IPO Subscription Status Today

Live Subscription Status

Data updated periodically
IPO Name Retail (x) NII (x) QIB (x) Total (x) Close Date
Leapfrog Engineering IPO SME β€” β€” β€” 0.00 19 Jun 2026
Clay Craft India IPO SME β€” β€” β€” 0.00 19 Jun 2026
Liotech Industries IPO SME β€” β€” β€” 0.00 19 Jun 2026
Diksha Polymers IPO SME β€” β€” β€” 0.00 19 Jun 2026

Recently Closed Subscriptions

IPO Name Retail (x) NII (x) QIB (x) Total (x) Close Date
Horizon Reclaim (India) IPO β€” β€” β€” 235.86 16 Jun 2026

Understanding Subscription Categories

Retail Individual (RII)

Individual investors applying for up to β‚Ή2 lakh. This is where most small investors participate. 35% of the IPO is reserved for this category.

Non-Institutional (NII)

High net-worth individuals and corporates applying for more than β‚Ή2 lakh. Also known as HNI category. 15% of the IPO is reserved here.

Qualified Institutional (QIB)

Mutual funds, insurance companies, banks, and FIIs. 50% of the IPO is reserved for QIBs, indicating institutional confidence.

A subscription of 1x means the category is fully subscribed. Higher multiples indicate stronger demand and lower allotment probability for retail investors.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is IPO subscription status?

Subscription status shows how many times an IPO has been over-subscribed across investor categories β€” Retail, Non-Institutional (NII/HNI), Qualified Institutional (QIB) and Employee β€” versus shares offered.

Why does subscription data matter?

High subscription (especially in the QIB category) signals strong institutional confidence, which usually correlates with better listing performance. Poor QIB demand often leads to muted or negative listings.

When is subscription data updated?

Stock exchanges publish subscription data at end-of-day during the IPO window and hourly on the final day. Our pages reflect the latest available numbers.

What happens if an IPO is under-subscribed?

If total subscription is below 90% (India), the IPO is considered unsuccessful and funds are returned to all applicants. The company typically withdraws the issue.

Does higher subscription mean I'll get more shares?

No β€” higher oversubscription means fewer shares per applicant. Retail allotment becomes a lottery, and in extreme cases only a fraction of retail applicants receive a single lot.

What is the difference between Retail, NII and QIB?

Retail investors apply for up to β‚Ή2 lakh. NII (non-institutional, HNI) applies for more than β‚Ή2 lakh. QIB includes mutual funds, banks, insurance companies and foreign institutions. Each has a reserved portion of the issue.