Chapter ISections 1-2Act + Rules + Cases

Preliminary
The interpretation engine

The statutory text is shown first, followed by a simple decode, practical application and the related rule. This structure is carried chapter by chapter.

96 section 2 entries25 current rule entriesLayer RulesReviewed through 26 June 2026
Chapter method

How every Companies Act chapter will be presented

1. Bare Act and rule text first

The operative section, proviso, explanation and current rule requirement appear before interpretation.

2. Simple decode

Technical language is translated into a short compliance conclusion.

3. Practical application

Major provisions carry examples, evidence requirements and decision points.

4. Exceptions and highlights

Exemptions, thresholds, commencement dates and cross-law differences are separated.

5. Finin2min summary

A portable inline flowchart works in the standalone HTML, ZIP and PDF.

6. Exam and professional cases

Cases are framed for CA, CS, finance, legal and compliance users.

Bare Act + decode

Section 1 - para by para

Section 1(1)
This Act may be called the Companies Act, 2013.
Simple meaning: Identifies the statute.
Practical example: Use the 2013 Act citation in resolutions, notices and legal opinions rather than the former 1956 Act unless a saving provision applies.
Section 1(2)
It extends to the whole of India.
Simple meaning: The Act has nationwide territorial reach.
Practical example: A company registered in any State or Union Territory is governed by the central Act, subject to sector and special-law overlays.
Section 1(3)
This section came into force at once; the remaining provisions came into force on dates appointed by Central Government notification, and different dates could be appointed for different provisions.
Simple meaning: Commencement is provision-specific.
Practical example: Before applying an amendment or section to a historical period, check the effective date rather than only the current wording.
Section 1(4)(a)
The Act applies to companies incorporated under the 2013 Act or any previous company law.
Simple meaning: Legacy companies remain governed by the current Act.
Practical example: A company incorporated under the Companies Act, 1956 need not be reincorporated; it is treated as a company under the 2013 Act.
Section 1(4)(b)-(e)
Insurance, banking, electricity and companies governed by special Acts are covered except where the Companies Act provision is inconsistent with the specified sector law.
Simple meaning: Sector law can prevail for an inconsistent matter.
Practical example: For an insurance company, first identify whether the issue is governed differently by insurance legislation or IRDAI requirements.
Section 1(4)(f)
The Central Government may notify other statutory bodies corporate as subject to the Act with specified exceptions, modifications or adaptations.
Simple meaning: Application can be extended by notification.
Practical example: A statutory corporation is not automatically governed in every respect; the enabling notification must be read.
Full statutory dictionary

Section 2 - clause by clause

The complete current clause is placed before the plain-language explanation. Major classifications include an applied example.

Section 2(1)

Abridged prospectus

Securities & fundraising
(1) “abridged prospectus” means a memorandum containing such salient features of a prospectus as may be specified by the Securities and Exchange Board by making regulations in this behalf;
Simple meaning: A concise memorandum containing the prospectus features specified by SEBI.
Section 2(2)

Accounting standards

Reporting
(2) “accounting standards” means the standards of accounting or any addendum thereto for companies or class of companies referred to in section 133;
Simple meaning: Accounting standards and addenda prescribed for companies under section 133.
Section 2(3)

Alter / alteration

Interpretation
(3) “alter” or “alteration” includes the making of additions, omissions and substitutions;
Simple meaning: Includes additions, omissions and substitutions.
Section 2(4)

Appellate Tribunal

Institutions
(4) “Appellate Tribunal” means the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal constituted under section 410;
Simple meaning: The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal constituted under section 410.
Section 2(5)

Articles

Constitutional documents
(5) “articles” means the articles of association of a company as originally framed or as altered from time to time or applied in pursuance of any previous company law or of this Act;
Simple meaning: The company's articles of association, as originally framed, altered or applied under company law.
Section 2(6)

Associate company

Group structure
(6) “associate company”, in relation to another company, means a company in which that other company has a significant influence, but which is not a subsidiary company of the company having such influence and includes a joint venture company. Explanation.—For the purpose of this clause,— (a) the expression “significant influence” means control of at least twenty per cent. of total voting power, or control of or participation in business decisions under an agreement; (b) the expression “joint venture” means a joint arrangement whereby the parties that have joint control of the arrangement have rights to the net assets of the arrangement;
Simple meaning: A non-subsidiary over which another company has significant influence; includes a joint venture. Significant influence generally means at least 20% of total voting power or contractual participation/control in business decisions.
Example: A company holding 22% of total voting power and participating in operating-policy decisions will ordinarily be an associate unless subsidiary control exists.
Section 2(7)

Auditing standards

Audit
(7) “auditing standards” means the standards of auditing or any addendum thereto for companies or class of companies referred to in sub-section (10) of section 143;
Simple meaning: Auditing standards and addenda referred to in section 143(10).
Section 2(8)

Authorised / nominal capital

Capital
(8) “authorised capital” or “nominal capital” means such capital as is authorised by the memorandum of a company to be the maximum amount of share capital of the company;
Simple meaning: The maximum share capital authorised by the memorandum.
Section 2(9)

Banking company

Regulated entities
(9) “banking company” means a banking company as defined in clause (c) of section 5 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 (10 of 1949);
Simple meaning: A banking company within section 5(c) of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.
Section 2(10)

Board of Directors / Board

Governance
(10) “Board of Directors” or “Board”, in relation to a company, means the collective body of the directors of the company;
Simple meaning: The collective body of the company's directors.
Section 2(11)

Body corporate / corporation

Entities
(11) “body corporate” or “corporation” includes a company incorporated outside India, but does not include— (i) a co-operative society registered under any law relating to co-operative societies; and (ii) any other body corporate (not being a company as defined in this Act), which the Central Government may, by notification, specify in this behalf;
Simple meaning: Includes a foreign company, but excludes co-operative societies and notified exclusions.
Section 2(12)

Book and paper / book or paper

Records
(12) “book and paper” and “book or paper” include books of account, deeds, vouchers, writings, documents, minutes and registers maintained on paper or in electronic form;
Simple meaning: Includes accounts, deeds, vouchers, documents, minutes and registers maintained physically or electronically.
Section 2(13)

Books of account

Records
(13) “books of account” includes records maintained in respect of— 1. The Explanation subs. by Act 1 of 2018, s. 2 (w.e.f. 7-5-2018). (i) all sums of money received and expended by a company and matters in relation to which the receipts and expenditure take place; (ii) all sales and purchases of goods and services by the company; (iii) the assets and liabilities of the company; and (iv) the items of cost as may be prescribed under section 148 in the case of a company which belongs to any class of companies specified under that section;
Simple meaning: Records of receipts and expenditure, sales and purchases, assets and liabilities, and prescribed cost items.
Section 2(14)

Branch office

Entities
(14) “branch office”, in relation to a company, means any establishment described as such by the company;
Simple meaning: An establishment described by the company as its branch office.
Section 2(15)

Called-up capital

Capital
(15) “called-up capital” means such part of the capital, which has been called for payment;
Simple meaning: The part of subscribed capital called for payment.
Section 2(16)

Charge

Security interests
(16) “charge” means an interest or lien created on the property or assets of a company or any of its undertakings or both as security and includes a mortgage;
Simple meaning: An interest or lien, including a mortgage, created as security over company property, assets or undertakings.
Section 2(17)

Chartered accountant

Professionals
(17) “chartered accountant” means a chartered accountant as defined in clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section 2 of the Chartered Accountants Act, 1949 (38 of 1949) who holds a valid certificate of practice under sub-section (1) of section 6 of that Act;
Simple meaning: A practising chartered accountant holding a valid certificate of practice.
Section 2(18)

Chief Executive Officer

Management
(18) “Chief Executive Officer” means an officer of a company, who has been designated as such by it;
Simple meaning: An officer designated by the company as CEO.
Section 2(19)

Chief Financial Officer

Management
(19) “Chief Financial Officer” means a person appointed as the Chief Financial Officer of a company;
Simple meaning: A person appointed as the company's CFO.
Section 2(20)

Company

Entities
(20) “company” means a company incorporated under this Act or under any previous company law;
Simple meaning: A company incorporated under the 2013 Act or a previous company law.
Section 2(21)

Company limited by guarantee

Entities
(21) “company limited by guarantee” means a company having the liability of its members limited by the memorandum to such amount as the members may respectively undertake to contribute to the assets of the company in the event of its being wound up;
Simple meaning: Member liability is limited to the amount undertaken in the memorandum for contribution on winding up.
Section 2(22)

Company limited by shares

Entities
(22) “company limited by shares” means a company having the liability of its members limited by the memorandum to the amount, if any, unpaid on the shares respectively held by them;
Simple meaning: Member liability is limited to unpaid amounts on shares held.
Section 2(23)

Company Liquidator

Winding up
(23) “Company Liquidator” means a person appointed by the Tribunal as the Company Liquidator in accordance with the provisions of section 275 for the winding up of a company under this Act;
Simple meaning: A person appointed by the Tribunal under section 275 for winding up under the Act.
Section 2(24)

Company secretary / secretary

Management
(24) “company secretary” or “secretary” means a company secretary as defined in clause (c) of sub- section (1) of section 2 of the Company Secretaries Act, 1980 (56 of 1980) who is appointed by a company to perform the functions of a company secretary under this Act;
Simple meaning: A qualified company secretary appointed to perform statutory company-secretarial functions.
Section 2(25)

Company secretary in practice

Professionals
(25) “company secretary in practice” means a company secretary who is deemed to be in practice under sub-section (2) of section 2 of the Company Secretaries Act, 1980 (56 of 1980);
Simple meaning: A company secretary deemed to be in practice under the Company Secretaries Act, 1980.
Section 2(26)

Contributory

Winding up
(26) “contributory” means a person liable to contribute towards the assets of the company in the event of its being wound up. Explanation.—For the purposes of this clause, it is hereby clarified that a person holding fully paid- up shares in a company shall be considered as a contributory but shall have no liabilities of a contributory under the Act whilst retaining rights of such a contributory;
Simple meaning: A person liable to contribute to company assets on winding up; a fully paid shareholder retains contributory rights without further contribution liability.
Section 2(27)

Control

Control
(27) “control” shall include the right to appoint majority of the directors or to control the management or policy decisions exercisable by a person or persons acting individually or in concert, directly or indirectly, including by virtue of their shareholding or management rights or shareholders agreements or voting agreements or in any other manner;
Simple meaning: Includes the right to appoint a majority of directors or control management or policy decisions, directly or indirectly, through ownership, agreements, voting rights or otherwise.
Example: A shareholder agreement giving veto and appointment rights over policy decisions can create control without majority legal ownership.
Section 2(28)

Cost Accountant

Professionals
(28) “Cost Accountant” means a cost accountant as defined in clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section 2 of the Cost and Works Accountants Act, 1959 (23 of 1959) and who holds a valid certificate of practice under sub-section (1) of section 6 of that Act;
Simple meaning: A practising cost accountant holding a valid certificate of practice.
Section 2(29)

Court

Institutions
(29) “court” means— (i) the High Court having jurisdiction in relation to the place at which the registered office of the company concerned is situate, except to the extent to which jurisdiction has been conferred on any district court or district courts subordinate to that High Court under sub-clause (ii); (ii) the district court, in cases where the Central Government has, by notification, empowered any district court to exercise all or any of the jurisdictions conferred upon the High Court, within the scope of its jurisdiction in respect of a company whose registered office is situate in the district; (iii) the Court of Session having jurisdiction to try any offence under this Act or under any previous company law; (iv) the Special Court established under section 435; (v) any Metropolitan Magistrate or a Judicial Magistrate of the First Class having jurisdiction to try any offence under this Act or under any previous company law;
Simple meaning: The relevant High Court, empowered district court, Court of Session, Special Court or specified Magistrate, depending on the matter.
Section 2(30)

Debenture

Securities & fundraising
(30) “debenture” includes debenture stock, bonds or any other instrument of a company evidencing a debt, whether constituting a charge on the assets of the company or not: Provided that— (a) the instruments referred to in Chapter III-D of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 (2 of 1934); and (b) such other instrument, as may be prescribed by the Central Government in consultation with the Reserve Bank of India, issued by a company, shall not be treated as debenture;
Simple meaning: Includes debenture stock, bonds and other company debt instruments, whether secured or unsecured, subject to statutory exclusions.
Section 2(31)

Deposit

Finance
(31) “deposit” includes any receipt of money by way of deposit or loan or in any other form by a company, but does not include such categories of amount as may be prescribed in consultation with the Reserve Bank of India;
Simple meaning: Broadly includes money received as deposit, loan or otherwise, excluding categories prescribed in consultation with RBI.
Section 2(32)

Depository

Securities & fundraising
(32) “depository” means a depository as defined in clause (e) of sub-section (1) of section 2 of the Depositories Act, 1996 (22 of 1996);
Simple meaning: A depository under the Depositories Act, 1996.
Section 2(33)

Derivative

Securities & fundraising
(33) “derivative” means the derivative as defined in clause (ac) of section 2 of the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1956 (42 of 1956);
Simple meaning: A derivative as defined in the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1956.
Section 2(34)

Director

Governance
(34) “director” means a director appointed to the Board of a company;
Simple meaning: A director appointed to the Board.
Section 2(35)

Dividend

Distribution
(35) “dividend” includes any interim dividend;
Simple meaning: Includes interim dividend.
Section 2(36)

Document

Records
(36) “document” includes summons, notice, requisition, order, declaration, form and register, whether issued, sent or kept in pursuance of this Act or under any other law for the time being in force or otherwise, maintained on paper or in electronic form;
Simple meaning: Includes notices, forms, registers, orders and other records, whether on paper or electronic.
Section 2(37)

Employees' stock option

Capital
(37) “employees’ stock option” means the option given to the directors, officers or employees of a company or of its holding company or subsidiary company or companies, if any, which gives such directors, officers or employees, the benefit or right to purchase, or to subscribe for, the shares of the company at a future date at a pre-determined price;
Simple meaning: An option granted to eligible directors, officers or employees to purchase or subscribe for company shares later at a predetermined price.
Section 2(38)

Expert

Professionals
(38) “expert” includes an engineer, a valuer, a chartered accountant, a company secretary, a cost accountant and any other person who has the power or authority to issue a certificate in pursuance of any law for the time being in force;
Simple meaning: Includes engineers, valuers, practising finance professionals and other persons authorised to issue statutory certificates.
Section 2(39)

Financial institution

Regulated entities
(39) “financial institution” includes a scheduled bank, and any other financial institution defined or notified under the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 (2 of 1934);
Simple meaning: Includes scheduled banks and other institutions defined or notified under RBI law.
Section 2(40)

Financial statement

Reporting
(40) “financial statement” in relation to a company, includes— (i) a balance sheet as at the end of the financial year; (ii) a profit and loss account, or in the case of a company carrying on any activity not for profit, an income and expenditure account for the financial year; (iii) cash flow statement for the financial year; (iv) a statement of changes in equity, if applicable; and (v) any explanatory note annexed to, or forming part of, any document referred to in sub-clause (i) to sub-clause (iv): Provided that the financial statement, with respect to One Person Company, small company and dormant company, may not include the cash flow statement;
Simple meaning: Includes balance sheet, profit and loss or income and expenditure account, cash-flow statement, statement of changes in equity where applicable, and explanatory notes.
Section 2(41)

Financial year

Reporting
(41) “financial year”, in relation to any company or body corporate, means the period ending on the 31st day of March every year, and where it has been incorporated on or after the 1st day of January of a year, the period ending on the 31st day of March of the following year, in respect whereof financial statement of the company or body corporate is made up: Provided that where a company or body corporate, which is a holding company or a subsidiary or associate company of a company incorporated outside India and is required to follow a different financial year for consolidation of its accounts outside India, the Central Government may, on an application made by that company or body corporate in such form and manner as may be prescribed, allow any period as its financial year, whether or not that period is a year: Provided further that any application pending before the Tribunal as on the date of commencement of the Companies (Amendment) Act, 2019, shall be disposed of by the Tribunal in accordance with the provisions applicable to it before such commencement; Provided also that a company or body corporate, existing on the commencement of this Act, shall, within a period of two years from such commencement, align its financial year as per the provisions of this clause;
Simple meaning: Normally the period ending 31 March; special approval may apply where consolidation with a foreign parent or subsidiary requires another period.
Section 2(42)

Foreign company

Entities
(42) “foreign company” means any company or body corporate incorporated outside India which— (a) has a place of business in India whether by itself or through an agent, physically or through electronic mode; and (b) conducts any business activity in India in any other manner;
Simple meaning: A foreign-incorporated company or body corporate having a place of business in India physically or electronically and conducting business activity in India.
Example: A foreign digital platform may have an electronic place of business in India even without a conventional office, subject to the full statutory facts.
Section 2(43)

Free reserves

Capital
(43) “free reserves” means such reserves which, as per the latest audited balance sheet of a company, are available for distribution as dividend: Provided that— (i) any amount representing unrealised gains, notional gains or revaluation of assets, whether shown as a reserve or otherwise, or (ii) any change in carrying amount of an asset or of a liability recognised in equity, including surplus in profit and loss account on measurement of the asset or the liability at fair value, shall not be treated as free reserves; 1. The proviso subs. by Act 22 of 2019, s. 2 (w.e.f. 2-11-2018).
Simple meaning: Reserves available for dividend from the latest audited balance sheet, excluding unrealised or notional gains, revaluation amounts and specified fair-value changes.
Section 2(44)

Global Depository Receipt

Securities & fundraising
(44) “Global Depository Receipt” means any instrument in the form of a depository receipt, by whatever name called, created by a foreign depository outside India and authorised by a company making an issue of such depository receipts;
Simple meaning: A foreign-depository instrument authorised by an issuing company.
Section 2(45)

Government company

Entities
(45) “Government company” means any company in which not less than fifty-one per cent. of the paid-up share capital is held by the Central Government, or by any State Government or Governments, or partly by the Central Government and partly by one or more State Governments, and includes a company which is a subsidiary company of such a Government company;
Simple meaning: A company with at least 51% of paid-up share capital held by Central or State Government(s), including its subsidiary.
Example: A 51% Government-owned company is a Government company; its subsidiary is also included.
Section 2(46)

Holding company

Group structure
(46) “holding company”, in relation to one or more other companies, means a company of which such companies are subsidiary companies; Explanation.—For the purposes of this clause, the expression “company” includes any body corporate;
Simple meaning: A company of which one or more companies are subsidiaries; 'company' includes a body corporate for this definition.
Example: A body corporate can be a holding company for this definition even if it is not incorporated as an Indian company.
Section 2(47)

Independent director

Governance
(47) “independent director” means an independent director referred to in sub-section (6) of section 149;
Simple meaning: An independent director referred to in section 149(6).
Section 2(48)

Indian Depository Receipt

Securities & fundraising
(48) “Indian Depository Receipt” means any instrument in the form of a depository receipt created by a domestic depository in India and authorised by a company incorporated outside India making an issue of such depository receipts; * * * * *
Simple meaning: A domestic-depository receipt authorised by a foreign-incorporated issuer.
Section 2(49)

Omitted clause

Interpretation
(49) Omitted clause - see the current notified text.
Simple meaning: Clause 49 has been omitted from section 2 and should not be treated as an operative definition.
Section 2(50)

Issued capital

Capital
(50) “issued capital” means such capital as the company issues from time to time for subscription;
Simple meaning: Capital issued by the company for subscription from time to time.
Section 2(51)

Key managerial personnel

Management
(51) “key managerial personnel”, in relation to a company, means— (i) the Chief Executive Officer or the managing director or the manager; (ii) the company secretary; (iii) the whole-time director; (iv) the Chief Financial Officer; 3*** (v) such other officer, not more than one level below the directors who is in whole-time employment, designated as key managerial personnel by the Board; and (vi) such other officer as may be prescribed;
Simple meaning: Includes CEO/MD/manager, company secretary, whole-time director, CFO, designated whole-time officer one level below directors and prescribed officers.
Example: A finance head called Controller is not automatically CFO or KMP; formal appointment and the statutory categories must be checked.
Section 2(52)

Listed company

Securities & fundraising
(52) “listed company” means a company which has any of its securities listed on any recognised stock exchange: Provided that such class of companies, which have listed or intend to list such class of securities, as may be prescribed in consultation with the Securities and Exchange Board, shall not be considered as listed companies.
Simple meaning: A company with any security listed on a recognised stock exchange, subject to the specific Rule 2A exclusions.
Example: Debt listing alone may fall within Rule 2A exclusion for Companies Act purposes, while SEBI debt obligations continue.
Section 2(53)

Manager

Management
(53) “manager” means an individual who, subject to the superintendence, control and direction of the Board of Directors, has the management of the whole, or substantially the whole, of the affairs of a company, and includes a director or any other person occupying the position of a manager, by whatever name called, whether under a contract of service or not;
Simple meaning: An individual managing the whole or substantially the whole of a company's affairs under Board supervision and control.
Section 2(54)

Managing director

Management
(54) “managing director” means a director who, by virtue of the articles of a company or an agreement with the company or a resolution passed in its general meeting, or by its Board of Directors, is entrusted with substantial powers of management of the affairs of the company and includes a director occupying the position of managing director, by whatever name called. 1. The Explanation ins. by Act 1 of 2018, s. 2 (w.e.f. 9-2-2018). 3. The word “and” omitted by s. 2, ibid. (w.e.f. 9-2-2018). Explanation.—For the purposes of this clause, the power to do administrative acts of a routine nature when so authorised by the Board such as the power to affix the common seal of the company to any document or to draw and endorse any cheque on the account of the company in any bank or to draw and endorse any negotiable instrument or to sign any certificate of share or to direct registration of transfer of any share, shall not be deemed to be included within the substantial powers of management;
Simple meaning: A director entrusted with substantial management powers by articles, agreement or resolution; routine administrative powers alone are insufficient.
Section 2(55)

Member

Membership
(55) “member”, in relation to a company, means— (i) the subscriber to the memorandum of the company who shall be deemed to have agreed to become member of the company, and on its registration, shall be entered as member in its register of members; (ii) every other person who agrees in writing to become a member of the company and whose name is entered in the register of members of the company; (iii) every person holding shares of the company and whose name is entered as a beneficial owner in the records of a depository;
Simple meaning: Includes memorandum subscribers, persons agreeing in writing whose names enter the register, and beneficial owners recorded by a depository.
Section 2(56)

Memorandum

Constitutional documents
(56) “memorandum” means the memorandum of association of a company as originally framed or as altered from time to time in pursuance of any previous company law or of this Act;
Simple meaning: The memorandum of association as originally framed or altered.
Section 2(57)

Net worth

Reporting
(57) “net worth” means the aggregate value of the paid-up share capital and all reserves created out of the profits , securities premium account and debit or credit balance of profit and loss account, after deducting the aggregate value of the accumulated losses, deferred expenditure and miscellaneous expenditure not written off, as per the audited balance sheet, but does not include reserves created out of revaluation of assets, write-back of depreciation and amalgamation;
Simple meaning: Paid-up capital plus specified reserves, securities premium and P&L balance, less accumulated losses and specified unamortised expenditure; excludes revaluation and certain write-backs.
Section 2(58)

Notification

Interpretation
(58) “notification” means a notification published in the Official Gazette and the expression “notify” shall be construed accordingly;
Simple meaning: A notification published in the Official Gazette.
Section 2(59)

Officer

Liability
(59) “officer” includes any director, manager or key managerial personnel or any person in accordance with whose directions or instructions the Board of Directors or any one or more of the directors is or are accustomed to act;
Simple meaning: Includes directors, managers, KMP and persons whose directions the Board or directors customarily follow.
Section 2(60)

Officer who is in default

Liability
(60) “officer who is in default”, for the purpose of any provision in this Act which enacts that an officer of the company who is in default shall be liable to any penalty or punishment by way of imprisonment, fine or otherwise, means any of the following officers of a company, namely:— (i) whole-time director; (ii) key managerial personnel; (iii) where there is no key managerial personnel, such director or directors as specified by the Board in this behalf and who has or have given his or their consent in writing to the Board to such specification, or all the directors, if no director is so specified; (iv) any person who, under the immediate authority of the Board or any key managerial personnel, is charged with any responsibility including maintenance, filing or distribution of accounts or records, authorises, actively participates in, knowingly permits, or knowingly fails to take active steps to prevent, any default; (v) any person in accordance with whose advice, directions or instructions the Board of Directors of the company is accustomed to act, other than a person who gives advice to the Board in a professional capacity; (vi) every director, in respect of a contravention of any of the provisions of this Act, who is aware of such contravention by virtue of the receipt by him of any proceedings of the Board or participation in such proceedings without objecting to the same, or where such contravention had taken place with his consent or connivance; (vii) in respect of the issue or transfer of any shares of a company, the share transfer agents, registrars and merchant bankers to the issue or transfer;
Simple meaning: The persons statutorily exposed for a default, including specified whole-time directors, KMP, responsible persons, consenting/aware directors and issue intermediaries in relevant cases.
Example: A non-executive director is not automatically liable; responsibility, knowledge, consent, participation and failure to prevent are tested.
Section 2(61)

Official Liquidator

Winding up
(61) “Official Liquidator” means an Official Liquidator appointed under sub-section (1) of section 59;
Simple meaning: An Official Liquidator appointed under the statutory framework referred to in the Act.
Section 2(62)

One Person Company

Entities
(62) “One Person Company” means a company which has only one person as a member;
Simple meaning: A company with only one member.
Section 2(63)

Ordinary or special resolution

Governance
(63) “ordinary or special resolution” means an ordinary resolution, or as the case may be, special resolution referred to in section 114;
Simple meaning: A resolution within section 114.
Section 2(64)

Paid-up share capital

Capital
(64) “paid-up share capital” or “share capital paid-up” means such aggregate amount of money credited as paid-up as is equivalent to the amount received as paid-up in respect of shares issued and also includes any amount credited as paid-up in respect of shares of the company, but does not include any other amount received in respect of such shares, by whatever name called;
Simple meaning: The aggregate amount credited as paid-up on issued shares; excludes other receipts relating to shares.
Section 2(65)

Postal ballot

Governance
(65) “postal ballot” means voting by post or through any electronic mode;
Simple meaning: Voting by post or electronic mode.
Section 2(66)

Prescribed

Interpretation
(66) “prescribed” means prescribed by rules made under this Act;
Simple meaning: Prescribed by rules made under the Act.
Section 2(67)

Previous company law

Interpretation
(67) “previous company law” means any of the laws specified below:— (i) Acts relating to companies in force before the Indian Companies Act, 1866 (10 of 1866); (ii) the Indian Companies Act, 1866 (10 of 1866); (iii) the Indian Companies Act, 1882 (6 of 1882); (iv) the Indian Companies Act, 1913 (7 of 1913); (v) the Registration of Transferred Companies Ordinance, 1942 (Ord. 54 of 1942); (vi) the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956); and (vii) any law corresponding to any of the aforesaid Acts or the Ordinances and in force— (A) in the merged territories or in a Part B State (other than the State of Jammu and Kashmir*), or any part thereof, before the extension thereto of the Indian Companies Act, 1913 (7 of 1913); or (B) in the State of Jammu and Kashmir*, or any part thereof, before the commencement of the Jammu and Kashmir (Extension of Laws) Act, 1956 (62 of 1956), in so far as banking, insurance and financial corporations are concerned, and before the commencement of the Central Laws (Extension to Jammu and Kashmir) Act, 1968 (25 of 1968), in so far as other corporations are concerned; (viii) the Portuguese Commercial Code, in so far as it relates to sociedades anonimas; and (ix) the Registration of Companies (Sikkim) Act, 1961 (Sikkim Act 8 of 1961);
Simple meaning: The historic company-law enactments listed in section 2(67).
Section 2(68)

Private company

Entities
(68) “private company” means a company having a minimum paid-up share capital 1*** as may be prescribed, and which by its articles,— (i) restricts the right to transfer its shares; (ii) except in case of One Person Company, limits the number of its members to two hundred: Provided that where two or more persons hold one or more shares in a company jointly, they shall, for the purposes of this clause, be treated as a single member: *. Vide Notification No. S.O. 3912 (E), dated 30th October, 2019, this Act is made applicable to the Union territory of Jammu and Kashmir and the Union territory of Ladakh. Provided further that— (A) persons who are in the employment of the company; and (B) persons who, having been formerly in the employment of the company, were members of the company while in that employment and have continued to be members after the employment ceased, shall not be included in the number of members; and (iii) prohibits any invitation to the public to subscribe for any securities of the company;
Simple meaning: A company whose articles restrict share transfers, generally cap members at 200 and prohibit public invitations to subscribe for securities.
Example: A private company must restrict share transfer, cap members at 200 subject to exclusions and prohibit public securities invitations.
Section 2(69)

Promoter

Control
(69) “promoter” means a person— (a) who has been named as such in a prospectus or is identified by the company in the annual return referred to in section 92; or (b) who has control over the affairs of the company, directly or in directly whether as a share holder, director or otherwise; or (c) in accordance with whose advice, directions or instructions the Board of Directors of the company is accustomed to act: Provided that nothing in sub-clause (c) shall apply to a person who is acting merely in a professional capacity;
Simple meaning: A person named or identified as promoter, controlling company affairs, or whose directions the Board follows, excluding professional advice alone.
Example: A person may be promoter because of control or Board directions even when not expressly named in the prospectus or annual return.
Section 2(70)

Prospectus

Securities & fundraising
(70) “prospectus” means any document described or issued as a prospectus and includes a red herring prospectus referred to in section 32 or shelf prospectus referred to in section 31 or any notice, circular, advertisement or other document inviting offers from the public for the subscription or purchase of any securities of a body corporate;
Simple meaning: A public invitation document, including red-herring and shelf prospectuses and relevant notices, circulars or advertisements.
Section 2(71)

Public company

Entities
(71) “public company” means a company which— (a) is not a private company; and (b) has a minimum paid-up share capital 2*** as may be prescribed: Provided that a company which is a subsidiary of a company, not being a private company, shall be deemed to be public company for the purposes of this Act even where such subsidiary company continues to be a private company in its articles ;
Simple meaning: A company that is not private; a private subsidiary of a non-private company is deemed public for the Act despite its articles.
Section 2(72)

Public financial institution

Regulated entities
(72) “public financial institution” means— (i) the Life Insurance Corporation of India, established under section 3 of the Life Insurance Corporation Act, 1956 (31 of 1956); (ii) the Infrastructure Development Finance Company Limited, referred to in clause (vi) of sub-section (1) of section 4A of the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956) so repealed under section 465 of this Act; (iii) specified company referred to in the Unit Trust of India (Transfer of Undertaking and Repeal) Act, 2002 (58 of 2002); (iv) institutions notified by the Central Government under sub-section (2) of section 4A of the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956) so repealed under section 465 of this Act; (v) such other institution as may be notified by the Central Government in consultation with the Reserve Bank of India: Provided that no institution shall be so notified unless— (A) it has been established or constituted by or under any Central or State Act other than this Act or the previous company law; or (B) not less than fifty-one per cent. of the paid-up share capital is held or controlled by the Central Government or by any State Government or Governments or partly by the Central Government and partly by one or more State Governments;
Simple meaning: Specified statutory institutions and other institutions notified subject to the statutory tests.
Section 2(73)

Recognised stock exchange

Securities & fundraising
(73) “recognised stock exchange” means a recognised stock exchange as defined in clause (f) of section 2 of the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1956 (42 of 1956);
Simple meaning: A recognised stock exchange under the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1956.
Section 2(74)

Register of companies

Records
(74) “register of companies” means the register of companies maintained by the Registrar on paper or in any electronic mode under this Act;
Simple meaning: The Registrar's register maintained physically or electronically.
Section 2(75)

Registrar

Institutions
(75) “Registrar” means a Registrar, an Additional Registrar, a Joint Registrar, a Deputy Registrar or an Assistant Registrar, having the duty of registering companies and discharging various functions under this Act;
Simple meaning: Registrar and specified additional, joint, deputy or assistant registrars performing registration and statutory functions.
Section 2(76)

Related party

Related parties
(76) “related party”, with reference to a company, means— (i) a director or his relative; (ii) a key managerial personnel or his relative; (iii) a firm, in which a director, manager or his relative is a partner; (iv) a private company in which a director or manager or his relative is a member or director; (v) a public company in which a director or manager is a director and holds along with his relatives, more than two per cent. of its paid-up share capital; (vi) any body corporate whose Board of Directors, managing director or manager is accustomed to act in accordance with the advice, directions or instructions of a director or manager; (vii) any person on whose advice, directions or instructions a director or manager is accustomed to act: Provided that nothing in sub-clauses (vi) and (vii) shall apply to the advice, directions or instructions given in a professional capacity; (viii) any body corporate which is— (A) a holding, subsidiary or an associate company of such company; (B) a subsidiary of a holding company to which it is also a subsidiary; or (C) an investing company or the venturer of the company. Explanation.—For the purpose of this clause, “the investing company or the venturer of a company” means a body corporate whose investment in the company would result in the company becoming an associate company of the body corporate; (ix) such other person as may be prescribed;
Simple meaning: The statutory network of directors, KMP, relatives, firms, companies, bodies corporate and group/investor relationships described in section 2(76), expanded by Rule 3.
Example: A transaction can be a Companies Act related-party transaction even when accounting treatment under Ind AS 24 differs.
Section 2(77)

Relative

Related parties
(77) “relative”, with reference to any person, means any one who is related to another, if— (i) they are members of a Hindu Undivided Family; (ii) they are husband and wife; or (iii) one person is related to the other in such manner as may be prescribed;
Simple meaning: Includes HUF members, spouses and the prescribed family relationships in Rule 4.
Section 2(78)

Remuneration

Management
(78) “remuneration” means any money or its equivalent given or passed to any person for services rendered by him and includes perquisites as defined under the Income-tax Act, 1961 (43 of 1961);
Simple meaning: Money or equivalent for services, including Income-tax Act perquisites.
Section 2(79)

Schedule

Interpretation
(79) “Schedule” means a Schedule annexed to this Act;
Simple meaning: A Schedule annexed to the Act.
Section 2(80)

Scheduled bank

Regulated entities
(80) “scheduled bank” means the scheduled bank as defined in clause (e) of section 2 of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 (2 of 1934);
Simple meaning: A scheduled bank under the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934.
Section 2(81)

Securities

Securities & fundraising
(81) “securities” means the securities as defined in clause (h) of section 2 of the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1956 (42 of 1956);
Simple meaning: Securities as defined in the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1956.
Section 2(82)

Securities and Exchange Board

Institutions
(82) “Securities and Exchange Board” means the Securities and Exchange Board of India established under section 3 of the Securities and Exchange Board of India Act, 1992 (15 of 1992);
Simple meaning: SEBI established under the SEBI Act, 1992.
Section 2(83)

Serious Fraud Investigation Office

Institutions
(83) “Serious Fraud Investigation Office” means the office referred to in section 211;
Simple meaning: The SFIO referred to in section 211.
Section 2(84)

Share

Capital
(84) “share” means a share in the share capital of a company and includes stock;
Simple meaning: A share in company share capital and includes stock.
Section 2(85)

Small company

Entity classification
(85) “small company” means a company, other than a public company,— (i) paid-up share capital of which does not exceed fifty lakh rupees or such higher amount as may be prescribed which shall not be more than ten crore rupees; and (ii) turnover of which as per profit and loss account for the immediately preceding financial year does not exceed two crore rupees or such higher amount as may be prescribed which shall not be more than one hundred crore rupees: Provided that nothing in this clause shall apply to— (A) a holding company or a subsidiary company; (B) a company registered under section 8; or (C) a company or body corporate governed by any special Act;
Simple meaning: A non-public company meeting both prescribed capital and turnover ceilings, but excluding holding/subsidiary companies, section 8 companies and entities governed by special Acts.
Example: A company with Rs 8 crore capital and Rs 92 crore turnover can qualify only if none of the statutory exclusions applies.
Section 2(86)

Subscribed capital

Capital
(86) “subscribed capital” means such part of the capital which is for the time being subscribed by the members of a company;
Simple meaning: The part of capital subscribed by members.
Section 2(87)

Subsidiary company

Group structure
(87) “subsidiary company” or “subsidiary”, in relation to any other company (that is to say the holding company), means a company in which the holding company— (i) controls the composition of the Board of Directors; or (ii) exercises or controls more than one-half of the total voting power either at its own or together with one or more of its subsidiary companies: Provided that such class or classes of holding companies as may be prescribed shall not have layers of subsidiaries beyond such numbers as may be prescribed. Explanation.—For the purposes of this clause,— (a) a company shall be deemed to be a subsidiary company of the holding company even if the control referred to in sub-clause (i) or sub-clause (ii) is of another subsidiary company of the holding company; (b) the composition of a company’s Board of Directors shall be deemed to be controlled by another company if that other company by exercise of some power exercisable by it at its discretion can appoint or remove all or a majority of the directors; (c) the expression “company” includes any body corporate; (d) “layer” in relation to a holding company means its subsidiary or subsidiaries;
Simple meaning: A company whose Board composition or more than half of total voting power is controlled by the holding company, directly or through subsidiaries.
Example: Indirect control through a subsidiary chain is expressly recognised; registered ownership in the lowest-tier company is not necessary.
Section 2(88)

Sweat equity shares

Capital
(88) “sweat equity shares” means such equity shares as are issued by a company to its directors or employees at a discount or for consideration, other than cash, for providing their know-how or making available rights in the nature of intellectual property rights or value additions, by whatever name called;
Simple meaning: Equity shares issued to directors or employees at discount or for non-cash know-how, IP rights or value additions.
Section 2(89)

Total voting power

Control
(89) “total voting power”, in relation to any matter, means the total number of votes which may be cast in regard to that matter on a poll at a meeting of a company if all the members thereof or their proxies having a right to vote on that matter are present at the meeting and cast their votes;
Simple meaning: Votes that could be cast on a poll if all persons entitled to vote were present and voted.
Section 2(90)

Tribunal

Institutions
(90) “Tribunal” means the National Company Law Tribunal constituted under section 408;
Simple meaning: The National Company Law Tribunal constituted under section 408.
Section 2(91)

Turnover

Reporting
(91) “turnover” means gross amount of revenue recognised in the profit and loss account from the sale, supply, or distribution of goods or on account of services rendered, or both, by a company during a financial year;
Simple meaning: Gross revenue recognised in the profit and loss account from goods and/or services during a financial year.
Example: Use revenue recognised in the profit and loss account, not GST turnover, billings or cash collections.
Section 2(92)

Unlimited company

Entities
(92) “unlimited company” means a company not having any limit on the liability of its members;
Simple meaning: A company without a limit on member liability.
Section 2(93)

Voting right

Membership
(93) “voting right” means the right of a member of a company to vote in any meeting of the company or by means of postal ballot;
Simple meaning: A member's right to vote at a meeting or by postal ballot.
Section 2(94)

Whole-time director

Management
(94) “whole-time director” includes a director in the whole-time employment of the company;
Simple meaning: A director in whole-time employment of the company.
Section 2(94A)

Winding up

Winding up
(94A) “winding up” means winding up under this Act or liquidation under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (31 of 2016), as applicable;
Simple meaning: Winding up under the Companies Act or liquidation under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, as applicable.
Example: A reference to winding up can include IBC liquidation where the statute makes it applicable.
Section 2(95)

Imported securities-law meanings

Interpretation
(95) words and expressions used and not defined in this Act but defined in the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1956 (42 of 1956) or the Securities and Exchange Board of India Act, 1992 (15 of 1992) or the Depositories Act, 1996 (22 of 1996) shall have the meanings respectively assigned to them in those Acts.
Simple meaning: Undefined expressions that are defined in the SCRA, SEBI Act or Depositories Act carry those statutory meanings.
Definition Details Rules, 2014

Current rule register

Current small-company rule: Rule 2(1)(t) prescribes Rs 10 crore paid-up capital and Rs 100 crore turnover from 1 December 2025. Both tests and every section 2(85) exclusion apply.
Rule 1

Short title and commencement

(1) These rules may be called the Companies (Specification of Definitions Details) Rules, 2014. (2) They came into force on 1 April 2014.
Simple application: Use the Rules from 1 April 2014, together with every later amendment effective for the relevant date.
Rule 2(1)(a)

Act

“Act” means the Companies Act, 2013 (18 of 2013).
Simple application: References to the Act in these Rules mean the Companies Act, 2013.
Rule 2(1)(b)

Certifying Authority

For a Digital Signature Certificate, “Certifying Authority” means a person licensed to issue such certificate under section 24 of the Information Technology Act, 2000 and includes the certification authority authorised for the MCA electronic-filing system.
Simple application: Electronic filings and signatures must use a legally licensed and MCA-recognised certifying framework.
Rule 2(1)(c)

Digital signature

“Digital signature” has the meaning assigned in section 2(1)(p) of the Information Technology Act, 2000.
Simple application: Apply the Information Technology Act definition rather than creating a separate company-law meaning.
Rule 2(1)(d)

Digital Signature Certificate

“Digital Signature Certificate” has the meaning assigned in section 2(1)(q) of the Information Technology Act, 2000.
Simple application: The certificate authenticating a digital signature takes its meaning from the Information Technology Act.
Rule 2(1)(e)

Director Identification Number

“Director Identification Number” means the identification number allotted to an individual intending to be appointed, or already appointed, as a director. A DIN issued under the 1956 Act remains valid; DIN includes a DPIN issued under the LLP Act, 2008.
Simple application: DIN is the permanent identification for a director; a valid DPIN is also treated as DIN.
Rule 2(1)(f)

e-Form

“e-Form” means a form in electronic form, as prescribed under the Act or the rules, used for the matter to which it relates.
Simple application: A filing form prescribed electronically is an e-Form.
Rule 2(1)(g)

Electronic mail

“Electronic mail” means a message sent, received or forwarded in digital form through an electronic communication mechanism, where the message is storable and retrievable.
Simple application: Email must be capable of being stored and retrieved, not merely transmitted.
Rule 2(1)(h)

Electronic mode

For section 2(42), “electronic mode” includes electronically carried out B2B and B2C transactions, data interchange and digital supplies; invitations or acceptance of deposits or securities subscriptions in India or from Indian citizens; financial settlements, web marketing, advisory, transactional, database, product and supply-chain services; online services such as telemarketing, telecommuting, telemedicine, education and information research; and related data-communication services, whether through email, mobile devices, social media, cloud computing, document management, voice/data transmission or otherwise. Electronic offering, subscription or listing of securities in an IFSC under section 18 of the SEZ Act is excluded for this purpose.
Simple application: A foreign entity can have an Indian electronic place of business even without a conventional office; test the listed digital activities and the IFSC exception.
Rule 2(1)(i)

Electronic record

“Electronic record” has the meaning assigned in section 2(1)(t) of the Information Technology Act, 2000.
Simple application: Use the Information Technology Act meaning of an electronic record.
Rule 2(1)(j)

Electronic Registry

“Electronic Registry” means the Central Government electronic repository or storage system in which information or documents are received, stored, protected and preserved in electronic form.
Simple application: The MCA electronic registry is the official digital repository for filings and records.
Rule 2(1)(k)

Executive Director

“Executive Director” means a whole-time director as defined in section 2(94) of the Act.
Simple application: Executive director and whole-time director are aligned for these Rules.
Rule 2(1)(l)

Fees

“Fees” means the fees specified in the Companies (Registration Offices and Fees) Rules, 2014.
Simple application: Filing fees are governed by the separate Registration Offices and Fees Rules.
Rule 2(1)(m)

Form

“Form” means a form set out in the Act or the rules and used for the matter to which it relates.
Simple application: Use the prescribed form for the exact statutory matter.
Rule 2(1)(n)

Pre-fill

“Pre-fill” means automated data input by the computer system from the database maintained in the Central Government electronic registry.
Simple application: Pre-filled information comes from MCA registry data and still requires verification by the filer.
Rule 2(1)(o)

Registrar's Front Office

“Registrar’s Front Office” means an office maintained by the Central Government, or an authorised agency, to facilitate e-filing into the electronic registry and inspection or viewing of documents.
Simple application: A Registrar’s Front Office facilitates electronic filing and document access.
Rule 2(1)(p)

Regional Director

“Regional Director” means a person appointed by the Central Government in the Ministry of Corporate Affairs as a Regional Director.
Simple application: The Regional Director is the MCA officer appointed for regional statutory functions.
Rule 2(1)(q)

Section

“Section” means a section of the Companies Act, 2013.
Simple application: A bare reference to “section” means a section of the 2013 Act.
Rule 2(1)(r)

Omitted clause

The former definition of “total share capital” was omitted with effect from 7 May 2018. It is not an operative rule definition.
Simple application: Do not use the former total-share-capital rule definition after its omission.
Rule 2(1)(s)

Or otherwise

For sections 164(1)(d) and 167(1)(f), “or otherwise” means an offence for which the person has been convicted by a court under the Companies Act, 2013 or the Companies Act, 1956.
Simple application: The director-disqualification and vacation provisions cover convictions under either the 2013 or 1956 company law.
Rule 2(1)(t)

Small-company ceilings

For section 2(85)(i) and (ii), paid-up capital and turnover of a small company shall not exceed ₹10 crore and ₹100 crore respectively, with effect from 1 December 2025. The section 2(85) exclusions continue to apply.
Simple application: A company must satisfy both current ceilings and every section 2(85) exclusion before using small-company relaxations.
Rule 2(2)

Imported meanings

Words and expressions used in these rules but not defined in them, and defined in the Act or in the Information Technology Act, 2000, have the meanings assigned in those enactments.
Simple application: Where the Rules do not define a term, import its meaning from the referenced parent legislation.
Rule 2A

Companies not treated as listed

For the proviso to section 2(52), the following are not considered listed companies: (a) a public company with no listed equity shares that has listed privately placed non-convertible debt securities, privately placed non-convertible redeemable preference shares, or both, under the applicable SEBI regulations; (b) a private company that has listed privately placed non-convertible debt securities under the applicable SEBI regulations; and (c) a public company with no equity listing on a recognised Indian stock exchange whose equity shares are listed on an exchange in a jurisdiction specified under section 23(3).
Simple application: Specified debt-only and permitted overseas-equity listings do not make the entity a “listed company” for the Companies Act definition, but securities-law obligations continue.
Rule 3

Additional related party

For section 2(76)(ix), a director—other than an independent director—or KMP of the holding company, or that person’s relative, is deemed to be a related party of the company.
Simple application: The holding company’s non-independent directors, KMP and their relatives extend the related-party network of the subsidiary.
Rule 4

Prescribed relatives

For section 2(77), the prescribed relatives are father (including step-father), mother (including step-mother), son (including step-son), son’s wife, daughter, daughter’s husband, brother (including step-brother) and sister (including step-sister). HUF membership and spouse are already covered by section 2(77).
Simple application: Use the exact prescribed family list, including the stated step-relations; do not assume every extended-family relationship qualifies.
Restriction on Number of Layers Rules, 2017

Rule-by-rule analysis

Rule 1

Short title and commencement

The Companies (Restriction on Number of Layers) Rules, 2017 took effect on publication.
Application: The Rules applied from Gazette publication and should be tested from that commencement date.
Rule 2(1)

General restriction

A non-exempt company cannot have more than two layers of subsidiaries.
Application: Count subsidiary layers from the holding company downward; the general maximum is two unless an exemption or proviso applies.
First proviso

Foreign acquisition

The rule does not prevent acquisition of a foreign company that lawfully has more than two subsidiary layers under its home-country law.
Application: A lawful foreign acquisition is not blocked merely because the foreign target already has more than two layers under its home law.
Second proviso

Wholly owned layer

One layer consisting of one or more wholly owned subsidiaries is ignored when counting layers.
Application: Ignore one layer containing one or more wholly owned subsidiaries when computing the limit.
Rule 2(2)

Exempt classes

Banking companies, specified systemically important NBFCs, insurance companies and Government companies are exempt.
Application: Confirm that the company genuinely falls in an exempt regulated class before disregarding the layer ceiling.
Rule 2(3)

Section 186 preserved

The Rules do not derogate from the separate section 186 investment-company layer restriction.
Application: A structure can satisfy these Rules and still breach the separate section 186 investment-company restriction.
Rule 2(4)

Existing excess layers

Grandfathered companies had to file CRL-1, could not add layers and cannot rebuild a layer after reducing it beyond the permitted/grandfathered level.
Application: Grandfathering preserved existing structures but prevented adding or rebuilding impermissible layers after a reduction.
Rule 2(5)

Contravention

The rule prescribes company and officer consequences for breach; current penalty treatment must be read with later decriminalisation and adjudication amendments.
Application: A breach requires present-day penalty and adjudication analysis; do not rely only on the wording of the original 2017 notification.
Form CRL-1

Layer return

The form was substituted with effect from 14 July 2025; the substantive two-layer rule did not change.
Application: The current form records layer details; a form substitution does not change the substantive layer limit.
Exceptions and highlights

High-risk points

Definitions are purpose-specific

A Companies Act term does not automatically equal the definition under Ind AS, SEBI LODR, GST, Income-tax, FEMA or IBC.

Context qualifier

Section 2 starts with “unless the context otherwise requires”, but context cannot be used to disregard a clear statutory definition casually.

Both small-company tests

Capital and turnover are cumulative conditions. Public, holding/subsidiary, section 8 and special-Act entities remain excluded.

Rule 2A is not universal exemption

Exclusion from the Companies Act listed-company definition does not remove SEBI, stock-exchange or debt-listing compliance.

Control is broader than shares

Board appointment, agreements, voting arrangements and management rights can create direct or indirect control.

Liability is evidence-based

Officer-in-default analysis requires the substantive section, role allocation, knowledge, consent, participation and prevention evidence.

Finin2min summary

Chapter I decision flow

Finin2minCOMPANIES ACT, 2013 - CHAPTER IFrom statutory term to compliance conclusionSections 1-2 + Definition Details Rules + subsidiary-layer rules 1. Identify the exact questionWhich term controls scope, classification, threshold, approval, liability or filing? 2. Read the entire section 2 clauseInclude explanations, provisos, exclusions, cross-references and effective amendments. 3A. Apply the factsVoting rights - Board rights - agreements - audited figuresactual responsibility - listing type - group chainRetain the evidence supporting the classification. 3B. Overlay the applicable ruleRule 2 definitions - Rule 2A listed-company exclusionsRule 3 related parties - Rule 4 relatives - layer rulesCheck commencement dates and exemption notifications. 4. Run separate cross-law testsSEBI/LODR - Ind AS - Income-tax - GST - FEMA - IBC - sector legislationThe same expression can have a different definition and purpose in another law. Reviewed through 26 June 2026 - Primary-source framework - Not a substitute for entity-specific legal advice
Applied analysis

Professional and exam cases

1. Small company after 1 December 2025

A private company has paid-up capital of Rs 8 crore and preceding-year turnover of Rs 92 crore and is not in an excluded category.

Analysis: It satisfies both current financial ceilings and can qualify, subject to the relevant compliance date and complete facts.

2. Small financial size but subsidiary

A private subsidiary has capital of Rs 50 lakh and turnover of Rs 3 crore.

Analysis: It is excluded because holding and subsidiary companies cannot be small companies under section 2(85).

3. Debt-listed company

A public company has only privately placed non-convertible debt listed and no listed equity.

Analysis: Rule 2A can exclude it from the Companies Act listed-company definition, but SEBI debt-listing obligations remain.

4. Indirect subsidiary

P controls S1 and S1 controls more than half the voting power of S2. P holds no direct shares in S2.

Analysis: S2 can still be P's subsidiary because indirect control through another subsidiary is expressly recognised.

5. Officer in default

A non-executive director did not participate in the default and had no assigned responsibility or knowledge.

Analysis: Liability is not automatic merely because the person is a director; section 2(60) and the substantive provision must be applied to evidence.

6. Foreign digital business

A foreign entity operates an India-facing paid digital service without a conventional office.

Analysis: Electronic mode can create a place of business in India; the complete section 2(42) and rule facts must be analysed.
CA / CS / finance revision

Questions examiners and reviewers repeatedly test

  1. Distinguish control, significant influence, holding company, subsidiary and associate.
  2. Apply both financial ceilings and exclusions for a small company.
  3. Explain why debt listing may not make the company listed under the Act but still triggers securities regulation.
  4. Reconcile section 2(76), Rule 3, section 188, Ind AS 24 and SEBI LODR related-party scopes.
  5. Identify the officer in default from the responsibility matrix and evidence, not designation alone.
  6. Count subsidiary layers after excluding one wholly owned layer and applying exempt-class rules.
Exam trap: Never quote a threshold without the effective date and never quote a definition without its proviso, explanation and related rule.
Primary sources

Technical source register

Use note: This is an educational and professional reference. The notified text, effective-date notification, exemption notification and entity facts control the final legal conclusion.