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✂️ STOCK SPLITS TRACKER

Upcoming Stock Splits 2026

Track all upcoming stock splits in India 2026. Face value subdivision, ex-dates and record dates for BSE and NSE listed companies.

6

Upcoming

1

This Month

10

Total 2026

BSE/NSE

Source

✂️

Share subdivision

Stock splits divide existing shares into smaller units, reducing the face value proportionally.

📉

Price adjusts automatically

Share price is adjusted on ex-date. A 1:10 split means price becomes 1/10th, but you get 10x shares.

💧

Improves liquidity

High-priced stocks become more affordable for retail investors, increasing trading volumes.

6 records

CompanyRatioFace ValueEx-DateRecord DateStatus

Page Industries

PAGEIND · 532827

1:510 2

30 May 2026

7 days

30 May 2026Upcoming

MRF Limited

MRF · 500290

1:1010 1

10 Jun 2026

10 Jun 2026Upcoming

Abbott India

ABBOTINDIA · 500488

1:510 2

25 Jun 2026

25 Jun 2026Upcoming

Shree Cement

SHREECEM · 500387

1:410 2.5

8 Jul 2026

8 Jul 2026Upcoming

Bosch Limited

BOSCHLTD · 500530

1:210 5

20 Jul 2026

20 Jul 2026Upcoming

Procter & Gamble Hygiene

PGHH · 500459

1:1010 1

5 Aug 2026

5 Aug 2026Upcoming

What are Stock Splits?

A stock split is a corporate action that subdivides existing shares into multiple shares with a smaller face value. For example, a 1:10 split of a ₹10 face value share creates ten ₹1 face value shares.

Total investment value remains the same on the ex-date — the share price adjusts down proportionally. Companies typically split stocks when the share price grows too high for comfortable retail participation. MRF, Bosch, and Page Industries are well-known examples where price levels create barriers to entry.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is a stock split different from a bonus issue?

Bonus shares are issued from a company's free reserves and increase share capital. Stock splits do not touch reserves — they only subdivide face value. Both reduce per-share price but affect the balance sheet differently.

What happens to my shares on the split ex-date?

Your share count multiplies by the split ratio and price divides by the same. A 1:5 split: 100 shares at ₹500 becomes 500 shares at ₹100. Total value (₹50,000) is unchanged. Your demat updates automatically.

Are stock splits taxable in India?

The split itself is not a taxable event. Cost of acquisition is divided proportionally across the new share count. The original purchase date is preserved for holding period purposes — your LTCG/STCG status does not reset.

Does a stock split mean the stock is undervalued?

Not necessarily. Splits are price-management decisions, not valuation signals. Some research suggests post-split outperformance due to improved liquidity, but the split itself adds no fundamental value.