Residential Property
Residential Property refers to a property that is used or intended to be used for residential purposes, such as living accommodation. It includes houses, apartments, flats, and similar dwelling units.
The tax treatment of residential property depends on whether it is self-occupied, let out, or deemed to be let out.
1. Types of Residential Property (Tax Perspective)
Self-Occupied Property (SOP)
- Used by the owner for own residence
- Annual value is considered Nil
- Interest deduction available (subject to limits)
Let-Out Property (LOP)
- Rented out to tenants
- Rental income is taxable
- Eligible for deductions (standard deduction, interest, municipal taxes)
Deemed Let-Out Property (DLOP)
- Not rented but treated as let-out (beyond specified number of properties)
- Notional rent is considered taxable
2. Taxation Under Income Tax
Income from residential property is taxed under:
- Income from House Property
Deductions available:
- Standard deduction of 30%
- Interest on home loan
- Municipal taxes (if paid)
3. Home Loan Benefits
- Interest Deduction: Up to ₹2 lakh (for self-occupied property, subject to conditions)
- Principal Repayment: Deduction under Section 80C (within overall limit)
4. Capital Gains on Sale
- Sale of residential property attracts capital gains tax
- Classified as short-term or long-term based on holding period
- Exemptions available under Sections 54, 54F
5. GST Implications
- GST may apply on under-construction properties
- Ready-to-move properties (with completion certificate) are generally exempt
6. Common Mistakes
- Not declaring deemed let-out property
- Ignoring rental income
- Not claiming eligible deductions
- Incorrect classification in ITR
Practical Insight
Most people think property = asset.
From a tax perspective, it’s also:
👉 income generator
👉 deduction opportunity
👉 tax liability
The impact depends entirely on:
- how the property is used
- how it is structured
How N D Savla & Associates Can Help
At N D Savla & Associates, we help you:
- Classify property correctly for tax purposes
- Maximise deductions and benefits
- Plan capital gains efficiently
- Ensure accurate reporting in ITR