📊 Authorized Capital
Understanding Nominal Capital & Registered Capital in Company Accounts
© 2025 Edunol. All rights reserved.
Understanding Nominal Capital & Registered Capital in Company Accounts
© 2025 Edunol. All rights reserved.
Authorized Capital is also known as Nominal Capital or Registered Capital.
Authorized Capital is the maximum amount that a company can raise by issuing shares.
This amount is mentioned in the company's Memorandum of Association.
Authorized Capital is the maximum share capital amount that the company gets permission from the government to raise.
The amount of Authorized Capital is written in the Memorandum of Association of the company.
The Memorandum of Association is a legal document that contains the company's capital clause, which specifies the authorized capital amount.
As we know, shares are of two types:
The Memorandum of Association must mention the amount of both types of share capital separately:
Before we learn about Issued Capital in detail, let's understand one important relationship:
Allowed
Auth: ₹10 Cr
Issued: ₹6 Cr
Allowed
Auth: ₹10 Cr
Issued: ₹10 Cr
Not Allowed
Auth: ₹10 Cr
Issued: ₹12 Cr
Given: ABC Company has an Authorized Capital of 10,000 shares.
What this means:
Important Point:
It is not necessary to issue all shares at once. Based on business funding needs, shares can be issued at different times.
Scenario:
Total shares issued over time cannot exceed 10,000 shares.
There are different types of capital in a company. However:
Only Authorized Capital is mentioned in the Memorandum of Association.
The following types of capital are NOT mentioned in the Memorandum of Association:
No journal entry is passed for Authorized Capital in the books of accounts.
Why?
Because the company has not received any money yet. The company has only received permission from the government to raise capital. No actual transaction has taken place.
Journal entries will be passed only when:
The amount of Authorized Capital is decided by the company's promoters based on:
Maximum amount a company can raise by issuing shares
Nominal Capital, Registered Capital
Mentioned in Memorandum of Association
Equity and Preference shares mentioned separately
Always ≥ Issued Capital
No entry passed (no money received)
Decided by promoters based on business needs
Requires government approval