
Price Bailey announces new membership with HARPA
Price Bailey announces its new membership with HARPA, the Holiday and Residential Parks Association, in a move that marks the firm’s continued commitment to supporting...
Glossary
Drag-along and tag-along rights are contractual provisions commonly included in shareholder agreements that govern how shares may be sold in certain situations. These rights regulate how majority and minority shareholders participate when a company is sold or when a significant shareholding is transferred.
Drag-along and tag-along rights are mechanisms used to manage shareholder interests during the sale of a company or a controlling shareholding. They are typically included in shareholder agreements or investment agreements in privately owned companies.
Drag-along rights allow majority shareholders to require minority shareholders to sell their shares if a buyer agrees to acquire the company. This helps ensure that a sale can proceed without minority shareholders preventing the transaction.
Tag-along rights provide protection for minority shareholders. If a majority shareholder sells their shares to a third party, minority shareholders may have the right to join the transaction and sell their shares on the same terms.
These provisions are commonly used in companies with multiple shareholders, such as start-ups, private equity-backed businesses, and growing SMEs. In the UK, the terms of these rights are usually defined within shareholder agreements and operate alongside company law provisions under the Companies Act.
Key characteristics of drag-along and tag-along rights include:
These rights generally operate through the following structure:
A technology start-up has several shareholders, including founders and external investors. A buyer offers to acquire the entire company from the majority shareholders. Under the drag-along provision, the minority shareholders are required to sell their shares as part of the transaction so the buyer can acquire full ownership.
Drag-along rights allow majority shareholders to require minority shareholders to sell their shares when the company is being sold to a third party.
Tag-along rights allow minority shareholders to sell their shares alongside majority shareholders if a controlling stake in the company is sold.
These provisions help manage shareholder interests during ownership changes by enabling company sales while providing protections for minority shareholders.
Drag-along rights are typically triggered when a majority shareholder agrees to sell a controlling stake or the entire company to a third-party buyer.
These rights apply only when they are included in a shareholder agreement or investment agreement and are triggered according to the terms set out in that contract.
We always recommend that you seek advice from a suitably qualified adviser before taking any action. The information in this glossary entry only serves as a guide and no responsibility for loss occasioned by any person acting or refraining from action as a result of this material can be accepted by the authors or the firm.
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