All you need to know about Long Term Capital Gain (LTCG) Tax

All you need to know about Long Term Capital Gain Tax

What is long-term capital gains (LTCG) tax?

LTCG is a tax paid on profit generated by an asset such as shares, equity, real estate or share-oriented products held for a particular time-period. The meaning of Long-term Capital Gains, or LTCG, is diverse for different items.

Why is LTCG tax in the news now?

In the Budget of 2018, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, re-introduced the LTCG tax on stocks. Investors who got a profit exceeding 1 lakh rupees from the sale of a share or equity mutual fund scheme held over a period of one year. All these investors have to pay 10 percent of tax on profit. Investors will have to pay 10 percent tax on profit exceeding Rs 1 lakh made from the sale of shares or equity mutual fund schemes held for over one year. Till now, LTCG was exempt from tax. The definition of a long-term investor in stocks for tax purposes is one year. LTCG tax on stocks was scrapped in 2004-05 by then finance minister P Chidambaram.

The budget talks about 'grandfathering' in LTCG. What is that?

The 'grandfathering' clause is the exemption granted to existing investors or gains made by them before the new tax law comes into force. Whenever the government introduces a stricter tax law, it has to ensure that investors who have committed money keeping in mind the easier tax regime are protected. In the matter of LTCG tax on shares, the government said gains from shares or equity mutual funds made till January 31, will be grandfathered - or exempted. There will be no LTCG tax on notional profit in shares till then.

So, who will come under the new LTCG tax net?

The Budget proposes that LTCG tax will have to be paid on profit booked after March 31. This means that for sale of shares made till March, the existing law will apply and this tax will not be applicable. In short, if you sell before March 31 a stock that has been held for more than a year, you do not pay tax. So, for tax purposes, there should not be any motivation for investors to sell in February and March. However, if you sell it on or after April 1, LTCG tax will apply on the gains made. Also, this tax is applicable only if LTCG is above Rs 1 lakh in a financial year. So, if an investor made long-term gains of Rs 150,000 in a year, LTCG tax is applicable only for Rs 50,000 (Rs 150,000-100,000).

How will LTCG tax be calculated since gains till January 31 have been grandfathered?

If an investor sells stock or equity mutual fund held for over a year after April 1, LTCG tax will be calculated on the basis of the acquisition price or closing price on January 31, whichever is higher. Take the example of a stock purchased on January 15, 2017, for Rs 100, which closed at Rs 200 on January 31, 2018. If sold after March 31, LTCG tax will be calculated based on the closing price of January 31, which is higher.

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