AOA Amendment — Articles of Association
Update Your Company's Internal Governance Rules to Match Business Needs and Legal Requirements
The Articles of Association (AOA) is the internal rulebook of a company — it governs the management of the company's internal affairs, including the rights and duties of directors and shareholders, meeting procedures, voting rights, share transfer restrictions, dividend distribution, and other operational matters. As a company evolves, its AOA often needs updating to reflect new governance arrangements, investor requirements, or compliance with revised regulations.
AOA amendments are commonly required when a company takes on new investors (who may need specific investor protection clauses), converts from one company type to another, needs to update share transfer restrictions, or wishes to adopt a new model set of articles. They are often done alongside MOA amendments for structural changes, or in connection with events like authorised capital increase and share transfer. As part of company compliance, any AOA amendment must be filed with MCA via Form MGT-14 within 30 days.
Common AOA Amendment Scenarios
Investor Protection Clauses
Adding anti-dilution rights, veto rights, tag-along and drag-along rights, pre-emption rights, and other investor protection provisions for PE/VC funding rounds.
Director Appointment & Removal
Amending provisions governing the appointment, tenure, remuneration, and removal of directors to align with new management structures or statutory requirements.
Share Transfer Restrictions
Updating or removing share transfer restrictions, first right of refusal clauses, and lock-in provisions as business structure and investor composition change.
Quorum & Voting Rights
Amending meeting quorum requirements, voting rights, and resolution thresholds to accommodate new shareholders and governance arrangements.
Adoption of New Model AOA
Replacing an outdated AOA with the Table F model articles or a custom set compliant with the Companies Act, 2013 to modernise governance.
MGT-14 Filing
Drafting the special resolution and filing Form MGT-14 with the amended AOA with MCA within 30 days of the EGM or general meeting.
Key Facts About AOA Amendment
- AOA amendment requires a special resolution (minimum 75% majority of shareholders voting)
- Form MGT-14 must be filed with MCA within 30 days of the special resolution
- The amended AOA must be attached to MGT-14 as a PDF — all changes should be clearly marked
- Unlike the MOA, AOA amendments do not generally require Central Government or Regional Director approval
- AOA cannot contain any provision inconsistent with the Companies Act, 2013 — any such clause is void
- Shareholders with preference shares may have additional rights requiring their consent for certain AOA changes
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between the MOA and the AOA?
Can a private company restrict share transfers in its AOA?
Does every change in the company require an AOA amendment?
How is an AOA amendment different from passing a board resolution?
Can AOA provisions override the Companies Act?
Update Your AOA to Match Your Business Reality
Precise drafting of amended articles, special resolution management, and timely MGT-14 filing — all handled for you.
Talk to an ExpertF.A.Q.
It includes all yearly requirements such as filings, actuarial valuation, audits, and maintaining proper records.
Yes, regular compliance is required to maintain approval and tax benefits.
It helps determine the exact gratuity liability and required funding for the trust.
Yes, trusts must file necessary returns and maintain financial records as per regulations.
Non-compliance can lead to penalties, loss of tax benefits, or cancellation of approval.
Trustees and the employer are responsible for ensuring proper compliance.