This table looks simple. But it isn’t. Mostly because of just one word that throws everyone off:
“Nominal Capital.”
If you quickly Google it, you’ll see:
Nominal capital = authorised capital
So naturally, people assume -- okay, authorised capital goes here. Logical, right?
But in AOC-4, that logic quietly breaks. And that’s where mistakes start.
What the government is actually asking here (not what it looks like)
Scenario 1: The most common setup (almost every company)
Let’s take a very normal case.
Company details
- Authorised
capital: ₹10,00,000
(1,00,000 equity shares of ₹10 each) - Issued,
subscribed & paid-up capital: ₹8,00,000
(80,000 equity shares of ₹10 each)
Now here’s where people slip.
What many people enter
- Number
of shares: 1,00,000
- Nominal
capital: ₹10,00,000
- Paid-up
capital: ₹8,00,000
Looks neat. But it’s wrong.
What should actually be entered
- Number
of shares: 80,000
- Nominal
capital: ₹8,00,000
- Paid-up
capital: ₹8,00,000
Why?
Because only 80,000 shares exist in reality.
The remaining 20,000 are just permission. Nothing more.
Authorised capital is like… potential.
AOC-4 wants facts.
Scenario 2: Shares issued, but not fully paid (this confuses people badly)
This one creates even more doubts.
Let’s say:
- 80,000
equity shares issued
- Face
value: ₹10 each
- But
shareholders paid only ₹8 per share
So technically:
- Nominal
value = 80,000 × 10 = ₹8,00,000
- Paid-up
capital = 80,000 × 8 = ₹6,40,000
Correct AOC-4 entry
- Number
of shares: 80,000
- Nominal
capital: ₹8,00,000
- Paid-up
capital: ₹6,40,000
And just to be very clear --
₹10,00,000 still does NOT appear anywhere here.
Even though it’s your authorised capital.
Scenario 3: Nothing changed during the year
No new shares.
No calls.
No forfeiture.
Nothing exciting.
Still -- you cannot leave this blank.
You must show:
- Opening
number of shares
- Opening
nominal capital
- Opening
paid-up capital
People often think, “Nothing happened, so zero everywhere.”
That’s wrong.
One simple line to remember (seriously, just this)
In AOC-4, nominal capital means face value of issued shares -
not authorised capital.
That’s it.
Remember this and half your confusion disappears.
Why this mistake actually matters
This isn’t just theory.
Wrong numbers here can lead to:
- Resubmission
by ROC
- Unnecessary
clarification emails
- Issues
during due diligence
- Questions
during funding or compliance review
And the annoying part?
The mistake feels correct when you make it.
FAQs – Clearing the Nominal Capital Confusion in AOC-4
No. This is where almost everyone goes wrong. In AOC-4, nominal capital is about the shares that are actually issued, not the big authorised limit written in the MOA. That Google definition doesn’t really help here.
2 Comments
Thank u so much , it helps a ot
ReplyDeleteThis was really a very big confusion
ReplyDelete