Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles Ltd has approved a stock-linked incentive scheme that could generate about ₹168 crore in pre-tax gains for employees, enabling eligible staff to acquire shares worth roughly ₹169 crore for just ₹1 crore, subject to vesting and performance conditions.
“The Board of Directors… has considered and approved the adoption of ‘Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles Limited Share-based Long Term Incentive Scheme 2026’… involving not exceeding 50,00,000 equity shares of the company,” the company said in a regulatory filing on Wednesday.
Under the scheme, up to 50 lakh performance share units (PSUs) will be granted to eligible employees. Each PSU carries the right to one equity share and can be exercised at ₹2 per share, the face value of the stock.
Based on Tata Motors’ closing share price of ₹338 on Wednesday, the 50 lakh shares covered under the plan would be worth about ₹169 crore. Employees would collectively pay ₹1 crore to exercise the awards (50 lakh shares multiplied by ₹2 each), implying a potential gain of roughly ₹168 crore before taxes if all units vest and are exercised.
maximum dilution
The company said the scheme would result in a maximum dilution of approximately 0.14 per cent of its issued share capital.
Industry observers said the timing reflects how automakers are increasingly using equity compensation to retain engineers, software developers and product leaders as vehicles become more technology-intensive and competition for specialised talent rises.
“Automotive companies are now competing for coders, battery specialists and vehicle architects in the same way technology firms compete for engineers,” said an executive compensation adviser to listed companies. “A performance-linked stock plan gives employees a direct stake in the company’s future and can create significant wealth if execution remains strong.”
The filing does not disclose how the awards will be allocated among employees. In similar programmes, grants are typically based on role, performance, strategic importance and retention priorities rather than tenure alone.
Because the awards are structured as performance share units, employees will receive shares only after meeting specified performance and service conditions. Vested units must be exercised within 12 months from the date of vesting.
Industry observers said the move also reflects a broader shift in the automotive sector, where the competition for talent increasingly extends beyond traditional manufacturing to software, electronics and battery systems.
“For Tata Motors, which is scaling its passenger vehicle and electric mobility businesses, retaining that talent could be as critical to future growth as launching the next generation of vehicles.” they indicated
Published on May 14, 2026






























