Employee Stock Option Plans (ESOPs) are among the most powerful tools for wealth creation in India’s booming corporate sector. However, as private companies transition toward an Initial Public Offering (IPO), a hidden regulatory trap often catches former employees off guard, leaving their hard-earned equity unexpectedly frozen.
Under India’s capital market framework, your employment status at a precise moment in time determines whether you can cash out on listing day or find yourself locked out for months.
The Pre-IPO Baseline: The Mandatory 6-Month Freeze
To prevent sudden market saturation and ensure price stability immediately following a public listing, the market regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), enforces strict selling restrictions.
According to Regulation 17 of the SEBI (ICDR) Regulations, all pre-IPO shareholdings held by non-promoters are subject to a mandatory 6-month lock-in period, starting from the date of IPO allotment. During this period, these shares cannot be traded on public stock exchanges.
The Safe Harbor: The ESOP Exemption for Current Employees
Recognizing that equity incentives are designed to reward the workforce, SEBI provides an explicit carve-out under Regulation 17(a). This exemption entirely waives the 6-month lock-in period for shares obtained via employee equity schemes, allowing individuals to trade their shares from day one of public listing.
However, this exemption is not automatic. To qualify, an individual must fulfill two non-negotiable criteria:
|
Condition |
Requirement |
What It Means |
|
1. Timing of Allotment |
Shares must be credited to your Demat account before the company files its Red Herring Prospectus (RHP) with the Registrar of Companies (ROC). |
Options must be fully exercised and converted into actual shares prior to the final IPO documentation. |
|
2. The Continuity Principle |
You must maintain an active employment contract with the issuing company (or its eligible subsidiaries/group entities) at the exact time of the IPO allotment. |
You must be on the active payroll when the company finalizes its IPO shares. |
The Ex-Employee Pitfall: Why Past Workers Face a Different Reality
This is where many executives and early-stage employees face an expensive surprise. If an employee has resigned, retired, or been terminated before the IPO allotment date, they lose access to the ESOP exemption.
SEBI interprets the word “employee” with literal, strict contractual rigidity. According to the regulator, if there is no active contract of employment on the date of IPO allotment, you are legally categorized as an external, standard pre-IPO investor rather than an employee.
Landmark Regulatory Precedents
SEBI has consistently reinforced this uncompromising stance through formal Clarifications and Informal Guidances:
SEBI explicitly clarified that individuals who have ceased their employment prior to the IPO timeline cannot utilize the regulatory safe harbor.
Scenario Analysis: A Tale of Two Colleagues
To see how this plays out in practice, consider two early engineers at a high-growth tech startup heading toward an IPO:
Employee A (Current Employee): Holds 5,000 shares exercised via ESOPs. She stays with the company through the public listing. Because she satisfies both the allotment timeline and active employment status, she is free to liquidate her shares on Day 1 of listing to capitalize on market momentum.
Employee B (Ex-Employee): Holds 5,000 shares exercised via the exact same ESOP scheme. However, he resigns three months before the IPO to join a new venture. Because he is no longer an active employee at the IPO allotment date, his shares are flagged by the depositories and locked for 6 months. If the stock price experiences high volatility or dips during those 6 months, he can only watch from the sidelines.
The Intermediate Stage Vulnerability: Vested and Exercised, but Unallotted Options
So far, we have only talked about what happens to employees who completely finished the process—meaning they turned their options into actual shares well before the company went public.
However, a massive risk for many employees is getting caught in the “pre-IPO middle ground.” This happens when the company is counting down to its IPO, but your options are stuck halfway through the pipeline—they aren’t just paper options anymore, but they haven’t quite become real shares in your Demat account yet.
Let’s break down the two ways you can get trapped in this middle zone:
A.Direct Route: Category A: Vested and Exercised, but Unallotted Options
In this scenario, the employee has formally signed the exercise application and submitted the strike price/tax component to the company. However, the final corporate action—the actual physical allotment and credit of shares into the personal Demat account—is still pending.
Once the RHP is filed, the company can no longer issue these shares under the employee safe harbor. They will either be pushed past the IPO timeline or, if allotted late, hit with the mandatory 6-month lock-in period.
But these Shares generated after listing by exercising pre-IPO ESOPs are not subject to any statutory SEBI lock-in. You can sell them immediately upon receiving them in your demat account, subject only to company policy.
B.Trust Route:Category B: Options Vested, but Unexercised
Here, the employee legally owns the right to buy the shares. However, the employee has not yet formally exercised the options.
Many Indian companies choose to manage their equity incentive plans through an intermediary Employee Welfare Trust (ESOP Trust) rather than issuing shares directly from the company’s cap table. Under this mechanism, the company issues a block of shares to the Trust, and the Trust subsequently transfers those shares to employees when they exercise their options.
If your company uses a Trust route, SEBI applies an even stricter lens to the Timing of Allotment condition.
According to SEBI’s settled legal positions, it is not enough for the company to have issued shares to the ESOP Trust before the RHP filing.
The specific shares must be transferred out of the Trust’s account and completely credited to the individual employee’s personal Demat account before the company files the RHP with the Registrar of Companies (ROC).
If the shares are still sitting within the pool of the ESOP Trust when the RHP is filed—even if you have formally “exercised” your options on paper—the exemption is disqualified. Those shares will face the standard 6-month lock-in upon the IPO.
Illustration:
A senior executive exercises their vested options 30 days before the company intends to file its RHP. The company’s ESOP Trust acknowledges the exercise and processes the paperwork. Due to administrative processing or depository timelines, the actual transfer of shares from the Trust’s Demat account to the executive’s personal Demat account happens two days after the RHP is officially filed. Despite being an active, loyal employee, Because the shares were not in their personal Demat account prior to the RHP filing date, the shares are frozen for 6 months post-listing.
The Continuous Restriction: SEBI Insider Trading Rules (PIT):
Even if you are a current employee and your shares are exempt from the 6-month IPO lock-in, you cannot trade freely whenever you want. You are bound by the SEBI (Prohibition of Insider Trading) Regulations (PIT):
1.Trading Window Closures
Regulation 9 (Code of Conduct):Every quarter, around the time the company prepares to announce its financial results, the compliance officer will declare a Trading Window Closure (typically lasting from the end of the quarter until 48 hours after the financial results are made public). As an employee, you are barred from selling any ESOP shares during this period.
2. Possession of UPSI (Unpublished Price Sensitive Information)
If you work in a sensitive department (like Corporate Finance, Strategy, or R&D) and are privy to major unannounced news—such as an unannounced acquisition, a huge profit spike, or a regulatory penalty—you cannot trade your shares until that information becomes public. Doing so constitutes a criminal offense under Indian securities laws.
To help you easily spot your specific scenario at a glance:
|
Route Chosen |
Employee Status at IPO Allotment |
Share Location at RHP Filing |
Listing Day Status (Day 1) |
|
Direct Route |
Active Employee |
Personal Demat Account |
Fully Liquid (Exempt) |
|
Direct Route |
Resigned / Ex-Employee |
Personal Demat Account |
Locked In for 6 Months |
|
Trust Route (Cash) |
Active Employee |
Personal Demat Account |
Fully Liquid (Exempt) |
|
Trust Route (Cash) |
Active Employee |
Still in Trust Account |
Locked In for 6 Months |
|
*Trust Route (Cashless) |
Active Employee |
Pending Broker Settlement |
Locked In for 6 Months |
|
Any Route |
Resigned / Ex-Employee |
Any Account |
Locked In for 6 Months |
Strategic Takeaway for Leadership and Executives
When mapping out an exit from a pre-IPO company, the timing of your departure is just as critical as the financial valuation of your equity. Leaving a company even a few weeks before its formal IPO allotment can completely change the liquidity timeline of your equity portfolio.
For companies preparing for a public debut, it is vital to communicate these regulatory boundaries transparently to avoid internal friction and ensure clear equity transition pathways for departing talent. Optimizing employee equity compensation within complex cross-border regulatory frameworks requires meticulous planning. Contact our advisory team today to structure your corporate equity programs or to evaluate your personal pre-IPO liquidity strategy.
*While a “cashless exercise” is a brilliant way to fund your options without upfront capital, attempting it right before an IPO creates a structural Catch-22 under SEBI rules—inadvertently triggering the very 6-month lock-in you are trying to avoid.
To learn how this operational mechanism clashes with SEBI’s strict timeline and to discover the exact workarounds companies use to protect employee liquidity, read our full companion guide: [Navigating the Compliance Minefield of Pre-IPO Cashless Exercises].
Article by: CS Neha Sarpal (91-7053715771)
This publication constitutes protected proprietary intellectual property. No part of this technical analysis, structural framework, or legal drafting may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, digital duplication, website mirroring, or recording, without the express prior written consent of the Author / Managing Partner.
Disclaimer: This article provides a comprehensive overview of equity incentives under Indian law for informational and educational purposes. It does not constitute formal legal or tax advice. Corporate boards must consult an independent Registered Valuer and qualified legal counsel to customize schemes matching their specific corporate structures.
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