In the Union Budget 2026-27, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced a major change in the taxation of share buybacks. Previously, under rules introduced in October 2024, buyback proceeds were treated as a “deemed dividend”, meaning the entire amount received by a shareholder was taxed as income, without any deduction for the cost of acquiring the shares. For instance, if an investor received ₹1,00,000 in a buyback and was in the 30% tax slab, the full amount was taxed, regardless of the initial investment. This often resulted in a disproportionately high tax burden, especially for retail investors and long-term shareholders.

The new rules in Budget 2026 align buybacks with capital gains taxation, similar to normal share sales. Under this regime, tax is charged only on the gain, which is the difference between the buyback price and the cost of acquisition. This allows investors to deduct their original investment before computing tax liability. For example, if a shareholder bought shares at ₹70 and received ₹100 in a buyback, tax would apply only to the ₹30 profit, not the entire ₹100 payout. This makes the system fairer and more predictable, particularly benefiting retail and minority investors.

The Budget also introduces special treatment for promoters to prevent misuse of buybacks as a tax planning tool. Domestic company promoters will face an effective tax rate of 22%, while non-domestic company promoters will pay 30% on buyback gains. This is higher than the regular capital gains rates for ordinary investors and is designed to curb potential tax arbitrage, ensuring fairness across shareholder classes.

The rationale for this change is multifold: it simplifies the tax framework, provides clarity and predictability for investors, encourages efficient corporate capital allocation, and addresses concerns about the earlier deemed dividend treatment. By taxing only the gain portion, the system becomes more equitable for long-term investors while still maintaining revenue from promoters who might otherwise exploit buybacks for lower taxation.

Effective from April 1, 2026, the new buyback taxation rules will be implemented under the Income-tax Act, 2025, marking a shift toward a more investor-friendly regime. Retail and non-promoter investors will now follow standard capital gains rules, with short-term or long-term holding periods determining the applicable rate, while promoters face the higher 22%-30% levy. Overall, this change makes share buybacks fairer, predictable, and aligned with regular stock sales, improving transparency and investor confidence in the Indian equity market.