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Home >> Blog >> Mainboard IPO vs SME IPO: Key Differences Explained (2026)

Mainboard IPO vs SME IPO: Key Differences Explained (2026)

   


Summary

  • Both routes operate under SEBI's ICDR Regulations, 2018. SEBI directly examines Mainboard offer documents, while SME offer documents are vetted by the exchange, with SEBI acting in a supervisory role.
  • The main financial requirement is the post-issue paid-up capital. A company with ₹10 crore or more moves toward the Mainboard, while a company with up to ₹25 crore remains eligible for the SME platform.
  • SEBI's March 2025 reforms increased the requirements for SME issuers. These include stricter profitability tests, limits on promoter selling, restrictions on the use of IPO proceeds, and an increase in the minimum application size from ₹1 lakh to ₹2 lakh.
  • SME IPOs generally have higher risk than Mainboard IPOs because they involve earlier-stage businesses, have lighter direct SEBI scrutiny, and usually have lower liquidity after listing.
  • Always read the offer document (RHP/prospectus) completely and check whether it was vetted by SEBI or the exchange before applying for any IPO.

A Mainboard IPO lists large, established companies directly on the NSE or BSE main exchange and requires a post-issue paid-up capital of at least ₹10 crore along with SEBI-defined profitability, net worth, and asset criteria. An SME IPO lets smaller businesses list on the NSE Emerge or BSE SME platform, with post-issue paid-up capital capped at ₹25 crore, lighter disclosure norms, and oversight by the stock exchange rather than direct SEBI vetting. The core trade-off is company scale and regulatory rigour on one side versus accessibility and growth capital for smaller firms on the other.

India's IPO market has matured into two distinct tracks. Large, established companies raise capital through a Mainboard IPO and list directly on the NSE or BSE. Smaller, high-growth businesses — the kind that form the backbone of the Indian economy — use the SME IPO route to list on the NSE Emerge or BSE SME platform instead. Both routes are governed by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) under the SEBI (Issue of Capital and Disclosure Requirements) Regulations, 2018 (“SEBI ICDR Regulations”), but the eligibility bar, oversight process, investment size, and risk profile differ sharply between the two. This guide breaks down exactly how, so you can read an IPO prospectus and know which category you're looking at — and what that means for you as an investor.

 

What Is a Mainboard IPO?

Definition

A Mainboard IPO is the process by which an established private company sells shares to the public for the first time and lists directly on the main board of the NSE or BSE, subject to SEBI's full ICDR eligibility, disclosure, and profitability norms.

When a company goes public through the Mainboard route, its shares begin trading on the primary segment of India's leading exchanges alongside long-listed large-caps and mid-caps. Because these companies are typically larger and more financially established, SEBI subjects them to the strictest disclosure and eligibility framework in Indian capital markets.

 

Mainboard IPO Eligibility — SEBI ICDR Regulations, 2018

SEBI allows a company to qualify for a Mainboard IPO through one of two routes:

Route

Who It's For

Key Requirements

Profitability Route (Entry Norm I)

Established, profitable companies

Net tangible assets ≥ ₹3 crore in each of the preceding 3 years; average operating (pre-tax) profit ≥ ₹15 crore in at least 3 of the preceding 5 years; net worth ≥ ₹1 crore in each of the preceding 3 years; post-issue paid-up capital ≥ ₹10 crore.

QIB Route (Entry Norm II)

High-growth, not-yet-profitable companies (e.g., new-age tech businesses)

Issue made through the book-building process with at least 75% of the net offer allocated to Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBs); if minimum QIB subscription isn't met, the entire issue is refunded. Recent large tech listings have used this route.

On top of SEBI's baseline norms, the exchanges (NSE and BSE) apply their own additional listing conditions — including a clean litigation and insolvency record, at least three years of audited financial statements, and no pending disciplinary action against promoters or directors by SEBI. The DRHP (Draft Red Herring Prospectus) for a Mainboard IPO is filed with and directly examined by SEBI, which can raise queries or delay the issue until it is satisfied.

 

Pros and Cons of a Mainboard IPO

Pros

Cons

Access to a much larger pool of public and institutional capital

High cost of the IPO process and ongoing listing compliance

Improved brand visibility, credibility, and access to cheaper credit

Mandatory disclosure of financial and strategic information, including to competitors

Deep liquidity — shares can be bought or sold in any quantity, including single shares, once listed

Quarterly reporting and continuous regulatory scrutiny add long-term compliance overhead

SEBI's direct vetting of the DRHP adds a layer of regulatory assurance for investors

Longer, more document-intensive approval timeline compared to an SME IPO

What Is an SME IPO?

Definition

An SME IPO is the process by which a small or medium enterprise raises capital by listing on a dedicated SME platform — NSE Emerge or BSE SME — under SEBI ICDR Chapter IX (Regulation 229), subject to a lighter disclosure regime and exchange-level (rather than direct SEBI) vetting.

SMEs are widely regarded as the backbone of the Indian economy, but they have historically struggled to access institutional funding and public capital markets on Mainboard-scale terms. The SME IPO framework, introduced in 2012, gives smaller companies a dedicated listing route with simpler, faster, and comparatively lower-cost compliance.

 

SME IPO Eligibility — SEBI ICDR Regulations, 2018 (Chapter IX)

•      Post-issue paid-up capital must not exceed ₹25 crore — companies that cross this ceiling must list on the Mainboard instead.

•      A minimum operational track record, generally at least 3 years, is required.

•      Following SEBI's March 2025 tightening, an issuer must show an operating profit (EBITDA) of at least ₹1 crore in at least 2 of the preceding 3 financial years; issuers unable to meet this must instead satisfy a defined net worth threshold.

•      A SEBI-registered merchant banker must handle underwriting, with underwriters committing to at least 15% of the issue size — mandatory underwriting is a distinguishing feature versus Mainboard IPOs.

•      The offer document is filed with, examined, and approved by the designated stock exchange (BSE SME or NSE Emerge) rather than SEBI directly — SEBI's role here is supervisory, which is why SME prospectuses carry a standard disclaimer noting SEBI has not vetted the offer.

 

SEBI's March 2025 SME IPO Reforms

After a wave of SME listings through 2023–24, SEBI identified a recurring pattern of concern: some issuers were diverting IPO proceeds to related parties, inflating revenues through circular transactions between group entities, and in at least one publicly reported case, had an SME IPO cancelled outright after evidence of fund misuse. In response, SEBI tightened the SME framework in March 2025:

•      Minimum SME IPO application size raised from ₹1 lakh to ₹2 lakh — directly raising the entry cost for retail investors.

•      A firmer profitability requirement (EBITDA ≥ ₹1 crore in 2 of the last 3 years), replacing looser revenue-growth-only tests.

•      Promoter selling is now capped — generally no more than 20% of the total issue size, and no more than 50% of a promoter's overall holding, via Offer for Sale (OFS).

•      IPO proceeds can no longer be used to repay loans owed to promoters or related parties.

•      NSE Emerge has separately capped Day-1 listing price movement at 90% above the issue price, to curb speculative opening-day spikes.

 

Pros and Cons of an SME IPO

Pros

Cons

Simpler, faster, lower-cost route to public capital for smaller companies

Higher business risk — SMEs list very early in their growth lifecycle, with thinner track records

Connects listed businesses with long-term institutional investors

Minimum application size of ₹2 lakh (post-March 2025) is a high entry barrier for small retail investors

A track record on the SME platform can support migration to the Mainboard as the company scales

Offer document is vetted by the exchange, not SEBI directly — a materially lighter scrutiny layer

Lower listing and compliance costs than a Mainboard IPO

Lower analyst coverage and liquidity compared to Mainboard-listed stocks

Mainboard IPO vs SME IPO: Side-by-Side Comparison

Parameter

Mainboard IPO

SME IPO

Listing Platform

NSE / BSE main board

NSE Emerge / BSE SME

Post-Issue Paid-Up Capital

≥ ₹10 crore

Up to ₹25 crore (ceiling, not minimum)

Regulator Vetting DRHP/Offer Document

SEBI directly reviews and can raise queries

Designated stock exchange vets the offer document; SEBI's role is supervisory

Profitability Requirement

Avg. operating profit ≥ ₹15 cr (3 of last 5 yrs) under Entry Norm I, or QIB Route for loss-making issuers

EBITDA ≥ ₹1 cr in 2 of last 3 years (post-March 2025 norms)

Minimum Application Size

Typically ₹14,000–₹15,000 per lot

₹2 lakh minimum (raised from ₹1 lakh in March 2025)

Underwriting

Not mandatory in all cases

Mandatory — underwriters commit to ≥ 15% of issue

Liquidity After Listing

High — trade in any quantity, deep institutional participation

Comparatively lower; thinner analyst and institutional coverage

Typical Issuer Profile

Large, established companies with a multi-year track record

Small and medium enterprises early in their public-market journey

 

 

Conclusion

Both Mainboard and SME IPOs give Indian companies a route to public capital — the difference is scale, oversight, and risk. A Mainboard IPO suits large, established businesses that can meet SEBI's stricter profitability and disclosure bar and offers investors deeper liquidity and direct SEBI vetting. An SME IPO opens the public markets to smaller, earlier-stage businesses, but with a lighter regulatory net, thinner liquidity, and — since March 2025 — a meaningfully higher entry ticket for retail investors. Subscription demand or a strong grey market premium is not, on its own, a reason to apply; eligibility route, use of issue proceeds, and who actually reviewed the offer document matter more to your risk than headline oversubscription numbers.

DISCLAIMER: This blog is NOT any buy or sell recommendation. No investment or trading advice is given. The content is purely for educational and information purposes only. Always consult your eligible financial advisor for investment-related decisions.



Author

Dr Mukul Agrawal - Stock Market Expert

Founder & Market Analyst, Finowings

Dr. Mukul Agrawal is the Founder of Finowings and a stock market mentor, trader, and investor with over 20 years of real market experience. He is a Guinness World Record holder and has trained thousands of investors in stock market strategies, IPO analysis, and wealth creation.

He specializes in IPO research, fundamental analysis, and helping beginners understand how to invest safely in the stock market. Dr. Agrawal has also authored multiple books on investing and regularly shares insights on IPOs, market trends, and long-term wealth building.


Frequently Asked Questions

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A Mainboard IPO lists on the NSE/BSE main board and requires SEBI's full profitability, net worth, and disclosure criteria, with SEBI directly examining the offer document. An SME IPO lists on NSE Emerge or BSE SME, is capped at ₹25 crore post-issue paid-up capital, and has its offer document vetted by the exchange rather than SEBI directly.
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Under SEBI ICDR Regulations, 2018, a company generally needs a post-issue paid-up capital of at least ₹10 crore to qualify for a Mainboard IPO, along with minimum net worth, net tangible assets, and profitability thresholds.
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Yes, through the QIB Route (Entry Norm II). The issue is made via book-building with at least 75% of the offer allocated to Qualified Institutional Buyers, and the entire issue is refunded if the minimum QIB subscription isn't achieved. Several recent large tech IPOs have used this route.
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Following SEBI's March 2025 amendment, the minimum application size for an SME IPO was raised from ₹1 lakh to ₹2 lakh, meaningfully higher than a typical Mainboard IPO lot, which is usually ₹14,000–₹15,000.
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No. A Mainboard DRHP is filed with and directly examined by SEBI. An SME offer document is instead vetted and approved by the designated stock exchange (BSE SME or NSE Emerge), with SEBI playing a supervisory rather than a direct-review role.
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Generally, yes. SME issuers are earlier in their business lifecycle, face lighter direct SEBI scrutiny of the offer document, and post-listing liquidity is typically thinner than for Mainboard stocks. SEBI's March 2025 reforms were introduced specifically to address governance and fund-diversion concerns that had emerged in the SME segment.
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NSE Emerge and BSE SME are the dedicated SME listing platforms of the National Stock Exchange and Bombay Stock Exchange respectively, created to give small and medium enterprises a simpler, lower-cost route to public capital markets.
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Yes. As a company grows and its post-issue paid-up capital and financials cross Mainboard thresholds, it can migrate from the SME platform to the main board of the NSE or BSE. This migration pathway is a recognized feature of the SME framework.
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SEBI tightened SME norms in March 2025: it raised the minimum application size from ₹1 lakh to ₹2 lakh, introduced a firmer EBITDA-based profitability test, capped how much promoters can sell via Offer for Sale, and restricted use of proceeds to repay related-party loans.
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No. Subscription levels and grey market premium (GMP) reflect near-term sentiment, not the company's fundamentals, use of proceeds, or the rigour of regulatory vetting. Read the offer document and evaluate the business itself before applying.


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