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Capital Loss

Capital loss refers to the loss incurred when a capital asset is transferred for a value lower than its cost of acquisition (plus improvement and transfer expenses).

In simple terms, if you sell an asset at a loss, that negative difference is your capital loss.


Types of Capital Loss

Short-Term Capital Loss (STCL)

Occurs when a short-term capital asset is sold at a loss.

  • Can be set off against both short-term and long-term capital gains

Long-Term Capital Loss (LTCL)

Occurs when a long-term capital asset is sold at a loss.

  • Can be set off only against long-term capital gains

How Capital Loss is Calculated

The computation mirrors capital gains:

Sale Consideration
– Cost of Acquisition
– Cost of Improvement
– Transfer Expenses
= Capital Loss (if negative)


Set-Off and Carry Forward Rules

This is where capital loss becomes useful:

  • Losses can be set off in the same year against eligible gains
  • Unused losses can be carried forward for up to 8 years
  • Carry forward is allowed only if the return is filed within due date

What This Really Means

A loss is not just a setback—it’s a tax asset.

For example:

  • You incur a ₹5 lakh capital loss this year
  • You can adjust it against future capital gains
  • This directly reduces your future tax liability

Important Conditions

  • Loss must be properly reported in the Income Tax Return
  • Timely filing is mandatory for carry forward
  • Proper documentation of purchase and sale is essential

Common Mistakes

  • Not reporting losses assuming “no tax = no need”
  • Missing the filing deadline and losing carry forward benefit
  • Incorrect set-off (e.g., LTCL against STCG incorrectly understood)
  • Ignoring transaction costs in computation

Key Point to Remember

Capital loss doesn’t reduce tax immediately in all cases—but it reduces future tax if used correctly.