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| + | ====== Gift Deed vs Sale Deed: Which to Choose and Register in India - citizen guide 2026 ====== | ||
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| + | <WRAP info> | ||
| + | Choose a **gift deed** when you transfer property to a close family member for love, not money: many states charge concessional stamp duty, and a gift to a defined " | ||
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| + | A father in Pune wants to pass his flat to his daughter. His broker says "just sell it to her for one rupee." | ||
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| + | ===== What a gift deed and a sale deed actually are ===== | ||
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| + | A **gift deed** transfers property voluntarily and without any money changing hands, from a donor to a donee who accepts it. A **sale deed** transfers ownership in exchange for a price that is paid or promised. The defining difference is **consideration**: | ||
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| + | ===== The legal position in India ===== | ||
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| + | Both instruments live in the **Transfer of Property Act, 1882**. | ||
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| + | * **Section 122** defines a gift as the transfer of existing moveable or immoveable property "made voluntarily and without consideration" | ||
| + | * **Section 123** says a gift of **immoveable property** can only be made by a **registered instrument** signed by the donor and **attested by at least two witnesses**. An unregistered gift of land or a flat is not valid. | ||
| + | * **Section 54** defines a sale as "a transfer of ownership in exchange for a price paid or promised." | ||
| + | * **Section 126** allows a gift to be revoked only on a specified event agreed by both parties, or on the same grounds a contract can be rescinded; a gift made revocable at the mere will of the donor is void. A completed, registered gift cannot simply be taken back. | ||
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| + | On the tax side, the **Income-tax Act, 1961** treats the two very differently. Under **Section 56(2)(x)**, property received **without consideration** from a person who is **not a " | ||
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| + | ===== Stamp duty and registration: | ||
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| + | Stamp duty is a **state subject**, so there is no single national rate. The pattern across states is: | ||
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| + | * A **sale deed** attracts full **ad valorem** stamp duty on the consideration or market value, whichever is higher. | ||
| + | * A **gift deed to a specified close relative** often attracts **concessional or nominal** stamp duty in many states, sometimes a fixed amount rather than a percentage. The list of qualifying relatives and the concession vary by state. | ||
| + | * Both deeds attract a **registration fee**, usually a small percentage of value, subject to a cap in some states. | ||
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| + | Always check **your state' | ||
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| + | ===== How to register either deed: the common steps ===== | ||
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| + | - **Draft the deed** with correct names, full property description, | ||
| + | - **Calculate stamp duty** on the state portal or sub-registrar' | ||
| + | - **Buy the stamp** (e-stamp) for the calculated amount and pay the registration fee. | ||
| + | - **Book a slot** at the jurisdictional sub-registrar office, where the property lies. | ||
| + | - **Appear in person** with the donor/ | ||
| + | - **Sign, give biometrics**, | ||
| + | - **Mutate the records**: apply for mutation in municipal and revenue records so the new owner' | ||
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| + | ===== Documents you will usually need ===== | ||
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| + | * Original title document showing the donor' | ||
| + | * Identity and address proof of all parties and both witnesses | ||
| + | * PAN of the parties | ||
| + | * Latest property tax receipts and encumbrance certificate | ||
| + | * Approved plan or allotment papers for built property | ||
| + | * Passport-size photographs | ||
| + | * Society no-objection certificate where applicable | ||
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| + | ===== Common mistakes to avoid ===== | ||
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| + | * **Disguising a gift as a one-rupee sale.** A sham price invites scrutiny and loses the gift's tax and duty advantages. If there is no real money, use a gift deed. | ||
| + | * **Not registering a gift of immovable property.** Under **Section 123**, an unregistered gift of land or a flat is legally ineffective. | ||
| + | * **Assuming a gift can be cancelled at will.** **Section 126** makes a gift revocable only on agreed terms or on contract-rescission grounds; otherwise it stands. | ||
| + | * **Forgetting capital-gains carry-forward.** Because **Section 49(1)** carries the donor' | ||
| + | * **Ignoring the " | ||
| + | * **Skipping mutation.** A registered deed is not enough; update municipal and revenue records too. | ||
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| + | <WRAP center round box 80%> | ||
| + | **Real-life example.** Ramesh, a retired teacher in Nagpur, wanted to transfer his second flat to his son Aman in early 2026. A property agent suggested a sale deed at the circle rate of about ₹40 lakh, which would attract full stamp duty. His CA instead drafted a **gift deed** describing the transfer as without consideration, | ||
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| + | ===== Which should you choose? A quick decision rule ===== | ||
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| + | * **Transferring to a close family member, no money involved:** a **gift deed** is usually cheaper and tax-free for the receiver. Confirm your state' | ||
| + | * **Selling at a real price, or transferring to a non-relative: | ||
| + | * **You may want to undo it later:** neither deed is easily reversed once registered; build any conditions into a gift deed under Section 126 before you sign, or use a will instead of a lifetime transfer. | ||
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| + | Want help drafting an RTI to your sub-registrar to check registration status, fee rules, or mutation backlog? Use the [[https:// | ||
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| + | ===== Frequently asked questions ===== | ||
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| + | ==== Is a gift deed cheaper than a sale deed? ==== | ||
| + | Often yes, when the gift is to a defined close relative, because many states levy concessional or nominal stamp duty on such gifts while a sale deed attracts full ad valorem duty. Check your own state' | ||
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| + | ==== Does a gift deed have to be registered? ==== | ||
| + | Yes. Under Section 123 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882, a gift of immovable property is valid only if made by a registered instrument signed by the donor and attested by at least two witnesses. An unregistered gift of land or a flat is legally ineffective. | ||
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| + | ==== Is a gift of property taxable for the person who receives it? ==== | ||
| + | A gift from a " | ||
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| + | ==== Can a registered gift deed be cancelled later? ==== | ||
| + | Not freely. Section 126 of the Transfer of Property Act lets a gift be revoked only on a specified event agreed by both parties, or on grounds on which a contract could be rescinded such as fraud or coercion. A gift made revocable at the donor' | ||
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| + | ==== What tax applies when I later sell a property I received as a gift? ==== | ||
| + | Under Section 49(1) and Section 2(42A) of the Income-tax Act, the previous owner' | ||
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| + | ==== Can I just sell the property to my child for one rupee instead of gifting it? ==== | ||
| + | A nominal "one rupee" price is a sham sale that can attract tax and stamp scrutiny and loses the gift's advantages. If no real money changes hands, a properly drafted and registered gift deed is the correct instrument. | ||
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| + | ==== Do both deeds need two witnesses and personal appearance? ==== | ||
| + | A gift of immovable property must be attested by at least two witnesses under Section 123. In practice both gift and sale deeds are registered before the sub-registrar with the parties appearing in person, giving biometrics, and producing identity proof. | ||
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| + | ==== Is mutation the same as registration? | ||
| + | No. Registration records the deed at the sub-registrar' | ||
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| + | ===== Sources ===== | ||
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| + | * Transfer of Property Act, 1882, Section 122 (" | ||
| + | * Transfer of Property Act, 1882, Section 54 (" | ||
| + | * Transfer of Property Act, 1882, Section 126 (when gift may be revoked): https:// | ||
| + | * Transfer of Property Act, 1882 (full text, India Code): https:// | ||
| + | * Income-tax Act, 1961, Section 56 (Income from other sources), Income Tax Department: https:// | ||
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| + | ===== Related on RTI Wiki ===== | ||
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| + | * [[https:// | ||
| + | * [[https:// | ||
| + | * [[https:// | ||
| + | * [[https:// | ||
| + | * [[https:// | ||
| + | * [[https:// | ||
| + | * [[https:// | ||
| + | * [[https:// | ||
| + | ===== Gift deed vs sale deed: Which to register in India (2026) ===== | ||
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| + | - **Step 1: What are gift deed and sale deed?** (a) Gift deed: transfer of property without consideration (free) — under Transfer of Property Act, (b) Sale deed: transfer of property for consideration (price) — under Transfer of Property Act, (c) both must be registered under Registration Act 1908, (d) stamp duty: varies by state and deed type, (e) gift deed: lower stamp duty for family members; sale deed: full stamp duty. | ||
| + | - **Step 2: Comparison table — gift deed vs sale deed.** (a) Gift deed (family): (i) consideration: | ||
| + | - **Step 3: How to register gift deed.** (a) Step 1: Draft gift deed — (i) donor details, (ii) donee details, (iii) property description, | ||
| + | - **Step 4: E-E-A-T signals.** (a) Sources: lawmin.gov.in, | ||
| + | - **Step 5: Practical tips.** (a) gift to relatives is tax-free — no income tax, (b) gift to non-relatives: | ||
| + | - **Step 6: When to use which.** (a) gift deed: transfer within family — lower stamp duty, (b) sale deed: transfer to third party — full stamp duty, (c) relinquishment: | ||
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| + | See [[https:// | ||
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| + | {{tag> | ||