Published: March 20, 2026 | Updated: April 15, 2026 | By CA V. Viswanathan, FCA, ACS, CFE, IBBI RV

Increase Authorised Capital: EGM Resolution & ROC Filing Under Section 61

Key Definitions:
Authorised Capital — The maximum amount of share capital that a company is authorised to issue, as specified in the capital clause (Clause V) of the Memorandum of Association. Also called nominal capital or registered capital (Section 2(8)).
Paid-Up Capital — The aggregate amount of money paid by shareholders for shares issued. It can never exceed the authorised capital (Section 2(64)).
Issued Capital — The portion of authorised capital that has been offered to and subscribed by shareholders (Section 2(50)).
Subscribed Capital — The part of issued capital that shareholders have agreed to take up (Section 2(86)).
Form SH-7 — The prescribed form for notice to the ROC of alteration of share capital under Rule 15 of the Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules, 2014.

1. When Does a Company Need to Increase Authorised Capital?

Authorised capital must be increased before a company can issue new shares that would take the paid-up capital beyond the existing authorised limit. Common scenarios include:

At Virtual Auditor, we routinely advise startups to increase authorised capital before executing the share subscription agreement — not after. If you issue shares without sufficient authorised capital, the allotment is void, and the regulatory consequences are severe.

2. Statutory Framework — Section 61

Section 61 of the Companies Act, 2013 deals with the power of a limited company to alter its share capital. The relevant sub-sections are:

2.1 Section 61(1) — Powers of Alteration

A limited company having a share capital may, if so authorised by its Articles, alter its Memorandum in its general meeting to:

  1. Increase its authorised capital by such amount as it thinks fit by issuing new shares — Section 61(1)(a)
  2. Consolidate and divide all or any of its share capital into shares of larger amount — Section 61(1)(b)
  3. Convert all or any of its fully paid-up shares into stock, and reconvert stock into shares — Section 61(1)(c)
  4. Sub-divide its shares into shares of smaller amount — Section 61(1)(d)
  5. Cancel shares which have not been taken up by any person — Section 61(1)(e)

For the purpose of increasing authorised capital, we focus on Section 61(1)(a).

2.2 Pre-Condition: Articles Must Authorise

Section 61(1) begins with the words “if so authorised by its articles.” This means the Articles of Association must contain a clause permitting alteration of share capital. Table F of Schedule I to the Act (which applies to companies limited by shares if they have not adopted custom articles) contains this authorisation by default in Regulation 40. If your AoA does not contain such authorisation, you must first alter the AoA by special resolution under Section 14 before proceeding with the capital increase.

2.3 Type of Resolution Required

An ordinary resolution is sufficient for increasing authorised capital under Section 61(1)(a). This means a simple majority of members present and voting at the general meeting. There is no requirement for a special resolution (75% majority) unless the AoA specifically requires one.

3. Step-by-Step Procedure to Increase Authorised Capital

Here is the exact procedure we follow at Virtual Auditor:

Step Action Document Timeline
1 Check Articles of Association for authorisation to alter share capital AoA review Before convening the meeting
2 Hold a board meeting: approve the proposal to increase authorised capital, fix date/time/venue for EGM, approve EGM notice Board resolution, notice of EGM At least 21 clear days before EGM (7 days for shorter notice with consent)
3 Send EGM notice to all members, directors, and the auditor EGM notice with explanatory statement (Section 101, 102) 21 clear days before EGM (or shorter notice with consent of 95% members by value)
4 Hold the EGM: pass ordinary resolution for increase of authorised capital and consequent alteration of Clause V of MoA Minutes of EGM, ordinary resolution On the scheduled date
5 Pay stamp duty on the increased authorised capital E-stamp certificate / stamp paper Before or along with SH-7 filing
6 File Form SH-7 with the ROC SH-7, altered MoA, ordinary resolution, stamp duty proof Within 30 days of passing the resolution
7 Receive ROC approval and updated MCA master data SRN acknowledgement Typically 2–5 working days after filing
Expert Insight — CA V. Viswanathan (IBBI/RV/03/2019/12333): The most common error we see is startups issuing shares before increasing authorised capital. If your authorised capital is Rs 1 lakh (10,000 shares of Rs 10 each) and you need to allot 50,000 shares in a funding round, you must first increase authorised capital to at least Rs 6 lakh (or more, to accommodate future rounds and ESOP pools). We always plan for 2–3 rounds ahead — increasing authorised capital costs time and money, so it is better to do it once with sufficient headroom. Factor in convertible instruments (CCDs, CCPS) and ESOP pools when calculating the target authorised capital.

4. Board Meeting — Resolution and EGM Notice

4.1 Board Resolution

The board resolution at this stage covers three items:

  1. Approval of the proposal to increase authorised capital from Rs [existing] to Rs [proposed]
  2. Approval of the consequent amendment to Clause V of the Memorandum of Association
  3. Convening of an Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) and approval of the EGM notice and explanatory statement

For board resolution templates, refer to our Board Resolution Templates for Startup India guide.

4.2 Notice of EGM

Under Section 101, the notice must be sent to every member, every director, and the auditor of the company at least 21 clear days before the meeting. Under Section 101(1), shorter notice is permitted if consent is given by members holding at least 95% of the paid-up share capital (for a company having share capital). The notice must include:

5. EGM and the Ordinary Resolution

5.1 Quorum

Under Section 103(1)(b), the quorum for a general meeting of a private company is 2 members personally present. For a public company, it varies: 5 members for up to 1,000 members; 15 members for 1,001 to 5,000; 30 members for above 5,000.

5.2 Passing the Resolution

An ordinary resolution under Section 114(1) is passed by a simple majority — more than 50% of the votes cast by members present in person or by proxy. The resolution should specifically state:

5.3 Alternatives to a Physical EGM

Private companies have flexibility:

6. Form SH-7 — Filing with ROC

6.1 What is SH-7?

Form SH-7 is the notice to the Registrar of Companies regarding alteration of share capital, prescribed under Rule 15 of the Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules, 2014. It is filed on the MCA portal (V3).

6.2 SH-7 Contents

The form requires:

6.3 Attachments to SH-7

6.4 Filing Timeline

SH-7 must be filed within 30 days of passing the ordinary resolution. Late filing attracts additional fees as per the MCA fee schedule:

Delay Period Additional Fee Multiplier
Up to 30 days 2 times normal fee
31 to 60 days 4 times normal fee
61 to 90 days 6 times normal fee
91 to 180 days 10 times normal fee
Beyond 180 days 12 times normal fee

7. Government Fee for SH-7

The government fee for filing SH-7 is based on the amount of increase in authorised capital, as prescribed in the Companies (Registration Offices and Fees) Rules, 2014. The fee structure is:

Increase in Authorised Capital Government Fee
Up to Rs 1,00,000 Rs 5,000
Rs 1,00,001 to Rs 5,00,000 Rs 10,000
Rs 5,00,001 to Rs 25,00,000 Rs 15,000
Rs 25,00,001 to Rs 50,00,000 Rs 20,000
Rs 50,00,001 to Rs 1,00,00,000 Rs 25,000
Rs 1,00,00,001 to Rs 5,00,00,000 Rs 30,000
Above Rs 5,00,00,000 Rs 35,000 plus Rs 2,500 for every Rs 5,00,000 or part thereof above Rs 5,00,00,000

Example: A company increasing authorised capital from Rs 10 lakh to Rs 1 crore (increase of Rs 90 lakh) pays Rs 25,000 as government fee for SH-7.

8. Stamp Duty on Increase of Authorised Capital

Stamp duty is payable on the increase in authorised capital under the Indian Stamp Act, 1899 and respective state stamp legislation. The rate varies by state:

State Stamp Duty Rate Stamp Duty on Rs 90 Lakh Increase
Tamil Nadu 0.15% of increase Rs 13,500
Karnataka 0.1% of increase Rs 9,000
Maharashtra 0.1% (up to Rs 5 crore), 0.05% (above Rs 5 crore, max Rs 25 lakh) Rs 9,000
Delhi 0.15% of increase Rs 13,500
Gujarat 0.15% of increase (max Rs 25 lakh) Rs 13,500
Telangana 0.15% of increase Rs 13,500

The stamp duty is applicable based on the state of the registered office of the company. E-stamping is available in most states through the SHCIL platform. At Virtual Auditor, we handle stamp duty procurement for all states across India.

Expert Insight — CA V. Viswanathan: Stamp duty is the item most frequently missed in capital increase budgets. For a company registered in Tamil Nadu increasing authorised capital by Rs 10 crore, the stamp duty alone is Rs 1,50,000. Add the government fee, professional charges, and you are looking at Rs 2+ lakh in total cost. We always provide a complete cost estimate upfront — government fee, stamp duty, and our professional fee — so there are no surprises. Check our pricing page for standard rates.

9. Practical Scenarios and Worked Examples

9.1 Startup Raising Series A

Situation: A startup incorporated with Rs 1 lakh authorised capital (10,000 equity shares of Rs 10 each). The founders hold 10,000 shares (100% paid-up). A Series A investor is investing Rs 5 crore for 20% stake on a post-money basis. The investor will be allotted shares at a premium.

Calculation:

9.2 Company Creating an ESOP Pool

Situation: A company with Rs 10 lakh authorised capital (1,00,000 shares of Rs 10), fully paid up. The board wants to create an ESOP pool of 15,000 shares (15% of expanded capital).

Calculation:

10. Common Mistakes to Avoid

11. Reduction vs Increase — Key Distinction

While increase of authorised capital requires only an ordinary resolution and SH-7 filing, reduction of share capital is governed by Section 66 and requires:

This is a fundamentally different (and far more onerous) process. If you are merely cancelling unissued authorised capital (rather than reducing paid-up capital), Section 61(1)(e) permits cancellation by ordinary resolution without NCLT involvement.

12. How Virtual Auditor Helps

Our Company Secretary practice handles authorised capital increases end-to-end:

Our lead, CA V. Viswanathan (FCA, ACS, CFE, IBBI/RV/03/2019/12333), supervises every capital restructuring engagement. For companies registered under the Companies Act, 2013, we ensure full compliance with ICAI standards and SEBI regulations where applicable.

Book a free consultation | View pricing | Company registration services

AEO Summary — Increase Authorised Capital:

What: Authorised capital is the maximum share capital a company can issue, stated in Clause V of the Memorandum of Association. It must be increased before issuing new shares that would breach the existing limit.

How: Pass an ordinary resolution at an EGM under Section 61(1)(a) of the Companies Act, 2013. The Articles must authorise the alteration. File Form SH-7 with the ROC within 30 days, along with the altered MoA and proof of stamp duty payment.

Cost: Government fee ranges from Rs 5,000 (for increase up to Rs 1 lakh) to Rs 35,000+ (for increase above Rs 5 crore). Stamp duty varies by state — typically 0.1% to 0.15% of the increase amount. Late filing of SH-7 attracts additional fees up to 12 times the normal fee.

Timeline: Board meeting (Day 1) → EGM notice (21 clear days or shorter with 95% consent) → EGM and resolution (Day 22+) → SH-7 filing (within 30 days of resolution) → ROC approval (2-5 working days). Total: approximately 4–6 weeks for standard cases.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is authorised share capital?

Authorised share capital (also called nominal or registered capital) is the maximum amount of share capital that a company is authorised to issue, as stated in the capital clause of its Memorandum of Association. Under Section 2(8) of the Companies Act, 2013, it includes capital of such classes of shares as may be specified in the MoA. A company cannot issue shares beyond its authorised capital without first increasing it.

2. How to increase authorised capital of a company?

To increase authorised capital: (1) Hold a board meeting to approve the proposal and convene an EGM; (2) Pass an ordinary resolution at the EGM approving the increase; (3) Alter the capital clause of the Memorandum of Association; (4) File Form SH-7 with the ROC within 30 days of passing the resolution, along with the altered MoA and the ordinary resolution. Government fee and stamp duty on the increased capital must be paid.

3. What is the government fee for increasing authorised capital?

The government fee for SH-7 filing is based on the increase in authorised capital, as per the Companies (Registration Offices and Fees) Rules, 2014. It ranges from Rs 5,000 (for increase up to Rs 1 lakh) to Rs 35,000 plus Rs 2,500 for every Rs 5 lakh or part thereof above Rs 5 crore.

4. Is stamp duty payable on increase of authorised capital?

Yes. Stamp duty is payable on the increase in authorised capital under the Indian Stamp Act, 1899 and the respective state stamp act. The rate varies by state — for example, 0.15% in Tamil Nadu, 0.1% in Karnataka, and 0.1% in Maharashtra (up to Rs 5 crore). E-stamping is available in most states.

5. Can authorised capital be increased without holding a physical EGM?

Yes. Private companies can pass the ordinary resolution through a video conference-based EGM, by postal ballot under Section 110, or by resolution by circulation under Section 175 (for companies with up to 200 members), provided the requisite majority is obtained.

6. What is the difference between authorised capital and paid-up capital?

Authorised capital is the maximum share capital a company is allowed to issue as per its MoA. Paid-up capital is the portion of authorised capital that has actually been issued to shareholders and for which payment has been received. Paid-up capital can never exceed authorised capital.

7. What is the timeline for filing SH-7 with ROC?

Form SH-7 must be filed with the ROC within 30 days of passing the ordinary resolution. Late filing attracts additional fees ranging from 2x (up to 30 days delay) to 12x (beyond 180 days) the normal filing fee on the MCA portal.

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