BIG NEWS for MCA Raises Small Company Threshold
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BIG NEWS for India’s Small Companies: Thresholds: Paid-up Capital to INR 10 Cr & Turnover to INR 100 Cr
The Companies (Specification of Definition Details) Rules were earlier amended in 2022. This 2025 amendment aims to align compliance thresholds with current economic realities and support India’s business ecosystem by easing statutory obligations on growing enterprises.
The Ministry of Corporate Affairs has officially notified major amendments to the Companies (Specification of Definition Details) Rules, 2014, through G.S.R. 880(E). These updates significantly expand the financial limits for classifying a company as a small company, a move aimed at reducing compliance burden and supporting startups, MSMEs, and growing private companies. The Ministry of Corporate Affairs has officially expanded the definition of a small company, delivering a major boost to India’s startup and MSME ecosystem. This move significantly reduces compliance burden and operational cost for thousands of companies. Effective from 1 December 2025
New Small Company Definition (From Dec 1, 2025)
New Small Company Thresholds : A company will now qualify as a Small Company if it meets both of the following:
- Paid-up Capital: Up to INR 10 crore
- Turnover: Up to INR 100 crore
This replaces the earlier, lower limits and is aligned with Section 2(85) of the Companies Act, 2013. This expansion means that many more private companies will now qualify as “Small Companies” and enjoy a wide range of compliance relaxations. The government has been steadily expanding these limits:
| Year | Paid-up Capital Limit | Turnover Limit |
| Earlier (pre-2022) | INR 2 crore | INR 20 crore |
| 2022 Amendment | INR 4 crore | INR 40 crore |
| 2025 Amendment | INR 10 crore | INR 100 crore |
This is the third upward revision in less than a decade, showing the government’s intent to reduce compliance burden and promote entrepreneurship. A CFO of a listed company commented that small companies typically face lighter, notice-based compliance action, offering a more founder-friendly regime.
Key Benefits & Relaxations for Small Companies:
Basic Key Compliance Relaxations for Small Companies: Eligible companies can now access the following major advantages: relaxed reporting & audit requirements.
- CARO not applicable
- No Internal Financial Controls (IFC) reporting by auditors
- No mandatory auditor rotation
- Cash Flow Statement not required in financial statements
Simplified Compliance
- Fast-track mergers allowed between small companies (Section 233)
- Abridged Board’s Report format permitted
- Annual Return can be signed by a Director (if no Company Secretary)
- Most e-forms don’t require professional certification
- Only 2 Board Meetings per year, spaced 90 days apart
Reduced Costs & Penalties
- Lower penalties — capped at 50% under Section 446B
- No need for share dematerialisation (exempt under Rule 9A)
Eligible companies enjoy several benefits, including
- No applicability of CARO
- No Internal Financial Controls (IFC) reporting
- No auditor rotation requirements
- No requirement for Cash Flow Statements
- Abridged Board’s Report allowed
- Annual Return can be signed by a Director (if no CS)
- Only 2 Board Meetings per year (minimum gap 90 days)
- Lower penalties under Section 446B (50% reduced)
- Eligibility for fast-track mergers under Section 233
- No dematerialisation of shares required (Rule 9A exemption)
- Most e-forms do not require professional certification
How This Benefits Startups
These relaxations substantially reduce compliance load and operational expenses for small companies. This update is a game-changer for the MSME sector. It simplifies corporate life, reduces compliance expenses, and makes running a private company more founder friendly. More companies can now focus on growth instead of paperwork. According to industry experts, the revised thresholds will bring thousands of additional companies under the Small Company category, offering them simplified compliance requirements and reduced statutory costs.
Experts estimate that thousands of startups, especially those in Series A & Series B stages, will now fall under the Small Company definition. This makes compliance Simpler, Cheaper, Less time-consuming. According to industry leaders The expanded limits give founders more breathing room to focus on growth, not paperwork. Companies nearing the INR 400 crore valuation stage can later designate compliance officers, but until then, the reduced burden helps conserve cost and resources.
The move is part of the Central Government’s broader initiative to enhance India’s Ease of Doing Business. Raising the small company thresholds to INR 10 crore capital and INR 100 crore turnover is a strategic step to support India’s startup ecosystem, MSMEs, and emerging enterprises by reducing statutory pressure and enabling sustainable growth.
