Example On How To Determine Cost Of Acquisition & LTCG tax
The Income Tax Department gave an illustration of property acquisition and sale details, to understand how the calculation is done.
Consider a property that was acquired in 1990 for Rs 5 lakh and its stamp duty value as of April 1, 2001 was Rs 10 lakh. The Fair Market Value (FMV) of the property as of the same date was Rs 12 lakh. If the property was sold on or after July 23, 2024, for Rs 1 crore, here's how capital gains tax will be calculated.
The cost of acquisition as of April 1, 2001, will be taken as which is the lower of the stamp duty value or FMV, and here it will be stamp duty value at Rs 10 lakh.
The Indexed Cost of Acquisition in FY 2024-25, accounting for inflation, was calculated as Rs 36,30,000.
Here's how that was calculated:
Cost Inflation Index (CII) in 2001 - 100
Cost Inflation Index (CII) in 2024-25- 363
Indexation Factor = 363/100
Indexed Cost of Acquisition = 10,00,000 × 3.63 = Rs 36.30 lakh
So now under the old regime, the Long-Term Capital Gain (LTCG) is calculated as Rs 1 crore minus Rs 36.30 lakh which equals Rs 63.70 lakh on which 20 per cent tax is imposed, resulting in a tax payable of Rs 12.74 lakh.
Under the new regime, with no indexation benefit, the LTCG is Rs 90 lakh, with a tax rate of 12.5 per cent, resulting in a tax payable of Rs 11.25 lakh.