1. The Right to Restrict Transfer — Section 2(68)
Under Section 2(68) of the Companies Act, 2013, a “private company” means a company having a minimum paid-up share capital as may be prescribed and which, by its Articles, restricts the right to transfer its shares. This restriction is constitutionally embedded in every private company — Table F of Schedule I to the Act provides default articles that include a right-of-first-refusal mechanism and board approval requirement for transfers.
Practically, this means:
- The board of directors must approve every share transfer
- The AoA may prescribe a pre-emptive right (right of first refusal) in favour of existing shareholders
- The board may refuse to register a transfer under Section 58(2), subject to providing reasons within 30 days
- A shareholders’ agreement (SHA) may impose additional transfer restrictions such as tag-along, drag-along, and lock-in periods
At Virtual Auditor, we review the AoA and SHA before advising on any transfer to ensure the procedure complies with both the statutory requirements and the contractual covenants. For companies choosing the right structure, see our Pvt Ltd vs LLP vs OPC comparison.
2. Step-by-Step Share Transfer Procedure
Here is the procedure we follow at Virtual Auditor for every share transfer engagement:
Step 1: Review Articles of Association and SHA
Check the AoA for: transfer restrictions, pre-emptive rights (right of first refusal), board approval requirements, and any prohibition on transfer to certain classes of persons. If an SHA exists, verify compliance with tag-along, drag-along, lock-in, and consent requirements (investor consent is often required for founder share transfers).
Step 2: Obtain Valuation (Where Required)
Valuation is required for:
- Income Tax — Section 56(2)(x): If shares are transferred below FMV and the shortfall exceeds Rs 50,000
- Income Tax — Section 50CA: If unlisted shares are sold below FMV, the FMV is deemed as full value of consideration for capital gains computation
- FEMA: All transfers involving NRIs/foreign nationals must be at fair value determined using DCF or NAV by a SEBI-registered merchant banker or CA
- Gift Tax: Transfer without consideration is treated as a gift under Section 56(2)(x)
Step 3: Execute the Share Transfer Deed — Form SH-4
Form SH-4 is the prescribed instrument of transfer under Rule 11 of the Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules, 2014. The SH-4 must contain:
- Name, address, and folio number of the transferor
- Name, address, and folio number of the transferee
- CIN of the company
- Description of shares: class, distinctive numbers (if applicable), number of shares, face value
- Consideration for the transfer
- Signatures of transferor, transferee, and a witness
Step 4: Pay Stamp Duty
Under Article 62 of Schedule I to the Indian Stamp Act, 1899, the stamp duty on a transfer of shares is 25 paise for every Rs 100 or part thereof of the consideration amount or the market value, whichever is higher. Key points:
- Stamp duty must be paid before or at the time of execution of SH-4
- E-stamping is available in most states through the SHCIL (Stock Holding Corporation of India Limited) platform
- Some states (e.g., Gujarat, Maharashtra) may have different rates — check the state stamp act
- Unstamped or insufficiently stamped transfer deeds are inadmissible as evidence and the transfer cannot be registered
Step 5: Lodge the Transfer Deed with the Company
The transferor or transferee lodges the duly executed and stamped SH-4 along with the original share certificate with the company. Under Section 56(1), the company shall not register a transfer unless a proper instrument of transfer duly stamped and executed by or on behalf of the transferor and the transferee has been delivered to the company along with the certificate.
Step 6: Board Approval
The board of directors considers the transfer request at a board meeting. The board verifies:
- Compliance with AoA restrictions on transfer
- Whether pre-emptive rights of existing shareholders have been observed
- Whether the SH-4 is duly stamped and executed
- Whether the original share certificate is attached
- Whether the transferee is an eligible person under the AoA and applicable law
- FEMA compliance (if the transfer involves a non-resident)
If the board approves, it passes a resolution approving the registration of transfer.
Step 7: Register the Transfer
Under Section 56(4), the company must register the transfer and deliver a new share certificate to the transferee within one month from the date of receipt of the transfer deed (or within one month from the date of allotment in case of transmission). In practice, the steps are:
- Cancel the old share certificate
- Make entries in the Register of Members (Section 88)
- Issue a new share certificate in the name of the transferee
Step 8: File With ROC (If Required)
A simple share transfer between existing resident shareholders does not require ROC filing. However, the annual return in Form MGT-7/MGT-7A must reflect the updated shareholding pattern. If the transfer results in a change in the significant beneficial ownership (SBO) threshold (10% or more under Section 90), Form BEN-2 must be filed within 30 days.
3. Refusal to Register Transfer — Section 58
Under Section 58(2), if the board refuses to register the transfer, it must send a notice of refusal to the transferor and the transferee within 30 days from the date of receipt of the instrument of transfer, specifying the reasons for refusal. If no communication is sent within 30 days, the transfer is deemed to have been registered.
The aggrieved party (transferor or transferee) may appeal to the NCLT under Section 58(4) within 30 days of the refusal or 60 days from the date of lodging the transfer deed (if no communication is received). The NCLT may direct the company to register the transfer within 10 days of its order.
4. Valuation for Share Transfer
4.1 Income Tax Valuation — Rule 11UA
Under Rule 11UA of the Income Tax Rules, 1962, the Fair Market Value of unlisted equity shares is determined as follows:
| Method | Applicable When | Certified By |
|---|---|---|
| Net Asset Value (NAV) | FMV = (A – L) / PE, where A = book value of assets, L = book value of liabilities, PE = total paid-up equity shares, as on the valuation date based on the last audited balance sheet | Chartered Accountant |
| Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) | Present value of future cash flows discounted at an appropriate rate; projections typically for 5 years with terminal value | SEBI-registered Merchant Banker or Chartered Accountant (for certain assessees) |
For resident-to-resident transfers, both methods are available. The assessee can choose the method that gives a higher FMV (to demonstrate the transaction is at or above FMV). Our valuation practice regularly issues both NAV and DCF certificates for share transfer purposes.
4.2 FEMA Valuation
For transfers involving non-residents (NRIs, foreign companies, FPIs), the pricing guidelines under the Foreign Exchange Management (Non-debt Instruments) Rules, 2019 apply:
- Resident to Non-Resident (sale): Price must not be less than the fair value determined using any internationally accepted pricing methodology on an arm’s length basis, certified by a SEBI-registered Merchant Banker or a Chartered Accountant
- Non-Resident to Resident (sale): Price must not exceed the fair value
- NRI to NRI: Requires prior RBI approval
The key difference from income tax valuation: FEMA valuations act as a floor price (for outbound transfers) or ceiling price (for inbound transfers), whereas income tax valuation determines the FMV for taxability purposes. We handle both simultaneously to ensure the transaction price satisfies both regulators. See our FEMA valuation certificate guide for details.
5. FEMA Compliance for NRI Share Transfers
5.1 Automatic Route vs Approval Route
Most share transfers between a resident and an NRI/PIO (Person of Indian Origin) fall under the automatic route — no prior RBI approval is needed, provided:
- The company is not in a sector prohibited for FDI
- Sectoral cap limits are not breached
- Pricing guidelines are followed
- The transfer does not involve a citizen of Pakistan or Bangladesh (which requires government approval in most sectors)
5.2 FC-TRS Reporting
Under Regulation 13 of the Foreign Exchange Management (Mode of Payment and Reporting of Non-Debt Instruments) Regulations, 2019, the FC-TRS form must be filed with the RBI through the Authorised Dealer (AD) bank within 60 days of the transfer. The FC-TRS must be accompanied by:
- Board resolution approving the transfer
- Valuation certificate from a SEBI-registered Merchant Banker or CA
- FIRC (Foreign Inward Remittance Certificate) for the consideration received
- Copy of SH-4 and new share certificate
- KYC of the transferor and transferee
Late filing of FC-TRS attracts compounding proceedings under Section 15 of FEMA, 1999. We have covered FEMA penalties in detail in our FEMA penalties and compounding guide.
5.3 Payment Mechanism
The consideration for the share transfer must be paid through:
- Inward remittance through banking channels (for resident to NRI transfers, consideration received by resident)
- Debit to NRO/NRE account of the NRI buyer (for NRI acquiring shares from a resident)
- Escrow account maintained with an AD bank (for deferred consideration structures)
Cash payment or payment through hawala channels is strictly prohibited and constitutes a FEMA contravention.
6. Income Tax Implications of Share Transfer
6.1 Capital Gains
| Aspect | Short-Term (STCG) | Long-Term (LTCG) |
|---|---|---|
| Holding Period | Less than 24 months (unlisted shares) | 24 months or more (unlisted shares) |
| Tax Rate | Normal slab rates (up to 30% + surcharge + cess) | 12.5% (above Rs 1.25 lakh exemption, without indexation from FY 2024-25) |
| Deemed Consideration | Higher of actual consideration or FMV under Section 50CA | Higher of actual consideration or FMV under Section 50CA |
6.2 Section 56(2)(x) — Taxability in Buyer’s Hands
If the transferee (buyer) receives shares for a consideration less than the FMV and the aggregate FMV of such shares exceeds the consideration by more than Rs 50,000, the difference is taxable as “Income from Other Sources” in the hands of the buyer under Section 56(2)(x). Exemptions are available for transfers between relatives (as defined in the Explanation to Section 56(2)(x)), transfers under will or inheritance, and certain other specified situations.
6.3 Section 50CA — Deemed Sale Consideration for Seller
If unlisted shares are transferred at a price less than the FMV determined under Rule 11UA, the FMV is deemed to be the full value of consideration for the purpose of computing capital gains in the seller’s hands. This prevents sellers from artificially depressing the transfer price to reduce capital gains liability.
6.4 TDS on Share Transfer
If the transferor is a non-resident, the buyer (transferee) must deduct TDS under Section 195 on the capital gains portion. The TDS rate depends on the DTAA (Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement) between India and the transferor’s country of residence. A lower deduction certificate under Section 197 can be obtained if the actual tax liability is lower than the statutory TDS rate.
7. Transmission of Shares — Section 56(2)
Transmission differs from transfer — it occurs by operation of law (death, succession, insolvency), not by voluntary deed. The legal heir or nominee applies to the company with:
- Death certificate
- Succession certificate or probate (if applicable)
- Legal heir certificate from a competent authority
- Indemnity bond and affidavit
- Original share certificate (if available)
The company registers the transmission and issues a new share certificate in the name of the legal heir within one month under Section 56(4). No stamp duty is payable on transmission. No board approval is technically required (as transmission is by operation of law), though the board typically passes a resolution recording the transmission.
8. Common Pitfalls in Share Transfer
- Insufficient stamp duty: The transfer deed becomes inadmissible, and the company cannot legally register the transfer. Always verify the applicable state stamp duty rate
- Ignoring AoA restrictions: Transferring shares without following the pre-emptive rights procedure exposes the transaction to challenge by other shareholders
- Missing FEMA valuation: For NRI transfers, using an income tax valuation instead of FEMA-compliant valuation is a contravention
- FC-TRS non-filing: Attracts compounding proceedings with RBI with penalties up to 3 times the amount
- Not updating Register of Members: Failure to maintain an up-to-date register is an offence under Section 88
- Ignoring Section 56(2)(x): Below-FMV transfers trigger income tax liability in the buyer’s hands — even if the buyer is unaware of the provision
- SBO non-disclosure: If the transfer crosses the 10% threshold under Section 90, BEN-2 must be filed
9. How Virtual Auditor Helps
Our integrated Company Secretary and Valuation practices make us uniquely positioned to handle share transfers end-to-end:
- Valuation Certificate: NAV and DCF valuations certified by CA V. Viswanathan (IBBI/RV/03/2019/12333) for income tax and FEMA compliance
- SH-4 Drafting: Execution-ready transfer deeds with stamp duty computation
- Board Resolution: Draft resolution for board approval of the transfer — see our board resolution templates
- FEMA Compliance: FC-TRS filing, pricing certification, AD bank coordination through our FEMA practice
- Tax Advisory: Capital gains computation, Section 56(2)(x) analysis, TDS under Section 195
- ROC Filings: MGT-7 annual return update, BEN-2 for SBO changes
Check our pricing or book a free consultation.
Procedure: Execute Form SH-4 (share transfer deed) with proper stamp duty (25 paise per Rs 100 under the Indian Stamp Act). Lodge with the company along with the original share certificate. Board approves the transfer (private companies have mandatory transfer restrictions under Section 2(68)). Company registers the transfer and issues a new certificate within 1 month (Section 56(4)).
Valuation: Required under Rule 11UA (Income Tax) using NAV or DCF method. Required under FEMA NDI Rules for non-resident transfers. Acts as floor/ceiling for pricing under FEMA; determines FMV for Section 50CA (deemed consideration) and Section 56(2)(x) (buyer-side income).
FEMA/NRI: Resident-to-NRI and NRI-to-Resident transfers are on the automatic route for most sectors. FC-TRS reporting mandatory within 60 days through AD bank. NRI-to-NRI transfers require RBI approval. Payment must be through banking channels (NRO/NRE account or inward remittance).
Tax: STCG at slab rates (holding < 24 months). LTCG at 12.5% without indexation (FY 2024-25 onwards). Section 195 TDS for non-resident sellers.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is the procedure for share transfer in a private limited company?
Share transfer in a private company requires: (1) execution of a Share Transfer Deed in Form SH-4, (2) payment of stamp duty (typically 25 paise per Rs 100 of consideration or market value, whichever is higher), (3) submission of SH-4 along with the share certificate to the company, (4) board approval by resolution, (5) registration of transfer in the Register of Members within 30 days, and (6) issuance of new share certificate within 30 days of registration. The transfer is governed by Section 56 of the Companies Act, 2013.
2. Is valuation required for share transfer in a private company?
Valuation is required in several scenarios: (1) under Section 56(2)(x) of the Income Tax Act, if shares are transferred for a consideration less than FMV and the shortfall exceeds Rs 50,000; (2) under FEMA regulations, transfers involving NRIs or foreign nationals must be at fair value determined by a SEBI-registered merchant banker or a Chartered Accountant; (3) under Section 50CA, if unlisted shares are transferred below FMV, the FMV is deemed as full value of consideration for computing capital gains.
3. Can an NRI transfer shares in an Indian private company?
Yes, but FEMA regulations apply. An NRI can transfer shares to a resident Indian on the automatic route at a price not exceeding the fair value. Transfer from NRI to another NRI requires RBI approval. FC-TRS reporting to RBI through the AD bank is mandatory within 60 days of the transfer.
4. Can the board of a private company refuse to register a share transfer?
Yes. Under Section 58(2), if a private company’s Articles of Association contain restrictions on share transfer, the board may refuse to register the transfer. However, the board must send a notice of refusal with reasons within 30 days. The aggrieved party may appeal to the NCLT under Section 58(4).
5. What stamp duty is applicable on share transfer?
Under the Indian Stamp Act, 1899, stamp duty on transfer of shares is 25 paise for every Rs 100 or part thereof of the consideration or market value, whichever is higher. State-specific rates may vary. E-stamping is available through the SHCIL platform in most states.
6. What are the income tax implications of share transfer?
Key provisions: Section 50CA deems FMV as sale consideration if actual price is lower; Section 56(2)(x) taxes the shortfall in the buyer’s hands if it exceeds Rs 50,000. STCG (holding below 24 months for unlisted shares) is taxed at slab rates; LTCG at 12.5% without indexation (from FY 2024-25). TDS under Section 195 applies if the seller is a non-resident.
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