Cost Inflation Index (CII)
Cost Inflation Index (CII) is a number notified by the government each year to adjust the cost of a capital asset for inflation.
It is used to calculate the indexed cost of acquisition, which helps reduce taxable long-term capital gains.
Why CII Exists
If you bought an asset years ago, its price increase isn’t entirely “profit”—a part of it is just inflation.
CII helps:
- Adjust purchase cost to current value
- Ensure tax is levied only on real gains, not inflationary gains
Where CII is Used
CII is applied in:
- Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG)
- Assets like property, bonds, and certain investments
- Cases where indexation benefit is allowed
(It does not apply to short-term capital gains or certain assets like equity shares under specific tax rules.)
How Indexation Works
The formula is:
Indexed Cost =
Original Cost × (CII of year of sale / CII of year of purchase)
This adjusted cost is then used to calculate capital gains.
What This Really Means
Let’s say:
- You bought a property for ₹10 lakh years ago
- Due to inflation, its indexed cost becomes ₹18 lakh
- You sell it for ₹25 lakh
Your taxable gain is not ₹15 lakh—it’s ₹7 lakh.
That’s a big difference.
Who Notifies CII
CII values are notified annually by the Central Board of Direct Taxes.
Each financial year has a specific index number used for calculations.
Common Mistakes
- Not applying indexation where eligible
- Using incorrect CII values
- Applying CII to assets where it’s not allowed
- Ignoring year of improvement for cost adjustments
Key Point to Remember
CII adjusts your cost, not your sale price.
It reduces taxable gains by factoring in inflation.