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Ross571(Initiate)Initiate
7 Nov 2023

Hi.

In the case where Company A owns shares in Company B and Company A distributes the Company B shares to Company A shareholders in specie, what are the tax implications for Company A shareholders?

2,420 views
4 replies
2,420 views
4 replies

Most helpful response

Most helpful reply

Bruce4Tax(Taxicorn)Taxicorn
8 Nov 2023

Could be a dividend.


Could be a return of capital.


Proper advice is required for this.


All replies

Most helpful reply

Bruce4Tax(Taxicorn)Taxicorn
8 Nov 2023

Could be a dividend.


Could be a return of capital.


Proper advice is required for this.


Ross571(Initiate)Initiate
8 Nov 2023

Thanks Bruce4Tax,

What circumstances would give rise to a dividend and what circumstances would give rise to a return of capital?

Is there a good place to get more information on this at the ATO website?

ATO Certified Response
NikkiATO(Community Moderator)Community Moderator
ATO Certified Response20 May 2026

Hi @Ross571,


An in‑specie distribution of shares is still treated as a distribution to shareholders, even though no cash is received.


The tax treatment depends on what the distribution represents, for example:

  • It may be treated as a dividend to the shareholders.
  • The value of the shares received is used to work out the amount of that distribution.

If it’s a dividend:

  • it may be assessable income
  • franking may apply if the company has franking credits available.

Receiving shares can also have CGT implications:

  • The shares you receive become a new CGT asset
  • Their cost base is generally their market value at the time of the distribution.

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In specie distributions by companies | ATO Community