You get the call: “A bigger company wants to buy you.” Your heart races. Then reality hits — you have no idea what comes next. Are you ready for a startup acquisition?
In 2026, startup acquisitions in India are no longer rare. Strategic buyers (conglomerates, large tech firms, and global players) are actively hunting for proven products, teams, and distribution. But the process is messy, emotional, and full of surprises most founders are not prepared for.
This is the exact playbook: how an acquisition actually works in India today — from the first whisper to money in the bank — with real timelines, what founders usually miss, and what you should do right now if you ever get that call.
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The Typical Acquisition Timeline in India (2026)
From first contact to cash in bank: 3–9 months is normal. Fast deals close in 90 days; complex ones drag to a year.
Usually starts with a casual call or email from the buyer’s corporate development team or banker. You sign a mutual NDA. Keep it simple and mutual.
Buyer sends a Letter of Intent with headline price, structure (cash vs stock), and key conditions. This is negotiable but not legally binding (except exclusivity and confidentiality).
The heavy part. Buyer reviews everything: financials, cap table, contracts, IP, compliance, customer data, pending litigation. Expect 100–300+ questions.
SPA (Share Purchase Agreement) + other docs are signed. Conditions precedent are fulfilled and money is wired.
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What Actually Happens in Each Stage
1. The NDA Stage
Keep it short (2–3 pages). Never share your full data room until the NDA is signed and you have comfort on the buyer’s seriousness.
2. The Term Sheet / LOI
This is where you negotiate the big things: valuation, payment structure (100% cash vs earn-outs), founder lock-ins, and employee retention. Get your lawyer involved here.
Real example: A SaaS startup in Pune received a ₹180 Cr LOI in early 2025. The buyer wanted 40% in cash and 60% in their listed stock with a 2-year lock-in. The founder negotiated it to 70% cash + 30% stock and a 12-month lock-in. That single change added ₹45 Cr in immediate liquidity.
3. Due Diligence – The Real Test
Buyer will look at:
- Clean cap table and ESOP records
- Customer contracts and churn data
- IP ownership and open-source compliance
- GST, TDS, and labour law compliance
- Any pending disputes or regulatory notices
Pro tip: Build a data room early (even if you are not for sale). It speeds up every process.
4. Closing & Post-Closing
Money is wired only after all conditions are met (DPIIT approval if needed, shareholder consents, regulatory filings). Post-closing you may have 6–24 months of earn-outs or lock-ins.
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Real 2025–2026 Acquisition Trends in India
- Strategic buyers (Reliance, Tata, Aditya Birla, global tech) dominate over pure financial buyers
- Average deal size for growth-stage startups: ₹80–300 Cr
- Multiples: 4–8x ARR for SaaS; 2–5x revenue for D2C/marketplace (higher if profitable)
- Earn-outs are very common (20–40% of deal value tied to performance)
- Founder continuity clauses are standard — buyers want the team to stay 12–36 months
In late 2025 a payments startup was acquired for ₹240 Cr (6x ARR). 60% paid upfront, 40% as earn-out over 18 months tied to transaction volume. The founder stayed as head of the new vertical for 2 years with a clear role and equity upside. The deal closed in 5 months because the data room was already clean.
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What Founders Usually Miss
- Personal guarantees or indemnities that can bite you later
- Tax implications of cash vs stock deals
- Employee retention bonuses and ESOP acceleration clauses
- Non-compete clauses that are too broad
If You Ever Get the Call
1. Stay calm and tell only your co-founders and lawyer.
2. Build or update your data room this month (even if you are not selling).
3. Get a good M&A lawyer who has done startup deals (₹3–8 lakh is normal for the full process).
4. Always negotiate the LOI — this is where 70% of the final value is decided.
An acquisition can be life-changing. Prepare like it’s coming tomorrow and you’ll get the best outcome when it actually arrives.
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