Conversion of Private
into Public
Limited Company
Convert your Private Limited Company into a Public Limited Company — to raise funds from the public, prepare for an IPO, list on NSE/BSE, or meet institutional investor requirements. CA/CS-managed special resolution, MOA/AOA amendment, and MGT-14 + INC-27 filing on MCA V3.
Why Convert a Private Limited into a Public Limited Company?
A Private Limited Company is designed for a closed group of shareholders — it restricts free transfer of shares, limits membership to 200, and cannot invite the public to subscribe to its shares or debentures. These restrictions, while appropriate for early-stage businesses, become barriers when a company is ready to tap public capital markets, list on a stock exchange, or meet large institutional investor requirements.
Conversion to a Public Limited Company removes all private restrictions — allowing the company to raise funds from the general public through an IPO, issue shares freely to a larger investor base, and eventually list on NSE or BSE. Companies also convert to satisfy PE/FII investment conditions, qualify for certain government tenders reserved for public companies, or offer stock options to employees through an exchange-listed ESOP structure.
The conversion is governed by Sections 14 and 18 of the Companies Act, 2013. It requires a special resolution, amendment of MOA and AOA, and filing of Form MGT-14 followed by Form INC-27 with the Registrar of Companies on MCA V3.
Conversion ≠ IPO — But It Is the Mandatory First Step Towards One
Converting to a Public Limited Company does not mean your shares are immediately listed on NSE or BSE. Listing is a separate SEBI-regulated process (DRHP filing, merchant banker appointment, public issue, allotment). However, being a Public Limited Company is a mandatory pre-condition for any IPO or stock exchange listing. TaxClue handles the conversion; our network includes SEBI-registered bankers and DRHP consultants for the next phase.
Private Limited vs Public Limited — What Changes After Conversion
The conversion brings significant structural and compliance changes. Understanding these upfront helps companies prepare for the increased regulatory framework that applies to Public Limited Companies.
- Maximum 200 shareholders — closed group only
- Cannot invite public to subscribe to shares or debentures
- Share transfer restricted — right of pre-emption in AOA
- Minimum 2 directors and 2 shareholders only
- Independent directors not mandatory for most private companies
- Lower annual compliance — no mandatory board committees
- Cannot issue a public prospectus
- Cannot list on NSE / BSE stock exchange
- Unlimited shareholders — open to the general public
- Can raise funds from public via IPO or rights issue
- Shares freely transferable — no pre-emption restrictions
- Minimum 7 shareholders and 3 directors required
- Independent directors mandatory once exchange-listed
- Higher compliance — board committees, secretarial audit
- Can issue a public prospectus and NCD prospectus
- Can apply for NSE SME / BSE Mainboard listing
Full Comparison — Private vs Public Limited Company
| Aspect | Private Limited | Public Limited (After Conversion) |
|---|---|---|
| Company Name | ABC Private Limited | ABC Limited — "Private" removed |
| Minimum Shareholders | 2 | 7 shareholders required |
| Maximum Shareholders | 200 | Unlimited |
| Minimum Directors | 2 | 3 directors required |
| Minimum Paid-up Capital | ₹1 Lakh | ₹5 Lakhs |
| Share Transferability | Restricted — pre-emption rights apply | Freely transferable |
| Public Share Issuance | Not permitted | Permitted via prospectus / IPO |
| Stock Exchange Listing | Not permitted | Can list on NSE / BSE |
| Board Meetings | Min. 4 per year | Min. 4 per year + stricter notice rules |
| Annual General Meeting | Mandatory — anywhere in India | Mandatory — only in city of registered office |
| Secretarial Audit | Optional for most private companies | Mandatory above prescribed size |
| SEBI Regulations | Not applicable (unlisted) | Applicable once listed |
| Annual Report | Filed with ROC | Must be sent to all shareholders |
| CIN Change | Contains 'C' (Private) | Contains 'L' (Public) — ROC reissues CIN |
What Your Company Needs Before Filing Conversion
Unlike OPC conversion, there is no prescribed minimum age or turnover threshold to convert from Private to Public. Any Private Limited Company that can meet the structural requirements of a Public Limited Company and pass the special resolution can apply. However, the following pre-conditions must be met before filing MGT-14 and INC-27.
✅ Pre-Conditions — All Must Be Met Before Filing
Only 2–4 Shareholders Currently? Allot Shares as Part of Conversion
Most Private Limited Companies converting to Public have fewer than 7 shareholders. New shares can be allotted to additional persons as part of the conversion — through a private placement or rights issue — to meet the 7-shareholder minimum. This also brings in fresh capital to meet the ₹5 Lakh paid-up requirement if needed. TaxClue manages share allotment (PAS-3 filing) alongside the conversion as a combined engagement, so both milestones are reached simultaneously.
How TaxClue Handles Private → Public Conversion
-
1
Free Assessment — Structure & Compliance Review
TaxClue reviews your company's shareholder count, director composition, paid-up capital, pending filings, and conversion reason. We identify what needs to be done before the EGM can be convened — share allotments, director appointment, pending filing clearance — and give you a complete action plan with timeline.
-
2
Clear All Pending Compliances
All pending AOC-4 and MGT-7 filings are cleared. Pending ITRs and GST returns are filed. TaxClue verifies MCA master data to confirm no ROC notices, disqualifications, or pending charges that would block the conversion application.
-
3
Appoint Third Director (if needed)
If only 2 directors exist, a third is appointed via board resolution. TaxClue collects DIN and KYC of the new director, prepares the appointment resolution, and files Form DIR-12 — ensuring the board meets the 3-director minimum for Public Limited Companies before the EGM is held.
-
4
Allot / Transfer Shares to Reach 7 Shareholders
New shares are allotted (via private placement board resolution) or existing shares partially transferred to reach a minimum of 7 shareholders. TaxClue prepares PAS-3 (allotment return) or SH-4 (share transfer forms), updates the register of members, and issues share certificates to new shareholders.
-
5
Draft Amended MOA & AOA
TaxClue's CS drafts the amended Memorandum of Association removing "Private" from the name clause and deleting the private company restrictions, and the new Articles of Association for a Public Limited Company — incorporating free share transferability, unlimited membership, and public subscription provisions. All changes are reviewed for Companies Act compliance.
-
6
Send EGM Notice — Minimum 21 Clear Days
An EGM notice with agenda, explanatory statement (Section 102), and proposed special resolution text is sent to all shareholders — minimum 21 clear days before the EGM date. TaxClue drafts the notice, explanatory statement, and proxy form. The EGM can be held physically, through video conferencing, or other audiovisual means as permitted by MCA.
-
7
Hold EGM & Pass Special Resolution
At the EGM, the special resolution for conversion — approving the change from Private to Public, amendment of MOA, and adoption of new AOA — is put to vote. A ¾ majority is required (special resolution threshold). TaxClue prepares the minutes, attendance sheet, and certified copies of the resolution for immediate use in MGT-14 filing.
-
8
File MGT-14 Within 30 Days of Special Resolution
Form MGT-14 is filed on MCA V3 within 30 days of the EGM — reporting the special resolution for MOA/AOA amendment to ROC. Attachments include the certified special resolution, amended MOA, and amended AOA. Late filing beyond 30 days attracts an escalating additional fee. TaxClue files MGT-14 promptly — typically within 2–3 working days of the EGM.
-
9
File INC-27 — Conversion Application
Form INC-27 is the formal conversion application filed after MGT-14. It notifies ROC of the company's intent to convert from Private to Public and triggers the ROC's review process. Attached with the amended MOA, AOA, list of minimum 7 members, list of 3 directors, director declaration, and latest audited financials. Signed with DSC of the managing director.
-
10
ROC Issues New Certificate of Incorporation
ROC reviews INC-27 and all attachments. If satisfied, ROC issues a new Certificate of Incorporation with the company's name ending in "Limited" instead of "Private Limited" and a new CIN with 'L' in the company type position. TaxClue delivers the certificate and assists with all post-conversion updates — PAN, GST, bank accounts, trade licences, and agreements.
TaxClue Manages Every Workstream — One Engagement
Private to Public conversion involves multiple parallel workstreams: director appointment, share allotment, MOA/AOA drafting, EGM convening, MGT-14 filing, and INC-27 application. TaxClue co-ordinates all of these through a single engagement — one CA for compliance, one CS for secretarial work — with regular updates and a target timeline of 2–4 months to new Certificate of Incorporation.
Post-Conversion Compliance for a Public Limited Company
Once converted, a Public Limited Company faces a significantly higher compliance burden — even before listing on any stock exchange. Being prepared for this upfront is important. TaxClue provides ongoing annual compliance support post-conversion.
Post-Conversion Name Updates Are Legally Required
Once the ROC issues the new Certificate of Incorporation, the company's name legally changes from "ABC Private Limited" to "ABC Limited". All letterheads, invoices, contracts, websites, GST registration, bank accounts, and regulatory licences must be updated within a reasonable time. Continuing to use the old name constitutes a legal misrepresentation. TaxClue provides a post-conversion update checklist and assists with PAN name change, GST amendment, and bank communication.
Documents Checklist — MGT-14 & INC-27
Two MCA filings are required — MGT-14 (within 30 days of special resolution) and INC-27 (conversion application). TaxClue prepares and checks all documents before submission.
📋 For MGT-14 — Special Resolution Filing
📋 For INC-27 — Conversion Application
Private to Public Conversion — Common Questions
No — the Companies Act, 2013 does not prescribe any minimum age, turnover, or profit record for a Private Limited Company to convert to a Public Limited Company. The conversion is available to any company that can meet the structural requirements (7 shareholders, 3 directors, ₹5 Lakh paid-up capital) and pass the special resolution. However, as a practical matter, SEBI's IPO eligibility criteria do require a track record — so companies typically convert well before they plan to go public.
Section 2(68) of the Companies Act defines a Private Limited Company by three AOA restrictions: (i) restriction on share transfer — right of pre-emption where existing shareholders get first right to purchase any shares being sold; (ii) limitation of members to 200; and (iii) prohibition on public invitation to subscribe to shares or debentures. All three must be deleted from the AOA. The amended AOA must also reflect the public company governance provisions — free transferability of shares, unlimited membership, and the right to issue a public prospectus.
The CIN (Corporate Identity Number) partially changes — the fourth character, which denotes company type, changes from 'C' (Private) to 'L' (Public/Listed). The state code, year of incorporation, activity code, and sequence number in the CIN remain unchanged. ROC issues a new Certificate of Incorporation reflecting the updated CIN. The company's entire filing history, charges, and legal identity remain the same — only the type classification changes. This updated CIN must be used on all letterheads, invoices, and official documents after conversion.
MGT-14 is a general e-form used to file any special resolution or agreement with the ROC — it must be filed within 30 days of any special resolution. In conversion, MGT-14 reports the special resolution for MOA/AOA amendment. INC-27 is the specific conversion application form — it formally notifies ROC that the company is applying to convert from Private to Public and carries all the structural information (7 members, 3 directors, amended MOA/AOA). MGT-14 records the shareholders' decision; INC-27 initiates the ROC's conversion process. Both are mandatory and sequential — MGT-14 first, then INC-27.
Yes — but it requires NCLT (National Company Law Tribunal) approval in addition to a special resolution of shareholders. Unlike the Private → Public direction (which only needs ROC filing), Public → Private conversion involves judicial oversight because it potentially affects the rights of public shareholders and creditors. The company must file a petition before NCLT, publish a public notice, and give creditors / shareholders an opportunity to object. The NCLT may impose conditions before granting approval. TaxClue handles NCLT conversion petitions as well.
Conversion to a Public Limited Company is the first step — after receiving the new Certificate of Incorporation, the company must: appoint a SEBI-registered merchant banker (BRLM), prepare a Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP), file it with SEBI for approval (SEBI typically takes 30–75 days), receive SEBI observations, apply for stock exchange listing approval, open the public issue, allot shares, and list. The minimum realistic timeline from conversion to actual listing is 12–18 months. Many companies complete the conversion 1–2 years before their planned IPO to allow time to build a public company governance track record.
Yes — Section 2(71) of the Companies Act, 2013 requires a Public Limited Company to have a minimum paid-up capital of ₹5 Lakhs. If the converting company's current paid-up capital is less than ₹5 Lakhs, shares must be allotted to increase it to the minimum before or as part of the conversion. This allotment also helps in meeting the 7-shareholder requirement. TaxClue structures the allotment (Form PAS-3) alongside the conversion to meet both requirements simultaneously and cost-efficiently.
Private → Public Conversion Done Right
TaxClue's CA/CS team manages the complete Private to Public Limited conversion — EGM, MOA/AOA amendment, MGT-14, INC-27, share allotment, director appointment, and post-conversion regulatory updates.
🔒 Confidential · 4.9★ Google Rating · No Hidden Charges · CA / CS Assisted