Section 48 Capital Gains Calculation: Formula, Indexation & Tax Guide (2026)

Introduction

What is Section 48?

Whenever you sell a valuable asset—be it a residential flat, a commercial plot, equity shares, or even gold—the profit generated from that sale does not escape the taxman. However, the Income Tax Department does not simply tax the entire sale value. The actual mechanism that determines exactly how much profit is taxable lies within Section 48 of the Income Tax Act. While Section 45 acts as the charging section that says capital gains are taxable, Section 48 is the actual mathematical engine providing the computation formula.

Why capital gains calculation is important

Calculating capital gains incorrectly can lead to disastrous financial consequences. Miscalculating your cost of acquisition, ignoring transfer expenses, or failing to apply the correct indexation multiplier can artificially inflate your tax liability by lakhs of rupees.

Importance during ITR filing and scrutiny

During ITR filing, the data you submit under Schedule CG is aggressively cross-verified by the department's AI systems against third-party reports like the Annual Information Statement (AIS) and property registry data. A minor discrepancy here is a guaranteed trigger for a Scrutiny Notice.

LTCG vs STCG overview

Capital gains are strictly divided into Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG) and Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) based on how long you held the asset before selling. The tax rates, available exemptions, and the calculation methodology under Section 48 change drastically depending on this classification.

📌 Quick Summary: Section 48 At a Glance

  • Meaning of Section 48: The statutory provision providing the step-by-step mathematical formula to compute Capital Gains.
  • Capital Gains Formula: Full Value of Consideration minus (Cost of Acquisition + Cost of Improvement + Transfer Expenses).
  • Indexed Cost Concept: Adjusting the purchase price for historical inflation using the Cost Inflation Index (CII) to lower tax liability on long-term assets.
  • Transfer Expense Deduction: Brokerage, legal fees, and registration costs paid by the seller are fully deductible.
  • LTCG vs STCG Treatment: LTCG generally enjoys lower tax rates (e.g., 12.5%) compared to STCG, which is often taxed at slab rates or 20%.
  • Latest Tax Rules: The recent budgets drastically altered LTCG rates to 12.5% and heavily modified indexation benefits for real estate.

What is Section 48 of Income Tax Act?

Meaning and Objective of Section 48

Section 48 serves a singular objective: to provide a standardized, legally binding formula for arriving at the "taxable profit" from the transfer of a Capital Asset. It prevents arbitrary deductions and establishes exactly what costs can be subtracted from your final sale price.

Legal Provision Explained

⚖️ Section 48 of Income Tax Act

Section 48 (Mode of Computation):

“The income chargeable under the head 'Capital gains' shall be computed, by deducting from the full value of the consideration received or accruing as a result of the transfer of the capital asset the following amounts, namely :—
(i) expenditure incurred wholly and exclusively in connection with such transfer;
(ii) the cost of acquisition of the asset and the cost of any improvement thereto...”
🧠 Simplified Legal View: Section 48 kehta hai ki aapki taxable gain nikalne ke liye aapki total sale value (Full Value of Consideration) mein se 3 cheezein minus ki jayengi: 1) Asset ko bechne mein laga kharcha (jaise brokerage), 2) Asset ko kharidne ki keemat (Cost of Acquisition), aur 3) Asset ko behtar banane me laga kharcha (Cost of Improvement). Agar asset Long-Term hai, toh in costs par Indexation ka benefit mil sakta hai.

Applicability of Section 48

This section universally applies to all categories of taxpayers (Individuals, HUFs, Companies, NRIs) transferring any valid capital asset, be it real estate, shares, mutual funds, jewelry, or intellectual property.

Capital Gains Charging Mechanism

The chargeability is triggered in the year the "transfer" takes place (e.g., property registry date or stock trade execution date), not necessarily the year you receive the final cash payment.

Types of Capital Gains Covered Under Section 48

Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG)

Generated when an asset is sold within a short holding period. The cost of acquisition is deducted "as-is" without adjusting for inflation. STCG is generally added to your total income and taxed at your applicable slab rate, except for certain financial assets (like listed equity) which have special flat rates.

Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG)

Generated when an asset is held beyond the defined statutory threshold. The tax department rewards long-term holding with lower tax rates (e.g., 12.5%) and, historically, the benefit of indexation to neutralize inflation.

Difference Between LTCG and STCG

Basis of Difference Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG) Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG)
Holding Period (Real Estate) Up to 24 Months More than 24 Months
Holding Period (Listed Shares) Up to 12 Months More than 12 Months
Indexation Benefit Not Available Available (Subject to recent Budget restrictions)
Tax Rate (General) Slab Rates (or 20% for Equity) Flat 12.5% or 20% depending on asset and indexation.
Section 54 Exemptions Not Eligible Highly Eligible for reinvestment exemptions.

Capital Gains Calculation Formula Under Section 48

The mechanics of Section 48 rely on five distinct definitions. You must calculate these accurately before filing your return.

1

Full Value of Consideration (FVC)

The total amount received or accruing to the seller in exchange for the asset. This is the starting point of the formula.

2

Cost of Acquisition (CoA)

The exact price the seller originally paid to acquire the asset.

3

Cost of Improvement (CoI)

Capital expenses incurred after acquisition to permanently enhance the asset's value or lifespan.

4

Expenditure Incurred on Transfer

Direct costs linked exclusively to the sale process, such as brokerage.

5

Indexed Cost of Acquisition / Improvement

The inflated cost of the asset computed using the government's Cost Inflation Index (CII) to account for the time value of money.

Section 48 Capital Gains Formula Explained

Formula for Short-Term Capital Gains

STCG = Full Value of Consideration - (Transfer Expenses + Cost of Acquisition + Cost of Improvement)

Formula for Long-Term Capital Gains

LTCG = Full Value of Consideration - (Transfer Expenses + Indexed Cost of Acquisition + Indexed Cost of Improvement)

Practical Calculation Flow

Always start with the gross sale value. Deduct the broker's commission immediately to find the Net Sale Consideration. Then, subtract your purchase costs (indexed or unindexed) to arrive at the final taxable capital gain.

What is Full Value of Consideration?

Meaning

It is the gross amount you agree to sell your asset for. However, in real estate, the Income Tax Act does not blindly trust your sale agreement.

Sale Consideration Rules & Stamp Duty Value Impact

If you sell a property for ₹50 Lakhs, but the state government's circle rate (Stamp Duty Value) assesses it at ₹70 Lakhs, the tax department suspects cash exchange (black money).

Section 50C Relevance

Under Section 50C, if the Stamp Duty Value exceeds the actual sale consideration by more than 10%, the Stamp Duty Value is forcibly deemed to be the Full Value of Consideration under Section 48. Your capital gains will be calculated on ₹70 Lakhs, not ₹50 Lakhs!

Cost of Acquisition Under Section 48

Meaning & Original Purchase Cost

This is the price you originally paid. It includes the purchase price, stamp duty paid during purchase, and registration fees.

Inherited Property Rules

If you inherited a house from your father, your cost of acquisition is technically zero. However, Section 49 states that the Cost to the Previous Owner will be considered as your Cost of Acquisition.

Gifted Asset Rules

Similar to inheritance, if an asset is received as a gift (tax-free under Section 56), the cost paid by the original donor becomes your cost.

Bonus Shares and Rights Shares

For Bonus Shares allotted after 01-04-2001, the Cost of Acquisition is mandated by law to be NIL (Zero). For Rights Shares, the cost is the actual amount paid to the company to acquire the rights.

Cost of Improvement Explained

Meaning & Eligible Improvement Expenses

Any capital expenditure incurred that permanently alters, adds to, or significantly extends the life of the asset.
Example: Constructing a new 2nd floor on a residential building, or legally clearing a title dispute.

Non-Allowable Expenses

Routine repairs, annual painting, fixing plumbing, or replacing broken tiles are revenue expenses. They cannot be capitalized as Cost of Improvement.

💡 Property Renovation Limit:

Any cost of improvement incurred *prior* to April 1, 2001, is completely ignored by the tax department. Only improvements made after 01-04-2001 can be added to your cost.

Transfer Expenses Allowed Under Section 48

To compute the Net Consideration, Section 48(i) allows the deduction of expenses incurred wholly and exclusively in connection with the transfer:

  • Brokerage & Commission: Paid to real estate agents or stockbrokers.
  • Legal Fees: Paid to lawyers for drafting sale deeds.
  • Advertising Expenses: Costs incurred to find a buyer.
  • Transfer Charges: Society transfer fees or NOC charges.

Note: Security Transaction Tax (STT) paid on the sale of equity shares is expressly DISALLOWED as a deduction under Section 48.

Indexation Benefit Under Section 48

What is Indexation?

Inflation erodes the purchasing power of money. A house bought for ₹10 Lakhs in 2005 might sell for ₹80 Lakhs in 2026. The ₹70 Lakh difference isn't pure profit; much of it is just inflation. Indexation is a legal mechanism to inflate your purchase price to today's equivalent value.

Cost Inflation Index (CII)

The CBDT releases a specific Cost Inflation Index number for every financial year, using 2001-02 as the base year (CII = 100).

How Indexation Reduces Tax Liability

By artificially increasing your Cost of Acquisition, indexation shrinks the final taxable Capital Gain, resulting in massive tax savings for long-term investors.

Cost Inflation Index (CII) Table

Here is a reference to the latest CII values crucial for your calculations:

Financial Year Assessment Year CII Value
2001-02 (Base Year)2002-03100
2010-112011-12167
2015-162016-17254
2020-212021-22301
2023-242024-25348
2024-252025-26363

How to Calculate Indexed Cost

Indexed Cost Formula

Indexed Cost = Purchase Price × (CII of Year of Sale / CII of Year of Purchase)

Step-by-Step Property Sale Example

You bought a house in FY 2010-11 (CII: 167) for ₹20,00,000. You sold it in FY 2024-25 (CII: 363) for ₹80,00,000.

  • Indexed Cost = ₹20,00,000 × (363 / 167) = ₹43,47,305.
  • Long-Term Capital Gain = ₹80,00,000 - ₹43,47,305 = ₹36,52,695 (Taxable).

Without indexation, your taxable gain would have been a staggering ₹60,00,000!

Section 48 for Property Sale

Residential & Commercial Property

The calculation mechanics are identical. However, the exemptions available post-calculation differ. Selling a residential property allows exemptions under Section 54, whereas selling commercial property triggers Section 54F rules.

Land Sale

If you sell vacant land, no depreciation is involved. The calculation strictly uses Purchase Cost + Improvement Cost (like building a boundary wall).

Joint Property Cases

If a property is jointly owned (50-50), the Full Value of Consideration, the Indexed Cost, and the resulting Capital Gain are split exactly in half before applying tax rates to each co-owner's individual PAN.

Section 48 for Shares and Securities

Listed vs Unlisted Shares

  • Listed Shares: Sold on a recognized stock exchange (STT paid). Grandfathering rules under Section 112A apply.
  • Unlisted Shares: No STT is paid. LTCG is taxed at 12.5% (as per new budget rules) without indexation. The holding period to qualify for LTCG is 24 months.

Mutual Funds & Debt Funds

Equity-oriented mutual funds follow the 12.5% LTCG rule (holding > 12 months). However, for specified Debt Mutual Funds acquired after April 1, 2023, the gains are deemed to be Short-Term Capital Gains regardless of holding period, taxed at slab rates without indexation.

Section 48 and Section 112A

LTCG Tax on Equity Shares

For listed equity shares and equity mutual funds, Section 48 is modified by Section 112A.

₹1.25 Lakh Exemption

For FY 2025-26, the government allows the first ₹1,25,000 of LTCG on equity to be completely tax-free. Only the profit exceeding ₹1.25 Lakhs is taxed at a flat 12.5%.

Grandfathering Provision

If you bought shares before January 31, 2018, your cost of acquisition is "grandfathered." The highest market price on Jan 31, 2018, is deemed as your purchase cost, effectively wiping out tax on gains accrued prior to that date.

Section 48 and Crypto Transactions

Crypto Capital Gains & Cost Deduction Restrictions

Virtual Digital Assets (VDAs) / Crypto are treated ruthlessly. Under Section 115BBH, the tax rate is a flat 30%. Crucially, Section 48 is suspended here: you cannot deduct any transfer expenses, brokerages, or infrastructure costs. Only the bare Cost of Acquisition is allowed as a deduction.

Special Cases Under Section 48

  • Inherited / Gifted Assets: The holding period of the previous owner is added to your holding period. Cost to the previous owner is your cost.
  • Slump Sale: Under Section 50B, when an entire business undertaking is sold for a lump sum, the "Net Worth" of the business is treated as the Cost of Acquisition. Indexation is expressly disallowed.
  • Conversion of Capital Asset to Stock: Treated as a transfer. FMV on the date of conversion is the Full Value of Consideration.

Capital Gains Tax Rates

Following the major restructuring in the recent Union Budget, here are the updated rates:

Asset Type Holding Period (LTCG) STCG Tax Rate LTCG Tax Rate
Listed Equity / Eq Mutual Funds > 12 Months 20% (Sec 111A) 12.5% (Over ₹1.25L)
Real Estate (Land & Building) > 24 Months Slab Rate 12.5% (Without Indexation)*
Unlisted Shares > 24 Months Slab Rate 12.5%
Gold & Jewelry > 24 Months Slab Rate 12.5%
Debt Mutual Funds (Post Apr '23) N/A Slab Rate Always STCG (Slab Rate)

*Note on Real Estate: Individuals/HUFs selling property bought before 23-July-2024 can choose to pay 20% tax with indexation OR 12.5% tax without indexation, whichever results in lower tax.

Exemptions Available Against Capital Gains

The Income Tax Act allows you to wipe your Section 48 calculated gains to zero by reinvesting the money:

  • Section 54: Reinvesting LTCG from a residential house into another residential house.
  • Section 54F: Reinvesting the entire net sale consideration of any asset (like shares/gold) into a residential house.
  • Section 54EC: Investing LTCG from real estate into specified government bonds (NHAI/REC) up to ₹50 Lakhs within 6 months.

Section 48 vs Section 50C

While Section 48 tells you how to subtract costs, Section 50C tells you what number to start with. If you sell a house for ₹80 Lakhs, but the Stamp Duty Valuation is ₹1 Crore, Section 50C forcefully replaces your actual ₹80 Lakhs with ₹1 Crore. Section 48 then performs its deductions from that inflated ₹1 Crore base.

Practical Capital Gains Calculation Examples

Example 1: Share Market Transaction

Rahul bought 1,000 listed shares for ₹50,000 in Jan 2023. He sold them in Oct 2025 for ₹3,00,000. He paid ₹1,000 in brokerage.

Since holding period > 12 months, it is LTCG under Sec 112A.
FVC: ₹3,00,000
Less Brokerage: ₹1,000
Less Cost: ₹50,000
Total LTCG: ₹2,49,000
Tax Calculation: First ₹1,25,000 is exempt. Taxable Gain = ₹1,24,000. Tax = 12.5% of ₹1,24,000 = ₹15,500.

Example 2: Inherited Property (Pre-2001)

Aman inherited land from his grandfather, bought in 1980 for ₹1 Lakh. He sold it in Dec 2025 for ₹1.5 Crores. Since the asset was bought before 2001, Aman can use the Fair Market Value (FMV) as on 01-04-2001 (say, ₹20 Lakhs) as his Cost of Acquisition.

Since the property was acquired before 23-July-2024, Aman calculates tax both ways (12.5% without indexation vs 20% with indexation) and pays the lower amount.

Common Mistakes While Calculating Capital Gains

⚠️ Avoid These Costly Errors
  • Ignoring Indexation: Failing to apply the CII inflator results in paying massive unnecessary taxes.
  • Wrong Holding Period: Applying the 24-month rule to listed shares (which require 12 months) leading to wrong tax rates.
  • Incorrect Cost Calculation: Forgetting to add initial registry and stamp duty costs to the purchase price.
  • Ignoring Transfer Expenses: Failing to deduct the 1-2% brokerage paid during the sale.

Documents Required for Capital Gains Calculation

Ensure you have these ready before logging into the portal:

  • Purchase Deed and Sale Deed (Registered).
  • Brokerage Receipts and Invoices.
  • Improvement Bills (e.g., contractor invoices for building an extra floor).
  • Demat Transaction Statements and Capital Gains Reports from brokers.

Capital Gains Reporting in ITR

Which ITR Form to Use

You cannot use ITR-1 or ITR-4 if you have capital gains. You must file ITR-2 (for salaried individuals) or ITR-3 (if you also have business income).

Schedule CG & AIS Matching

All calculations must be mapped into Schedule CG. Crucially, the Income Tax Department's AIS (Annual Information Statement) will capture your property sales and high-value stock trades. Your entered Sale Consideration must perfectly match the AIS figures to avoid a defect notice.

Scrutiny Risks in Capital Gains Cases

The CASS (Computer Assisted Scrutiny Selection) algorithm heavily targets Schedule CG. Primary triggers include:

  • Property Value Mismatch: Declaring a sale value lower than the Stamp Duty Value (violating Sec 50C).
  • Fake Improvement Costs: Claiming ₹20 Lakhs as Cost of Improvement without valid contractor invoices or bank trails.
  • Undisclosed Gains: Selling a property but completely omitting it from the ITR.

Tax Planning Tips for Capital Gains

  • Capital Loss Set-Off: You can set off Long-Term Capital Losses against Long-Term Capital Gains to reduce net liability. (STCL can be set off against both STCG and LTCG).
  • Use of Exemptions: Plan property sales to align with purchasing a new home within 2 years to utilize Section 54/54F.
  • Timing of Sale: For equity, harvest losses before March 31st to offset gains, or delay selling to cross the 12-month mark to secure the 12.5% rate.

Latest FY 2025-26 Updates Related to Capital Gains

The tax landscape shifted drastically recently:

  • Revised Tax Rates: LTCG uniformly streamlined to 12.5% for major asset classes. STCG on listed equity raised to 20%.
  • Exemption Enhancement: The Section 112A exemption limit was enhanced from ₹1,00,000 to ₹1,25,000.
  • Real Estate Indexation: Default indexation on real estate was removed. A 12.5% flat rate applies. However, a grandfathering clause protects assets acquired before July 23, 2024, allowing taxpayers to calculate tax both ways and choose the lower liability.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is Section 48 of Income Tax Act?

Section 48 is the computation mechanism that provides the exact mathematical formula to calculate taxable capital gains by allowing deductions for cost of acquisition, improvement, and transfer expenses.

How is capital gain calculated under Section 48?

It is calculated by taking the Full Value of Consideration (Sale Price) and subtracting Transfer Expenses, Cost of Acquisition, and Cost of Improvement. For long-term assets, indexed costs may be used.

What is indexed cost?

Indexed cost is the original purchase price adjusted for inflation using the government's Cost Inflation Index (CII), significantly reducing the taxable profit on long-term assets.

Is brokerage deductible under Section 48?

Yes, brokerage, legal fees, and commissions paid wholly and exclusively in connection with the transfer of the asset are fully deductible.

Can renovation cost be claimed?

Yes, but only if it is of a capital nature (like adding a room) and incurred after April 1, 2001. Routine maintenance or painting cannot be claimed as Cost of Improvement.

How is inherited property taxed?

Inheritance itself is tax-free. When you sell it, the Cost of Acquisition is the amount paid by the original owner, and the holding period includes the previous owner's tenure.

What is Cost Inflation Index (CII)?

It is an annual multiplier released by the CBDT used to calculate the inflation-adjusted cost of a capital asset. The base year is 2001-02 (CII = 100).

Is indexation available on shares?

No. Indexation is not available for listed equity shares taxed under Section 112A, nor for unlisted shares under the latest tax rules.

Which expenses are allowed as transfer expenses?

Brokerage, stamp duty paid by the seller, legal drafting fees, and advertisement costs incurred to find a buyer.

What is full value of consideration?

It is the gross amount you receive or accrue upon selling the asset, before any deductions are made.

Is stamp duty value taxable?

Under Section 50C, if the stamp duty value exceeds the actual sale consideration by more than 10%, the stamp duty value replaces the actual consideration in the Section 48 formula.

Which ITR form is applicable?

Individuals with capital gains must file either ITR-2 (if no business income) or ITR-3 (if they have business/profession income).

How are mutual funds taxed?

Equity MFs held >12 months face 12.5% LTCG (over ₹1.25L). Specified Debt MFs acquired post-Apr 2023 are always taxed as STCG at slab rates.

Is TDS applicable on property sale?

Yes. If the property sale value exceeds ₹50 Lakhs, the buyer must deduct 1% TDS under Section 194-IA before paying the seller.

What happens if capital gains are not reported?

The IT Department cross-checks AIS data. Non-reporting triggers a Scrutiny Notice, resulting in massive tax demands, interest under Section 234, and a 200% penalty under Section 270A for concealment.

Final Conclusion

Section 48 provides the definitive roadmap for calculating your true capital gains. Understanding the nuances of the formula—from inflating your acquisition costs to correctly deducting transfer expenses—is the difference between a highly optimized tax return and a crippling tax demand. With the recent legislative overhauls standardizing LTCG to 12.5% and introducing complex grandfathering options for real estate, precision is non-negotiable.

Always ensure your calculated consideration matches your AIS and Stamp Duty Valuations to avoid automated scrutiny. Proper documentation, strategic use of Section 54 exemptions, and timely loss harvesting can legally reduce your capital gains tax to near zero.

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