INDEX

  • Budget 2024 Update 

  • What is Capital Gains Tax

  • Defining Capital Assets

  • Tax Rates for Capital Gains

  • Changes in Debt Mutual Funds

  • Asset Classification

  • Notes on Inherited Assets

  • Example of Income from Capital Gains for FY 2023-24

  • Example of Income from Capital Gains for FY 2024-25

Income from Capital Gain

1. Budget 2024 Highlights — The Big Shake-Up

Here’s what’s new (and worth paying attention to):

  • Two categories now rule the game: holding periods are down to just 12 months and 24 months. The old 36-month wait? Gone.

  • Listed securities: Hold them for more than 12 months, and they count as long-term.

  • Everything else: needs a 24-month hold to hit long-term status.

  • STCG (Short-Term Capital Gains): The tax on listed shares, equity mutual funds, and REITs jumps from 15% → 20%.

  • LTCG (Long-Term Capital Gains):

    • Exemption limit raised: ₹1 lakh → ₹1.25 lakh.

    • But tax rate up too: 10% → 12.5% (from July 23, 2024).

  • Other long-term assets: Tax rate trimmed from 20% to 12.5%, but (brace yourself) no more indexation.

  • For old real estate (bought before July 23, 2024): you can choose:

    • 12.5% without indexation, or

    • 20% with indexation.

Yep — more options, more math, more coffee.

2. What’s a Capital Gains Tax Anyway?

In plain talk, capital gains tax is what you pay when you make a profit from selling a capital asset — basically, anything valuable that’s not a regular part of your business stock.

You only pay this tax when you sell or transfer the asset — not while you’re just holding it and admiring it.

🧩 Types of Capital Gains

1. Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG)

Quick flips. You sold your asset before hitting the required holding period.

  • For most assets: held under 36 months.

  • For listed shares, mutual funds, and bonds: less than 12 months.

  • Taxed at slab rates or special rates (like 15% → now 20% for equities).

2. Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG)

The “patient investor” tax.

  • For most assets: held beyond 36 months (or 24 months for property).

  • Lower tax rate, but until now you got indexation — adjusting for inflation.

  • From FY 2024–25: lower rate (12.5%) but no indexation.

3. What Counts as a Capital Asset?

Think of it as your “valuable possessions” list:

✅ Land, buildings, houses
✅ Vehicles, jewelry, machinery
✅ Shares, mutual funds, bonds, patents, trademarks

But not everything qualifies. These don’t count:

❌ Business inventory or raw materials
❌ Personal-use stuff like furniture and clothes
❌ Rural agricultural land
❌ Certain government bonds or gold savings schemes

Rural Land — Still Safe from Tax

Your farmland is tax-free if it’s outside city limits.
The taxman’s measuring tape goes like this:

  • Beyond 2 km from a town (pop. 10,000–1 lakh)

  • Beyond 6 km from a city (pop. 1–10 lakh)

  • Beyond 8 km from a metro (pop. over 10 lakh)

Basically, if your field’s far enough from the nearest Starbucks, you’re probably safe.

Tax rates for short-term and long-term capital gains in India infographic”

4. Capital Gains Tax Rates for FY 2024–25

TypeAssetTax Rate (Before July 23, 2024)Tax Rate (After July 23, 2024)
LTCGListed shares / equity mutual funds10% (on gains > ₹1 lakh)12.5% (on gains > ₹1.25 lakh)
LTCGOther assets (property, gold, etc.)20%12.5% (no indexation)
STCGListed shares / equity funds15%20%
STCGOther assetsSlab ratesSlab rates

📝 Debt mutual funds are now always short-term — no indexation, no long-term perks.

5. Changes in Debt Mutual Funds (2023)

Gains from debt mutual funds are now always taxed as short-term. Additionally, indexation benefits for these funds are no longer available.

6. Holding Periods (FY 2024–25 Onward)

  • 12 months: Listed securities (shares, bonds, ETFs, REITs).

  • 24 months: Everything else — property, unlisted shares, etc.

Inherited or gifted assets? The original owner’s holding period counts.
Bonus/rights shares? The clock starts from the date of allotment.

7. Example of Income from Capital Gains for FY 2023-24

Transaction 1: Sale of shares on 10 July 2023
  • Sale Date: 10 July 2023
  • Sale Value: ₹5,20,000
  • Purchase Date: 1 June 2020
  • Purchase Value: ₹1,50,000
Transaction 2: Sale of shares on 5 August 2023
  • Sale Date: 5 August 2023
  • Sale Value: ₹2,00,000
  • Purchase Date: 5 April 2023
  • Purchase Value: ₹70,000
Calculation of Capital Gains & Tax for FY 2023-24:
TransactionSale DateSale Value (₹)Purchase DatePurchase Value (₹)Capital Gain (₹)Taxable Gain (₹)Tax RateTax Payable (₹)
1. Long-Term Capital Gain (LTCG)10 July 20235,20,0001 June 20201,50,0003,70,000₹3,70,000-₹1,00,000= ₹2,70,00010%27,000
2. Short-Term Capital Gain (STCG)5 August 20232,00,0005 April 202370,0001,30,0001,30,00015%19,500
Total Capital Gains Tax Payable       46,500

This table summarizes both the capital gains and the corresponding taxes for each transaction. The total tax payable is ₹46,500.

8. Example of Income from Capital Gains for FY 2024-25

Transaction 1: Sale of shares on 10 July 2024
  • Sale Date: 10 July 2024
  • Sale Value: ₹5,20,000
  • Purchase Date: 1 June 2020
  • Purchase Value: ₹1,50,000
Transaction 2: Sale of shares on 5 August 2024
  • Sale Date: 5 August 2024
  • Sale Value: ₹2,00,000
  • Purchase Date: 5 April 2024
  • Purchase Value: ₹70,000
Calculation of Capital Gains & Tax for FY 2024-25:
TransactionSale DateSale Value (₹)Purchase DatePurchase Value (₹)Capital Gain (₹)Taxable Gain (₹)Tax RateTax Payable (₹)
1. Long-Term Capital Gain (LTCG)10 July 20245,20,0001 June 20201,50,0003,70,000₹3,70,000 – ₹1,25,000 = ₹2,45,00012.5%30,625
2. Short-Term Capital Gain (STCG)5 August 20242,00,0005 April 202470,0001,30,0001,30,00020%26,000
Total Capital Gains Tax Payable       56,625

Total Tax Payable for FY 2024-25:

  • Total Tax from LTCG: ₹30,625
  • Total Tax from STCG: ₹26,000

Total Tax Payable = ₹30,625 + ₹26,000 = ₹56,625

So, Mr. A will have to pay a total of ₹56,625 as tax for FY 2024-25 on the capital gains from these two transactions.

Final Thoughts

Capital gains tax has always been a balancing act between rewarding long-term investors and collecting fair revenue. Budget 2024 simplifies the system — but not without some sting.

If you invest often, or plan to sell big assets, keep your holding periods and sale dates in check. A few months here or there could literally save (or cost) you thousands.

And if the numbers make your head spin? That’s what spreadsheets — and patient tax professionals — are for.