Capital Gains Tax
Capital Gains Tax is the tax charged on the profit arising from the transfer of a capital asset.
If you sell something you own—like property, shares, or mutual funds—and make a gain, that profit is taxed under this head.
When Does It Apply
Capital gains tax is triggered when:
- A capital asset is transferred (sold, exchanged, relinquished, etc.)
- There is a profit on the transaction
No sale, no tax. The gain must actually arise.
Types of Capital Gains
Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG)
Arises when an asset is held for a shorter period before sale.
- Higher tax rates
- Generally taxed at slab rates (or special rates for certain assets like equity)
Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG)
Arises when an asset is held for a longer duration.
- Lower tax rates
- May allow indexation benefits (for certain assets)
- Special exemptions available
How Capital Gains are Calculated
At its core, the calculation looks like this:
Sale Consideration
– Cost of Acquisition
– Cost of Improvement
– Transfer Expenses
= Capital Gain
What This Really Means
Two people can sell the same asset at the same price and still pay different taxes.
Why? Because:
- Their purchase cost differs
- Holding period differs
- Eligibility for exemptions differs
Common Exemptions
You can reduce or eliminate capital gains tax through specific provisions, such as:
- Reinvestment in residential property
- Investment in specified bonds
- Shifting gains into eligible schemes
(Each exemption comes with strict conditions and timelines.)
Common Mistakes
- Not considering stamp duty value in property transactions
- Ignoring indexation where applicable
- Missing exemption timelines
- Misclassifying short-term vs long-term
- Not reporting transactions assuming “no tax = no reporting”
Key Point to Remember
Capital gains tax is event-based—it arises only when you transfer the asset, not while you hold it.