ESOP in India: A Complete Founder & Employee Guide

By vimtara_admin on 11/20/2025

ESOP in India: A Complete Founder & Employee Guide

ESOPs in India are no longer a “nice extra.” They are a core part of how startups, growth-stage companies, and even traditional businesses hire, reward, and retain talent.

Vimtara is an AI-enabled equity management platform that helps Indian companies simplify cap tables, manage ESOPs at scale, and automate compliance. That context will show up throughout, because ESOPs without proper tooling usually end in confusion and mistakes.

Table of Contents

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  • 1. What is an ESOP in India?
    • 1.1 Key ESOP terms
  • 2. Why ESOPs matter in India (founders vs employees)
    • 2.1 Founders: what you actually gain
    • 2.2 Employees: what you should realistically expect
  • 3. Legal basics: ESOP in India
    • 3.1 Who can get ESOPs?
    • 3.2 Quick legal map
  • 4. ESOP lifecycle in India
    • 4.1 Company vs employee view
  • 5. ESOP design decisions founders must not wing
    • 5.1 ESOP pool size in Indian startups
    • 5.2 Vesting, cliffs, and leaving scenarios
    • 5.3 Exercise price and valuation
    • 5.4 Communication to employees
  • 6. ESOP taxation in India
    • 6.1 Stage 1 – Tax at exercise (salary / perquisite)
      • Special relief for eligible startups
    • 6.2 Stage 2 – Tax at sale (capital gains)
    • 6.3 Tax overview table (for employees)
  • 7. FEMA & cross-border ESOPs
  • 8. ESOPs vs RSUs vs SARs (quick comparison)
  • 9. How Vimtara helps you run ESOPs the way investors expect
    • 9.1 What Vimtara does for founders & finance teams
    • 9.2 What Vimtara does for employees
  • 10. Action checklists
    • 10.1 Founder checklist for ESOP in India
    • 10.2 Employee checklist before counting ESOPs as “real money”
  • FAQ
    • Q1. What is the minimum vesting period for ESOPs in India?
    • Q2. Can a private limited company issue ESOPs?
    • Q3. When is ESOP taxed in India?
    • Q4. Is this article legal or tax advice?

1. What is an ESOP in India?

ESOP (Employee Stock Option Plan) is a plan that gives employees the right (not obligation) to buy company shares at a fixed price in the future.

ESOP in India

If the company grows and the share price goes up, the employee can make money from the difference. If the company doesn’t do well, the options may end up worthless.

1.1 Key ESOP terms

TermWhat it means in practice
OptionA right to buy a share in the future at a fixed price (exercise price). Not a share yet.
GrantWhen the company gives you options under the ESOP scheme.
VestingOptions are “earned” over time. You don’t get everything on day one.
CliffMinimum time you must stay before any options vest (for example, 1 year).
ExerciseYou pay the exercise price and convert vested options into actual shares.
Exercise pricePrice per share you pay when you exercise your options.
ExpiryLast date by which you must exercise vested options.

In India, ESOPs are mainly governed by:

  • Section 62(1)(b) of the Companies Act, 2013
  • Rule 12 of the Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules, 2014 for unlisted companies
  • SEBI (Share Based Employee Benefits and Sweat Equity) Regulations, 2021 for listed companies

You don’t need to memorise the sections, but you should know they exist. ESOPs are not “just a side letter”; they sit inside a legal framework.

2. Why ESOPs matter in India (founders vs employees)

2.1 Founders: what you actually gain

BenefitWhy it matters
Hire better talentYou can compete with higher-paying brands by offering real upside.
Align incentivesPeople think like owners, not just employees, when they have equity.
Lower cash burnTrade some cash salary for equity in early years.
Reduce attritionVesting and cliffs reward people who stay longer.
Investor readinessVCs now expect a clean ESOP pool and clear documentation.
Structured liquidity storiesESOP buybacks and secondaries are now a PR and retention tool in India.

2.2 Employees: what you should realistically expect

Reality checkWhat it means
ESOPs are not guaranteed moneyIf the company never gives liquidity, your options may be worthless.
You carry tax risk + cash-flow riskTax at exercise can hit before you see any cash from selling shares. Income Tax India+2ICMAI+2
You benefit only if the company growsIf valuation stagnates or drops, upside disappears.
Terms matter more than big numbers10,000 options mean nothing without price, % ownership, and exit path.

If you don’t understand your ESOP grant, you don’t have a reward plan. You have a lottery ticket you haven’t read the rules for.

3. Legal basics: ESOP in India

3.1 Who can get ESOPs?

Under Rule 12 of the Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules, 2014, unlisted companies can issue ESOPs to:

  • Permanent employees (in India or abroad)
  • Directors (excluding independent directors)
  • Employees/directors of holding, subsidiary, or associate companies

The scheme must be approved by shareholders through a special resolution and follow detailed disclosure rules.

3.2 Quick legal map

AreaLaw / RegulatorApplies toWhy it matters
Company lawCompanies Act 2013, Rule 12 of Share Capital & DebenturesAll Indian companies issuing ESOPsDefines who can get ESOPs, approvals, minimum vesting, disclosures.
Securities lawSEBI SBEB & Sweat Equity Regulations, 2021Listed companiesExtra rules on ESOP structure, disclosures, and shareholder protection.
Income taxIncome-tax Act, 1961 (salary perquisite + capital gains rules)All employees receiving ESOPsTaxes ESOPs at exercise and at sale.
FEMA / RBIFEMA + Non-debt Instruments Rules 2019 + reporting regulationsCross-border ESOPs (NR employees / foreign shares)Controls foreign currency, limits, and reporting like Form ESOP.

You don’t have to become a lawyer. But as a founder, you do have to stop pretending “It’s just an HR thing.”

4. ESOP lifecycle in India

4.1 Company vs employee view

StageCompany sideEmployee side
PlanDecide ESOP pool, draft scheme, get approvals.Nothing yet.
GrantIssue grant letters, capture in cap table / ESOP system.Receive ESOP letter with option count & terms.
VestingTrack vesting, handle exits, update records.Earn options over time if you stay.
ExerciseProcess exercise requests, update share register, deduct TDS.Pay exercise price, become shareholder, pay tax.
HoldingMaintain shareholder records, define transfer policies.Hold shares, cannot always sell immediately.
ExitRun buyback / secondary / IPO / M&A, manage payouts & compliance.Sell shares (if allowed), pay capital gains tax.

If you’re running this in spreadsheets at 30+ employees with ESOP, you’re playing with fire. Vimtara exists exactly to take this off your plate.

ESOP in India

5. ESOP design decisions founders must not wing

5.1 ESOP pool size in Indian startups

Most Indian startups end up with ESOP pools in the 5–15% range of fully diluted share capital, depending on stage and negotiation with investors.

Don’t copy a random number from Twitter. Model:

  • Current team + planned leadership hires
  • Investor expectations in the next 2 rounds
  • Founder dilution if pool is created pre-money vs post-money

This is where Vimtara’s cap table modelling helps you see the dilution impact before you commit anything to shareholders.

5.2 Vesting, cliffs, and leaving scenarios

Typical Indian startup pattern:

  • 1-year cliff
  • 3–4 year total vesting
  • Monthly or quarterly vesting after cliff

You must also define:

ScenarioWhat usually happens (if policy is explicit)
Employee resignsUnvested options lapse; vested options exercisable for a limited period.
Termination for causeBoth vested and unvested options often lapse.
Layoff / redundancyVested usually preserved, exercise window may be extended.
Death / disabilityOften full or partial accelerated vesting and longer exercise window.

If you don’t define it, you’ll negotiate every exit. That is a guaranteed way to create drama, distrust, and cap table mess.

5.3 Exercise price and valuation

For unlisted companies:

  • Exercise price is usually at or above face value, but FMV is determined by a registered value for tax and regulatory purposes.
  • At exercise, the difference between FMV and exercise price is taxed as a perquisite under “salary”.

Do not randomly pick ₹10 because “that’s the face value.” Tie your ESOP pricing to actual valuation reports and your auditor’s comfort level.

5.4 Communication to employees

Even if your scheme is legally perfect, it fails if employees don’t understand:

  • How much they own (rough % estimate)
  • How vesting works
  • When and how they can exercise
  • When they may get liquidity
  • What tax they will pay and when

Vimtara’s ESOP module is designed around transparent employee dashboards and automated communication, not one-off HR emails and confusing spreadsheets.

6. ESOP taxation in India

ESOPs are taxed twice in India:

  1. At exercise (as salary perquisite)
  2. At sale of shares (as capital gains)

6.1 Stage 1 – Tax at exercise (salary / perquisite)

When an employee exercises options:

  • Perquisite value = FMV on exercise date − exercise price
  • This value is taxed as salary income. Employers must deduct TDS.

Example (simplified)

  • Exercise price: ₹20
  • FMV on exercise date: ₹120
  • Perquisite per share: ₹100
  • Options exercised: 1,000
  • Taxable perquisite: ₹1,00,000 (added to salary)

If you are not ready to pay tax on this amount, do not exercise blindly.

Special relief for eligible startups

For employees of DPIIT-recognised eligible startups, TDS on this perquisite can be deferred. Tax is still due, but TDS payment happens at the earliest of:

  • 48 months from end of assessment year in which shares were allotted, or
  • Date you sell the shares, or
  • Date you leave the company

This solves timing to some extent, but not the underlying risk that the company may never give liquidity.

6.2 Stage 2 – Tax at sale (capital gains)

When the employee sells their shares:

  • Cost of acquisition for capital gains = FMV at exercise (not exercise price)
  • Capital gain = Sale price − FMV at exercise

Broad rules (high level):

  • If shares are held for a short period, gain is short-term and taxed at slab or specific STCG rate depending on listed/unlisted.
  • If held for longer than the long-term threshold, gain is long-term and taxed at long-term rates.

Recent Budgets have changed thresholds and rates for several capital gains categories, so do not rely on old blog numbers. Always check current law or speak to a tax advisor.

6.3 Tax overview table (for employees)

StageTrigger eventWhat is taxedTax headWho pays / handles it
1Exercise of optionsFMV at exercise − exercise priceSalary (perquisite)Employer deducts TDS; employee pays final tax.
2Sale of sharesSale price − FMV at exerciseCapital gainsEmployee pays capital gains tax.

If you are an employee, always ask: “What is the expected FMV when this might be exercised?” Not just “How many options am I getting?”

7. FEMA & cross-border ESOPs

If your Indian company issues ESOPs to non-resident employees, or employees acquire foreign shares under an ESOP of a foreign parent, FEMA and RBI rules apply.

High-level points:

  • ESOPs to non-resident employees are permitted under the Foreign Exchange Management (Non-debt Instruments) Rules, 2019.
  • Indian companies granting ESOPs to non-residents must file Form ESOP with RBI (through their Authorised Dealer bank) within a specified timeline, currently 30 days from grant in many cases.
  • For Indian residents receiving foreign shares under ESOP, there can be LRS (Liberalised Remittance Scheme)-related caps and reporting.

If you are doing cross-border ESOPs and operating off a Google Doc policy, you’re asking for trouble. Use counsel + a platform that understands FEMA workflows.

8. ESOPs vs RSUs vs SARs (quick comparison)

Indian founders throw these terms around interchangeably. They are not the same.

FeatureESOP (Options)RSU (Restricted Stock Unit)SAR (Stock Appreciation Right)
What you getRight to buy shares at a fixed price later.Promise to receive shares (or cash) on meeting conditions.Right to receive increase in value of a notional number of shares.
Exercise priceYesUsually noNo (settled in cash or shares).
Ownership when grantedNoNo (until vesting/settlement)No direct share ownership.
Common in India?Very common in startups/private companies.Growing in late-stage / MNC setups.Used in specific senior plans or listed-company setups.

Regulatory and tax treatment differs for each, especially RSUs and SARs for listed companies, so don’t “DIY” these structures without advisor support.

9. How Vimtara helps you run ESOPs the way investors expect

Trying to manage ESOPs in Excel once you cross 20–30 employees is a good way to:

  • Mess up vesting schedules
  • Lose track of pool usage
  • Break your cap table before a funding round

Vimtara is built specifically to avoid that.

From Vimtara’s own positioning:

  • It is an AI-enabled equity management platform for startups and enterprises.
  • It helps you simplify cap tables, automate compliance, and scale with confidence.
  • It includes dedicated Cap Table Management and ESOP Management modules.

9.1 What Vimtara does for founders & finance teams

  • Cap table & ESOP in one place
    Stop reconciling multiple sheets and signatures.
  • Accurate pool tracking
    See how much of your ESOP pool is granted, vested, lapsed, and available.
  • Scenario modelling
    Understand how new rounds and pool top-ups hit founder and employee ownership before you sign term sheets.
  • Compliance automation
    Structure grants in line with Companies Act and SEBI requirements and generate clean records for auditors and investors.

9.2 What Vimtara does for employees

  • Clear dashboards that show grants, vesting status, and potential value.
  • Automatic notifications for vesting, exercise windows, and key actions.
  • Better trust in ESOPs because people can see their equity, not dig up PDFs.

This is not “nice UX.” It directly impacts whether your ESOPs are taken seriously by the people you’re trying to retain.

10. Action checklists

10.1 Founder checklist for ESOP in India

StepQuestionIf your answer is “no” or “not sure”…
1Do we have a board- and shareholder-approved ESOP scheme?Fix the documentation before issuing more grants.
2Is our ESOP pool sized for 2–3 years of hiring?Remodel pool size with cap table projections.
3Are vesting, cliffs, and leaving rules clearly defined?Update the scheme & grant letters; stop case-by-case deals.
4Do we know our FMV and exercise price logic?Get a registered valuer and align with tax advisors.
5Are ESOP grants properly recorded and tracked?Move to a real platform like Vimtara, not spreadsheets.
6Do employees understand their ESOPs?Run an ESOP education session and share clear FAQs.
7Do we have a rough plan for liquidity events?At least outline buyback / secondary / IPO scenarios.

10.2 Employee checklist before counting ESOPs as “real money”

QuestionWhy it matters
Do I know how many options I have and how they vest?Vesting schedule controls what you actually earn over time.
Do I know my exercise price and rough FMV today?Determines your tax and whether exercise even makes sense.
Do I know when I can exercise (during employment / at exit)?Some schemes allow exercise only at exit or liquidity events.
Do I know what happens if I resign or get laid off?You may lose unvested and even vested options.
Has the company talked about buybacks / liquidity plans?Without liquidity, ESOP is just paper.
Do I understand the two-stage tax (exercise + sale)?Prevents nasty surprises later.

If your “yes” count here is low, stop fantasizing about the upside and start asking HR/Finance hard questions.

FAQ

Q1. What is the minimum vesting period for ESOPs in India?

For most ESOPs under the Companies Act and Rule 12, the minimum vesting period is 1 year from the date of grant, except in cases like death or permanent disability where accelerated vesting may be allowed.

Q2. Can a private limited company issue ESOPs?

Yes. Private companies can issue ESOPs if:

  • Their Articles of Association allow it, and
  • They follow Section 62(1)(b) and Rule 12, including special resolution by shareholders and proper disclosures.

Q3. When is ESOP taxed in India?

  • At exercise: FMV minus exercise price is taxed as salary perquisite; employer must deduct TDS.
  • At sale: Sale price minus FMV at exercise is taxed as capital gains.
    For eligible startups, TDS on the perquisite can be deferred within the 48-month / exit / resignation framework.

Q4. Is this article legal or tax advice?

No. Laws, tax rates, and regulatory practice change. This guide is for education and planning. For actual decisions, especially scheme design and large exercises, use this as a base, then speak to your CA, lawyer, or ESOP advisor.

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