Capital Gains Tax India 2025: The Ultimate Guide to LTCG, STCG, Rates, Indexation & Exemptions
Selling shares, mutual funds, property, or gold in FY 2025-26? Then capital gains tax India 2025 is something you absolutely cannot afford to misunderstand. The rules have fundamentally changed — and getting them wrong could cost you lakhs in avoidable tax.
The Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024 introduced the most sweeping overhaul of capital gains taxation in decades: a uniform 12.5% LTCG rate, a higher ₹1.25 lakh annual exemption on equity gains, simplified 12/24-month holding periods, and the near-total removal of indexation for assets transferred on or after July 23, 2024.
This comprehensive guide covers every aspect of capital gains tax in India for FY 2025-26 — asset-wise rates, holding period rules, indexation choices, the critical July 23, 2024 cut-off, and how to use Sections 54, 54F, 54EC, and 54B to legally minimise your tax liability.
📋 Table of Contents
- What is Capital Gains Tax in India?
- STCG vs LTCG — Holding Period Rules 2025
- Capital Gains Tax Rates — Complete Rate Card FY 2025-26
- Indexation: What Changed After July 23, 2024?
- How to Calculate Capital Gains Tax — Step-by-Step
- Real-Life Examples with ₹ Calculations
- Section 54, 54F, 54EC, 54B — Capital Gains Exemptions Explained
- Set-Off and Carry Forward of Capital Losses
- Infographic: Capital Gains Tax India 2025 Quick Reference
- 9 Proven Tax Planning Strategies to Reduce Capital Gains
- Key Takeaways
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- Conclusion
1. What is Capital Gains Tax in India?
Capital gains tax is the tax levied on the profit earned from selling or transferring a capital asset. Under the Income Tax Act 1961, Section 45 defines a capital gain as income arising from the transfer of a capital asset in any previous year.
A capital asset includes any property held by a taxpayer — shares, mutual funds, real estate, gold, jewellery, bonds, debentures, and even cryptocurrency. Importantly, tax is triggered at the point of transfer or sale, not while you merely hold the asset.
Certain assets are explicitly excluded from the definition of capital assets and therefore not subject to capital gains tax. These include rural agricultural land in India, stock-in-trade, personal effects such as furniture and clothing (except jewellery), and consumable stores.
The Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024 — effective from July 23, 2024 — restructured capital gains taxation comprehensively. Budget 2025 made no changes to the fundamental LTCG/STCG rates or holding period rules. Therefore, the revised framework from July 2024 fully governs FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27).
2. STCG vs LTCG — Holding Period Rules FY 2025-26
Whether your gain is classified as Short-Term or Long-Term determines both the tax rate and the exemptions available to you. Post July 23, 2024, the holding period framework has been simplified from a three-bucket system to a cleaner two-bucket model.
Holding Period Classification — Simplified
| Asset Type | Short-Term (STCG) | Long-Term (LTCG) |
|---|---|---|
| Listed Equity Shares (STT paid) | ≤ 12 months | > 12 months |
| Equity-Oriented Mutual Funds (STT paid) | ≤ 12 months | > 12 months |
| Units of Business Trusts (REITs/InvITs) | ≤ 12 months | > 12 months |
| Immovable Property (Land & Building) | ≤ 24 months | > 24 months |
| Gold, Silver, Jewellery | ≤ 24 months | > 24 months |
| Unlisted Shares | ≤ 24 months | > 24 months |
| Debt Mutual Funds, Gold Funds, Hybrid Funds (non-equity) | ≤ 24 months | > 24 months |
| Listed Bonds and Debentures | ≤ 12 months | > 12 months |
| Zero Coupon Bonds (Listed) | ≤ 12 months | > 12 months |
3. Capital Gains Tax Rates — Complete Rate Card FY 2025-26
The following rate card covers all major asset categories. These rates apply to transfers made on or after July 23, 2024, which encompasses the entirety of FY 2025-26.
Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) Tax Rates
| Asset Category | Section | LTCG Tax Rate | Exemption/Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Listed Equity Shares (STT paid) | 112A | 12.5% | First ₹1.25 lakh exempt per FY |
| Equity-Oriented Mutual Funds (STT paid) | 112A | 12.5% | First ₹1.25 lakh exempt per FY |
| Units of Business Trusts (STT paid) | 112A | 12.5% | First ₹1.25 lakh exempt per FY |
| Immovable Property — acquired before July 23, 2024 | 112 | 12.5% (without indexation) OR 20% (with indexation) | Resident individuals/HUFs choose lower |
| Immovable Property — acquired on/after July 23, 2024 | 112 | 12.5% (no indexation) | No indexation option |
| Gold, Silver, Jewellery | 112 | 12.5% | No indexation |
| Unlisted Shares (Domestic Companies) | 112 | 12.5% | No indexation |
| Debt Mutual Funds | Slab Rate | Slab Rate (added to income) | Post April 1, 2023 purchases |
| Listed Bonds / NCDs | 112 | 12.5% | No indexation |
Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG) Tax Rates
| Asset Category | Section | STCG Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Listed Equity Shares (STT paid) | 111A | 20% (flat) |
| Equity-Oriented Mutual Funds (STT paid) | 111A | 20% (flat) |
| Immovable Property | Slab | Applicable Income Tax Slab Rate |
| Gold, Jewellery | Slab | Applicable Income Tax Slab Rate |
| Unlisted Shares | Slab | Applicable Income Tax Slab Rate |
| Debt Mutual Funds | Slab | Applicable Income Tax Slab Rate |
4. Indexation After July 23, 2024 — What Changed and What Remains
Indexation was one of the most valuable tools for property investors. It allowed taxpayers to inflate the cost of acquisition using the Cost Inflation Index (CII), thereby reducing taxable gains. The July 2024 changes significantly curtailed this benefit.
What is Indexation and Why it Mattered
Indexation adjusts the original purchase price of an asset for inflation. The formula is: Indexed Cost = Actual Cost × (CII of Year of Sale ÷ CII of Year of Purchase). A higher indexed cost means lower capital gains and lower tax.
For example: A property bought in FY 2001-02 for ₹20 lakh, with CII of that year being 100 and FY 2025-26 CII being 376, would have an indexed cost of ₹75.2 lakh — dramatically reducing taxable gains on a sale at, say, ₹1 crore.
Current Indexation Rules — FY 2025-26
| Asset Type | Date of Acquisition | Indexation Available? | Options |
|---|---|---|---|
| Immovable Property (Land/Building) | Before July 23, 2024 | Yes — for Resident Individuals & HUFs | Choose: 12.5% without indexation OR 20% with indexation |
| Immovable Property (Land/Building) | On/After July 23, 2024 | No | 12.5% only |
| Gold, Jewellery, Other Assets | Any | No (removed from July 23, 2024) | 12.5% without indexation |
| Listed Equity / Equity MF | Any | Never available | 12.5% (Section 112A) |
| Unlisted Shares | Any | No (removed) | 12.5% without indexation |
CII for FY 2025-26 is 376, as notified by CBDT vide Notification No. 70/2025 dated July 1, 2025. You can verify the full CII table on the Income Tax India official website.
5. How to Calculate Capital Gains Tax — Step-by-Step
The calculation of capital gains tax follows a structured, sequential process. Here is the definitive step-by-step method applicable for FY 2025-26.
- Step 1 — Identify the Capital Asset: Determine what you sold — shares, mutual funds, real estate, gold, bonds, or other. Exclude rural agricultural land, personal effects, and other non-capital assets.
- Step 2 — Determine the Date of Transfer: This is the sale date (or date when full consideration was received). For shares, it is the trade date, not settlement date.
- Step 3 — Calculate the Holding Period: From date of acquisition to date of transfer. Classify as STCG or LTCG based on the two-bucket rule (12/24 months).
- Step 4 — Compute Full Value of Consideration: Total sale proceeds received or receivable.
- Step 5 — Identify Cost of Acquisition: Original purchase price. For assets acquired before April 1, 2001, use the higher of actual cost or Fair Market Value (FMV) as on April 1, 2001.
- Step 6 — Apply Indexation (if eligible): Only for property acquired before July 23, 2024 under the 20% option. Indexed Cost = Actual Cost × (CII Sale Year ÷ CII Purchase Year).
- Step 7 — Deduct Transfer Expenses: Brokerage, stamp duty, registration fees, and other direct transfer costs are deductible.
- Step 8 — Apply Exemptions: Check Sections 54, 54F, 54EC, 54B applicability and deduct eligible exemption amounts.
- Step 9 — Apply the Tax Rate: LTCG equity at 12.5% (above ₹1.25L); LTCG property at 12.5% or 20%; STCG equity at 20%; other STCG at slab rate.
- Step 10 — Add 4% Cess + Surcharge: Health & Education Cess at 4% on all computed tax. Surcharge applies if total income exceeds ₹50 lakh.
6. Real-Life Examples — Capital Gains Tax Calculated with ₹ Figures
Theory only takes you so far. Here are four practical scenarios showing exactly how capital gains tax is computed in India for FY 2025-26.
Example 1 — Rajan Sells Listed Shares (LTCG on Equity)
Rajan purchased 500 shares of Infosys in March 2022 at ₹1,400/share (Total: ₹7,00,000). He sells them in November 2025 at ₹2,600/share (Total: ₹13,00,000). Holding: 3.5 years → LTCG. Brokerage paid: ₹5,000.
| Full Sale Consideration | ₹13,00,000 |
| Less: Cost of Acquisition | ₹7,00,000 |
| Less: Brokerage / Transfer Charges | ₹5,000 |
| LTCG (Gross) | ₹5,95,000 |
| Less: Section 112A Annual Exemption | ₹1,25,000 |
| Taxable LTCG | ₹4,70,000 |
| Tax @ 12.5% | ₹58,750 |
| Add: 4% Health & Education Cess | ₹2,350 |
| Total Capital Gains Tax Payable | ₹61,100 |
Example 2 — Meena Sells a House Property (with Indexation Choice)
Purchase price in FY 2010-11: ₹25,00,000. CII for 2010-11: 167. Sale price in August 2025: ₹75,00,000. CII for FY 2025-26: 376. Property acquired before July 23, 2024 → both options available.
| Computation | Option A: 12.5% No Indexation | Option B: 20% With Indexation |
|---|---|---|
| Sale Price | ₹75,00,000 | ₹75,00,000 |
| Cost of Acquisition | ₹25,00,000 | ₹25,00,000 × (376÷167) = ₹56,28,743 |
| Capital Gain | ₹50,00,000 | ₹18,71,257 |
| Tax Rate | 12.5% | 20% |
| Tax Before Cess | ₹6,25,000 | ₹3,74,251 |
| + 4% Cess | ₹25,000 | ₹14,970 |
| Total Tax | ₹6,50,000 | ₹3,89,221 ✅ Better |
Conclusion: For this older property, Option B (20% with indexation) saves Meena over ₹2.6 lakh in tax.
Example 3 — Suresh Books Loss and Sets Off Against Gains
| Transaction | Amount | Nature |
|---|---|---|
| LTCG from equity shares (Section 112A) | ₹2,00,000 | Long-term |
| STCG from equity shares (Section 111A) | ₹1,00,000 | Short-term |
| Short-Term Capital Loss (debt fund) | (₹70,000) | Short-term loss |
Set-Off: STCL of ₹70,000 is first set off against STCG of ₹1,00,000 → Net STCG = ₹30,000. LTCG of ₹2,00,000 minus ₹1,25,000 Section 112A exemption = Taxable LTCG of ₹75,000.
Tax: ₹30,000 × 20% (111A) = ₹6,000 + ₹75,000 × 12.5% (112A) = ₹9,375. Total tax = ₹15,375 + 4% Cess = ₹15,990.
Example 4 — Priya Sells Gold After 3 Years
Priya purchased gold jewellery in August 2021 for ₹4,00,000. She sells it in October 2025 for ₹7,00,000. Holding: more than 24 months → LTCG. No indexation available (post-July 23, 2024 rules apply to the transfer).
| Sale Price | ₹7,00,000 |
| Less: Cost | ₹4,00,000 |
| LTCG | ₹3,00,000 |
| Tax @ 12.5% (Section 112) | ₹37,500 |
| + 4% Cess | ₹1,500 |
| Total Tax | ₹39,000 |
7. Section 54, 54F, 54EC, 54B — Capital Gains Exemptions Explained
These four sections are your most powerful legal tools to reduce or eliminate capital gains tax. Here is a clear, actionable breakdown of each.
Section 54 — LTCG Exemption on Sale of Residential House
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Who can claim? | Individual and HUF only |
| Asset sold | Residential house property (LTCG only) |
| Reinvestment required in | Residential house property (purchase or construction) |
| Time limit — Purchase | 1 year before OR 2 years after date of sale |
| Time limit — Construction | 3 years from date of sale |
| Exemption amount | Lower of: LTCG amount OR Cost of new property |
| Maximum cap | ₹10 crore (from FY 2023-24 onwards) |
| Lock-in on new property | 3 years from purchase/construction (else STCG triggered) |
Section 54F — LTCG Exemption on Sale of Any Asset into Residential House
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Who can claim? | Individual and HUF only |
| Asset sold | Any long-term capital asset other than a residential house |
| Reinvestment required in | Residential house property |
| Time limits | Same as Section 54 (1 year before / 2 years after for purchase; 3 years for construction) |
| Exemption amount | Proportional — LTCG × (Cost of new house ÷ Net Consideration) |
| Condition | Taxpayer must NOT own more than 1 residential house at time of sale (other than the new one) |
| Maximum cap | ₹10 crore on cost of new asset (from FY 2023-24) |
Section 54EC — LTCG Exemption via Specified Bonds
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Who can claim? | Any taxpayer (Individual, HUF, Company, Firm) |
| Asset sold | Any long-term capital asset |
| Investment required in | NHAI / REC / PFC bonds (specified Section 54EC bonds) |
| Time limit | Within 6 months from date of transfer |
| Exemption amount | Amount invested in bonds (maximum ₹50 lakh per financial year) |
| Lock-in period | 5 years (premature redemption triggers LTCG tax) |
Section 54B — Exemption on Sale of Agricultural Land
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Who can claim? | Individual and HUF |
| Asset sold | Urban agricultural land (STCG or LTCG both eligible) |
| Reinvestment in | New agricultural land (urban or rural) |
| Time limit | 2 years from date of transfer |
| Lock-in on new land | 3 years from purchase |
8. Set-Off and Carry Forward of Capital Losses
Capital losses are not wasted — they can be strategically deployed to reduce future tax liability. Understanding the set-off rules is essential for sophisticated tax planning.
Capital Loss Set-Off Rules
| Type of Loss | Can Set Off Against | Cannot Set Off Against |
|---|---|---|
| Short-Term Capital Loss (STCL) | Both STCG and LTCG | Any non-capital income (salary, business) |
| Long-Term Capital Loss (LTCL) | LTCG only | STCG, salary, business income |
| Loss under Section 111A (Equity STCL) | Both STCG and LTCG | Non-capital income |
| Loss from Section 112A (Equity LTCL) | LTCG only (cannot be set off against 111A gains) | STCG, any other income |
- Carry Forward Period: Unabsorbed capital losses (both STCL and LTCL) can be carried forward for up to 8 assessment years.
- Mandatory ITR Filing: To carry forward capital losses, your ITR must be filed within the due date under Section 139(1). Late filing forfeits the carry forward right for capital losses.
- FY 2025-26 Clarification: From FY 2025-26, repeated set-off of the same long-term capital loss across multiple years is restricted — a loss can be set off once it is recorded, and cannot be inflated or duplicated across years.
9. Infographic — Capital Gains Tax India 2025: Complete Quick Reference
10. 9 Proven Strategies to Reduce Capital Gains Tax in India 2025
Knowing the rules is the first step. Using them strategically is where real tax savings happen. Here are nine legitimate, fully legal approaches that sophisticated investors and CAs use to minimise capital gains tax liability.
- Harvest the ₹1.25 Lakh Annual Equity Exemption Every Year: The Section 112A exemption of ₹1.25 lakh on equity LTCG resets each financial year. Strategically book gains up to this threshold annually — even if you immediately repurchase the same shares — to step up your cost base without paying any tax. Over 10 years, this could shield ₹12.5+ lakh of gains entirely.
- Hold Equity for More than 12 Months: The jump from STCG at 20% to LTCG at 12.5% is significant. On ₹10 lakh of gains, that’s ₹75,000 in tax savings just from waiting a few extra weeks. Track your purchase dates carefully — especially for shares bought through SIPs or multiple tranches.
- Compare Indexation Options on Property: For pre-July 23, 2024 property, always compute both options. Use CII 376 (FY 2025-26) and the purchase year’s CII to calculate Option B (20% with indexation). For property purchased before 2008, Option B almost always wins decisively.
- Reinvest Property Gains Under Section 54 or 54F: If you are selling a house or any long-term asset and planning to buy another residential property, you can defer or eliminate up to ₹10 crore of capital gains tax. Plan your reinvestment within the prescribed timelines and use CGAS to preserve eligibility.
- Use Section 54EC Bonds for Non-Property Assets: If you are selling commercial property, gold, or other assets and do not wish to buy residential property, reinvesting up to ₹50 lakh in NHAI/REC/PFC bonds within 6 months gives a clean exemption. The 5-year lock-in is the trade-off.
- Tax Loss Harvesting Before March 31: Review your portfolio in February–March. Book unrealised losses in underperforming stocks or funds to set off against gains you have already booked during the year. This reduces net taxable capital gains without permanently exiting positions.
- Stagger Large Asset Sales Across Financial Years: If you plan to sell a large holding, splitting the sale across two financial years (e.g., March 2026 and April 2026) allows you to use the ₹1.25 lakh equity exemption twice and potentially keep total capital gains lower in each year. It also gives you two opportunities to offset losses.
- Gift Assets to Family Members in Lower Tax Brackets: Gifting shares or property to a spouse or parent (within clubbing provisions) and then having them sell can shift the taxable gain to someone in a lower income bracket. Be aware of clubbing provisions under Section 64 — gains from gifted assets to a spouse are still clubbed with the donor’s income in some cases.
- File ITR On Time to Preserve Loss Carry Forward: This one costs nothing except discipline. If you have unabsorbed capital losses and do not file your ITR by July 31 (or October 31 for audit cases), you permanently lose the right to carry forward those losses to future years. Always file on time, especially in years with significant capital losses.
For property-specific capital gains planning, especially involving HRA combined with home ownership or NRI situations, consider consulting a Qualified CA. The interaction between income sources, tax regimes, and capital gains can be complex. Our team at ClearTax Advisors specialises in this — see our Tax Advisory Services or check our Income Tax Saving Guide and Mutual Fund Investment Guide for related reading.
11. Key Takeaways — Capital Gains Tax India 2025
- July 23, 2024 is the definitive pivot date — all new rules on rates, holding periods, and indexation apply to transfers from this date.
- Uniform LTCG rate of 12.5% on most assets — equity, property, gold, bonds — effective from July 23, 2024.
- Listed equity and equity MF: STCG at 20% (Section 111A); LTCG at 12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh exemption (Section 112A).
- Property acquired before July 23, 2024: Resident individuals/HUFs can choose 12.5% without indexation OR 20% with indexation.
- CII for FY 2025-26 is 376 — CBDT Notification No. 70/2025. Use it for the 20% indexation calculation.
- Section 87A Rebate does not apply to capital gains — pay tax even if total income is below ₹12 lakh.
- Sections 54, 54F, 54EC, and 54B provide powerful, legal exemptions — plan property sales with these in mind.
- File ITR on time to carry forward capital losses for up to 8 years — late filing forfeits this right.
- Budget 2025 made no changes to LTCG/STCG rates or holding periods — the July 2024 framework fully applies.
12. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
13. Conclusion — Capital Gains Tax India 2025: Plan Ahead, Save More
Capital gains tax in India 2025 is both simpler and more demanding than it was three years ago. The uniform 12.5% LTCG rate makes arithmetic easier. But the removal of indexation for most assets, the higher STCG rate of 20% on equity, and the sharp July 23, 2024 cut-off mean that decisions around when to sell, what to hold, and how to reinvest carry real, significant financial consequences.
The most important insight from this guide: capital gains tax planning is not a March 31 exercise — it is a year-round discipline. Choosing when to sell, how long to hold, which exemption to deploy, and whether to harvest losses are all decisions that need to be made with both the tax law and your investment goals in mind.
Whether you are an individual investor selling shares, a business owner divesting property, or a CA advising clients, the framework in this guide gives you a comprehensive foundation. For the LTCG calculation specific to your situation — particularly for property with the 12.5% vs 20% indexation choice — use the official Income Tax India calculator or consult our experts at ClearTax Advisors.
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