Best IPO to Buy Today

Open & upcoming IPOs ranked by recommendation — 2026

Find the best IPO to apply for today in 2026. Our recommendation engine analyzes GMP trends, subscription demand, company valuation, and financials to rank each IPO. Strong Subscribe means high confidence, Avoid means high risk.

5 IPOs found
Upcoming
Strong Subscribe SME
₹112 – 118
Open Jul 09
Close Jul 13
Listing Jul 16
Upcoming
Strong Subscribe Mainboard
₹398 – 419
Open Jul 08
Close Jul 10
Listing Jul 15
Open
Subscribe SME
₹94 – 99
Open Jul 03
Close Jul 07
Listing Jul 10
Upcoming
Neutral SME
₹62 – 66
Open Jul 09
Close Jul 13
Listing Jul 16
Upcoming
Mainboard
Open Jul 14
Close Jul 16
Listing Jul 21
Company Price Band Open Close Listing GMP Sub

Upcoming SME Strong Subscribe
₹112–118 · Jul 09 – Jul 13
₹112 – 118 Jul 09 Jul 13 Jul 16 +44 (+37.3%)

Upcoming Mainboard Strong Subscribe
₹398–419 · Jul 08 – Jul 10
₹398 – 419 Jul 08 Jul 10 Jul 15 +170 (+40.6%)

Open SME Subscribe
₹94–99 · Jul 03 – Jul 07
₹94 – 99 Jul 03 Jul 07 Jul 10 +45 (+45.5%) 7.06x

Upcoming SME Neutral
₹62–66 · Jul 09 – Jul 13
₹62 – 66 Jul 09 Jul 13 Jul 16 +0 (+0.0%)

Upcoming Mainboard
Jul 14 – Jul 16
Jul 14 Jul 16 Jul 21

A Quick Guide to IPO Investing in India 2026

What is an IPO?

An Initial Public Offering (IPO) is the process by which a private company offers its shares to public investors for the first time, listing them on a stock exchange like BSE or NSE. Companies raise an IPO to fund expansion, repay debt, provide an exit to early investors, or simply to gain a public market valuation. For retail investors, IPOs offer a chance to buy into a business at its public-market debut, potentially capturing listing-day gains and longer-term wealth creation if the company performs well. Read the full beginner's guide →

How to Evaluate an IPO Before Applying

Smart IPO investing requires looking beyond the headline buzz. Here are the five signals serious investors check before applying:

  • Grey Market Premium (GMP): The unofficial pre-listing price difference indicates demand intensity. Track its trend over the bidding period — a stable or rising GMP is a stronger signal than a spike that fades. Learn more about GMP →
  • Subscription Status: Watch category-wise data, not just total. Strong QIB (Qualified Institutional Buyer) participation signals institutional confidence; high Retail demand reflects retail sentiment. Mainboard issues typically need 5x+ overall subscription to perform well at listing.
  • Valuation: Compare the company's post-issue P/E ratio against listed industry peers. A premium to peers needs to be justified by faster growth or higher margins; otherwise, the issue may be overpriced.
  • Fundamentals: Look at revenue growth, profit margins, return on equity (ROE), and debt levels in the most recent reported period. A company with declining revenue or shrinking margins is harder to recommend regardless of GMP.
  • Anchor Investor Quality: Reputed mutual funds, FIIs, or insurance companies investing as anchors before the public issue is a strong vote of confidence. More on anchor investors →

Mainboard IPO vs SME IPO — Which Should You Choose?

Mainboard IPOs list on the main BSE/NSE exchanges, have minimum issue sizes of Rs 10 crore, broader institutional participation, lower retail lot sizes (around Rs 14,000–15,000), and stricter SEBI eligibility. SME IPOs list on BSE SME or NSE Emerge, have post-issue paid-up capital between Rs 1–25 crore, a higher minimum application (over Rs 2 lakh, two-lot minimum since July 2025), and an OFS cap of 20% — making them riskier but potentially higher-reward. Most retail investors should start with Mainboard issues; SME IPOs are better suited for investors who can stomach lower liquidity and bigger price swings post-listing.

Key Risks Every IPO Investor Should Know

IPOs are not a guaranteed money-making opportunity. Listing gains can turn into listing losses if market sentiment shifts overnight or if the issue is overpriced. Locked-in capital (typically 4–7 days from application to credit) means money is tied up regardless of outcome. SEBI's lottery-based allotment for oversubscribed retail issues means there is no guarantee of allotment even if you apply — and even when you do get shares, post-listing performance depends on market conditions, sector sentiment, and company fundamentals you cannot fully control. Always read the Red Herring Prospectus (RHP) for risk factors specific to the company before investing.

Use the live data above — GMP, subscription multiples, financials, peer comparison — together with the points covered here to make informed IPO investment decisions. None of this constitutes investment advice; consult a SEBI-registered advisor before committing capital.