A gift of money from a relative is fully tax-free in India no matter how large, but money or property received without consideration from a non-relative is taxable in full once the total you receive in a financial year crosses Rs 50,000. This rule sits in Section 56(2)(x) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, and applies to every receipt on or after 1 April 2017. The single trap most people miss is that crossing the threshold taxes the whole amount, not just the part above Rs 50,000.
Quick answer: Gifts from a defined “relative”, on your marriage, by will or inheritance, or in contemplation of death are exempt without any limit. Cash or property gifts from anyone else are tax-free only up to an aggregate of Rs 50,000 in a financial year. Cross that line and the entire amount becomes “Income from Other Sources” and is taxed at your slab rate.
Section 56(2)(x) taxes three kinds of receipts when there is no consideration (you gave nothing back) and a non-relative is involved.
The Rs 50,000 limit is a single annual bucket for money, not a per-gift allowance. Two gifts of Rs 30,000 each from two friends total Rs 60,000, so the whole Rs 60,000 is taxable.
These receipts are outside the charge of Section 56(2)(x) regardless of value, as listed in the provisos to the clause (Section 56):
The Explanation to the clause defines “relative”, in the case of an individual, as:
So your spouse, parents, grandparents, children, brothers, sisters, your spouse's brothers and sisters, your aunts and uncles by blood (parent's siblings), and their spouses are all relatives. A cousin, a friend, a nephew or niece, and an aunt or uncle by marriage outside this list are NOT relatives for this section, so their gifts count toward the Rs 50,000 limit.
Worked example: On her wedding, Kashvi Pathak receives Rs 5,00,000 in cash gifts from guests, including friends and distant relatives. Because these are received on the occasion of her own marriage, the entire Rs 5,00,000 is exempt under Section 56(2)(x). Separately, three months later her friend gifts her Rs 70,000 for a new laptop, with no occasion. As this is from a non-relative and exceeds Rs 50,000, the full Rs 70,000 is taxable as Income from Other Sources at her slab rate. Her father, Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak, also transfers Rs 10,00,000 to help her buy a car; being a gift from a relative (lineal ascendant), it is fully tax-free regardless of amount.
Gift taxation is personal and assessed by the Income Tax Department, so RTI is narrow here. You cannot use RTI to ask another person about their gifts. But RTI can help where a public authority holds relevant records, for example obtaining the stamp duty valuation or registered gift-deed copy from a state sub-registrar, or seeking the status of your own grievance with the CPGRAMS or the income-tax e-filing portal. Draft such requests cleanly with the AI RTI Drafter, and if a public information officer ignores or wrongly denies your request, escalate using the First Appeal Builder.
No. Parents are lineal ascendants and therefore relatives under Section 56(2)(x), so a gift of money from them is fully exempt no matter how large.
No. Once the aggregate from non-relatives crosses Rs 50,000, the whole amount is taxable. The full Rs 60,000 is treated as Income from Other Sources.
Gifts received on the occasion of your own marriage are fully exempt, with no upper limit and regardless of who gives them, under the proviso to Section 56(2)(x).
No. Property or money received under a will or by way of inheritance is specifically excluded from Section 56(2)(x), so there is no gift tax on it.
It depends. A brother of your father or mother is a relative, so his gift is exempt. An uncle only by marriage who is outside the defined list is a non-relative, so his gift counts toward the Rs 50,000 limit.
If you receive immovable property without consideration from a non-relative and its stamp duty value exceeds Rs 50,000, the full stamp duty value is taxable as Income from Other Sources.