OFS Live Bidding Today: Live & Upcoming Offer for Sale
Track OFS Live Bidding for every active and upcoming Offer for Sale (OFS) on the NSE and BSE, with real-time subscription, floor price, demand and the live bid book, all on one screen.
Live · Last updated 17 Jun 2026, 3:42 AM IST
OFS Live Bidding Status Today
Combined NSE + BSE Cut-off & Bid Book
Most trackers show you only one exchange. We pull the live bids from both NSE and BSE and merge them into a single order book, so the cut-off price, subscription and demand you see reflect the real combined demand for the OFS, not just half the picture.
Past OFS
See Past OFSGIRCE
General Insurance Corporation India · 16 Jun 2026
Cut-off
₹352.00
Subscription
0.33x
Offered
7.89Cr
NLCINDIA
NLC INDIA · 10 Jun 2026
Cut-off
₹303.00
Subscription
0.13x
Offered
0.28Cr
NLCINDIA
NLC INDIA · 9 Jun 2026
Cut-off
₹323.10
Subscription
3.36x
Offered
3.88Cr
NHPC
NHPC · 3 Jun 2026
Cut-off
₹71.00
Subscription
1.83x
Offered
6.03Cr
| Script | Offer Date | Category | Offered | Final Subscription | Cutoff | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
GIRCE General Insurance Corporation India |
2026-06-16 | HNI | 31,579,200 |
0.33x |
₹352.00 |
View More |
|
NLCINDIA NLC INDIA |
2026-06-10 | Retail | 2,773,274 |
0.13x |
₹303.00 |
View More |
|
NLCINDIA NLC INDIA |
2026-06-09 | HNI | 24,959,458 |
3.36x |
₹323.10 |
View More |
|
NHPC NHPC |
2026-06-03 | Retail | 30,135,105 |
1.83x |
₹71.00 |
View More |
What is OFS (Offer for Sale)?
An Offer for Sale (OFS) is a route through which existing shareholders, usually promoters, the Government of India or large investors, sell their shares directly to the public on the stock exchange. Unlike an IPO, no new shares are created here and the company itself does not get any money; the proceeds go to the selling shareholder.
OFS is quicker and cheaper than going through a full follow-on public offer (FPO). Promoters commonly use it to bring down their stake, and the government uses it for disinvestment in PSU companies.
Retail Investors
- • At least 10% of the offer is reserved for retail investors
- • Usually a small discount on the floor price (around ₹2 to ₹5 a share)
- • Retail bids on the T+1 day, a day after the non-retail category
- • Bids placed through your stock broker's platform
Non-Retail (Institutional / HNI)
- • Open to QIBs, NIIs, and HNIs
- • No upper limit on bid quantity
- • Bids at floor price or above
- • Settlement through stock exchange mechanism
OFS Live Bidding: Frequently Asked Questions
What is OFS Live Bidding?
OFS Live Bidding is the window during market hours when investors actually place their bids for an Offer for Sale on the NSE and BSE. While the window is open, you can watch the subscription build up (how many times the issue is covered), the indicative cut-off price, and the full bid book as both retail and non-retail demand comes in.
What time does OFS live bidding start and end?
OFS bidding runs during regular market hours, roughly 9:15 AM to 3:30 PM IST on the day of the offer. The non-retail category (institutions and HNIs) usually bids on the T day, and retail investors get to bid on the T+1 day. The exact dates and the bidding window are set by the seller and the exchange for each issue, so do check the schedule for that particular OFS.
How can I track OFS live bidding status today?
Right here on this page. We list every live and upcoming OFS with its subscription multiple, floor price and the quantity on offer. Click into any issue to open the live bid book, which shows the cumulative quantity bid at each price level, combined across NSE and BSE.
Can retail investors participate in OFS live bidding?
Yes. At least 10% of the offer is reserved for retail investors, that is, bids up to ₹2 lakh. Retail bidders usually get a small discount on the floor price as well. You place the bid through your stock broker during the bidding window, much like buying shares in the cash market.
How is OFS subscription and demand calculated during live bidding?
It is simply the total quantity bid divided by the number of shares on offer. So 2x means bids have come in for twice the shares available, and anything above 1x means the issue is fully subscribed. The cut-off is the lowest price at which the entire quantity on offer can be sold.