Seller guide

Capital gains tax on property: what sellers must know

Your sale price is not your take-home amount. Tax, loan repayment and selling costs change the final number.

When you sell a property, the profit may be taxed as capital gains. The exact treatment depends on holding period, purchase cost, improvement cost, sale expenses and available exemptions.

LTCG vs STCG

Short-term gains are generally added to income and taxed at your slab rate. Long-term gains have separate treatment. Budget changes can affect rates and indexation availability, so sellers should model both tax and exemption options before listing.

What reduces taxable gain

Brokerage, transfer expenses and eligible improvement costs can reduce gains when documented properly. Keep invoices for renovation and capital improvements because they may materially affect tax.

Section 54 planning

Eligible sellers can reduce tax by reinvesting gains into another residential property within prescribed timelines. This is powerful, but compliance details matter.

Seller net proceeds

Calculate sale price minus outstanding loan, brokerage, legal charges, prepayment penalty, tax and other closing expenses. This is the number you can actually redeploy.

Calculate seller net proceeds