Quick Answer
Capital gains tax in India is governed by Section 45 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, with the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024 (Budget 2024) bringing the most significant overhaul in a decade — LTCG on listed shares now taxed at 12.5% (up from 10%) with an enhanced exemption threshold of Rs.1.25 lakhs, STCG at 20% (up from 15%), and the removal of indexation for all assets (with transitional relief for pre-23 July 2024 properties). At Virtual Auditor, we provide end-to-end capital gains tax planning covering share portfolio restructuring, property sale timing, ESOP exercise optimisation, and exemption utilisation under Sections 54, 54EC, and 54F — backed by IBBI-registered valuation where FMV determination is required.
Definition — Capital Gains (Section 45): Any profits or gains arising from the transfer of a capital asset effected in the previous year shall be chargeable to income-tax under the head “Capital Gains” and shall be deemed to be the income of the previous year in which the transfer took place. A “capital asset” means property of any kind held by an assessee, excluding stock-in-trade, consumable stores, personal effects (excluding jewellery, archaeological collections, drawings, paintings, sculptures, or any work of art), and certain specified agricultural land.
Definition — Short-Term Capital Asset: A capital asset held for not more than 36 months (24 months for immovable property; 12 months for listed equity shares, equity-oriented mutual fund units, listed bonds/debentures, and zero-coupon bonds) immediately preceding the date of transfer.
Definition — Long-Term Capital Asset: A capital asset that is not a short-term capital asset — i.e., held beyond the respective holding period thresholds stated above.
The Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024 restructured the capital gains tax regime comprehensively. The revised rates applicable from AY 2025-26 onwards are:
| Asset Class | Holding Period for LTCG | STCG Rate | LTCG Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Listed equity shares (STT paid) | 12 months | 20% (Section 111A) | 12.5% above Rs.1.25 lakhs (Section 112A) |
| Equity-oriented mutual funds (STT paid) | 12 months | 20% (Section 111A) | 12.5% above Rs.1.25 lakhs (Section 112A) |
| Listed bonds/debentures (non-zero coupon) | 12 months | Slab rates | 12.5% (Section 112) |
| Unlisted shares | 24 months | Slab rates | 12.5% (Section 112) |
| Immovable property (land/building) | 24 months | Slab rates | 12.5% without indexation (Section 112) |
| Debt mutual funds (acquired after 01-04-2023) | Always STCG | Slab rates | N/A — always taxed as STCG at slab rates |
| Gold, jewellery, all other assets | 24 months | Slab rates | 12.5% without indexation (Section 112) |
The most significant change in Budget 2024 is the removal of the Cost Inflation Index (CII) benefit for computing long-term capital gains on all asset classes. Previously, under the old Section 112, LTCG on non-equity assets was taxed at 20% after allowing indexation of the cost of acquisition using CII notified by the CBDT under Section 48. The new regime replaces this with a flat 12.5% rate without indexation.
Transitional relief for immovable property: For land or building (or both) acquired before 23 July 2024, the taxpayer may compute LTCG tax as the lower of:
This transitional provision was introduced by an amendment to Section 112 during the passage of the Finance (No. 2) Bill, 2024 in Parliament, after significant public feedback that the blanket removal of indexation would adversely affect long-held property investments.
Expert Insight — CA V. Viswanathan, FCA, ACS, CFE (IBBI/RV/03/2019/12333)
The removal of indexation creates a clear breakeven analysis. For properties held for 10+ years where the CII multiplier exceeds 1.56x (i.e., indexed cost is more than 56% higher than actual cost), the old regime of 20% with indexation remains more beneficial. For properties held for shorter periods or where the actual appreciation is very high relative to CII growth, the new 12.5% flat rate wins. At Virtual Auditor, we run both computations for every property sale engagement and advise the optimal regime. This analysis is particularly critical for inherited properties where the cost of acquisition is the cost to the previous owner (Section 49(1)), and the holding period includes the previous owner’s holding period — the CII advantage compounds significantly over multi-generational holdings.
Section 111A applies to gains arising from the transfer of:
where the transaction is subject to Securities Transaction Tax (STT) at the time of transfer. Post-Budget 2024, STCG under Section 111A is taxed at a flat rate of 20% (plus applicable surcharge and cess), up from the previous rate of 15%.
Tax planning strategies for Section 111A:
Section 112A, introduced by Finance Act 2018, taxes LTCG on listed equity shares, equity-oriented mutual fund units, and business trust units at 12.5% (post-Budget 2024, previously 10%) on gains exceeding Rs.1.25 lakhs per financial year (threshold enhanced from Rs.1 lakh).
Key features of Section 112A:
Tax-loss harvesting is the systematic practice of selling securities at a loss to offset capital gains and reduce the overall tax liability. The strategy works as follows:
Quantitative example: If you have Rs.3 lakhs LTCG on listed shares and Rs.1.5 lakhs unrealised loss on other listed holdings, selling the loss-making holdings converts your net taxable LTCG to Rs.1.5 lakhs. After the Rs.1.25 lakhs exemption, your taxable LTCG is only Rs.25,000 — tax payable at 12.5% = Rs.3,125 (plus surcharge and cess). Without harvesting, tax on Rs.3 lakhs (less Rs.1.25 lakhs exemption) = Rs.21,875.
Capital gains on sale of land or building are computed under Section 48:
Full value of consideration (sale price or stamp duty value under Section 50C, whichever is higher)
Less: Cost of acquisition (actual cost, or FMV as on 01-04-2001 for properties acquired before that date, using a registered valuer’s report)
Less: Cost of improvement (expenditure of a capital nature on the property after acquisition)
Less: Expenditure incurred wholly and exclusively in connection with the transfer (brokerage, legal fees, stamp duty paid by the seller)
= Capital Gains
Section 50C provides that where the sale consideration for land or building is less than the stamp duty value (as adopted by the stamp valuation authority for registration), the stamp duty value shall be deemed to be the full value of consideration. However:
Section 54 provides exemption from LTCG on sale of a residential house property if:
Capital Gains Account Scheme (CGAS): If the new house is not purchased/constructed before the due date of filing the income tax return for the year of transfer, the capital gains (or the balance amount) must be deposited in a Capital Gains Account with a specified bank under the CGAS, 1988, before the due date. The deposit is treated as cost of the new house for exemption purposes. Failure to utilise the deposited amount within the stipulated period results in the unutilised amount being taxed as LTCG in the year in which the period expires.
Section 54EC provides exemption from LTCG on transfer of land or building (or both) if the capital gains are invested within 6 months from the date of transfer in specified bonds:
Planning tip: If a property sale straddles two financial years (e.g., sale in January 2026), you can invest Rs.50 lakhs in FY 2025-26 and another Rs.50 lakhs in FY 2026-27, effectively claiming exemption for up to Rs.1 crore of capital gains — provided both investments are made within 6 months of the transfer date.
Section 54F provides exemption from LTCG on transfer of any long-term capital asset other than a residential house property if the net sale consideration (not just the capital gains) is invested in purchasing or constructing a residential house property. Key conditions:
Employee Stock Option Plans (ESOPs) are taxed at two distinct points:
Stage 1 — At Exercise (Perquisite Tax):
Stage 2 — At Sale (Capital Gains Tax):
For employees of eligible startups (companies recognised by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) under Section 80-IAC), the Finance Act 2020 introduced a deferral mechanism for the perquisite tax at Stage 1:
Expert Insight — CA V. Viswanathan
ESOP tax planning requires coordinating the exercise timing with the employee’s overall income profile. We frequently advise startup founders and senior employees to: (1) Exercise options in a year when other income is lower to benefit from lower slab rates on the perquisite. (2) For listed company ESOPs, exercise and immediately sell a portion to fund the perquisite tax (sell-to-cover strategy). (3) For unlisted company ESOPs, obtain a registered valuer’s report for FMV determination under Rule 11UA — this valuation is defensible in assessment and prevents disputes. As an IBBI Registered Valuer (IBBI/RV/03/2019/12333), I personally handle these valuations at Virtual Auditor, ensuring the FMV is both defensible and tax-efficient within the bounds of the law. ESOP valuation starts from Rs.25,000.
Restricted Stock Units (RSUs) differ from ESOPs in their tax treatment:
| Parameter | ESOP | RSU |
|---|---|---|
| Exercise price | Employee pays an exercise price (may be nominal or at discount) | No exercise price — shares are granted free on vesting |
| Perquisite at vesting/exercise | FMV on exercise date minus exercise price | Full FMV on vesting date (since no price is paid) |
| Cost of acquisition for capital gains | FMV on exercise date | FMV on vesting date |
| Section 80-IAC deferral | Available for eligible startups | Not explicitly covered (debatable — CBDT clarification awaited) |
When unlisted shares are transferred at a price below FMV (as determined under Rule 11UA), the provisions of Section 56(2)(x) may be triggered in the hands of the buyer — the difference between FMV and the purchase price is taxable as income from other sources. Simultaneously, the seller computes capital gains based on the actual sale consideration. This creates potential for double taxation, which must be carefully managed through proper valuation.
Section 50CA (inserted by Finance Act 2017) provides that where the sale consideration for unlisted shares is less than the FMV determined in accordance with Rule 11UA, the FMV shall be deemed to be the full value of consideration for computing capital gains. This is the share-transfer equivalent of Section 50C (which applies to immovable property).
The interplay of Section 50CA and Section 56(2)(x) requires that unlisted share transfers be structured at or around FMV. At Virtual Auditor, we provide concurrent Rule 11UA valuation reports and capital gains computation to ensure compliance on both the seller’s and buyer’s side.
The set-off and carry forward rules for capital losses are prescriptive:
Capital gains are subject to advance tax under Section 234C. However, a special dispensation applies — capital gains (and lottery/horse race income) that arise after the due date of an advance tax instalment are not considered for computing interest under Section 234C for that instalment. The entire capital gains tax must be paid as advance tax in the instalment immediately following the quarter in which the transfer takes place. Failure to pay advance tax on capital gains results in interest under Section 234B (for default in payment of advance tax) and Section 234C (for deferment of advance tax).
Actionable Planning Checklist
| Service | Scope | Pricing (INR) |
|---|---|---|
| Single transaction review | Capital gains computation, old vs new regime analysis, exemption advisory | From Rs.10,000 |
| Annual capital gains planning | Portfolio review, tax-loss harvesting, advance tax computation | From Rs.50,000 |
| Property sale advisory | Section 50C analysis, Section 54/54EC/54F planning, CGAS advisory | From Rs.20,000 |
| ESOP taxation advisory | Exercise timing, perquisite computation, capital gains planning | From Rs.25,000 |
| Rule 11UA valuation (unlisted shares) | FMV determination by IBBI Registered Valuer for ESOP/share transfers | From Rs.25,000 |
| Capital gains appeal (CIT(A)) | Challenge to Section 50C valuation, exemption disallowance, etc. | From Rs.30,000 |
For a personalised consultation, visit Virtual Auditor pricing or call +91 99622 60333.
Post-Budget 2024, LTCG on listed equity shares and equity-oriented mutual fund units under Section 112A is taxed at 12.5% (previously 10%) on gains exceeding Rs.1.25 lakhs per financial year (threshold increased from Rs.1 lakh). The holding period for long-term classification remains 12 months. STT must have been paid on both acquisition and transfer (with specified exceptions for IPO allotments, bonus shares, ESOPs, and similar acquisitions where STT is not payable at the time of acquisition).
Yes, the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024 removed indexation for all asset classes. The new LTCG rate is a flat 12.5% without indexation. However, for immovable property acquired before 23 July 2024, a transitional provision allows taxpayers to compute tax under either the old regime (20% with indexation) or the new regime (12.5% without indexation), and pay whichever results in a lower tax. For properties acquired on or after 23 July 2024, only the 12.5% without indexation regime applies.
ESOPs are taxed in two stages. At exercise, the spread between FMV on the exercise date and the exercise price is taxed as perquisite salary income under Section 17(2)(vi) at slab rates. At sale, the difference between sale price and FMV on the exercise date is taxed as capital gains (STCG or LTCG depending on the holding period from the exercise date). For eligible DPIIT-recognised startups, the perquisite tax at exercise is deferred for up to 5 years or until the employee leaves/sells the shares, whichever is earlier.
Section 54 exempts LTCG on sale of a residential house if the taxpayer purchases another residential house within 1 year before or 2 years after the sale, or constructs one within 3 years. The exemption is the lower of the capital gain or the cost of the new house, capped at Rs.10 crores (Finance Act 2023). If the new house is not acquired before the ITR filing due date, the capital gains must be deposited in a Capital Gains Account Scheme before that date. If the new house is sold within 3 years, the exemption is reversed.
Section 54EC bonds are issued by NHAI, REC, PFC, and IRFC. LTCG on sale of land or building can be invested in these bonds within 6 months of the transfer to claim exemption. Maximum investment is Rs.50 lakhs per financial year. The bonds have a 5-year lock-in and yield approximately 5% per annum (taxable). A strategic approach for large gains is to time the property sale near the financial year-end and invest Rs.50 lakhs each in two consecutive financial years, capturing up to Rs.1 crore of exemption.
At Virtual Auditor, a single transaction capital gains review starts from Rs.10,000. Annual capital gains planning (portfolio review, tax-loss harvesting, advance tax) starts from Rs.50,000. Property sale advisory including Section 54/54EC/54F planning starts from Rs.20,000. ESOP taxation advisory starts from Rs.25,000. Rule 11UA valuation for unlisted shares starts from Rs.25,000. Contact CA V. Viswanathan at +91 99622 60333 for a customised quote.
Virtual Auditor — AI-Powered CA & IBBI Registered Valuer Firm
Valuer: V. VISWANATHAN, FCA, ACS, CFE, IBBI/RV/03/2019/12333
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