Company: IR
Filing Date: 2025-04-25
Form Type: DEF 14A
Source: 0001140361-25-015748
Chunk: 3

Company: Ingersoll Rand Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-04-25
Form: DEF 14A
Chunk 3
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 of the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2025 (the “Ratification Proposal”). |
| 3 |     | Approval, in a non-binding advisory vote, of the compensation paid to the named executive officers (the “Say on Pay Proposal”).                       |

WHO IS ENTITLED TO VOTE? Stockholders as of the close of business on April 17, 2025 (the “Record Date”) may vote at the Annual Meeting. As of that date, there were 403,447,247 shares of common stock outstanding. You have one vote for each share of common stock held by you as of the Record Date, including shares:

| • | Held directly in your name as “stockholder of record” (also referred to as “registered stockholder”); |

| • | Held for you in an account with a broker, bank or other nominee (shares held in “street name”). Street name holders generally cannot vote their shares directly and instead must instruct the brokerage firm, bank or nominee how to vote their shares; and |

WHAT CONSTITUTES A QUORUM? The holders of record of a majority of the voting power of the issued and outstanding shares of capital stock entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting must be present in person or represented by proxy to constitute a quorum for the Annual Meeting. Abstentions are counted as present and entitled to vote for purposes of determining a quorum. Shares represented by “broker non-votes” that are present and entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting also are counted for purposes of determining a quorum. However, as described

Ingersoll Rand 7 2025 Proxy Statement

TABLE OF CONTENTS below under “How are votes counted?”, if you hold your shares in street name and do not provide voting instructions to your broker, your shares will not be voted on any proposal on which your broker does not have discretionary authority to vote (a “broker non-vote”). WHAT IS A “BROKER NON-VOTE”? A broker non-vote occurs when shares held by a broker are not voted with respect to a proposal because (1) the broker has not received voting instructions from the stockholder who beneficially owns the shares, (2) the broker lacks the authority to vote the shares at his/her discretion and (3) there is at least one other proposal on the ballot with respect to which the broker has authority to vote the shares at his/her discretion. Under current New York Stock Exchange interpretations