Conversion & Closure · Entity Restructuring Advisory
Transfer of Business as Going Concern / Slump Sale
Selling or acquiring a business as a going concern is one of the highest-stakes transactions a company undertakes — and one of the easiest to get structurally wrong.
Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986
Selling or acquiring a business as a going concern is one of the highest-stakes transactions a company undertakes — and one of the easiest to get structurally wrong. Whether you call it a slump sale, a business transfer agreement, or a going concern sale, the tax treatment under the Income-tax Act, the GST position, the valuation methodology, and the transfer mechanics under the Companies Act all interact in ways that a generic sale deed does not anticipate. PNPC has advised on business transfers and slump sale transactions since 1986 — from valuation and tax structuring through documentation, regulatory filings, and post-transfer compliance. We do not just draft the agreement; we structure the transaction so the tax and legal outcome matches what you actually intended.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
A slump sale is defined under Section 2(42C) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (the substantive definition and the Section 50B computation mechanism are expected to continue in substance, under renumbered provisions, in the Income Tax Act, 2025 which took effect from 1 April 2026 — PNPC confirms the exact current citation applicable to your transaction date at the time of engagement) as the transfer of one or more undertakings, for a lump sum consideration, without values being assigned to individual assets and liabilities in such a sale. The critical feature is that the business is transferred as a whole — as a going concern — with all its assets, liabilities, employees, contracts, licences, and goodwill moving together under a single umbrella consideration. This is fundamentally different from an itemised asset sale, where each asset (land, machinery, inventory, receivables) is individually valued and transferred, potentially attracting different tax and stamp duty treatment for each item. The mechanism used to execute a slump sale is typically a Business Transfer Agreement (BTA), sometimes called a Going Concern Sale Agreement, which identifies the undertaking being transferred, the lump sum consideration, the effective date, and the treatment of employees, contracts, and statutory registrations.
The tax computation for a slump sale is governed by Section 50B of the Income-tax Act. Capital gains arising from a slump sale are computed as the difference between the lump sum consideration and the 'net worth' of the undertaking transferred — net worth being the aggregate value of total assets minus the value of liabilities, computed as per the books of account, with certain specified adjustments (revalued assets are considered at their book value before revaluation, and self-generated goodwill or other self-generated assets are taken at NIL value). The gain is characterised as long-term capital gain if the undertaking was held for more than 36 months, and short-term otherwise — the holding period of individual assets within the undertaking is not separately relevant; what matters is how long the undertaking itself has existed as a going concern. Since the Finance Act 2021 amendment, for slump sale transactions, the Fair Market Value (FMV) of the undertaking as on the date of transfer — computed under prescribed valuation rules (Rule 11UAE of the Income-tax Rules) — is deemed to be the full value of consideration if it exceeds the actual consideration received, closing a valuation-manipulation gap that existed in earlier years.
On the GST side, the transfer of a business as a going concern is treated as a supply of services but is exempted from GST under Entry 2 of Notification No. 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate), provided the transfer is of the business (or an independent part of the business) as a going concern — meaning the transferee continues the same kind of business that was carried on by the transferor, without a break in continuity. This exemption is a significant reason many businesses prefer structuring an exit as a slump sale rather than a piecemeal asset sale (where individual assets like machinery or inventory would ordinarily attract GST at applicable rates on their transaction value). Getting the 'going concern' characterisation right — genuine continuity of business, not merely a bundle of assets dressed up as an undertaking — is essential; a transaction that fails the going-concern test on facts can retrospectively lose this GST exemption along with other favourable treatments.
From a corporate law standpoint, a slump sale of a company's undertaking that constitutes 'the whole or substantially the whole of the undertaking' requires shareholder approval by special resolution under Section 180(1)(a) of the Companies Act 2013 — the Board alone cannot approve such a sale. Stamp duty is payable on the Business Transfer Agreement as a conveyance, at rates that vary by state and are typically calculated on the consideration or the value of immovable property transferred, whichever is higher under the applicable state stamp act. Employee transfer requires careful handling — under Indian labour law, a transfer of undertaking as a going concern generally does not by itself terminate employment (continuity of service is often preserved contractually and, for certain categories, under labour welfare legislation), but the BTA must explicitly address whether employees are being transferred with continuity of service, retrenched, or re-employed by the transferee, since this affects gratuity, provident fund transfer, and retrenchment compensation obligations.
When a slump sale or going concern transfer is the right structure
Selling an entire division, undertaking, or business line to a buyer who wants to run it as a continuing business rather than acquire scattered assets
Exiting a non-core business unit while retaining the parent entity and its other operations — a clean carve-out without dissolving the company
Group restructuring — moving a business undertaking from one group entity to another (e.g., ahead of a fundraise, demerger, or to ring-fence liabilities in a specific vertical)
Acquirer wants continuity of contracts, licences, employees, and vendor relationships without the delay and cost of individually novating or re-registering each one
Promoters want a single lump-sum consideration and a cleaner tax computation (net worth basis under Section 50B) rather than negotiating and documenting values for dozens of individual assets
Business has significant self-generated goodwill or intangible value that would be difficult to substantiate and tax-optimise through an itemised asset sale
Buyer and seller want the GST going-concern exemption under Notification 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate) rather than GST applying to each individual asset transferred
Distressed asset sale where a going concern sale (including IBC-driven slump sales of a corporate debtor's business) preserves more enterprise value than a piecemeal liquidation of assets
When another structure is more appropriate
Buyer wants specific identified assets only (e.g., only the machinery, only a customer list, only a brand) and has no interest in taking on employees, contracts, or liabilities — an itemised asset purchase agreement is more appropriate and GST will typically apply on the assets transferred
You want to acquire or dispose of an entire company including its corporate shell, statutory history, and existing registrations — a share purchase/sale (transfer of shares) may be simpler than carving out an undertaking, especially where licences are tied to the corporate entity rather than the business itself
Two companies want to combine on an ongoing basis with shareholders of both continuing as shareholders of the combined entity — an amalgamation or merger under Sections 230–232 of the Companies Act (via NCLT) is the correct route, not a slump sale, which is a cash/consideration-for-business transaction between two separate parties
The 'undertaking' cannot be meaningfully separated from the rest of the business — shared employees, shared premises, shared contracts with no clean split — attempting a slump sale in such cases invites tax and GST authorities to challenge whether a genuine 'going concern' was actually transferred
The transaction is really an itemised transfer with values assigned to each asset for buyer's own accounting or financing reasons — assigning individual values to assets defeats the 'lump sum consideration' test under Section 2(42C) and the transaction may be reclassified as an itemised sale, losing slump sale tax treatment
Regulatory licences or registrations central to the business (e.g., certain financial services licences, specific sector permissions) are non-transferable and require a fresh application by the transferee regardless of structure — in such cases a share sale of the licence-holding entity may be unavoidable
Slump Sale / Going Concern Transfer vs other business transfer & exit mechanisms
| Feature | Slump Sale (Sec 2(42C)/50B) | Itemised Asset Sale | Share Sale / Transfer | Amalgamation / Merger (NCLT) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| What is transferred | Entire undertaking as a going concern — assets, liabilities, employees, contracts together | Individual identified assets only | Shares of the company — undertaking stays inside the same corporate shell | Entire company merges into another; shareholders get shares in the combined entity |
| Consideration basis | Single lump sum for the whole undertaking — no itemised values assigned | Separate value assigned to each asset transferred | Price per share, for the shareholding transferred | Share exchange ratio determined by valuation; typically no cash consideration to the company |
| Tax computation | Capital gains = consideration minus net worth of undertaking (Sec 50B); LTCG if held >36 months | Gains/loss computed asset-by-asset; block of assets rules for depreciable assets apply | Capital gains for the selling shareholder = sale price minus cost of acquisition of shares | Generally tax-neutral for shareholders and the amalgamating company if conditions under Sec 2(1B) are satisfied |
| GST treatment | Exempt if genuine going concern transfer — Notification 12/2017-CT(Rate), Entry 2 | GST applies on individual assets at applicable rates (transaction value based) | No GST — transfer of shares is not a supply of goods or services | No GST at the level of the merger itself; asset transfer on merger is generally outside GST scope as part of amalgamation |
| Stamp duty | On the Business Transfer Agreement — state-specific rates, generally as conveyance | On individual asset transfer instruments (e.g., sale deed for immovable property) | Nominal — 0.015%–0.25% typically, on share transfer instrument value depending on mode of transfer | Stamp duty on the NCLT-sanctioned scheme, per state stamp act — can be substantial in some states |
| Approval required | Special resolution under Sec 180(1)(a) if it is the whole or substantially whole undertaking | Board approval generally sufficient unless it also triggers Sec 180(1)(a) | Board + compliance with AoA share transfer restrictions; SH-4 filing | NCLT sanction after shareholder, creditor, and regulatory approvals — a court-supervised process |
| Timeline (typical) | 6–16 weeks depending on due diligence, valuation, and consent requirements | 4–10 weeks depending on number and type of assets | 2–6 weeks for a straightforward private transfer | 6–18 months given NCLT process and regulatory approvals |
| Employee treatment | BTA specifies continuity of service, retrenchment, or re-employment; PF/gratuity transfer addressed | Employees typically not transferred unless separately negotiated | No change — employees remain with the same corporate employer | Employees of transferor company typically continue with the combined entity per the scheme |
| Liabilities carried | All liabilities of the undertaking generally transfer with it unless BTA carves out specific exclusions | Only liabilities explicitly assumed by the buyer transfer | All liabilities of the company remain with it (buyer inherits them via the shares) | Liabilities of transferor company vest in the transferee per the sanctioned scheme |
| Suitability for partial carve-out | Well suited — a single division or undertaking can be cleanly separated and sold | Suited only for discrete assets, not a functioning business unit | Not suited for partial carve-out — transfers the whole company | Not typically used for a partial carve-out — a demerger under Sec 230-232 is used instead |
| Regulatory/licence continuity | Business licences tied to the undertaking may need fresh application by transferee unless transferable | Asset-specific; licences generally not transferred with individual assets | Licences held by the company continue unaffected — only ownership of shares changes | Licences generally continue with the transferee per the scheme, subject to sectoral regulator consent |
| Best suited for | Selling/buying a functioning business unit while keeping legal history separate from the target undertaking | Buyer wants only specific assets, no ongoing business or workforce | Buyer wants the entire corporate entity including its history, contracts, and licences intact | Two going-concern companies combining permanently with continuing shareholder base |
This table gives directional guidance only. The correct structure for any specific transaction depends on the buyer's and seller's commercial objectives, the sector's regulatory licensing framework, the presence of foreign shareholders (FEMA pricing and reporting implications), and detailed tax modelling under Section 50B and Rule 11UAE. A pre-transaction consultation with a practising CA and legal counsel is essential before the term sheet is finalised.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | What Generic Advisors Miss | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Transaction Structuring Advisory — determine whether slump sale is the right mechanism before any term sheet is signed | We ask the questions that determine everything downstream: is this genuinely a separable undertaking, or shared infrastructure dressed up as one? Are there sector-specific licences that will not transfer with the undertaking? Is there a foreign buyer or seller triggering FEMA pricing guidelines? Does the seller want long-term or short-term capital gains treatment, and does the 36-month holding period test work in their favour? These answers shape whether slump sale, itemised sale, or a share sale is actually the right route. | Week 1–2 |
| 2 | Business Valuation — determining consideration and net worth for tax purposes | The lump sum consideration must be commercially defensible and, since the Finance Act 2021 amendment, cannot simply understate value — Rule 11UAE prescribes the FMV methodology for the undertaking, and if the FMV computed under the Rule exceeds actual consideration, the FMV is deemed to be the full value of consideration for capital gains purposes. We prepare a defensible valuation using DCF, comparable transactions, and net asset value methods as appropriate, cross-checked against Rule 11UAE. | Week 2–4 |
| 3 | Tax Structuring & Net Worth Computation — computing Section 50B net worth precisely | Net worth is not simply 'assets minus liabilities' from the balance sheet — self-generated goodwill and other self-generated intangible assets are taken at NIL, revalued assets are considered at their pre-revaluation book value, and specific adjustments under Section 50B's Explanation apply. Getting this computation wrong either overstates the seller's tax liability or creates an indefensible return position that invites scrutiny. We compute this line by line, not by approximation. | Week 3–5 |
| 4 | Due Diligence Coordination — legal, tax, and financial due diligence on the undertaking being transferred | The undertaking's contracts, licences, employee records, litigation history, tax assessment status, and encumbrances on assets must all be verified before the BTA is signed — not discovered afterward. We coordinate with legal counsel and review the tax and compliance angle: pending assessments, GST input credit reversal exposure, unpaid statutory dues attached to the undertaking, and change-of-control clauses in material contracts. | Week 3–7 (parallel to valuation) |
| 5 | Business Transfer Agreement (BTA) Drafting — the definitive legal document | The BTA must precisely define the 'undertaking' being transferred (assets, liabilities, contracts, employees, IP, goodwill), state the consideration as a single lump sum (not itemised), specify the effective date, address representations and warranties, indemnities, non-compete covenants, and — critically — the treatment of employees (transfer with continuity of service vs re-employment vs retrenchment) and statutory registrations (GST, IEC, trade licences) that need fresh application by the transferee. A poorly drafted BTA that assigns itemised values inadvertently converts the transaction into an asset sale for tax purposes. | Week 5–8 |
| 6 | Board & Shareholder Approvals — Section 180(1)(a) special resolution where applicable | If the undertaking being sold constitutes the whole or substantially the whole of the company's undertaking, Section 180(1)(a) of the Companies Act 2013 requires a special resolution of shareholders — the Board resolution alone is not sufficient. We assess whether this threshold is triggered (a fact-specific test, not a bright-line percentage) and prepare the resolution, explanatory statement, and notice accordingly. | Week 6–8 |
| 7 | GST Position & Notification 12/2017 Exemption Assessment | The going concern GST exemption requires genuine continuity — the transferee must carry on the same kind of business. We document the facts supporting this characterisation (continuing employees, continuing customer relationships, continuing use of the same trade name or operations) so the exemption position is defensible if questioned. Where the exemption is doubtful, we advise on GST implications on the transfer and input tax credit transfer via Form GST ITC-02. | Week 6–9 |
| 8 | FEMA / RBI Compliance (if cross-border) — pricing guidelines and reporting | Where either the transferor or transferee is a non-resident, or the undertaking includes foreign assets or liabilities, FEMA pricing guidelines apply to ensure the consideration is not below (for inbound) or above (for outbound) the fair value determined by a SEBI-registered merchant banker or chartered accountant. Reporting on the FIRMS portal may be required depending on the transaction structure. We assess this early — retrofitting FEMA compliance after signing is far costlier. | Week 6–10 (where applicable) |
| 9 | Stamp Duty Assessment & Payment — state-specific conveyance duty on the BTA | Stamp duty on a business transfer agreement is levied under the state stamp act applicable to the state where the agreement is executed or where the immovable property/undertaking is situated, and rates and the basis of computation (consideration vs asset value) vary meaningfully by state. Under-stamping risks the document being inadmissible as evidence and attracting penalty on adjudication. We compute the correct duty and, where beneficial, advise on state of execution. | Week 8–10 |
| 10 | Employee Transfer Documentation — continuity of service, PF/gratuity, and communication | The BTA must specify whether employees transfer with continuity of service (common in genuine going concern transfers) or are retrenched and re-employed. Continuity of service preserves gratuity eligibility periods and generally avoids retrenchment compensation obligations, but requires explicit employee consent/communication and coordination with the transferee's PF and ESI registrations for a seamless contribution transfer. We prepare the employee communication, consent documentation, and PF/gratuity transfer coordination. | Week 8–11 |
| 11 | Statutory Registration Transitions — GST, IEC, trade licences, and other registrations | Some registrations transfer with proper application (e.g., GST registration is generally fresh for the transferee entity, with ITC transfer via Form GST ITC-02 rather than the registration itself moving); others require a fresh application in the transferee's name from Day 1 of the transfer (IEC, FSSAI, trade licence, factory licence, pollution control consent). We map every registration the undertaking holds and sequence the transitions so there is no operational gap on the effective date. | Week 9–13 |
| 12 | Completion & Closing — execution, consideration payment, and possession handover | Closing involves simultaneous execution of the BTA, payment of consideration, handover of possession/control of the undertaking, execution of ancillary documents (IP assignment, non-compete agreements, transitional services agreement if applicable), and formal notice to key customers, vendors, and employees. We coordinate the closing checklist so nothing is executed out of sequence. | Week 12–14 |
| 13 | Post-Closing Tax Filing & Compliance — capital gains reporting and undertaking's income tax position | The seller must report the slump sale gain in the relevant year's income tax return with Form 3CEA (accountant's report on computation of capital gains under Section 50B) attached where the undertaking's turnover crosses the tax audit threshold. The transferee must ensure GST ITC-02 filing (if applicable), update statutory registers, and integrate the undertaking's accounting into its own books from the effective date. We manage this filing and the first post-transfer compliance cycle. | Within statutory due dates post financial year end |
Realistic end-to-end timeline for a mid-sized slump sale transaction: 3–4 months from initial structuring advisory to closing, assuming reasonably clean due diligence and no NCLT or sector-regulator approval requirement. Transactions involving foreign parties, regulated sector licences, or significant creditor consents typically take longer. PNPC provides a transaction-specific timeline after the initial structuring assessment.
Latest audited financial statements of the transferor entity — at least 2–3 years, plus the undertaking-specific financials if maintained separately
List of assets and liabilities proposed to be included in the undertaking — tagged clearly as belonging to the undertaking vs the retained business
Organisation chart identifying which employees are dedicated to the undertaking vs shared with the retained business
List of material contracts (customer, vendor, lease, financing) associated with the undertaking, with change-of-control and assignment clauses flagged
List of statutory registrations and licences held in connection with the undertaking (GST, IEC, trade licence, factory licence, sector-specific approvals)
Details of any pending litigation, tax assessment, or regulatory proceeding connected to the undertaking
Board approval to explore the transaction and appoint advisors (valuer, legal counsel, CA firm)
Valuation report — DCF, comparable transaction, and/or net asset value methodology as appropriate to the undertaking
Rule 11UAE Fair Market Value computation of the undertaking for capital gains purposes
Net worth computation of the undertaking under Section 50B — assets at book value, liabilities as recorded, self-generated goodwill at NIL, revalued assets restated at original book value
Computation of holding period of the undertaking to determine long-term vs short-term capital gains characterisation
Draft capital gains computation showing consideration less net worth, and applicable tax rate
Board resolution approving the slump sale/business transfer and authorising signatories
Special resolution of shareholders under Section 180(1)(a) — required where the undertaking constitutes the whole or substantially the whole of the company's undertaking
Notice of general meeting with explanatory statement disclosing material facts of the transaction to shareholders
Certified copy of the resolution for use in banking, regulatory, and counterparty due diligence
Business Transfer Agreement (BTA) — defining the undertaking, lump sum consideration, effective date, representations and warranties, indemnities, and closing conditions
Disclosure schedule — exceptions to representations and warranties, disclosed liabilities, ongoing litigation
Non-compete and non-solicitation agreement — where the seller agrees not to compete with the transferred business for a defined period and territory
IP assignment agreement — for trademarks, patents, copyrights, and domain names forming part of the undertaking
Transitional Services Agreement (TSA) — where the transferor continues to provide certain shared services (IT, HR, accounting) to the transferee for a defined post-closing period
Employee transfer letters/consent — documenting continuity of service terms, or retrenchment and re-employment terms as applicable
Fair value certificate from a SEBI-registered merchant banker or CA for FEMA pricing compliance — required where a non-resident is a party to the transaction
FIRMS portal reporting documentation — where applicable for cross-border consideration or asset transfer
GST position memo documenting the going-concern exemption basis under Notification 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate), or GST computation if the exemption is not claimed
Form GST ITC-02 — for transfer of unutilised input tax credit from transferor to transferee where the exemption applies and ITC transfer is elected
State stamp duty adjudication application (where the parties elect to have the BTA formally adjudicated) and proof of stamp duty payment
Form 3CEA — accountant's report on computation of capital gains in case of slump sale, where applicable based on turnover/audit thresholds
Fresh GST registration application for the transferee (where the undertaking operates from a location not already covered by transferee's existing GSTIN)
Fresh applications for non-transferable licences in the transferee's name — IEC, FSSAI, factory licence, pollution control consent, trade licence, as applicable to the undertaking
PF and ESI transfer/continuity documentation for transferred employees
Updated statutory registers of the transferor (asset register update) and transferee (incoming asset recording)
Handover memorandum — inventory count, asset physical verification, and possession certificate at closing
Customer and vendor notification letters confirming the change in operating entity and continuity of service
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Transaction Structuring (Week 1–4) | Decision to sell/acquire a business unit | Assess whether the undertaking is genuinely separable, whether slump sale is the optimal structure versus itemised sale or share sale, and identify sector, FEMA, and licence-transfer complications before a term sheet is signed. | Wrong structure chosen — transaction later reclassified by tax authorities, losing intended capital gains and GST treatment. Non-transferable licences discovered after signing, delaying or derailing closing. |
| Valuation & Tax Structuring (Week 2–6) | Term sheet signed or LOI executed | Defensible valuation under Rule 11UAE, precise Section 50B net worth computation, and holding period analysis for LTCG/STCG characterisation. | FMV computed incorrectly → capital gains understated → tax demand with interest and penalty on reassessment. Net worth miscalculated → seller either overpays tax or files an indefensible return. |
| Documentation & Approvals (Week 5–9) | Valuation and due diligence substantially complete | BTA drafted with a single lump sum consideration (no itemised asset values), Section 180(1)(a) special resolution where triggered, employee treatment clearly specified, non-compete and IP assignment documented. | Itemised values in the BTA convert the transaction into an asset sale for tax purposes, losing slump sale treatment. Missing special resolution renders the transfer voidable. Ambiguous employee clauses create retrenchment compensation claims later. |
| GST, FEMA & Stamp Duty Compliance (Week 6–10) | BTA finalised, ready for execution | Going-concern GST exemption position documented with supporting facts. FEMA fair value certificate obtained for cross-border transactions. Correct state stamp duty computed and paid/adjudicated. | GST exemption denied on audit if going-concern facts are not genuinely established → GST demand plus interest and penalty. FEMA pricing guideline breach → RBI compounding proceedings. Under-stamped BTA inadmissible as evidence in a later dispute. |
| Closing & Handover (Week 10–14) | All approvals and documentation complete | Simultaneous execution, consideration payment, possession handover, ancillary agreement execution, and customer/vendor/employee communication managed to a single closing checklist. | Uncoordinated closing — consideration paid before possession transferred, or vice versa, creating a dispute. Registrations not applied for in time leaving the transferee unable to operate legally from Day 1. |
| Post-Closing Compliance (Month 1–12) | Transfer effective | Fresh GST registration and ITC-02 filing for the transferee, non-transferable licence applications completed, PF/ESI continuity established, capital gains reported in the seller's ITR with Form 3CEA where applicable. | GST or licence gap causing the transferee to operate without valid registration. Capital gains under-reported or Form 3CEA not filed where required, inviting scrutiny assessment. |
| Ongoing Integration & Dispute Management | Post-closing operations | Transitional Services Agreement managed to its term, indemnity claims (if any) tracked against the contractual time limits in the BTA, non-compete compliance monitored. | TSA services lapse without transferee being operationally ready. Indemnity claims lost due to missed contractual notice periods. Non-compete breach litigation if terms were ambiguous. |
What exactly is a slump sale, in plain terms?
It is the sale of an entire business or business unit — all its assets, liabilities, employees, and contracts together — for one lump sum price, rather than selling each asset separately with its own price tag. The legal definition is in Section 2(42C) of the Income-tax Act, 1961: a transfer of one or more undertakings for a lump sum consideration without values being assigned to the individual assets and liabilities.
What is the difference between a slump sale and a 'transfer of business as a going concern'?
They generally describe the same commercial transaction from two different regulatory lenses. 'Slump sale' is the Income-tax Act's term (Section 2(42C)) focused on how capital gains are computed. 'Transfer of business as a going concern' is the language used in the GST exemption under Notification 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate), focused on whether GST applies to the transfer. A well-structured transaction satisfies both tests simultaneously — lump sum consideration for income tax purposes, and genuine business continuity for GST purposes.
How is the tax on a slump sale actually computed?
Under Section 50B of the Income-tax Act, the capital gain is the lump sum consideration received minus the 'net worth' of the undertaking transferred. Net worth is computed as aggregate value of total assets of the undertaking minus the value of liabilities, as they appear in the books of account — with adjustments: revalued assets are taken at their book value before revaluation (ignoring any revaluation), and self-generated goodwill or other self-generated intangible assets are taken at NIL. Since the Finance Act 2021, if the Fair Market Value of the undertaking computed under Rule 11UAE exceeds the actual consideration, that FMV is deemed to be the full value of consideration for the capital gains computation.
Is the capital gain from a slump sale long-term or short-term?
It depends on how long the undertaking has existed and been held as a going concern — not the individual holding period of each asset within it. If the undertaking was held for more than 36 months, the gain is a long-term capital gain; otherwise it is short-term. This is a distinct rule from the general capital asset holding period tests that apply to shares, immovable property, or individual depreciable assets.
Does GST apply to a slump sale transaction?
If the transfer genuinely qualifies as a transfer of business as a going concern — meaning the transferee continues the same kind of business without a break in continuity — the transaction is exempt from GST under Entry 2 of Notification No. 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate). If the transaction does not meet the going-concern test (for example, it is really a bundle of individual assets without continuity of the business), GST would apply on the supply of those individual assets at applicable rates. Getting the characterisation right, on facts, is essential.
What is Form GST ITC-02 and when is it needed?
Form GST ITC-02 is used to transfer unutilised input tax credit from the transferor's electronic credit ledger to the transferee's electronic credit ledger when a business is transferred as a going concern (including on account of sale, merger, demerger, amalgamation, lease, or transfer of business). The transferor files the form on the GST portal, and the transferee must accept it for the credit to reflect in their ledger. This is a separate process from the GST exemption itself.
Do we need shareholder approval to do a slump sale?
If the undertaking being transferred constitutes the whole or substantially the whole of the company's undertaking, Section 180(1)(a) of the Companies Act 2013 requires the company to obtain shareholder approval by special resolution before the Board can complete the sale, lease, or disposal. If the undertaking is a smaller unit that does not meet this 'whole or substantially whole' threshold, Board approval alone may suffice, though good governance practice often still recommends shareholder disclosure for material transactions.
What happens to employees when a business is transferred as a going concern?
This must be explicitly addressed in the Business Transfer Agreement. The two common approaches are: (1) employees transfer to the transferee with continuity of service — meaning their tenure, gratuity eligibility, and leave balances carry forward as if there was no break in employment; or (2) employees are retrenched by the transferor (with applicable retrenchment compensation) and re-employed fresh by the transferee. The BTA, along with employee communication and consent, determines which path applies — it does not happen automatically by operation of law in every case.
Does the transferee need a fresh GST registration for the acquired undertaking?
Generally, yes, if the undertaking operates from a location where the transferee does not already hold a GST registration in that state, the transferee must obtain a fresh GST registration for that place of business. The transferor's existing GST registration is not simply reassigned to the transferee — the transferee's own registration covers the acquired operations going forward, with input tax credit transferred separately via Form GST ITC-02.
Are all licences and registrations of the undertaking transferable to the buyer?
No. Some registrations and licences are tied to the business/premises and can transfer or be re-registered relatively smoothly (for example, certain trade licences with a change-of-ownership intimation); others are non-transferable and require the transferee to make a fresh application in its own name from scratch — this commonly includes the Import Export Code (IEC), FSSAI licence, factory licence, and various sector-specific permissions. Where a key licence central to the business cannot be transferred and takes significant time to obtain afresh, this materially affects transaction timing and sometimes the decision to structure as a share sale instead.
Is stamp duty payable on a Business Transfer Agreement?
Yes. The BTA is generally treated as a conveyance under the applicable state stamp act, and stamp duty is payable — typically computed on the consideration, or on the market value of any immovable property or other specified assets included in the undertaking, whichever the state law prescribes as higher. Rates vary meaningfully by state, and some states have specific provisions or notifications addressing business transfer instruments.
Can a slump sale happen between two companies in the same corporate group?
Yes — intra-group slump sales are a common group restructuring tool, used to carve a business unit out of one group entity and place it in another (for example, to ring-fence liabilities, prepare a unit for a separate fundraise, or simplify a group structure ahead of an IPO). The same Section 50B tax computation, Section 180(1)(a) approval requirement (if applicable), and GST going-concern test apply regardless of whether the buyer is a related party — related-party transactions additionally attract scrutiny on whether the consideration reflects fair value, and transfer pricing documentation may be relevant if either entity has cross-border links.
What is Form 3CEA and when is it required?
Form 3CEA is the accountant's report on the computation of capital gains in case of a slump sale, required under Section 50B(3) of the Income-tax Act read with the applicable Rules, to be furnished along with the return of income where the assessee's undertaking transfer falls within the scope requiring such certification (typically linked to tax audit applicability thresholds for the transferor). It sets out the computation of net worth and the resulting capital gains in the prescribed format, certified by a chartered accountant.
Does the Income Tax Act, 2025 change how slump sales are taxed?
The Income-tax Act, 1961 has been replaced by the Income Tax Act, 2025, effective 1 April 2026. The government's stated intent for the new Act was continuity of substantive tax policy with renumbered and simplified sections and language — the slump sale definition, the net-worth-based capital gains computation, and the FMV-deeming rule are expected to carry forward in substance, but under renumbered section and rule references rather than the familiar Section 2(42C)/50B/Rule 11UAE citations from the 1961 Act. Because the transition is recent, we treat the underlying commercial and tax logic in this guide as reliable, but always confirm the exact current section/rule citation applicable to your transaction date at the time of engagement, rather than assuming the old numbering still applies for transactions effective after the changeover.
How is the consideration for a slump sale determined — can the parties agree on any price?
Commercially, the parties negotiate the price, but for tax purposes the actual consideration cannot simply be set arbitrarily low to minimise capital gains. Rule 11UAE of the Income-tax Rules prescribes a Fair Market Value methodology for the undertaking, and since the Finance Act 2021, if this computed FMV exceeds the actual consideration agreed, the FMV — not the lower agreed price — is deemed to be the full value of consideration for computing capital gains. This closes the gap where parties could previously agree an artificially low price to reduce the seller's tax.
What is a Transitional Services Agreement (TSA) and do we need one?
A TSA is a separate agreement under which the seller continues to provide certain shared services — IT systems, HR/payroll processing, accounting, customer support — to the buyer for a defined period after closing, while the buyer builds its own independent capability for those functions. It is common where the transferred undertaking previously relied on the seller's shared infrastructure that cannot be instantly replicated on Day 1 of the transfer.
Can a foreign company or NRI be a buyer or seller in a slump sale?
Yes, but cross-border slump sales bring FEMA into play. If a non-resident is acquiring an Indian undertaking, or an Indian company is selling an undertaking to a non-resident, FEMA pricing guidelines require the consideration to be determined per the fair value methodology prescribed for the relevant category of transaction, and reporting obligations (potentially including FIRMS portal filings) may apply. Sectoral FDI caps and conditions can also restrict which businesses a non-resident may acquire via this route.
Is a slump sale reversible or can it be undone if something goes wrong post-closing?
Not easily. Once closing occurs — consideration is paid, possession is handed over, and (where required) the special resolution and regulatory filings are complete — unwinding a slump sale requires either a mutually agreed rescission (itself a fresh transaction with its own tax and legal consequences) or litigation if one party alleges breach or misrepresentation. This is why due diligence, representations and warranties, and indemnity provisions in the BTA matter so much — they are the primary post-closing remedy, not a right to simply reverse the deal.
What representations and warranties are typically included in a Business Transfer Agreement?
Common representations include: the seller's clear title to the assets being transferred, accuracy of the financial statements of the undertaking, no undisclosed liabilities, no pending or threatened litigation beyond what is disclosed, compliance with applicable laws (labour, tax, environmental, sector-specific), validity of material contracts and consents obtained for their assignment, and accuracy of the employee and statutory dues position. These are backed by indemnity provisions specifying the buyer's remedy if a representation proves false.
Can a slump sale be used to transfer a loss-making undertaking?
Yes, structurally there is no bar on transferring a loss-making undertaking via slump sale — the net worth computation under Section 50B could even be negative if liabilities exceed assets, which would increase the computed capital gain (since gain = consideration minus net worth, a negative net worth increases the gain figure). Separately, carried-forward business losses and unabsorbed depreciation of the transferor generally do not automatically transfer to the transferee in a slump sale (unlike in certain amalgamations that qualify for specific loss carry-forward provisions under Section 72A) — this is an important commercial consideration for both parties.
How does a slump sale interact with existing loan or lease agreements tied to the undertaking?
Most loan agreements, equipment leases, and property leases contain change-of-control or assignment restriction clauses requiring lender or lessor consent before the underlying contract can be assigned to a new party. A slump sale does not automatically transfer these contracts without such consent — attempting to do so can trigger a default under the existing agreement. We review every material contract associated with the undertaking during due diligence specifically for these clauses, and sequence consent-seeking well ahead of the planned closing date.
Does a slump sale require RBI or other regulator approval?
A purely domestic slump sale between two Indian resident entities generally does not require RBI approval. Regulator involvement arises in specific scenarios: cross-border transactions require FEMA compliance (and, in restricted sectors, government route approval under the FDI policy); regulated entities (banks, NBFCs, insurance companies) transferring their business may require sectoral regulator (RBI, IRDAI) approval or at least intimation; and if the transaction forms part of an IBC corporate insolvency resolution process, NCLT/IBBI processes apply instead of a standalone private BTA.
What documentation should the buyer insist on before agreeing to a lump sum price?
At minimum: audited or reviewed financial statements of the undertaking for at least the preceding 2–3 years, a schedule of all assets and liabilities being included, disclosure of all material contracts with their assignment/consent status, confirmation of statutory compliance (GST, TDS, PF, ESI) up to the transfer date, litigation and tax assessment disclosure, and an independent valuation the buyer's own advisors are comfortable with. A buyer relying solely on the seller's valuation without independent verification carries meaningful diligence risk.
How long does a typical slump sale transaction take from term sheet to closing?
For a straightforward mid-sized undertaking with reasonably clean records, no foreign party, and no sector-regulator approval requirement: typically 3–4 months from a signed term sheet or LOI through structuring, valuation, due diligence, documentation, approvals, and closing. Transactions involving cross-border FEMA compliance, distressed or IBC-context sales, significant creditor consents, or regulated-sector approvals routinely take longer — sometimes 6 months or more.
What are the most common mistakes businesses make in a DIY slump sale?
The recurring pattern we see: (1) assigning itemised values to specific assets in the agreement 'for clarity,' which inadvertently converts the transaction out of slump sale treatment; (2) not obtaining the Section 180(1)(a) special resolution when required, rendering the transfer legally vulnerable; (3) treating the GST going-concern exemption as automatic without documenting the continuity-of-business facts; (4) failing to check whether key licences are transferable, discovering the gap only after signing; and (5) leaving employee treatment ambiguous in the BTA, which surfaces as a dispute months later.
Does PNPC handle both the buy-side and sell-side of a slump sale, and can you act for both parties?
PNPC typically acts for one party to the transaction — either the seller or the buyer — to avoid any conflict of interest in negotiation, valuation, and due diligence, which are inherently adversarial processes between buyer and seller. Where we act for the seller, we structure the sale, prepare the valuation and net worth computation, and represent the seller's interests in the BTA negotiation. Where we act for the buyer, we lead due diligence, independent valuation review, and structure the acquisition. We can, in limited cases, act as a neutral structuring advisor for related-party or intra-group transactions where both parties are the same ultimate ownership.
What does PNPC's slump sale advisory engagement typically include?
Transaction structuring assessment (slump sale vs alternatives), business valuation and Rule 11UAE FMV computation, Section 50B net worth computation and capital gains modelling, coordination of legal and financial due diligence, review/drafting input on the Business Transfer Agreement from a tax and compliance perspective, GST going-concern exemption assessment and Form GST ITC-02 filing support, FEMA compliance assessment for cross-border transactions, stamp duty computation, Section 180(1)(a) resolution drafting support, statutory registration transition mapping, and post-closing capital gains tax filing including Form 3CEA where applicable.
How much does slump sale advisory with PNPC cost?
Fees depend on transaction complexity — the size of the undertaking, whether cross-border FEMA elements apply, the number of licences and contracts requiring transition, and whether the deal involves related parties requiring more rigorous valuation defence. PNPC agrees a fixed or milestone-based fee in writing before the engagement begins, distinct from the valuer's or legal counsel's separate fees where those are engaged independently.
Why should we engage a CA firm rather than handling the slump sale entirely through legal counsel?
Legal counsel is essential for the Business Transfer Agreement and its enforceability, but the tax computation under Section 50B, the Rule 11UAE fair value methodology, the GST going-concern analysis, the stamp duty assessment, and the post-closing Form 3CEA filing are CA-domain technical work that determines the actual tax cost of the transaction. A BTA that is legally sound but structured without CA input on the consideration mechanics can still result in an unintended tax outcome — for instance, itemised values creeping into schedules for the buyer's internal accounting purposes, which can undermine the lump-sum characterisation. We work alongside legal counsel, not instead of them.
Can a slump sale be part of an IBC corporate insolvency resolution or liquidation process?
Yes. Under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016, the sale of a corporate debtor's business as a going concern is one of the recognised strategies during the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) and during liquidation, aimed at preserving enterprise value rather than a piecemeal asset liquidation. Such transactions follow the IBC's process (resolution plan approval by the Committee of Creditors and NCLT sanction, or liquidator-run process during liquidation) in addition to — not instead of — the general slump sale tax and GST principles, which continue to apply to characterise the transaction for the acquirer and the corporate debtor.
Is there a minimum transaction size for a slump sale to make sense over other structures?
There is no statutory minimum, but practically, the fixed costs of a slump sale — valuation, legal documentation, due diligence, stamp duty, and advisory fees — mean the structure is most cost-efficient for transactions of meaningful size where the tax benefit of net-worth-based capital gains computation and the GST exemption materially outweigh these costs. For very small asset transfers, an itemised sale with simpler documentation may be more proportionate.
What happens to the seller's remaining company after a slump sale of one of its undertakings?
The seller company continues to exist as a legal entity with its other business operations (if any) intact — the slump sale only carves out and transfers the specific undertaking identified in the BTA. The seller retains the sale proceeds (net of any liabilities settled from them and applicable capital gains tax), and its books of account are updated to remove the transferred undertaking's assets and liabilities from the effective date. If the transferred undertaking was the seller's only business, the seller company may subsequently consider closure, dormancy, or redeployment of the sale proceeds into a new venture — a separate decision from the slump sale itself.
Our business operates in both India and the UAE. Can PNPC handle a slump sale that spans both jurisdictions?
Yes. PNPC has operating offices in Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai. Where a slump sale involves an Indian undertaking with UAE-linked customers, vendors, or a UAE parent/subsidiary structure, we coordinate the India-side tax and GST structuring with the UAE-side Corporate Tax and VAT implications of the transaction under one engagement — rather than the client managing two disconnected advisory relationships across jurisdictions.
| What You Need | Generic Legal Drafting Service / DIY Template | PNPC Global |
|---|---|---|
| Structure selection | Slump sale assumed without testing alternatives | Structuring assessment comparing slump sale, itemised sale, share sale, and amalgamation against your commercial objectives |
| Valuation & FMV compliance | Not addressed, or a single generic valuation figure | Valuation plus Rule 11UAE fair market value computation, cross-checked so consideration and tax-deemed FMV are aligned before signing |
| Net worth / capital gains computation | Left to the client's accountant after signing | Section 50B net worth computed line-by-line during structuring, with capital gains modelled before the price is finalised |
| GST going-concern exemption | Assumed automatic | Facts-based assessment and documentation of business continuity; ITC-02 transfer managed proactively |
| Companies Act approvals | Board resolution only, by default | Section 180(1)(a) applicability assessed on the actual facts; special resolution and explanatory statement prepared where required |
| Licence & registration transition | Not mapped in advance | Every registration and licence held by the undertaking mapped for transferability before the term sheet is finalised |
| FEMA / cross-border compliance | Overlooked until a regulator query arises | FEMA pricing guideline and reporting assessment built into structuring from Day 1 where a non-resident party is involved |
| Post-closing tax filing | Not included | Form 3CEA and capital gains reporting managed as part of the engagement, consistent with the deal's valuation file |
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Transaction structuring assessment — slump sale vs itemised sale vs share sale vs amalgamation
- 02
Business valuation and Rule 11UAE fair market value computation
- 03
Section 50B net worth computation and capital gains modelling
- 04
Due diligence coordination — tax, GST, and statutory compliance angle
- 05
Business Transfer Agreement input — consideration structuring, representations, indemnities, employee treatment
- 06
Section 180(1)(a) special resolution and explanatory statement drafting support
- 07
GST going-concern exemption assessment and Form GST ITC-02 filing
- 08
FEMA pricing and reporting compliance for cross-border transactions
- 09
Stamp duty computation and adjudication support
- 10
Statutory registration and licence transition mapping
- 11
Employee transfer, PF/gratuity continuity coordination
- 12
Post-closing capital gains tax filing including Form 3CEA where applicable
- 13
India-UAE coordinated advisory for cross-border group restructurings
Speak with a PNPC Chartered Accountant before signing a term sheet for a business transfer. We will assess the right structure, model the actual tax outcome, and flag every regulatory dependency — in writing — before you commit.