Tuesday, 17 February 2026

Capital gain exemption on transfer of long-term capital asset (other than residential house) [Section 54F of Income-tax Act, 1961]

Section 54F of Income-tax Act, 1961 grants exemption from long-term capital gains (LTCG) when an assessee sells a long-term capital asset other than a residential house and invests the net consideration in purchasing or constructing a residential house property in India.

[1]  Applicability Conditions

       Section 54F applies if:

(i)   Nature of Asset Transferred

      The asset transferred is a long-term capital asset (other than a residential house).

(ii)  Eligible Assessee

The assessee is :

o  Individual, or

o  HUF.

[2]  Investment Condition

The assessee invests in one residential house in India:

    • Purchase:
      • Within 1 year before, or
      • Within 2 years after the date of transfer.
    • Construction:
      • Within 3 years after the date of transfer.

[3]  Ownership Condition (On Date of Transfer)

§  On the date of transfer, the assessee does not own more than one residential house (other than the new house).

§  If the assessee own more than one residential house (other than new house) → Exemption not available

§  The assessee does not purchase another residential house within 2 years or construct within 3 years (other than the new house).

[4]  Quantum of Exemption

       The exemption is proportionate to the investment:

Case 1: Full Investment

If entire net consideration is invested → Full LTCG exempt

Case 2: Partial Investment

If part of net consideration is invested → Exemption proportionately reduced.

Amount Exempt = Capital Gain X Amount Invested

                                 Net Sale Consideration

Example

Mr. A sells a plot of land (held for 5 years):

§  Sale consideration                     = ₹ 80,00,000

§  Transfer expenses                     = ₹   5,00,000

§  Indexed cost                 = ₹ 30,00,000

 

Step 1: Net Consideration

80,00,000 – 5,00,000 = ₹ 75,00,000

 

Step 2: LTCG

80,00,000 – 5,00,000 – 30,00,000 = ₹ 45,00,000

 

Scenario A – Full Investment

Investment in new house = ₹ 75,00,000

Exemption = 45,00,000 × (75,00,000 / 75,00,000) = ₹ 45,00,000 (Full exemption)

Taxable LTCG = Nil

 

Scenario B – Partial Investment

If you only invest a portion, the exemption is proportionate.

The formula used is:

Exemption = Capital Gain x Amount Invested

                                   {Net Consideration}

Investment = ₹ 30,00,000

Exemption = 45,00,000 × (30,00,000 / 75,00,000) = ₹ 18,00,000

Taxable LTCG = 45,00,000 – 18,00,000 = ₹ 27,00,000

 

[5] Maximum investment eligible for exemption is capped at ₹ 10 crore

   As per the amendment by the Finance Act, 2023, the maximum exemption allowed on long-term capital gains (LTCG) under Sections 54 and 54F of the Income Tax Act has been capped at ₹10 crore. This restriction came into effect on April 1, 2024, and applies to the Assessment Year 2024-25 and subsequent years.

§ Any investment above ₹ 10 crore will be ignored for exemption computation.

[6] Capital Gains Account Scheme, 1988

      If the amount is not invested before the due date of filing return under section 139(1):

  • The unutilized amount must be deposited in Capital Gains Account Scheme, 1988 (CGAS) before due date.
  • If not utilized within prescribed period → becomes taxable as capital gain in the year of expiry.

 

[7]  Lock-in Condition

If the new residential house is transferred within 3 years:

§  The exemption earlier allowed becomes taxable.

§  Cost of acquisition of new house is reduced by exempted amount while computing capital gain.

 

[8]  Consequences if the deposit amount is not fully utilized for the purchase or the construction of a residential house

If the amount deposited is not utilized fully for purchase or construction of new house within the stipulated period, then the following amount shall be treated as long-term capital gain of the previous year in which the period of three years from the date of transfer of original asset expires.

Unutilized amount x  Amount of original capital gain

                Net sale consideration

§  In such a case, the assessee can withdraw the unutilized amount at any time after the expiry of 3 years from the date of the transfer of the original asset in accordance with the aforesaid scheme.

[9]  Important Judicial Principles

Exemption available even if construction is not fully completed within 3 years (substantial investment test).

Entire Section  54F exemption cannot be disallowed only because construction of new house was not completed

Assessee sold a plot of land and earned LTCG, which was invested in purchase and construction of a residential house and, accordingly, deduction under section 54F was claimed, which, had been examined in detail and duly allowed. However, Commissioner (Appeals) observed that capital gains had not been appropriated towards acquisition of a residential house by way of purchase and Construction timeline had not been met and, therefore, deduction under section 54F was not allowable. Since amounts for purchase of property and construction thereon were paid duly within relevant period, as prescribed under law and that too from Capital Gains Account, disallowance of entire exemption only because construction was not completed was without any basis and/or merit and the said action of the Commissioner (Appeals) deserves to be quashed. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2015-16) – [Subramanian Swaminathan v. ACIT (2023) 152 taxmann.com 72 (ITAT Delhi)]

Section 54F relief could not be denied on non-execution of sale deed within time if possession was handed over to assessee

Assessee sold a piece of land and claimed deduction under section 54F based on a purchase agreement of a residential property. The assessee submitted sale agreement to prove genuineness of deduction claimed under section 54F. The Assessing Officer issued notice to the seller party which was not responded. Accordingly, the Assessing Officer disallowed the deduction on ground that assessee had not registered the property and only agreement of sale had been executed. On appeal, the Commissioner (Appeals) upheld the order of the Assessing Officer. On appeal to the Tribunal:

Held : The requirement of section 54F is that the assessee should purchase any residential house within a period of one year before or two years after the date of transfer of the property or construct a new residential house within a period of three years after the date of transfer. In the present case, there is no dispute that the assessee has entered into an ‘Agreement of Sale with Possession’ of the residential house, being a flat at HHS within time allowed in the Act. However, the property has not been registered. The assessee submitted that the entire sale consideration of Rs. 2.65 crores have been paid to the seller through banking channel by the assessee on various dates from 29.06.2017 to 27.06.2018. The assessee has also deducted TDS of Rs. 2.65 lakhs on the above payment. As per the agreement, the seller has conveyed to the assessee the vacant and direct possession of the entire property together with all rights and has stated that the assessee has become the sole and absolute owner of the property. The assessee shall have ownership and rights over the property to the same extent as the seller had. The Gujarat High Court in case of Kishorbhai Harjibhai Patel v. ITO (2019) 107 taxmann.com 295 (Guj.) has held that where assessee had executed an agreement to sell in respect of a house property and purchased a new residential property within one year from date of agreement to sell, even though sale deed could not be executed within time, section 54F relief was to be granted to assessee in respect of purchase of new residential property. While deciding the issue, the High Court has followed the decision of the Supreme Court in case of Sanjeev Lal v. CIT (2014) 46 taxmann.com 300 (SC) and stated that the Income-tax Act gives precise definition to the term ‘transfer’. It observed that in case of Sanjeev Lal (supra), it is very clear that an agreement to sell would extinguish the rights and the same would amount to transfer within the meaning of section 2(47). This definition of transfer given in the Act is only for the purpose of Income-tax. Accordingly, the issue was decided in favour of the assessee and against the revenue. In view of the facts discussed above and respectfully following the decision of the Gujarat High Court cited supra, the ground is allowed. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2017-18)[Arvindbhai Ramniklal Raval (HUF) v. ITO (2025) 174 taxmann.com 120 (ITAT Surat)]

Provisions of Section 54F are beneficial provisions and are to be applied in accordance to the peculiar situation of each case; Allows Section 54F deduction, cites failure to construct property beyond Assessee’s control

Delhi ITAT allows Assessee’s appeal observing that the Assessee is entitled to claim benefit of deduction under section 54F given that reasons for failure to construct the residential property was beyond Assessee’s control, and forced Assessee to surrender its right to the plot of land and invest in a new property; Tribunal highlights that the Assessee got the provisional allotment for the residential plot on 27.05.2016 and subsequently made 3 installments, thereafter the Assessee claimed deduction under Section 54F; Noting Assessing Officer’s observations, ITAT outlines that due the failure to hand over possession of the respective plot of the land, the Assessee failed to commence the construction of the residential house; ITAT articulates that in the present case, the Assessee was clearly impeded from taking possession of the plot of land, and the whole project got delayed due to the national level dispute with the Central Govt./NHAI finally stepping in and taking over the project of construction of the highway, and such reasons were beyond the control of the Assessee; Tribunal outlines that due to this, the Assessee surrendered its right to the said plot of land and claimed refund from the builder, and subsequently purchased new residential property; Outlining the Karnataka High Court decision in CIT v. Sambandam Udaykumar (2012) 19 taxmann.com 17 (Karn.) held that section 54F is a beneficial provision for promoting construction of residential house and in the given case also, assessee has utilized the funds for the purpose of construction of residential house and all the funds were utilized within the period of three years. Merely because the approval and construction of the property was completed beyond the period of three years, the same is not disentitled the assessee from the benefit of exemption under section 54F of the Act, Madras High Court decision in CIT v. Sardarmal Kothari (2008) 302 ITR 286 (Mad.) the Madras High court held that Section 54F of Income tax Act is a beneficial provision for promoting the construction of residential house and requires to be construed liberally for achieving that purpose, Bombay High Court decision in CIT v. Girish L Ragha (2016) 289 CTR 213 : 239 Taxman 449 (Bom.) and other judicial precedents, ITAT opines that the provisions of Section 54F are beneficial provisions and are to be applied in accordance to the peculiar situation of each case. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2017-18) – [Rajni Kumar v. ITO, Gurgaon [TS-1278-ITAT-2025(DEL)] – Date of Judgement : 17.09.2025 (ITAT Delhi)]

Assessee eligible for section 54F relief if second house occupied by him is situated in foreign country

Assessee, a non-resident, had sold land in India and had claimed exemption under section 54F by reinvesting in residential house in India. Benefit of section 54F was denied by Commissioner (Appeals) solely on ground that assessee jointly owned two residential houses in USA. Proviso to section 54F(1) which contains condition that deduction is not available if assessee owns more than one residential house, other than new asset, should be interpreted to mean ownership of residential houses in India. Therefore, ground on which deduction under section 54F was denied that assessee owned two residential houses in USA was not tenable. Assessee was entitled for claiming deduction under section 54F for investments made in India in one residential house within stipulated time limit. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2015-16) - [Smt. Maries Joseph v. DCIT (International Taxation), Kochi (2023) 148 taxmann.com 97 (ITAT Cochin)]