The Lok Sabha has officially passed the Finance Bill, 2026, introducing landmark changes to the taxation of share buybacks. If you are a Company Promoter or a High-Net-Worth Investor, this amendment directly impacts your financial planning.
🔍 What Has Changed?
The government has introduced a 12% surcharge on the Additional Income Tax payable by promoters during share buybacks. This is part of the broader shift under the Income-tax Act, 2025, which now treats buyback proceeds as Capital Gains.
💡 Key Highlights of the Amendment
- Targeted at Promoters: The surcharge applies strictly to promoters, ensuring fair tax contribution from those with significant corporate control.
- Section 69 Clarification: The surcharge is levied only on Additional Income Tax calculated under Section 69(2)(b).
- Effective Tax Rates:
- ~30% for individual promoters
- ~22% for corporate promoters
- Relief for Retail Investors: Non-promoter shareholders are exempt from the flat surcharge. They continue under normal slab-based surcharge rates (0%, 10%, 15%).
- Scope Limitation: The surcharge applies only to buybacks executed under Section 68 of the Companies Act, 2013.
⚖️ Why This Matters
Historically, buybacks were used as a tax-efficient alternative to dividends. The 2026 Bill levels the field:
- Retail investors benefit from a simpler “Income minus Cost” model.
- Promoters face a higher “Additional Tax” to prevent misuse of buyback routes.
📌 The Takeaway
While promoters will bear a heavier tax burden, the amendment provides clarity, reduces litigation risks, and enables better financial planning ahead of the new fiscal year starting April 1, 2026.
