EXEMPTIONS
Stamp Duty Exemptions — When You Do NOT Pay
Several situations are exempt from stamp duty on share transfer:
1. Transmission to Legal Heirs (Death)
When shares are transmitted to the legal heirs of a deceased shareholder, no stamp duty is payable. Transmission is not a “transfer” under the Indian Stamp Act — it occurs by operation of law (succession), not by a voluntary act between parties. This applies to both physical and demat shares.
This is a significant benefit for families inheriting shares. Our share transmission service handles the entire process for legal heirs.
2. Transmission Due to Insolvency
Shares transmitted as part of insolvency proceedings are also exempt, as the transfer occurs by court order rather than voluntary agreement.
3. Allotment of New Shares
When a company allots new shares (IPO, rights issue, bonus shares), no stamp duty is payable on the allotment itself. Stamp duty on the share certificate (if issued in physical form) may apply separately.
4. Dematerialisation and Rematerialisation
Converting physical shares to demat (dematerialisation) or demat to physical (rematerialisation) does not attract stamp duty, as there is no change in ownership — only a change in the form of holding.
Important for Legal Heirs: If you are inheriting shares from a deceased family member, no stamp duty is payable on the transmission. However, if you subsequently sell or transfer those shares to someone else, stamp duty will apply on that sale/transfer at the applicable rate. To learn more, read our guide: Transfer vs Transmission of Shares.