How to calculate tax if capital gains are your sole income in FY25

The benefit of ₹1.25 lakh exemption and the basic exemption limit are available, but slab rates are not applicable, and rebates are also not available.
NEW DELHI : When capital gains from stocks or equity-oriented mutual funds are the sole income, the income tax calculation differs significantly. If this were the case in 2024-25, there is added complexity in calculating according to the right tax rates for equity assets sold before and after 23 July 2024.
Tax rates on long-term capital gains (LTCG)—investments held for more than a year before being sold—from equity are taxed at 12.5% if sold after 23 July 2024 and 10% for those sold before this date.
Further, an exemption of ₹1 lakh and ₹1.25 lakh is allowed on equity sold before and after 23 July 2024, respectively. For gains made FY26 onwards, a flat rate of 12.5% and exemption of ₹1.25 lakh would be applicable.
Deducting the permissible exemptions is crucial to calculating net taxable income. Apart from the ₹1.25 lakh exemption allowed on equity capital gains, under the old tax regime, individuals are eligible for a basic exemption limit of ₹2.5 lakh. Under the new tax regime, this limit is ₹3 lakh for FY25 (increased to ₹4 lakh from FY26 onwards). These deductions are used to compute the net capital gains that are subject to tax.
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“Assuming an assessee has made LTCG on equity mutual funds that were sold after 23 July 2024, the net gains will be computed after first allowing ₹1.25 lakh as an enhanced exemption, followed by a reduction of the basic exemption limit applicable under both the regimes. The remaining amount, if any, will be taxable at the applicable rate of 12.5%," explained Vishwas Panjiar, partner, Nangia Andersen LLP.

For example, Mr A earned ₹5 lakh LTCG. First, after deducting the ₹1.25 lakh exemption under Section 112A of the Income Tax Act, the gains stand at ₹3.75 lakh. Since this is above the basic exemption limit (under both tax regimes), the gains are taxable. However, next, Mr A can deduct the basic exemption amount of the tax regime he picks. Since the new tax regime has a higher exemption limit of ₹3 lakh, Mr A's net capital gains stand at ₹75,000 and his tax liability at ₹9,375 (12.5% rate).
Also Read: Capital gains on equities: Here's all you need to know when filing tax returns this year
If, after the deduction under 112A ( ₹1.25 lakh or ₹1 lakh), the total capital gains are below the applicable exemption limit, no income tax is to be paid. Moreover, the individual may not even be required to file an ITR in such a case.
“However, the obligation to file an ITR depends on multiple criteria such as residential status, if a resident and ordinarily resident with a foreign asset reporting requirement or a signatory to foreign bank account, other prescribed conditions where filing of ITR is mandatory or where the individual has any refund of tax or carried forward loss to claim in ITR," said Sonu Iyer, partner and national leader, people advisory services-tax, EY India.
FY26 onwards, the standard LTCG tax rate of 12.5% is applicable on equity assets.
Why rebate benefit not allowed
Both the tax regimes offer a rebate up to a certain income limit under Section 87A, meaning incomes up to the rebate limit are tax-free. The old regime allows a tax rebate on incomes up to ₹5 lakh. In the new regime, the rebate limit until 2024-25 was ₹7 lakh, which has been increased to ₹12 lakh from FY26 onwards.
However, equity capital gains do not qualify for this rebate.
“Rebate of income tax is not available on LTCG and STCG (short-term capital gains) made on equity assets. This means if a taxpayer only has capital gains income in 2024-25 and it is below the rebate limit of ₹7 lakh, they would still pay tax on it at 12.5% tax rate, after deducting the applicable exemptions," said Manohar Goenka, a chartered accountant (CA) and chief manager, REC Ltd.
In contrast, Panjiar said the rebate under Section 87A is available for all other cases of capital gains, provided the total income remains within the threshold.
Advance tax obligation
When the total tax liability in a fiscal year exceeds ₹10,000, the taxpayer is obliged to pay advance tax. If capital gains are your only income, the advance tax still needs to be paid.
Also Read: For some NRIs, capital gains from Indian mutual funds are tax-free
Advance tax is paid in four specified instalments throughout the year on or before the prescribed due dates. Defaulting on due dates attracts penal interest. Considering the nature of capital gains that are often non-recurring and sudden, the law provides certain relief on advance tax payments, said Panjiar.
“If the capital gains have arisen after one of the specified instalment dates, the taxpayer can pay the amount of advance tax in the subsequent instalments, and the taxpayer is not liable to pay interest on the missed instalments."
While computing advance tax on capital gains, taxpayers should consider both the exemption of ₹1.25 lakh as well as the basic slab exemption applicable under the respective tax regime. “Additionally, it is important to consider TDS/TCS while computing your net tax liability," said Panjiar.
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