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March 2026

Significant Beneficial Ownership (SBO) Under The Companies Act 2013: A Study

By Pramod Prabhudesai, Chartered Accountant
Reading Time 37 mins

The Significant Beneficial Ownership (SBO) framework under the Companies Act 2013 identifies natural persons who ultimately control companies, preventing corporate misuse. SBO status triggers via a dual-test: a quantitative threshold of 10% indirect or combined shareholding, voting, or dividend rights, or a qualitative test of exercising "control" or "significant influence". Companies must seek SBO details (Form BEN-4), SBOs declare interests (Form BEN-1), and companies notify the Registrar (Form BEN-2). Non-compliance invites steep penalties and NCLT restrictions on dividend and voting rights. Recent rulings against Samsung and LinkedIn underscore strict enforcement regarding indirect group control.

Significant Beneficial Ownership (SBO) represents one of the most critical compliance requirements under the Companies Act 2013 (CA 2013), aimed at identifying the natural persons who ultimately control or benefit from companies, thereby preventing misuse of corporate structures for illicit purposes. Following recommendations from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and the Company Law Committee, India introduced the SBO regime through the Companies (Amendment) Act 2017, which substantially amended Section 90 of the CA 2013. The regime underwent further refinement through the Companies (Significant Beneficial Owners) Rules 2018 (SBO Rules), s

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