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A Complete Guide to India’s New Small Company Limits: Benefits, Exemptions, and Eligibility for 2025

Pankaj Kumar Nov. 19th, 2025 Reading Time: 6 Minutes
A Complete Guide to India’s New Small Company Limits: Benefits, Exemptions, and Eligibility for 2025

The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) has formally announced the Companies (Specification of Definition Details) Amendment Rules, 2025. This is a big step toward making it easier to do business in India. As of December 1, 2025, this change has raised the limits for what counts as a “Small Company” under Section 2(85) of the Companies Act, 2013.

The new limitations, which are Paid-up Capital up to ₹10 Crore and Turnover up to ₹100 Crore, are more than double the existing ones. Here is a full guide to understanding these developments and how they will help your business.

MCA clarifies new thresholds for small companies at ₹10 Cr and ₹100 Cr.

For many years, the Indian government has been making it easier for MSMEs and startups to follow the rules. The most recent change, which will go into effect in 2025, is probably the most ambitious one yet. It will put thousands of new private enterprises into the “Small Company” category. The government wants to let entrepreneurs focus more on expansion and less on paperwork by making it easier for these businesses to follow the rules.

What is the New Definition of a Small Company?

According to the most recent notice (G.S.R. 880(E) dated December 1, 2025), a “Small Company” is characterized by two main financial pillars. To be eligible, a business must meet both of the following requirements:

Criteria Previous Limit (Sept 2022) New Limit (Effective Dec 2025)
Paid-up Share Capital Not exceeding ₹4 Crore Not exceeding ₹10 Crore
Annual Turnover Not exceeding ₹40 Crore Not exceeding ₹100 Crore

Key Conditions to Remember:

  • Private Companies Only: Only private limited firms can be called small businesses. Public corporations are not allowed.
  • Simultaneous Fulfillment: To keep its position, a corporation must stay within both restrictions. It loses the “Small Company” classification if it goes beyond even one limit.
  • Preceding Financial Year: The Profit & Loss account from the year before is used to figure out the turnover.

Who is Excluded from the “Small Company” Status?

You can’t be called a Small Company if your business meets the financial requirements above and also falls into one of these categories:

  • Public Companies: All public limited corporations must follow the rules of standard compliance.
  • Holding or Subsidiary Companies: If your business is a parent company or a child company in a business structure.
  • Section 8 Companies: Companies that were set up to help others or make money for a good cause.
  • Special Act Companies: Any business that is run by a certain law, such a bank or an insurance company.

Top 10 Benefits of Being a Small Company

The main benefit of this classification isn’t just a name; it’s the huge drop in costs and legal requirements for compliance. The most important relaxations are:

A. Reduced Board Meetings

A standard company must have at least four board meetings a year, but a small company just has to have two, one in each half of the year. There must be at least 90 days between these meetings.

B. Exemption from Cash Flow Statements

One of the best things about accounting is that small businesses don’t have to include a Cash Flow Statement in their financial statements. This makes it easier to do the year-end audit and report.

C. Abridged Annual Returns (Form MGT-7A)

Small businesses can file a shorter version of the yearly return, called Form MGT-7A. Compared to the conventional MGT-7 used by larger companies, this form is much shorter and doesn’t require as much information.

D. No Mandatory Auditor Rotation

Section 139(2) says that big enterprises have to change their individual auditors every five years and their audit firms every ten years. Small businesses don’t have to do this, so they can keep working with their trusted auditors for a long time.

E. Simplified Director’s Report

Small Companies have to give a lot less information in their Board’s Report. You don’t have to explain every little policy in detail, which saves time and administrative work.

F. Fast-Track Merger Route

Under Section 233, small businesses can choose the “Fast-Track Merger” method. This makes it considerably easier to restructure a business because it doesn’t have to go through the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), which is long, expensive, and boring.

G. Lower Penalties (Section 446B)

If a small business or its officer breaks the law, the maximum fine is half (50%) of what a larger business would have to pay. The maximum fine is usually ₹2 lakh for the business and ₹1 lakh for the executives.

H. Exemption from Internal Financial Control (IFC) Reporting

Small business auditors don’t have to report on how well Internal Financial Controls work and how well they work. This makes the audit smaller and, as a result, lowers the audit fees.

I. No CARO 2020 Applicability

Small companies usually don’t have to follow the Companies (Auditor’s Report) Order, 2020 (CARO), which mandates detailed reports on things like inventory, fixed assets, and loans.

J. Exemption from Mandatory Dematerialization

The MCA has made demat of shares required for many private companies, however extremely tiny businesses sometimes get exemptions or longer transition periods, which lowers the expense of keeping a depository account right away.

Why the Increase to ₹10 Cr and ₹100 Cr Matters

The change from ₹4/40 Cr to ₹10/100 Cr is a deliberate response to the current state of the Indian economy.

  • Inflation Adjustment: A ₹40 Cr turnover is no longer “large” because the cost of conducting business is going up. The new restriction is in line with how mid-sized enterprises work today.
  • Encouraging Formalization: The government wants startups and family-run enterprises to become Private Limited corporations instead of staying as unregistered partnerships. They do this by making it easy to follow the rules.
  • Startup Growth: Startups that grow swiftly often reach a turnover of ₹40 Cr quickly, even when they are still in a “burn” phase. The ₹100 Cr restriction provides them more “breathing room” to grow their business before they have to deal with a lot of government rules.

Immediate Action Points for Business Owners

You should do the following if your company’s paid-up capital is less than ₹10 Crore and its turnover for FY 2024-25 was less than ₹100 Crore:

  • Review Financials: Talk to your CA to make sure you are still in the same position as of December 1, 2025.
  • Update Compliance Calendar: Cut down on the frequency of Board Meetings and make your reporting templates easier to use.
  • Check Pending Filings: Check to see if you can now utilize the shortened Form MGT-7A if you haven’t filed your yearly taxes yet.
  • Cost Optimization: Renegotiate the rates for audits and secretarial work because the reporting requirements have changed (No IFC, No CARO, No Cash Flow).

Conclusion

The MCA’s choice to raise the Small Company limits to ₹10 Crore (Capital) and ₹100 Crore (Turnover) is a major change for Indian businesses. It changes the focus from “policing” small enterprises to “empowering” them. If your organization now matches this new criteria, you should take advantage of these exclusions to make things easier and save money on compliance.

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