Capital Gains Account Scheme (CGAS): Complete Guide - Deposit, Withdrawal & Tax Exemption FY 2026-27
The Capital Gains Account Scheme (CGAS), 1988, is a government-backed tax-saving facility that enables taxpayers to secure capital gains tax exemptions under Section 54, Section 54B, 54D, Section 54EC, Section 54F, 54G, 54GA, and 54GB even when they are unable to reinvest capital gains before the due date of filing Income Tax Return. Introduced to provide flexibility and prevent genuine taxpayers from losing exemption benefits due to timing constraints in finding suitable investment opportunities, CGAS allows taxpayers to deposit unutilized capital gains or net sale consideration in designated accounts with authorized public sector banks before the ITR filing deadline, thereby securing the exemption claim. The scheme offers two types of accounts - Type A (Savings Account with flexible withdrawals) and Type B (Term Deposit with structured maturity) - catering to different investment planning needs. With a ₹10 crore maximum deposit limit for Sections 54 and 54F, specific withdrawal procedures through Forms C and D, strict utilization timelines (2-3 years depending on section), and requirement to utilize withdrawn funds within 60 days, CGAS provides a structured mechanism for taxpayers to park capital gains temporarily while searching for qualifying investments in residential property, specified bonds, or other eligible assets. This comprehensive guide for FY 2026-27 covers all aspects of CGAS including eligibility, account types, deposit procedure, withdrawal rules, authorized banks, forms required, consequences of non-utilization, and practical compliance strategies.
What is Capital Gains Account Scheme (CGAS)?
The Capital Gains Account Scheme (CGAS) is a statutory scheme notified by the Central Government under Section 54 to Section 54GB of the Income Tax Act, 1961. It provides a mechanism for taxpayers earning capital gains to park their gains in specified bank accounts to secure tax exemption benefits.
Legislative Background:
Sections 54, 54F, and other capital gains exemption provisions require taxpayers to reinvest capital gains in specified assets within prescribed timelines (e.g., purchase residential property within 2 years, construct within 3 years). However, finding suitable property or making investment decisions can take time, and taxpayers may not complete investments before the due date of filing Income Tax Return.
The Problem: Without actual investment before ITR filing, how can taxpayers claim exemption in their return?
The Solution: CGAS allows taxpayers to deposit unutilized capital gains in CGAS account before ITR due date, claim exemption in ITR, and then make the actual investment within the prescribed period (2-3 years). This bridges the timing gap between earning capital gains and completing qualifying investments.
Official Notification: The scheme is governed by the Capital Gains Accounts Scheme, 1988, notified under the Income Tax Rules.
Who Can Use CGAS?
Eligible Taxpayers
Any taxpayer earning capital gains eligible for exemption under following sections:
| Section | Type of Transfer | Reinvestment Requirement | Eligible Taxpayers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Section 54 | Residential house property (LTCG) | Purchase/construct residential property | Individual, HUF |
| Section 54B | Urban agricultural land (STCG & LTCG) | Purchase agricultural land | Individual, HUF |
| Section 54D | Compulsory acquisition of land and building (LTCG) | Purchase land/building for industrial undertaking | Any taxpayer |
| Section 54EC | Long-term capital assets (land/building) | Investment in specified bonds (REC/NHAI) | Any taxpayer |
| Section 54F | Any long-term capital asset (except residential property) | Purchase/construct residential property | Individual, HUF |
| Section 54G | Shifting industrial undertaking from urban to non-urban area | Purchase specified assets for new undertaking | Individual, HUF |
| Section 54GA | Transfer on shifting undertaking from urban area | Purchase specified assets | Any taxpayer |
| Section 54GB | Transfer of residential property for investment in startup | Subscribe to equity shares of eligible startup | Individual, HUF |
Includes:
- Individuals (Resident and Non-Resident)
- Hindu Undivided Families (HUFs)
- Companies (Private, Public, Section 8, OPC)
- Partnership Firms and LLPs
- Trusts
- Association of Persons (AOP) and Body of Individuals (BOI)
- Any person eligible for capital gains exemption
For Non-Residents: Must open NRCGAS (Non-Resident Capital Gains Account Scheme) with authorized banks offering NRI services.
When to Use CGAS?
CGAS is required when:
- You have earned capital gains from sale of capital asset
- You want to claim exemption under Sections 54 to 54GB
- You are unable to complete the required investment before the due date of filing Income Tax Return
- You intend to make the investment within the prescribed period (2-3 years depending on section)
Key Timeline:
- Capital Gain Earned: FY 2025-26 (e.g., sold property in September 2025)
- ITR Due Date: 31st July 2026 (for individuals not requiring audit)
- Investment Timeline: Up to 2-3 years from date of transfer (depending on exemption section)
- If investment not made by 31st July 2026: Deposit in CGAS before filing ITR
- Claim exemption in ITR filed on 31st July 2026
- Make actual investment by prescribed deadline (2-3 years from transfer)
Without CGAS: Cannot claim exemption in ITR if investment not completed before ITR due date. Lose exemption benefit entirely.
With CGAS: Deposit in CGAS, claim exemption, and get extended time to complete investment.
Types of CGAS Accounts
The Capital Gains Account Scheme offers two types of accounts to suit different investor needs:
Type A - Savings Account (Deposit Account-A)
Nature: Functions like a regular savings account with flexible withdrawal facility.
Features:
- Flexible Withdrawals: Can withdraw any amount at any time without restrictions
- No Lock-in Period: Funds available for withdrawal as needed
- Interest: Earns interest similar to savings account (around 3-4% per annum)
- Multiple Withdrawals: No limit on number of withdrawals
- Immediate Access: Suitable for taxpayers planning to invest soon
- 60-Day Utilization Rule: Amount withdrawn must be utilized for specified investment within 60 days
- Re-deposit Facility: Unutilized withdrawn amount must be immediately re-deposited in Type A account
Withdrawal Forms:
- First Withdrawal: Submit Form C
- Subsequent Withdrawals: Submit Form D (must provide details of utilization of previous withdrawal)
Best For:
- Taxpayers actively searching for property and may need funds soon
- When investment timeline is uncertain
- Flexibility and liquidity required
Type B - Term Deposit Account (Deposit Account-B)
Nature: Functions like a fixed deposit with defined maturity period.
Features:
- Fixed Tenure: Deposited for specified period (1 year, 2 years, 3 years, etc.)
- Higher Interest: Earns higher interest compared to Type A (around 5-7% per annum, similar to FD rates)
- Cumulative or Non-Cumulative: Option to receive interest periodically or at maturity
- Premature Withdrawal: Allowed but with restrictions:
- Amount must first be transferred to Type A account
- Then withdrawn from Type A following Type A rules
- May attract penalty for premature closure (as per bank's FD rules)
- Structured Investment: Suitable for disciplined savings
Withdrawal Procedure:
- Close/premature break Type B deposit (may involve penalty)
- Transfer amount to Type A account
- Withdraw from Type A using Form C/D
- Utilize within 60 days for specified investment
Best For:
- Taxpayers with longer investment horizon (2-3 years)
- When property search may take time
- Desire to earn higher interest on parked funds
- Disciplined savings approach preferred
Comparison - Type A vs Type B
| Feature | Type A (Savings Account) | Type B (Term Deposit) |
|---|---|---|
| Liquidity | High - anytime withdrawal | Low - premature withdrawal restricted |
| Interest Rate | Lower (3-4% p.a.) | Higher (5-7% p.a.) |
| Withdrawal Restrictions | None (except 60-day utilization) | Must transfer to Type A first |
| Suitable For | Short-term parking, active investors | Long-term parking, higher returns |
| Penalty on Withdrawal | No penalty | May attract premature closure penalty |
| Forms Required | Form C (first), Form D (subsequent) | First transfer to Type A, then Form C/D |
How Much to Deposit in CGAS?
The amount to be deposited in CGAS depends on the specific exemption section being claimed:
Unutilized Capital Gains OR Net Sale Consideration
(whichever is applicable as per exemption section)
Section-Wise Deposit Requirements
| Section | Amount to be Deposited | Maximum Deposit Limit |
|---|---|---|
| Section 54 | Unutilized capital gains (not yet invested in residential property) | ₹10 crores maximum (exemption cap from FY 2024-25) |
| Section 54F | Unutilized net sale consideration (entire sale proceeds, not just capital gains) | ₹10 crores maximum (exemption cap from FY 2024-25) |
| Section 54B | Unutilized capital gains | No upper limit |
| Section 54EC | Unutilized capital gains (to be invested in bonds) | ₹50 lakhs per FY (bond investment limit) |
| Section 54GB | Unutilized net sale consideration | ₹10 crores maximum |
| Other Sections | As specified in respective section | Varies by section |
Important: Section 54F Requires Net Consideration (Not Just Capital Gains)
Key Difference:
- Section 54: Deposit only capital gains (profit amount)
- Section 54F: Deposit entire net sale consideration (total sale proceeds)
Example:
- Sold shares for ₹50 lakhs
- Purchase cost: ₹30 lakhs
- Long-term capital gains: ₹20 lakhs
Under Section 54F:
- Must deposit ₹50 lakhs (net consideration) in CGAS if not invested
- NOT just ₹20 lakhs (capital gains)
- Proportionate exemption based on investment vs net consideration
Authorized Banks for CGAS
CGAS accounts can be opened only with authorized public sector banks designated by the Central Government. As of FY 2026-27, major authorized banks include:
List of Authorized Banks (Major PSUs and Private Banks offering CGAS)
Public Sector Banks:
- State Bank of India (SBI) - all branches except rural branches
- Punjab National Bank (PNB)
- Bank of Baroda (BoB)
- Canara Bank
- Union Bank of India
- Bank of India (BoI)
- Indian Bank
- Central Bank of India
- Indian Overseas Bank (IOB)
- UCO Bank
- Bank of Maharashtra
- Punjab & Sind Bank
Private Sector Banks (Select banks offering CGAS from 2026):
- ICICI Bank - Launched CGAS services from 1st January 2026 for resident individuals and HUFs (expanding to non-individuals and NRIs soon)
- Other private banks may offer based on authorizations
Exclusions:
- Rural branches of authorized banks are NOT authorized to open CGAS accounts
- Only urban and semi-urban branches can open CGAS
Verification: Before opening account, verify with specific bank branch whether they are authorized to operate CGAS accounts.
How to Open CGAS Account - Step-by-Step Procedure
Complete Procedure to Open and Deposit in CGAS
Step 1: Visit Authorized Bank Branch
- Visit nearest authorized bank branch (urban/semi-urban branch of PSU bank or authorized private bank)
- Carry all required documents
- Request to open Capital Gains Account Scheme account
Step 2: Documents Required
- Identity Proof: PAN Card (mandatory), Aadhaar Card, Passport, Voter ID
- Address Proof: Aadhaar, Passport, Utility bills, Bank statement
- Proof of Capital Gains:
- Copy of sale deed or agreement to sell
- Computation of capital gains (prepared by CA or self)
- Bank statement showing receipt of sale proceeds
- Documents evidencing transfer (registration certificate, share transfer certificates, etc.)
- Recent Photographs: Passport size photos
- For HUF: HUF PAN Card, proof of HUF, Karta's identity proof
- For Companies/Firms: Registration certificate, Board resolution, authorized signatory documents
Step 3: Fill Application Form
- Fill CGAS account opening form provided by bank
- Mention:
- Type of account (Type A or Type B)
- Amount to be deposited
- Section under which exemption being claimed (54, 54F, etc.)
- Details of capital asset transferred
- Date of transfer
- Submit duly filled form with documents
Step 4: Make Deposit
- Mode of Deposit:
- Cash (subject to bank's cash deposit limits and regulatory restrictions)
- Cheque/DD (preferred mode)
- NEFT/RTGS/IMPS (electronic transfer from existing bank account)
- Multiple Deposits Allowed: Can deposit in installments (not required to deposit entire amount at once)
- Date of Deposit:
- If deposited by cheque/DD: Date of encashment is considered deposit date
- If deposited by cash/electronic: Date of credit to CGAS account
Step 5: Receive Account Details
- Bank will provide CGAS account number
- Receive deposit receipt/passbook (for Type A)
- Receive fixed deposit receipt (for Type B)
- No cheque book or debit card issued for CGAS accounts
Step 6: Claim Exemption in ITR
Deposit Timeline - When to Deposit in CGAS?
Critical Timeline:
Deposit MUST be made BEFORE:
- Due date of filing Income Tax Return for the assessment year in which capital gains arise
- For individuals (not requiring audit): 31st July of AY (check ITR due dates)
- For individuals (requiring tax audit): 31st October of AY
- For companies: 31st October of AY
Example Timeline:
- Property sold: 15th September 2025 (FY 2025-26)
- Capital gains arise in: FY 2025-26
- ITR to be filed for: AY 2026-27
- Last date to deposit in CGAS: 31st July 2026 (if individual not requiring audit)
- File ITR by 31st July 2026 claiming exemption
- Investment timeline: Within 2-3 years from 15th September 2025 (depending on section)
Miss the Deadline?
- If not deposited by ITR due date, cannot claim exemption
- Full capital gains becomes taxable
- No extension available
- Can only file belated return but exemption lost
Withdrawal from CGAS - Rules and Procedure
Withdrawal from CGAS is permitted ONLY for specified investment to claim exemption. Cannot be withdrawn for any other purpose.
Withdrawal Rules
Common Rules for Both Type A and Type B
- Purpose of Withdrawal:
- Only for specified investment (purchase/construction of residential property, purchase of bonds, etc.)
- Cannot withdraw for personal use, other investments, or expenses
- 60-Day Utilization Rule:
- Amount withdrawn MUST be utilized for specified investment within 60 days of withdrawal
- If not utilized within 60 days, must be immediately re-deposited in Type A account
- Failure to comply can result in loss of exemption
- No Cheque Book/Debit Card:
- CGAS accounts do not have cheque book or debit card facility
- All withdrawals through bank branch with prescribed forms
- Forms Required:
- First Withdrawal: Submit Form C to bank
- Subsequent Withdrawals: Submit Form D along with details of utilization of previous withdrawal
- Documentation of Utilization:
- Must provide proof of utilization (sale deed, allotment letter, payment receipts, bond purchase certificate)
- Bank may ask for utilization certificate for future withdrawals
Type A (Savings Account) Withdrawal
- No restrictions: Can withdraw any amount anytime
- Procedure:
- Visit bank branch
- Submit Form C (for first withdrawal) or Form D (for subsequent withdrawals)
- Specify amount to be withdrawn and purpose
- Receive amount via cheque/NEFT/cash (as per bank policy)
- Utilize within 60 days for specified investment
- Re-deposit unused amount immediately in Type A
Type B (Term Deposit) Withdrawal
- Premature withdrawal allowed but with extra steps
- Procedure:
- Request premature closure/partial withdrawal of Type B deposit
- Bank will transfer amount to Type A account (must be opened if not already existing)
- May attract premature withdrawal penalty as per FD rules (typically 0.5-1% reduction in interest)
- Then follow Type A withdrawal procedure using Form C/D
- Utilize within 60 days
Forms Used in CGAS
The CGAS scheme uses several forms for various stages:
| Form | Purpose | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Form A | Application for opening CGAS account | At the time of account opening |
| Form B | Deposit slip for depositing amount in CGAS | When making deposit in CGAS account |
| Form C | Application for first withdrawal from CGAS account | When withdrawing for the first time to make specified investment |
| Form D | Application for subsequent withdrawals with details of previous utilization | For second and further withdrawals (must show how previous withdrawal was utilized) |
| Form E | Statement of account | To request statement of transactions in CGAS account |
| Form F | Application for closure of CGAS account | When closing account after full utilization OR when exemption period expires |
Important Points on Forms C and D:
Form C (First Withdrawal):
- Must specify exact purpose and amount needed
- Declaration that amount will be utilized within 60 days
- Details of proposed investment (property address, seller details, etc.)
Form D (Subsequent Withdrawals):
- Must provide details of how previous withdrawal was utilized
- Supporting documents (payment receipts, part payment acknowledgments, etc.)
- If previous amount re-deposited, details of re-deposit
- New withdrawal amount and purpose
Consequence of Non-Compliance: Bank may refuse subsequent withdrawals if proper utilization not demonstrated.
Utilization Timeline - When to Use CGAS Funds?
The period within which CGAS funds must be utilized depends on the exemption section:
| Section | Investment Requirement | Timeline from Date of Transfer |
|---|---|---|
| Section 54 | Purchase of residential property | 1 year before transfer or 2 years after transfer |
| Section 54 | Construction of residential property | 3 years after transfer |
| Section 54B | Purchase of agricultural land | 2 years after transfer |
| Section 54EC | Investment in specified bonds | 6 months after transfer |
| Section 54F | Purchase of residential property | 1 year before or 2 years after transfer |
| Section 54F | Construction of residential property | 3 years after transfer |
| Section 54GB | Investment in equity shares of eligible startup | 6 months after transfer |
Consequences of Non-Utilization Within Prescribed Period
If CGAS funds NOT utilized for specified investment within prescribed timeline:
- Exemption Reversal:
- The exemption claimed earlier becomes INVALID
- Unutilized amount deposited in CGAS is treated as capital gains in the year in which prescribed period expires
- Taxation:
- Unutilized CGAS amount taxed as long-term capital gains (or short-term if Section 54B used for STCG)
- Interest on delayed payment of tax under Sections 234A, 234B, 234C
- Reporting:
- Must report unutilized CGAS amount in ITR for the year when period expires
- Pay tax on such amount
Example:
- Property sold: 1st April 2024 (FY 2024-25)
- LTCG: ₹40 lakhs
- Deposited ₹40 lakhs in CGAS on 15th July 2025 (before ITR due date)
- Claimed exemption under Section 54 in ITR for AY 2025-26
- Timeline to purchase/construct residential property: Up to 31st March 2027 (2 years for purchase from 1st April 2024)
- If no investment made by 31st March 2027:
- ₹40 lakhs becomes taxable as LTCG in FY 2026-27 (AY 2027-28)
- Must report in ITR for AY 2027-28 and pay tax
Interest on CGAS Deposits
Interest Rates and Tax Treatment
Interest Earned on CGAS:
- Type A (Savings Account): Around 3-4% per annum (similar to regular savings accounts)
- Type B (Term Deposit): Around 5-7% per annum (similar to fixed deposit rates, varies by tenure and bank)
- Interest rates subject to change as per bank policies and RBI guidelines
Tax on Interest:
- Interest earned on CGAS deposits is taxable as "Income from Other Sources"
- Must be shown in Income Tax Return
- No TDS deducted by bank on CGAS interest (unlike regular savings/FD accounts where Section 194A TDS applies)
- Taxpayer's responsibility to compute and pay tax on interest
- No exemption under Section 80TTA/Section 80TTB for CGAS interest
Section 80TTA/80TTB Not Applicable:
- Unlike regular savings account interest (₹10,000 exemption under 80TTA for individuals below 60 years)
- CGAS interest does not qualify for this exemption
- Full interest taxable at applicable slab rates
Closing CGAS Account - Form F
CGAS account can be closed in following scenarios:
- After Full Utilization:
- When entire CGAS amount utilized for specified investment
- Submit Form F with proof of utilization (sale deed, payment receipts, bond certificates)
- Bank verifies utilization and closes account
- After Prescribed Period Expiry:
- If investment not made within prescribed period (2-3 years)
- Withdraw balance and report as capital gains in ITR
- Submit Form F to close account
- Approval Required:
- For closing account, approval from Income Tax Officer (AO) under whose jurisdiction you fall may be required
- AO verifies proper utilization or proper taxation of unutilized amount
- Bank may close only after AO approval (varies by bank policy)
Detailed Examples - CGAS Usage
Example 1: Section 54 with CGAS - Type A Account
Facts:
- Mr. Sharma sold residential property on 10th August 2025
- Sale price: ₹1.5 crores
- Purchase price (2010): ₹30 lakhs (indexed cost ₹75 lakhs using Cost Inflation Index)
- Long-term capital gains: ₹1.5 cr - ₹75 lakhs = ₹75 lakhs
- Did not purchase new residential property by ITR due date (31st July 2026)
Action Taken:
- Deposited ₹75 lakhs in CGAS Type A account on 20th July 2026 (before ITR due date)
- Filed ITR-2 on 30th July 2026 claiming full exemption of ₹75 lakhs under Section 54
- Started searching for suitable property
Timeline:
- Investment deadline: 10th August 2027 (2 years from date of transfer for purchase)
- Found suitable flat in March 2027
- Price: ₹90 lakhs
Withdrawal from CGAS:
- Submitted Form C on 1st April 2027 for withdrawal of ₹75 lakhs
- Bank transferred ₹75 lakhs to registered account
- Paid ₹75 lakhs to seller on 15th April 2027 (within 60 days)
- Remaining ₹15 lakhs arranged from own funds
- Property registered on 20th April 2027 (paid TDS under Section 194IA)
Result:
- Full exemption of ₹75 lakhs secured
- No tax liability on capital gains
- Submitted Form F with sale deed copy to close CGAS account
Example 2: Section 54F with CGAS - Partial Utilization
Facts:
- Mrs. Gupta sold shares on 5th September 2025
- Sale proceeds: ₹60 lakhs (net consideration)
- Purchase cost: ₹40 lakhs
- LTCG: ₹20 lakhs
- Did not own any other residential property
- Did not purchase residential property before ITR due date
Action:
- Deposited ₹60 lakhs (net consideration, not just ₹20 lakhs capital gains) in CGAS Type B (2-year FD) on 25th July 2026
- Claimed full exemption of ₹20 lakhs in ITR filed on 30th July 2026 under Section 54F
Investment:
- Found residential flat in January 2027
- Price: ₹50 lakhs (less than ₹60 lakhs deposited)
- Premature broke FD on 10th January 2027
- Transferred ₹50 lakhs to Type A account
- Submitted Form C and withdrew ₹50 lakhs
- Purchased property on 25th January 2027
Tax Calculation:
- Net consideration: ₹60 lakhs
- Invested: ₹50 lakhs
- Proportionate exemption: (₹50L / ₹60L) × ₹20L = ₹16.67 lakhs
- Taxable LTCG: ₹20L - ₹16.67L = ₹3.33 lakhs
- Remaining ₹10 lakhs in CGAS withdrawn and used for other purposes
- Reported ₹3.33 lakhs as LTCG in ITR for AY 2027-28
- Tax: ₹3.33L × 12.5% = ₹41,625
Example 3: Non-Utilization - Exemption Reversal
Facts:
- Mr. Kapoor sold property on 1st June 2024
- LTCG: ₹50 lakhs
- Deposited ₹50 lakhs in CGAS on 15th July 2025
- Claimed exemption under Section 54 in ITR for AY 2025-26
- Timeline to purchase property: Up to 1st June 2026 (2 years from transfer)
Situation:
- Did not purchase any residential property by 1st June 2026
- Prescribed period expired
Tax Consequences:
- ₹50 lakhs becomes taxable as LTCG in FY 2026-27 (AY 2027-28)
- Must report in ITR for AY 2027-28
- Tax: ₹50L × 12.5% = ₹6.25 lakhs
- Plus interest under Section 234A, 234B, 234C for delayed payment
- Withdrew ₹50 lakhs from CGAS and used for other purposes
- Closed CGAS account using Form F after paying tax
Learning: Failing to utilize CGAS within prescribed period results in exemption reversal and full tax liability plus interest.
Common Mistakes to Avoid with CGAS
- Not Depositing Before ITR Due Date:
- Missing ITR due date means losing exemption entirely
- Deposit well in advance of deadline
- Depositing in Wrong Account Type:
- Regular savings account or FD won't work
- Must be specific CGAS account with authorized bank
- Incorrect Deposit Amount (Section 54F):
- For Section 54F, deposit net consideration (not just capital gains)
- Common error leading to partial exemption loss
- Not Utilizing Within 60 Days:
- After withdrawal, must utilize within 60 days
- Forgetting this can cause compliance issues
- Re-deposit immediately if not utilized
- Not Submitting Forms C/D Properly:
- Bank may refuse subsequent withdrawals without proper documentation
- Maintain records of utilization
- Ignoring Interest Taxation:
- CGAS interest is fully taxable
- Must report in ITR under "Income from Other Sources"
- Not Reporting Unutilized Amount:
- If not utilized within prescribed period, must report as capital gains
- Failure to report can lead to penalty and interest
- Opening Account in Rural Branch:
- Rural branches not authorized to open CGAS
- Verify branch authorization before opening
- Depositing After Prescribed Period Expiry:
- Cannot deposit after investment timeline has already expired
- CGAS must be used within overall exemption timeline from date of transfer
Recent Developments - FY 2026-27
Key Updates for FY 2026-27
- ICICI Bank Launched CGAS (January 2026):
- ICICI Bank became one of the first private sector banks to offer CGAS
- Available for resident individuals and HUFs from 1st January 2026
- Expansion to non-individuals and NRIs planned shortly
- Convenient online account opening for existing ICICI customers
- ₹10 Crore Cap on Sections 54/54F (from FY 2024-25):
- Maximum exemption under Section 54 and 54F capped at ₹10 crores
- CGAS deposit also limited to ₹10 crores for these sections
- Applicable from FY 2024-25 onwards
- Enhanced Digital Infrastructure:
- Banks improving online CGAS services
- Digital forms and e-KYC for account opening
- Better tracking and statement access
- Increased Awareness:
- More taxpayers utilizing CGAS due to awareness campaigns
- CA community actively recommending CGAS for compliance
📚 Related Income Tax Topics
Capital Gains Exemptions:
- Section 54 - Capital Gains Exemption on House Property
- Section 54F - Capital Gains Exemption on Other Assets
- Section 54EC - Capital Gains Exemption through Bonds
- Section 54B - Agricultural Land Exemption
Capital Gains Taxation:
- Capital Gains Tax - Complete Guide
- Section 112A - LTCG on Equity & Mutual Funds
- Section 111A - STCG Tax on Equity
- Section 50C - Stamp Duty Valuation
- Cost Inflation Index (CII)
Property Transactions:
- Section 194IA - TDS on Property Purchase
- Section 43CA - Deemed Profit on Property Stock
- Income from House Property
ITR Filing & Compliance:
- ITR-2 Filing Guide
- ITR Forms Applicability
- ITR Due Dates
- Advance Tax Payment Guide
- Income Tax Notices
Other Useful Guides:
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Key Takeaways for FY 2026-27
- CGAS allows depositing capital gains to secure exemption before ITR due date even when investment incomplete
- Applicable for exemptions under Sections 54, 54B, 54D, 54EC, 54F, 54G, 54GA, 54GB
- Two account types: Type A (savings, flexible) and Type B (term deposit, higher interest)
- Deposit deadline: Before ITR due date (31st July/31st October)
- Type A: 3-4% interest, anytime withdrawal; Type B: 5-7% interest, structured maturity
- Section 54F/54GB: Deposit net consideration (not just capital gains)
- Maximum deposit: ₹10 crores for Section 54/54F (from FY 2024-25)
- Authorized banks: PSU banks + select private banks (ICICI from Jan 2026) - urban/semi-urban branches only
- 60-day utilization rule: Withdrawn amount must be invested within 60 days
- Forms required: Form C (first withdrawal), Form D (subsequent withdrawals)
- Utilization timeline: 2 years for purchase, 3 years for construction, 6 months for bonds (section-specific)
- Non-utilization consequence: Exemption reversed, becomes taxable capital gains in year period expires
- Interest taxable: All CGAS interest taxable as "Other Income" (no 80TTA/80TTB exemption)
- No cheque book: All transactions through bank branch with forms
- Closure: Form F with Income Tax Officer approval after full utilization or period expiry
- Must file appropriate ITR form with CGAS details to claim exemption
Conclusion
The Capital Gains Account Scheme (CGAS), 1988, stands as a critical taxpayer-friendly mechanism in India's capital gains taxation framework, ingeniously bridging the temporal gap between earning capital gains and completing qualifying investments required for tax exemptions. By allowing taxpayers to secure exemption benefits immediately upon filing Income Tax Returns while providing extended timelines (2-3 years) to identify and execute suitable investments, CGAS removes the pressure of rushed investment decisions that could result from rigid compliance deadlines. This flexibility is particularly valuable in real estate transactions where finding appropriate residential property matching one's requirements can take considerable time, and in scenarios involving construction where project completion spans multiple years.
The dual account structure - Type A (Savings Account) and Type B (Term Deposit) - demonstrates thoughtful design catering to diverse taxpayer needs. Type A serves taxpayers who are actively searching for investment opportunities and may require funds on short notice, offering liquidity and convenience despite lower interest rates. Type B, conversely, rewards those with longer investment horizons who can lock funds for extended periods, providing higher interest rates comparable to fixed deposits while maintaining the core CGAS benefits. This optionality ensures that taxpayers aren't forced into suboptimal financial arrangements but can align their CGAS strategy with their specific investment timelines and liquidity preferences.
The introduction of CGAS services by private sector banks like ICICI Bank from January 2026 marks a significant expansion of accessibility beyond traditional public sector banks. This diversification of service providers enhances convenience, particularly for customers already banking with these institutions, and introduces competitive service quality improvements. The extension to Non-Resident Indians through NRCGAS accounts further broadens the scheme's reach, acknowledging that NRIs too face capital gains situations and require similar flexibility in completing cross-border property investments.
However, CGAS is not without its compliance complexities and pitfalls. The strict deposit deadline - before ITR due date - admits no exceptions, and missing it results in complete forfeiture of exemption benefits regardless of the magnitude of capital gains involved. The 60-day utilization rule after withdrawal, while reasonable, requires disciplined transaction management to avoid inadvertent violations that could trigger exemption reversals. The distinction between depositing "capital gains" for most sections versus "net sale consideration" for Section 54F is subtle but financially significant, and errors here lead to partial exemption loss. The requirement to maintain proper documentation of utilization and submit Forms C/D correctly for successive withdrawals creates administrative burden that must be managed meticulously.
The taxation of CGAS interest as "Income from Other Sources" without any exemption under Sections 80TTA or 80TTB may seem paradoxical - earning interest on funds parked specifically for tax-exempt purposes, yet paying tax on such interest. However, this treatment is consistent with the broader principle that only the specified investments (residential property, bonds, etc.) qualify for exemption, not ancillary income earned during the interim parking period. Taxpayers must factor this tax liability into their financial planning and ensure proper reporting in ITRs to avoid complications.
The ₹10 crore cap introduced from FY 2024-25 on exemptions under Sections 54 and 54F (and consequently on CGAS deposits for these sections) represents a policy shift toward capping tax benefits for ultra-high-net-worth individuals while retaining meaningful exemptions for the broader taxpayer base. While this ceiling may impact a small segment of taxpayers with very large capital gains, for the vast majority, the limit is sufficiently high to preserve full exemption benefits. The absence of such caps on Section 54B (agricultural land) reflects different policy priorities regarding agricultural economy support.
Looking forward, the CGAS framework would benefit from certain refinements: (1) Clearer guidelines on partial withdrawals and proportionate utilization tracking, (2) Digitization of Forms C/D with online submission and approval processes reducing bank visit requirements, (3) Integration with Income Tax portal for automated ITR verification of CGAS deposits and utilization, (4) Extended grace periods or relaxations for genuine hardship cases (medical emergencies, natural disasters) that prevent timely utilization, and (5) Harmonization of rules across all capital gains exemption sections to reduce confusion.
For taxpayers in FY 2026-27, successful CGAS utilization requires proactive tax planning. Upon deciding to sell capital assets, immediately evaluate whether exemption investment can be completed before ITR due date. If not, initiate CGAS account opening well in advance (not in the last week before deadline), choose appropriate account type based on investment timeline certainty, deposit the correct amount (especially vigilant with Section 54F net consideration requirement), claim exemption confidently in ITR, maintain disciplined search for qualifying investments, document all utilization meticulously, and monitor utilization deadlines vigilantly to avoid exemption reversal.
Professional advice from qualified Chartered Accountants becomes invaluable in complex scenarios involving multiple capital gains, partial utilizations, CGAS for different exemption sections simultaneously, or uncertainty about investment completion timelines. The cost of such professional guidance is trivial compared to the potential tax savings preserved through correct CGAS utilization or the tax liabilities incurred through incorrect handling.
In conclusion, the Capital Gains Account Scheme represents thoughtful tax administration that balances revenue protection with taxpayer convenience. By providing structured flexibility for completing qualifying investments while securing exemption benefits early, CGAS enables informed, unhurried investment decisions rather than forced, suboptimal transactions driven solely by tax deadline pressures. Understanding its mechanics, respecting its deadlines, utilizing its flexibility wisely, and maintaining meticulous documentation transforms CGAS from a mere compliance tool into a strategic tax planning instrument that preserves legitimate exemption benefits while maintaining full regulatory compliance. As capital gains taxation becomes increasingly significant with growing asset values and investment activities, mastering CGAS utilization becomes an essential skill for savvy taxpayers and their professional advisors.
Earned Capital Gains? Planning to Claim Exemption? Need CGAS Guidance? Consult qualified Chartered Accountants for proper CGAS deposit planning, account type selection, and timely investment execution. Explore our guides on Capital Gains Tax, Section 54, Section 54F, Section 50C, and TDS on Property for comprehensive tax planning.
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