

Equirus Wealth
16 Jan 2026 • 5 min read
If you invest in shares, you may have come across a situation where you bought a stock but did not receive it in your demat account. This is called Short Delivery.
Understanding short delivery is important because it can impact your trading experience, settlement timelines and sometimes even your profits. In this guide, we break down what short delivery means, why it happens and how it affects investors in a simple and easy way.
Short Delivery happens when a seller fails to deliver shares that were sold on the stock exchange on the settlement date.
In simple words:
This usually occurs in delivery-based trades and not intraday trades.
To understand short delivery, it helps to know how settlement works.
If the seller does not deliver the shares on time, the trade results in short delivery.
Short delivery can occur for several reasons. Some are accidental and some are intentional.
Most short delivery cases are unintentional and get resolved quickly.
When short delivery happens, the stock exchange takes corrective steps to protect buyers.
If the exchange cannot find shares during the auction, the buyer receives cash compensation.
If you are the buyer, here is what you should know.
In most cases, buyers do not face a financial loss due to short delivery.
Sellers responsible for short delivery face penalties.
This discourages sellers from failing to deliver shares.
These two terms often confuse investors, but they are very different.
| Short Delivery | Short Selling |
|---|---|
| Happens due to non-delivery | Intentional trading strategy |
| Considered a settlement failure | Regulated and allowed |
| Leads to auction process | Requires margin and compliance |
| Penalised by exchanges | Legal when rules are followed |
Short delivery is usually unplanned. Short selling is planned and regulated.
While you cannot fully control short delivery, you can reduce exposure.
Long-term investors usually face fewer short delivery issues than frequent traders.
Short delivery cases are relatively low in liquid large-cap stocks. They are more common in:
Stock exchanges continuously monitor and improve systems to minimise short delivery incidents.
Understanding short delivery helps you:
Short Delivery is a settlement-related issue where shares are not delivered by the seller on time. While it may sound concerning, the stock exchange has robust mechanisms to protect investors through auctions and cash compensation.
For most long-term investors, short delivery is rare and manageable. Knowing how it works helps you stay informed, calm and confident in your investing journey.
Short delivery occurs when the seller fails to deliver shares on the settlement date after a trade.
In most cases, no. The exchange ensures either share delivery or cash compensation.
Usually within a few trading days through the auction process.
No. It is a settlement failure and attracts penalties for the seller.
No. Intraday trades are squared off on the same day and do not involve delivery.
Yes. Exchanges like NSE publish daily short delivery reports.