Gift Received in FY 2025-26? Check Its Taxability Under Income Tax

A comprehensive guide to gift taxation in India covering taxable and exempt gifts, Section 56(2)(x) provisions, reporting requirements, and practical examples for FY 2025-26.

Gift Taxation in India

Gift Received in FY 2025-26? Check Its Taxability Under Income Tax

Gift Received in FY 2025-26? Check Its Taxability Under Income Tax

As we are all aware, ITR due dates are approaching, and if you have received any gift in FY 25-26 & don’t know the tax consequences, then this article is for you!

The Core Rule: Section 56(2)(x)

Do you know that only Money or any kind received as a gift is not taxable, but if you acquired it with inadequate consideration, it will also give rise to taxability under this section?

Any sum of money or property received by an individual or HUF without adequate consideration is taxable as Income from Other Sources under Section 56(2)(x) unless it falls under a specific exemption.

This applies to gifts of money, immovable property, movable property (shares, jewellery, art, etc.), and even property received at below-market price or fair value.

Type of GiftTaxability TriggerAmount Taxable
Cash/Money (including cheque, NEFT)Aggregate > 50,000 in a FYEntire amount (not just the excess over 50,000)
Immovable Property received freeStamp duty value > 50,000Stamp duty value of the property
Immovable Property received/acquired at a low priceStamp duty value exceeds consideration by > 50,000 AND > SDV > 110% of considerationStamp duty value minus actual consideration paid
Movable Property as notified (shares, securities, jewellery, art, bullion, archaeological collections, VDA), received freeFair Market Value > 50,000Fair Market Value of the property
Movable Property, as mentioned above, was received at a low priceFMV exceeds consideration by > 50,000FMV minus actual consideration paid

EXEMPT GIFTS

Not all gifts are taxable, as there are exemptions available under which gifts will not be taxable.

  1. Gifts received from relatives are not taxable

Relative definition:

Sr. NoRelative Note
1SpouseA gift from husband to wife or vice versa is fully exempt. But income earned from the gifted amount may be clubbed under Section 64(1)
2Brother or SisterFull siblings, both paternal and maternal.
3Brother or Sister of the SpouseSpouse’s siblings (brother-in-law, sister-in-law).
4Brother or Sister of Either ParentPaternal uncle/aunt, maternal uncle/aunt all covered.
5Lineal Ascendant / DescendantParents, grandparents, great-grandparents AND children, grandchildren. The lineage goes both up and down.
6Lineal Ascendant / Descendant of SpouseSpouse’s parents (in-laws), spouse’s grandparents, spouse’s children from prior marriage.
7Spouse of any person listed above (1 to 6)E.g., spouse of uncle = aunt. Spouse of sibling = brother/sister-in-law’s spouse.
  1. Gift received on the occasion of Marriage
  2. Gift received under a Will or Inheritance
  3. Gift in Contemplation of Death
  4. Gift from Local Authority, Trust (12AA/12AB),Hospital or medical institution & university or educational institution
  5. Gift received by HUF from its Members

Note: Gift from Employer to Employee is NOT exempt under Section 56(2)(x) & will be taxable as perquisite under the head of Salary.

What if you resell the gifted immovable property?

Cost of Acquisition for Future Capital Gains

When you later sell the property, the cost of acquisition will be:

  • Gifted property (from a relative) → cost = cost-to-previous-owner basis. Holding period also includes the previous owner period.
  • Gifted property (from a non-relative, taxed u/s 56(2) (x)) → cost = stamp duty value that was taxed us 56. Holding period starts from the date of gift receipt.

Common Gift Scenarios: Taxable or Not?

ScenarioTaxable?Reason
Father gifts 10L cash to sonNORelative. Fully exempt.
Friend gifts 60,000 cash on birthdayYESNon-relative gift. Aggregate 60K > 50K threshold. Full 60K taxable.
Grandmother gifts gold jewellery worth 3LNOGrandmother is Relative. Fully exempt.
Cousin gifts 75,000YESCousin is NOT a relative under the definition. 75K fully taxable.
Wedding gift of 5L from office colleagues.NOReceived on occasion of own marriage fully exempt regardless of amount or source.
NRI uncle sends 2L to nephew in IndiaNOUncle is brother of parent. Relative. Exempt.
Employer gives Diwali gift of 7,000YESTaxable as perquisite under Salary head (not Other Sources).
Friend gifts flat worth 30L (stamp duty value 28L)YESNon-relative. Stamp duty value 28L > 50K. 28L fully taxable as Other Sources.
Property inherited via Will from deceased parentNOInheritance is fully exempt under Section 56(2)(x).
Gifts from 5 different friends totaling 55,000YESAggregate from all non-relatives 55K > 50K. Full 55K taxable.
Mother-in-law gifts 2L cashNOMother-in-law is lineal ascendant of spouse. Relative. Fully exempt.

How to Report Gift Income in ITR

SituationITR FormWhere to Report
Taxable gift (cash or property) receivedITR-1 / ITR-2Schedule OS (Income from Other Sources) → Any other income → describe as gift received from [name] taxable u/s 56(2)(x)
Exempt gift from relativeITR-1 / ITR-2Schedule EI (Exempt Income) → mention the amount and nature. Optional but recommended for large amounts to tackle AIS queries.
Gift received on marriageITR-1 / ITR-2Schedule EI → describe as ‘Gift received on occasion of marriage exempt u/s 56(2)(x)’
Gifted property sold laterITR-2 / ITR-3Schedule CG → use cost-to-previous-owner as cost of acquisition & include previous owner’s holding period for LTCG classification

Documents to Maintain for Gift Transactions

Type of GiftDocuments to Keep
Cash gift from relativeGift deed (preferably notarized), bank transfer proof, relationship proof Aadhaar/PAN link showing relationship, family tree affidavit
Gift of immovable propertyRegistered gift deed (mandatory property gifts must be through registered deed), original cost documents of donor (for future capital gains), stamp duty valuation certificate
Gift of shares/MF unitsGift deed specifying securities transferred, depository transfer slip/CDSL-NSDL transfer statement, original purchase records of donor
Wedding giftsWedding invitation card, gift register (list contains who gave & what), bank statements showing amounts received
Gifts received under WillRegistered Will, succession certificate, legal heir certificate, asset transfer documents

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