The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 represents the most consequential overhaul of India’s merger and restructuring framework since the Companies Act, 2013 came into force, and M&A lawyers India-wide are already re-evaluating live deals. The Bill amends Sections 230–233 of the Companies Act, recalibrates shareholder-approval thresholds for schemes of arrangement, revises buyback limits and solvency conditions, and consolidates NCLT bench jurisdiction for merger applications (PRS India). For general counsel, PE sponsors and transaction teams structuring deals in 2026, these changes alter the calculus on route selection, timeline assumptions, minority-protection drafting and PE exit mechanics. This guide provides the practical checklists, comparison tables and drafting notes that deal teams need right now.
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 targets the core Companies Act provisions that govern M&A structuring in India. Understanding exactly which sections are affected, and how the textual changes translate into deal-level consequences, is the essential first step for counsel advising on transactions in the current cycle.
The Bill introduces targeted amendments to the scheme-of-arrangement and merger provisions of the Companies Act, 2013:
The Bill aligns the Limited Liability Partnership Act with the Companies Act merger framework by introducing a dedicated chapter on LLP mergers and conversions. For deal teams, the practical implication is that capital restructuring India transactions involving mid-market carve-outs and conversion of LLPs into companies (or vice versa) now have a clearer statutory pathway, reducing reliance on ad hoc NCLT directions. Industry observers expect this to make LLP-to-company conversions a more attractive pre-IPO restructuring tool.
The buyback rules 2026 amendments introduce three material changes. First, the Bill mandates a director-signed solvency statement, confirming that the company can meet its debts as they fall due for a period of at least 12 months following the buyback. Second, the buyback ceiling is now pegged to free reserves calculated on a stand-alone basis, closing a structuring gap that permitted groups to rely on consolidated reserves (EY India). Third, listed companies undertaking a buyback must now disclose a detailed use-of-funds statement alongside the board resolution, specifying why the buyback is preferred over dividends or capital investment.
For PE exits India 2026, the tightened rules mean sponsors relying on buyback-funded exits will need to front-load solvency analysis far earlier in the deal timeline.
The consolidation of NCLT benches for merger hearings is among the most operationally significant changes for M&A lawyers India deal teams face in 2026. Under the revised framework, the earlier requirement of parallel filings before multiple benches is replaced by a single-bench regime, altering jurisdiction strategy and hearing timelines.
Under the pre-amendment framework, both the transferor company and the transferee company were required to file scheme petitions before the NCLT bench having jurisdiction over their respective registered offices. Where the transferor and transferee were in different jurisdictions, say, Mumbai and Chennai, this meant parallel proceedings, separate hearings and potential inconsistencies in direction. The Bill now designates the NCLT bench at the registered office of the transferee company as the single competent bench for the entire scheme application (MCA Bill text). The transferor company is required only to file a certified copy of its board resolution and a statement of its registered office, with the primary petition proceeding before the transferee’s bench.
Early indications suggest the single-bench regime will compress timelines for straightforward intra-group mergers. Under the dual-filing system, coordinating hearing dates across two benches typically added four to eight weeks to the process. With a single filing, industry observers anticipate that uncontested schemes could receive admission orders within three to four weeks of filing and final orders within 12 to 16 weeks, roughly two months faster than the previous median. However, for contested schemes where the transferor’s creditors are in a different jurisdiction, the practical effect on timing remains uncertain as the NCLT may still need to issue notices and convene meetings across jurisdictions.
The shift to a single transferee-bench model has direct implications for deal structuring. Where the parties have flexibility in designating the transferee, for instance, in a merger of equals, the choice of which entity becomes the transferee (and therefore which NCLT bench hears the matter) becomes a strategic variable. Key considerations include:
| Document / Form | Filed by | Deadline / Trigger |
|---|---|---|
| Scheme petition (NCLT Form No. 6 equivalent) | Transferee company | Within 30 days of board approval |
| Certified board resolution + registered-office statement | Transferor company | Filed concurrently with transferee’s petition |
| Registered valuer’s report | Transferee company | Annexed to petition at filing |
| Sectoral compliance certificate | Both companies | Annexed to petition at filing |
| Notice to creditors and members (NCLT-directed) | Transferee company | As directed in admission order (typically 21–30 days) |
| Affidavit of compliance post-scheme | Both companies | Within 30 days of final order |
The 2026 amendments reshape the decision tree for M&A lawyers India practitioners use when advising clients on the optimal merger or restructuring route. The expansion of fast-track eligibility, combined with revised scheme-of-arrangement thresholds, means that a wider set of transactions can now bypass the full Section 230 NCLT process.
| Route | When to Use (Typical Deal / Condition) | Key Approvals and Timeline (Post-Bill) |
|---|---|---|
| Fast-track merger / amalgamation (Section 233) | Intra-group reorganisations, wholly owned subsidiary mergers, small companies and DPIIT-registered start-ups below the notified net-worth threshold | Reduced meeting requirements; no NCLT-convened creditor/member meetings if no objections; single NCLT bench of transferee; typical 6–10 weeks |
| Scheme of arrangement (Section 230 route) | Complex third-party mergers, cross-class compromises, deals involving listed-company demergers or creditor write-downs | NCLT-convened creditor and member meetings; 30-day minority objection window; registered valuer’s report mandatory; typical 4–6 months |
| Slump sale / asset transfer | Asset carve-outs, business-division sales, acquisition of identified undertakings without entity-level merger | Board and shareholder approvals (special resolution if material); possible sectoral consents (RBI, SEBI); no NCLT filing; timeline 4–12 weeks depending on consents |
The revised scheme-of-arrangement thresholds directly affect minority-shareholder dynamics. Under the pre-amendment regime, a scheme could be approved if members holding 75 % in value voted in favour. The Bill now adds a majority-in-number requirement, meaning that a small number of large shareholders can no longer unilaterally push through a scheme over the objections of a numerically significant minority (PRS India). For deal teams, this changes the economics of shareholder engagement: acquirers must now canvass not just value-weighted support but also headcount-weighted consent, making pre-scheme shareholder mapping and outreach a critical workstream.
Additionally, the new 30-day objection window gives dissenting minorities a formal procedural mechanism to raise concerns before the NCLT, increasing the risk of contested hearings for schemes that lack broad consensus.
The choice of merger route should drive the scope and focus of M&A due diligence India teams undertake:
For PE sponsors and their counsel, the buyback rules 2026 amendments and capital-restructuring changes introduced by the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 carry immediate deal-structuring consequences. These provisions reshape the mechanics, and risk profile, of the most common PE exit routes in India.
The Bill introduces a layered compliance framework for buybacks:
PE exits India 2026 transactions now require careful route selection. A buyback remains the most tax-efficient exit route in many structures (distributions from buyback by unlisted companies are not currently subject to dividend distribution tax, though capital-gains tax applies to the selling shareholder). However, the solvency-statement requirement and stand-alone reserves test mean that a buyback exit is viable only where the portfolio company has sufficient stand-alone free reserves and can certify solvency for 12 months, a constraint that may disqualify leveraged businesses or those with seasonal cash-flow profiles.
A secondary share sale to a strategic buyer avoids the buyback constraints entirely but exposes the seller to negotiated representations and warranties, potential earnouts and buyer-side conditions. A scheme-of-arrangement-based exit (e.g., a demerger followed by sale of the demerged entity) remains the most flexible tool for complex multi-asset exits but triggers the full Section 230 process, including the revised voting thresholds and the 30-day objection window. The likely practical effect will be that PE sponsors increasingly pre-clear the buyback solvency analysis at the investment stage, building solvency-certification covenants into shareholder agreements from day one.
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 does not operate in isolation. M&A due diligence India teams must now cross-reference the Bill’s changes against the existing approval requirements from tax authorities, the Competition Commission of India (CCI), and sectoral regulators to ensure that deal timelines and condition-precedent drafting remain aligned.
The Bill does not amend the Competition Act, 2002, but it changes the upstream deal timeline in ways that affect CCI filing strategy. Because the single-bench NCLT regime is expected to compress scheme timelines by four to eight weeks, deal teams may find that the CCI combination-filing review period (the standard 210-day outer limit under the Competition Act) now represents the longest leg of the approval chain rather than the NCLT process. In practice, this means that for transactions triggering CCI thresholds, filing the combination notice simultaneously with (or even before) the NCLT petition is becoming the preferred approach.
Where a deal falls below the CCI thresholds, a short-form self-assessment memo should still be prepared and kept on file as a compliance safeguard.
For schemes of arrangement, the Income Tax Act’s provisions on tax-neutral mergers (Sections 47 and 2(1B)) continue to apply, provided the prescribed conditions, including issuance of shares by the transferee and continuity of business, are met. The Bill does not alter these tax provisions directly, but the expanded fast-track eligibility creates an indirect tax issue: fast-track mergers that do not follow the full NCLT scheme process may not satisfy the “sanctioned by a court” requirement that some tax rulings have historically relied upon for Section 47 exemptions. Industry observers expect the Central Board of Direct Taxes to issue a clarificatory circular, but until that guidance is issued, counsel should build contingency language into deal documentation.
Stamp-duty implications vary by state; deal teams should confirm whether the relevant state has adopted the Indian Stamp Act amendments that treat NCLT-sanctioned mergers as exempt instruments.
The following step-by-step framework translates the 2026 amendments into an actionable workflow for M&A lawyers India transaction teams can adopt immediately.
Checklist note: Deal teams should prepare a consolidated one-page compliance checklist covering pre-filing, hearing, post-order and ongoing obligations. This checklist should be customised by transaction type (fast-track, Section 230, buyback) and updated each time the MCA issues new rules or notifications under the Bill.
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 demands immediate action from every practitioner advising on Indian M&A. Deal teams should audit live transactions against the revised thresholds, re-assess route selection for pending restructurings, update template resolutions and shareholder agreements, and build solvency-analysis workstreams into PE exit timelines. For counsel requiring specialist guidance on merger structuring, NCLT filings, buyback compliance or competition-screening strategy, the Global Law Experts lawyer directory connects you with experienced M&A lawyers India across all major jurisdictions. The window for proactive compliance is now, waiting for the MCA to notify commencement dates without preparing documentation in advance will place deals at a competitive and procedural disadvantage.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Abhishek Singh Baghel at DSK Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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