Gift Tax Calculator (India)
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Section 56(2) of the Income Tax Act governs the taxation of gifts received in India. Since 2005, gifts received from non-relatives above ₹50,000 in aggregate in a financial year are taxable as 'Income from Other Sources' at the recipient's slab rate. However, gifts from specified relatives are completely exempt — regardless of the amount. Specified relatives include: spouse, parents, brothers, sisters, and their spouses, parents' siblings (uncles and aunts), grandparents, and lineal descendants. Additionally, gifts received on specific occasions are exempt: gifts on marriage (from anyone — not just relatives), gifts from will/inheritance, gifts from local authority, gifts from registered charitable organisations, and gifts from employers as perquisites (though employer perquisites are taxable as salary). The gift tax provisions also apply to property received below market value: if movable property is received for inadequate consideration (more than ₹50,000 below fair market value), the difference is taxable. For immovable property, if received for less than stamp duty value (circle rate) by more than ₹50,000, the difference is taxable as 'Income from Other Sources' in the hands of the recipient (Section 56(2)(x)). The donor faces no tax on the gift (except in cases of deemed gifts in business transactions). NRI gifting to Indian relatives, gifts in kind, and cash gifts all have specific treatment. Understanding gift tax rules prevents unintended tax liability on large family transfers.
Taxable Gift = Gift Value - ₹50,000 threshold (if total non-relative gifts in FY > ₹50,000) | For property: Taxable = Stamp Duty Value - Actual Consideration paid (if difference > ₹50,000)
- 1Identify the donor: if a specified relative (spouse, parent, sibling, grandparent, etc.), any gift amount is tax-free regardless of size.
- 2For non-relative gifts: if aggregate gifts from all non-relatives in a financial year exceed ₹50,000, the ENTIRE aggregate amount (not just the excess) is taxable as 'Income from Other Sources'.
- 3For gifts received on marriage: completely exempt regardless of donor (relative or non-relative) and amount. Must be received on the occasion of marriage.
- 4For property received below stamp duty value: if the shortfall (stamp duty value minus actual payment) exceeds ₹50,000, the entire shortfall is taxable in the recipient's hands.
- 5Gifts from NRI relatives to resident Indians: if the donor is a specified relative, completely exempt. For non-relative NRI gifts above ₹50,000, taxable as above.
- 6Employer gifts to employees: taxable as perquisite if total value exceeds ₹5,000 per year (earlier rule); now all gifts from employer are taxable as salary income.
- 7Declare taxable gifts in ITR under 'Income from Other Sources'; TDS is generally not deducted on gifts (except in specific company-to-individual contexts).
No upper limit — gifts between specified relatives are always exempt, regardless of amount
Parent is a specified relative. Any gift from parent to child is 100% exempt from tax under Section 56(2). The son need not declare this gift as income. The father also has no tax liability for giving the gift.
If the same friend had gifted only ₹50,000, it would be completely tax-free (exactly at threshold)
Non-relative gift of ₹80,000 > ₹50,000 threshold: the ENTIRE ₹80,000 (not just the ₹30,000 excess) is taxable. Tax = 80,000 × 20% = ₹16,000 + 4% cess = ₹16,640. If gifts from different non-relatives aggregated to cross ₹50,000, the trigger applies.
Marriage gift exemption covers gifts received on the wedding day and reasonably close to it
Section 56(2) explicitly exempts gifts received 'on the occasion of marriage' from any donor, any amount, any form (cash, jewellery, goods). This exemption is absolute — no ₹50,000 threshold applies. The recipient need not declare marriage gifts as income.
Cousin is NOT a specified relative for Section 56(2) purposes; specified relatives do not include cousins
The list of 'relatives' under Section 56(2) does NOT include cousins, in-laws beyond immediate family, or extended family. The ₹30L discount (₹70L stamp duty value - ₹40L paid) > ₹50,000 threshold, making the entire ₹30L taxable as income from other sources in the buyer's hands. This is a major trap for property transactions with extended family.
Professionals in finance and tax use India Gift Tax Calc as part of their standard analytical workflow to verify calculations, reduce arithmetic errors, and produce consistent results that can be documented, audited, and shared with colleagues, clients, or regulatory bodies for compliance purposes.
University professors and instructors incorporate India Gift Tax Calc into course materials, homework assignments, and exam preparation resources, allowing students to check manual calculations, build intuition about input-output relationships, and focus on conceptual understanding rather than arithmetic.
Consultants and advisors use India Gift Tax Calc to quickly model different scenarios during client meetings, enabling real-time exploration of what-if questions that would otherwise require returning to the office for detailed spreadsheet-based analysis and reporting.
Individual users rely on India Gift Tax Calc for personal planning decisions — comparing options, verifying quotes received from service providers, checking third-party calculations, and building confidence that the numbers behind an important decision have been computed correctly and consistently.
Extreme input values
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in india gift tax calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
Assumption violations
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in india gift tax calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
Rounding and precision effects
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in india gift tax calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
| Gift Type | From Relative | From Non-Relative | On Marriage | By Will/Inheritance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash / Bank Transfer | Exempt (any amount) | Taxable if aggregate > ₹50,000 | Exempt (any amount) | Exempt (any amount) |
| Movable Property (gold, shares) | Exempt (any amount) | Taxable if FMV - Consideration > ₹50,000 | Exempt (any amount) | Exempt (any amount) |
| Immovable Property | Exempt (any amount) | Taxable if Stamp Duty Value - Price > ₹50,000 | Exempt (any amount) | Exempt (any amount) |
| Employer to Employee gifts | N/A | Taxable as salary (perquisite) | Taxable as salary | N/A |
Who are 'specified relatives' for Section 56(2) gift tax purposes?
Specified relatives for Section 56(2) include: spouse; brother or sister; brother or sister of the spouse; brother or sister of either parent; any lineal ascendant or descendant (parents, grandparents, children, grandchildren); lineal ascendant or descendant of the spouse; and their spouses. Cousins, uncles-in-law, great-grandparents, and other extended family members are NOT specified relatives and gifts from them above ₹50,000 are taxable.
Is wedding gift from anyone (including non-relatives) tax-free?
Yes. Gifts received 'on the occasion of marriage' are completely exempt under Section 56(2)(vii) — regardless of the donor (relative, friend, colleague, or stranger), amount, or form (cash, jewellery, goods). The exemption requires the gift to be received on or close to the occasion of marriage. Gifts received months before or after the wedding may not qualify.
What is the ₹50,000 aggregate threshold — how does it work?
The ₹50,000 threshold is aggregate across all non-relative gifts in a financial year. If total non-relative gifts = ₹40,000 (below threshold), nothing is taxable. If total = ₹60,000 (above threshold), the ENTIRE ₹60,000 is taxable — not just the ₹10,000 excess. This all-or-nothing design of the provision is important to understand when receiving multiple small gifts.
Can I receive ₹50,000 cash gift every year without tax?
Yes. If total cash/kind gifts from non-relatives in a financial year are exactly ₹50,000 or below, no tax applies. This allows up to ₹50,000 per year from non-relatives (e.g., employer perquisites, vendor gifts, friend gifts) without tax. However, the moment the aggregate exceeds ₹50,000, the ENTIRE amount (including the first ₹50,000) becomes taxable.
Is there a gift tax for the donor (person giving the gift)?
No. There is no gift tax for the donor in India. The donor has no tax liability on gifting money or assets to anyone. The tax, if any, is only in the hands of the recipient. The donor may face tax on the appreciation of assets sold before gifting, but the act of gifting itself does not trigger any tax for the giver.
How are NRI gifts to resident Indian relatives taxed?
Gifts from NRI relatives (specified relatives as defined in Section 56(2)) to resident Indians are completely exempt — no amount limit. For NRI non-relatives gifting above ₹50,000 in a year to a resident Indian, the recipient in India pays tax at their slab rate on the gift amount. The NRI donor faces no tax in India on the gift (may face tax in their country of residence depending on that country's laws).
What happens to the tax base when gifted property is later sold?
When you sell gifted property, the cost of acquisition for capital gains computation is the cost in the hands of the previous owner (donor). The holding period for LTCG includes the donor's holding period as well. If Section 56(2) tax was paid on the property when received (because it was below stamp duty value), that taxed amount can be added to the cost of acquisition.
Is a loan from a relative taxable as a gift?
No. A genuine loan (repayable with or without interest) from a relative is not taxable as a gift. Ensure there is documentation of the loan (loan agreement, promissory note) and actual repayment intention. If the loan is forgiven and written off without repayment, the waived amount may be treated as a gift. Under the Income Tax Act, cash transactions above ₹20,000 are prohibited — loans must be through banking channels.
Pro Tip
The most tax-efficient way to transfer wealth within family is directly from parents to adult children as documented gifts (through banking channels) — completely tax-free regardless of amount. Avoid gifts from cousins or friends above ₹50,000 per year unless you want to declare them as income. For property transactions below circle rate with extended family, always check whether the difference triggers Section 56(2)(x) before signing the agreement.
Did you know?
India's gift tax history is convoluted — Gift Tax Act 1958 was repealed in 1998, then gifts were brought back under Section 56(2) of the Income Tax Act in 2004. The current system is designed to prevent conversion of black money into white through fictitious gifts to relatives. Despite this, India still does not have a formal inheritance/estate tax, making India one of the most gift-and-inheritance-friendly countries for wealthy families planning intergenerational wealth transfer.