When investing in Australian startups or private companies, minority shareholders often worry about being left behind if majority owners decide to sell. Tag-along rights are a legal safeguard designed to prevent this exact scenario. In 2025, as Australia’s private capital market continues to surge and regulations evolve, understanding tag-along rights is more crucial than ever for both founders and investors.
Tag-along rights—sometimes called co-sale rights—are contractual provisions that allow minority shareholders to ‘tag along’ and sell their shares on the same terms as majority shareholders if a third party acquires a controlling stake. This ensures that small investors aren’t forced to stay in a company under new ownership or miss out on a lucrative exit opportunity.
For example, imagine a tech startup in Sydney with three founders and several early-stage investors. If the founders (who hold 70% of shares) negotiate a sale to a global tech giant, tag-along rights mean the minority investors can sell their stakes alongside the founders—at the same price and on the same terms.
Australia’s Corporations Act doesn’t mandate tag-along rights, but they are increasingly standard in shareholder agreements, especially in venture capital, private equity, and family-owned businesses considering succession or exit.
For founders, investors, and legal advisors, negotiating robust tag-along rights is about more than a standard clause. Here’s what to watch for in 2025:
Many investors now insist on tag-along rights as a non-negotiable term, and founders are increasingly accommodating these demands to secure funding and foster trust.
In 2025, Melbourne-based healthtech company MedAI underwent a partial acquisition by a US healthcare conglomerate. Thanks to robust tag-along provisions, minority investors were able to exit at the same $2.50/share valuation as the founders, turning early $50k stakes into $300k windfalls. The deal set a benchmark for clear, enforceable tag-along terms in Australian private equity.
Tag-along rights are no longer a niche concern—they’re a vital part of Australia’s fast-evolving investment landscape. Whether you’re a founder raising capital or an investor seeking protection, understanding and negotiating these rights is essential in 2025. Make sure your next shareholder agreement gives everyone a fair seat at the table.