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Gift tax and inheritance India 2026: Section 56(2)(x) — ₹50,000 threshold, relatives list, marriage, will, property gifts

Gift tax India mein abolished hai (since 1998) but **Section 56(2)(x)** ensures gifts above ₹50,000 from non-relatives are taxable as Income from Other Sources. From relatives — fully exempt regardless of amount. Marriage gifts, will-based inheritance, HUF transfers — all tax-free. Yahaan complete framework with relatives list + property valuation rules.

CA Prabhakar Kumar
Prabhakar Kumar
Chartered Accountant (ICAI, Nov 2019)
📅 26 May 2026
⏱ 10 min read
2,072 words

India mein gift tax abolished hai since 1998, but Section 56(2)(x) is the modern provision that taxes "gifts" exceeding ₹50,000 from non-relatives as Income from Other Sources. From relatives — completely exempt regardless of amount. Inheritance & wills — also fully exempt at receipt.

Common scenarios that trigger confusion: - Friend transfers ₹70K via UPI for trip → taxable? Yes, if not relative - Inherited family home worth ₹2cr → taxable? No, exempt - Father-in-law gifts ₹50L for house purchase → taxable? No, FIL is "relative" - Wedding cash gifts ₹15L from family + friends → taxable? No, marriage exempt - Boss gifts iPhone for promotion (₹1.2L) → taxable as perquisite + 56(2)(x) - Cousin (brother's son) gifts ₹3L → taxable, cousin is NOT relative per Section

Yeh article aapko complete gift + inheritance tax framework deta hai — relatives list, ₹50K threshold mechanics, exempt occasions, property valuation rules, HUF gifts, NRI considerations, documentation, aur 6 common ₹30K-₹5L disclosure mistakes.

Section 56(2)(x) — Core mechanics

### The provision Any sum of money OR property received by individual/HUF without consideration (or for inadequate consideration) is treated as Income from Other Sources if: - Aggregate value in FY exceeds ₹50,000 - Received from non-relatives - Not falling under specified exempt occasions

### What "gift" includes - Money: Cash, bank transfer, UPI, cheque - Movable property: Gold, jewelry, vehicles, shares, MF units, bullion - Immovable property: Land, building, flats, apartments - Stamp duty paid by transferor on transfer

### Tax rate - Treated as Income from Other Sources - Added to total income - Taxed at applicable slab rate - No special exemption beyond ₹50,000 threshold

Threshold mechanics

Critical: ₹50,000 is aggregate per FY across all non-relative gifts.

Total non-relative giftsTax treatment
≤ ₹50,000Entire amount tax-free
> ₹50,000ENTIRE aggregate amount taxable (not just excess)

"Relative" Definition — The Complete List

Per Section 56(2)(x) Explanation

1. Spouse of the individual

2. Brother or sister of the individual - Real brother/sister - Half-brother/half-sister - Step-brother/step-sister (per court rulings)

3. Brother or sister of the spouse - Brother-in-law (wife's/husband's brother) - Sister-in-law (wife's/husband's sister)

4. Brother or sister of either of the parents - Uncle (father's brother / mother's brother) - Aunt (father's sister / mother's sister) - Both maternal AND paternal

5. Any lineal ascendant or descendant of the individual - Parents - Grandparents - Great-grandparents - Children (own + adopted) - Grandchildren - Great-grandchildren

6. Any lineal ascendant or descendant of the spouse - Father-in-law - Mother-in-law - Spouse's grandparents - Spouse's children from previous marriage (if any)

7. Spouse of any person referred to in (2) to (6) - Brother's wife (bhabhi) - Sister's husband (jija) - Uncle's wife - Aunt's husband - And so on...

Tabular reference

RelationshipIncluded?
Spouse
Father / Mother
Son / Daughter
Brother / Sister
Grandparents
Grandchildren
Father-in-law / Mother-in-law
Brother-in-law / Sister-in-law
Uncle / Aunt (both sides)
Uncle's wife / Aunt's husband
Brother's wife / Sister's husband
Cousin (brother's son/daughter)✗ Not relative
Cousin (sister's son/daughter)✗ Not relative
Nephew / Niece (spouse's brother/sister's child)✗ Not relative
Friend✗ Not relative
Colleague✗ Not relative
Distant relative (grandfather's brother, etc.)✗ Not relative

### Why cousins are not relatives Section 56(2)(x) limits "siblings" to brother/sister of the individual or parent. Cousins are children of uncle/aunt — beyond the defined chain. Common misconception that cousins are relatives — they're NOT for tax purposes.

Exempt occasions (regardless of source/amount)

### 1. Marriage of recipient Fully exempt — All gifts received on occasion of recipient's own marriage: - Cash from any source - Jewelry, gold - Property (land, building, flats) - Vehicles - Electronics

Conditions: - Must be recipient's marriage (not parent's, sibling's) - Occasion-linked (during wedding + reasonable timeframe before/after) - Genuine wedding gift

### 2. Under will / inheritance Fully exempt — Assets received under will (after testator's death): - Money/cash bequeathed - Movable property (gold, jewelry, vehicles) - Immovable property (land, building, apartments) - Investments (shares, MF, FDs)

Mechanics: - Tax-free at receipt - Capital gains tax later if sold: Cost basis = original purchase by deceased; holding period = deceased's holding + inheritor's holding

### 3. In contemplation of death Specific provision: Gifts made in expectation of donor's imminent death (medical condition, age) — exempt.

### 4. From local authority Gifts from government local authorities — exempt.

### 5. From any fund/foundation/educational/medical institution Specified institutions notified by government — exempt.

### 6. From or to charitable institution / educational/medical institutions - Receipt from registered charitable institution under Section 12A — exempt - Receipt from any educational institution registered under Section 10(23C) — exempt

### 7. From HUF to its members - Gifts from HUF to its members (Karta, coparceners, members) — exempt - Treated as distribution of family wealth, not "gift"

### 8. To non-resident Indian - Specific case: Gift from resident relative to NRI follows different rules under FEMA - Income Tax angle: NRI receipt has different reporting requirements

Specific scenarios

Immovable property gifts

From non-relative

Scenario A: Pure gift (no consideration) - Stamp duty value of property = recipient's income - If stamp duty value > ₹50,000 → entire amount taxable - Example: Friend's plot gift worth ₹15L → ₹15L taxable income to recipient at slab

Scenario B: Inadequate consideration - Stamp duty value: ₹50 lakh - Actual payment: ₹30 lakh - Difference: ₹20 lakh > ₹50K threshold - Income: ₹20 lakh taxable to recipient

#### From relative - Fully exempt regardless of amount - Stamp duty value irrelevant - Recipient's cost basis = donor's original cost basis (for future capital gains)

Movable property gifts (other than money)

#### From non-relative - Fair market value (FMV) of property used as basis - If FMV > ₹50,000 aggregate → income at slab rate

#### From relative - Fully exempt - Cost basis carries over

Cash gifts via banking channels

#### From non-relative - Aggregate ₹50K threshold applies - Mode of transfer (UPI, NEFT, RTGS) doesn't change rule - Documentation: Bank statements showing source

#### From relative - Fully exempt - However, large transfers may attract AIS reporting + SFT - Maintain donor's KYC + relationship proof

Gifts to/from HUF

HUF receiving gifts: - From members (Karta, coparceners): Exempt - From non-relatives: ₹50K threshold applies

HUF giving gifts: - To members: Treated as distribution, exempt at receiver's end - To non-members: Subject to non-relative rules

NRI scenarios

Resident receiving from NRI: - NRI is relative → Fully exempt - NRI is non-relative → ₹50K threshold applies - FEMA: Receipt through NRE/NRO/banking channels required - Form 15CA/15CB: For specified transactions (above threshold)

Resident giving to NRI: - Subject to FEMA limits ($250K Liberalized Remittance Scheme per FY) - Income Tax: Gift to NRI relative = exempt

Documentation requirements

### For gifts FROM relatives (exempt) 1. Relationship proof: Birth certificates, marriage certificates 2. Donor's KYC: PAN, Aadhaar 3. Source of funds (donor's): Bank statements, salary slips, return acknowledgments 4. Banking trail: NEFT/UPI/RTGS confirmation 5. Gift deed (recommended for >₹50K from relatives, especially immovable property)

### For gifts FROM non-relatives (taxable above ₹50K) - Acknowledge as Income from Other Sources in ITR - Schedule OS — gift income disclosure - Self-assessment tax payment

### Gift deed (formal documentation) For substantive gifts, a registered gift deed: - Clearly identifies donor + recipient - States property/amount details - Confirms voluntary transfer without consideration - Witnessed (typically 2 witnesses) - Notarized - Sometimes registered (mandatory for immovable property)

### Marriage gifts register Best practice: Maintain wedding gift register: - Each gift's giver name - Relationship to recipient - Date received - Amount/item description - Photo evidence (especially gold, valuables)

Useful for future scrutiny defenses.

ITR disclosure rules

Schedule reporting

Gift typeITR Schedule
Exempt gifts > ₹10L totalSchedule EI (Exempt Income) — transparency
Taxable gifts from non-relativesSchedule OS (Other Sources) — income
Property receivedSchedule HP (House Property) if rental potential

### When to disclose - Taxable gifts: Mandatory disclosure in Schedule OS with tax payment - Exempt gifts > ₹10L: Recommended disclosure in Schedule EI for transparency - Below ₹10L exempt: Not strictly required, but useful for documentation - AIS reporting: Banks/registrars report high-value transfers to IT Department; expect scrutiny

### AIS reporting thresholds Banks/financial entities report to IT Department: - Cash deposits: > ₹10 lakh in savings account - Property purchases/registrations: > ₹30 lakh - MF investments: > ₹2 lakh - Credit card payments: > ₹2 lakh aggregate

If above thresholds match large gift receipt → AIS flag → potential 143(1)(a) notice.

Inheritance — Tax treatment

### At receipt Completely tax-free — Section 56(2)(x) specifically exempts inheritance. - No income tax - No estate duty (abolished 1985) - No wealth tax (abolished 2015) - No specific inheritance tax in India

At subsequent sale of inherited asset

Capital gains tax applies when inheritor sells:

Cost basis: - Original purchase price by deceased (or April 1, 2001 FMV if inherited before April 2001) - Stamp duty + improvements added to cost - Indexation removed post Budget 2024 (12.5% flat LTCG)

Holding period: - Deceased's holding period + Inheritor's holding period combined - If combined > 24 months (immovable) / 12 months (listed) → LTCG - If combined < threshold → STCG at slab rate

Example: Father bought house 1995 for ₹10 lakh. Inheritance to son 2020. Son sells 2026 for ₹2 crore. - Cost basis: ₹10 lakh (or April 2001 FMV) - Holding period: 1995-2026 (31 years, definitely LTCG) - LTCG: ₹1.9 crore (no indexation post Budget 2024) - Tax at 12.5%: ₹23.75 lakh + cess

Gift between spouses — Clubbing provisions

### Section 64 clubbing rules Gift to spouse → Income on gifted asset clubbed in donor's income

Example: - Husband gifts ₹50 lakh to wife - Wife invests in FD generating ₹4 lakh annual interest - Interest ₹4 lakh clubbed in husband's income (Section 64(1)(iv))

### Strategic implications - Gifts between spouses NOT effective for income tax planning - Asset transfer happens, but income continues to be taxed in donor - Exception: Reinvestment of clubbed income (second-generation income) is the wife's own - Pin money/maintenance amounts excluded

### Gift to minor child Section 64(1A) — Income on assets gifted to minor child clubbed in higher-income parent. - Child's income up to ₹1,500/year exempt (Section 10(32)) - Above that — clubbed

Common Gift Tax Mistakes

### Mistake #1: Treating cousin as "brother" Issue: Cousin gift above ₹50K not declared as income
Fix: Cousin = not relative per Section 56(2)(x); ₹50K threshold applies

### Mistake #2: Splitting non-relative gifts thinking each ≤₹50K exempt Issue: ₹40K + ₹35K = ₹75K aggregate from 2 non-relatives → entire ₹75K taxable
Fix: ₹50K is aggregate annual threshold, not per gift

### Mistake #3: Wedding gifts received months after marriage Issue: AO challenges occasion linkage; may treat as regular non-relative gift
Fix: Maintain wedding date evidence; reasonable timeframe interpretation

### Mistake #4: Not maintaining donor's source documentation Issue: AO questions large gift legitimacy + donor's tax filings
Fix: Donor's bank statements, ITR, source proof maintained

### Mistake #5: Property gift without stamp duty payment Issue: Gift deed unregistered for immovable property; legal complications
Fix: Registered gift deed for immovable property; stamp duty paid

### Mistake #6: Gift to spouse for income planning Issue: Section 64 clubbing — income still taxable in donor
Fix: Spouse gifts don't shift tax liability; for genuine wealth transfer only

### Mistake #7: NRI gift without FEMA compliance Issue: Banking channel violations; FEMA penalties separate from tax
Fix: NRE/NRO routing; Form 15CA/15CB where applicable

Action plan — Gift documentation

### Receiving gift - [ ] Identify donor's relationship (relative or non-relative) - [ ] If relative: maintain relationship proof + donor KYC - [ ] If non-relative > ₹50K aggregate: plan for tax payment - [ ] Banking channel verification - [ ] Gift deed for property or substantial amounts

### Pre-ITR - [ ] Aggregate all non-relative gifts in FY - [ ] Compute taxable income (if > ₹50K) - [ ] Self-assessment tax payment - [ ] Schedule OS preparation

### ITR filing - [ ] Taxable gifts in Schedule OS - [ ] Exempt gifts > ₹10L in Schedule EI - [ ] Match with AIS reporting

### Long-term documentation - [ ] Permanent archive of significant gifts - [ ] Donor relationship documentation - [ ] Source verification records - [ ] Property gift registered deeds


References (verified 23 May 2026)


Disclaimer: Yeh article educational guidance hai based on Income Tax Act 1961 provisions for FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27). Section 56(2)(x) carries over to Section 92 of Income Tax Act 2025 effective 1 April 2026 with substantively same rules. Gift tax provisions for HUF (gifts to members) and inheritance treatment carry forward identically. Complex scenarios (cross-border gifts, large estate planning, business succession via gifts) require qualified CA + lawyer consultation. Section 64 clubbing provisions apply to spouse and minor child gifts independently. Data verified 23 May 2026.

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CA Prabhakar Kumar — ICAI Chartered Accountant
Written by
Prabhakar Kumar
Chartered Accountant (ICAI, Nov 2019)
Founder of VittSphere Technologies. Practicing CA serving 200+ MSME clients across Pune. 86% win-rate at AO and CIT(A) level tax appeals. Writes on Indian taxation, capital gains, and personal finance.

Frequently asked questions

India mein gift tax kab abolished hua aur ab kya rule hai?
**Gift Tax Act 1958 abolished in October 1998**. But government realized this created tax avoidance route — people would transfer income via gifts. So **Section 56(2)(x)** introduced in 2017 (replacing earlier 56(2)(vii)) to plug the loophole. Current rule — **Gifts from non-relatives above ₹50,000 in a financial year** treated as **Income from Other Sources** taxable at slab rate. Below ₹50K — not taxable. **Gifts from relatives**: Fully exempt regardless of amount (no upper limit). **Specific exempt occasions**: Marriage of recipient, will/inheritance, in contemplation of death, from HUF to member, from registered charitable institution. So technically India has no "gift tax" but has "tax on gifts treated as income" under Section 56(2)(x).
Section 56(2)(x) ka ₹50,000 threshold kaise calculate hota hai?
**₹50,000 is the AGGREGATE threshold** across all non-relative gifts in a financial year — not per gift. If total non-relative gifts in FY ≤ ₹50,000 → entire amount tax-free. If total exceeds ₹50,000 → **ENTIRE aggregate amount** taxable (not just the excess above ₹50K). **Example 1**: ₹40K cash gift from college friend → tax-free (≤₹50K). **Example 2**: ₹55K cash gift from friend → **₹55K fully taxable** (not just ₹5K excess). **Example 3**: ₹30K + ₹15K + ₹20K from 3 non-relative friends total ₹65K → entire ₹65K taxable. **Critical**: Once threshold crossed, no proportionate exemption. Plan gifts to stay within threshold OR ensure clearly identifiable relative source. Per-FY threshold (resets every April).
Section 56(2)(x) mein "relative" ki definition kya hai?
**Specifically defined in Section 56(2)(x) Explanation**. Relatives include — (1) **Spouse** of the individual. (2) **Brother or sister** of the individual. (3) **Brother or sister of spouse**. (4) **Brother or sister of either of the parents** (uncle/aunt). (5) **Any lineal ascendant or descendant** (parents, grandparents, children, grandchildren). (6) **Lineal ascendant or descendant of spouse** (in-laws). (7) **Spouse of any persons in (2)-(6)**. **What's INCLUDED**: Real brother/sister, half-brother/half-sister, step-brother/step-sister (per court rulings). Uncles and aunts both maternal + paternal. **What's NOT included** (treated as non-relatives, ₹50K threshold applies): Cousins (brother's son/daughter), Friends regardless of closeness, Colleagues, Distant relatives like grandparent's siblings.
Marriage ke time received gifts tax-free hote hain?
**YES — fully exempt** under Section 56(2)(x) proviso. Gifts received on the **occasion of recipient's marriage** are completely tax-free, regardless of: (1) Amount (no upper limit), (2) Source (relative or non-relative), (3) Cash or kind (property, gold, vehicles, etc.). **Important conditions**: (a) Must be received **on occasion of marriage** (immediate context). Gifts received months before/after marriage may face scrutiny. (b) **Marriage of the recipient** specifically — not parent's, sibling's, child's marriage. (c) Should be **genuine wedding gift** — not disguised business transactions. **Best practice**: Maintain a wedding gift register documenting each gift with giver's name, relationship, amount/item. **Time window**: Generally interpreted as gifts received during wedding ceremony + immediate days before/after (reception, etc.). Long-delayed gifts may be queried.
Inheritance aur will-based assets pe tax kya hai?
**Inheritance fully tax-free at receipt**. Section 56(2)(x) specifically exempts amounts received: (1) **Under a will or inheritance** (after death of testator). (2) In contemplation of death of the payer (specific provision). (3) From a relative (covered separately). **Key clarifications**: (a) Inheritance is **NOT taxable** as income to inheritor. (b) **Capital gains tax may apply LATER** when inherited asset is sold (using original owner's cost basis + period of holding). (c) **Estate duty** abolished in 1985 — no estate tax in India. (d) **Wealth tax** abolished from FY 2015-16. (e) **Property received via will**: Cost basis = original purchase by deceased; holding period includes deceased's holding for LTCG/STCG calculation. **Documentation needed**: Death certificate of testator, copy of will (probate if applicable), legal heir certificate, transfer deeds.
Immovable property gift mein stamp duty valuation kaise apply hoti hai?
**Special rule for immovable property** under Section 56(2)(x). If property received **as gift from non-relative**: (1) Without consideration (purely gift) → Stamp duty value treated as recipient's income if > ₹50,000. (2) With inadequate consideration (deal price < stamp duty value by > ₹50,000) → difference between stamp duty value and actual consideration treated as income. **Example**: Friend gifts plot worth ₹15 lakh (stamp duty value). Cash paid: zero (pure gift). Income deemed at ₹15 lakh (exceeds ₹50K threshold) → taxable at slab rate. **Example 2**: Friend "sells" property worth ₹50L (stamp duty value) for ₹30L. Difference ₹20L (>₹50K) → taxable income of recipient at slab. **Important**: Rule applies to land + building + flats + apartments. **From relatives**: No stamp duty rule applies (fully exempt). **For wedding gift**: Property gift on marriage occasion — exempt.
NRI relative se gift receive kar sakte hain bina tax ke?
**YES — NRI relative is still a "relative"** for Section 56(2)(x) purposes. Definition of relative doesn't distinguish based on residential status. **Gift from NRI parent/sibling/child** to resident Indian = fully tax-free regardless of amount. **However, additional considerations**: (1) **FEMA compliance** — NRI must remit through proper banking channels (NRE/NRO accounts). (2) **Form 15CA/15CB** for foreign remittances above specified thresholds. (3) **Recipient reporting** — Above ₹10L gifts in single FY should be **declared in ITR Schedule EI (Exempt Income)** for transparency. (4) **Documentation** — Maintain relationship proof (passport copies, birth certificates), bank statements showing receipt source. **AO scrutiny risk**: Even tax-exempt gifts above ₹50K typically face questions. Strong documentation pre-empts notices.
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