transfer-property-gift-deed-2026
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How to transfer property via Gift Deed — complete 2026 guide

How to transfer property via Gift Deed 2026 — RTI Wiki citizen guide

⚠️ DPDP Rules, 2025 (14 Nov 2025) amended Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act — public-interest override now under Section 8(2). Read the note →

· 2026/04/19 05:02

Quick answer. A Gift Deed transfers property (movable or immovable) from one person to another without consideration — no money changes hands. It is governed by §122 to §129 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882. For immovable property it must be registered under §17 of the Registration Act, 1908, on stamp paper of the value notified by your state. If both donor and donee are blood relatives (parents, children, spouse, siblings, lineal ascendants/descendants), most states give a deep concessional stamp duty — 0.5% of market value in Maharashtra, ₹1,000 flat in Karnataka for spouse, 0.5% in Delhi — instead of the regular 4-7%. The gift is fully exempt from income tax in the donee's hands under §56(2)(x) of the Income-tax Act when received from a relative. Once registered, a Gift Deed is operative immediately (unlike a Will, which works only on death) and irrevocable once accepted.

Rajesh's story — "I saved ₹3.83 lakh by gifting my flat instead of selling it to my son"

Rajesh Deshmukh, 67, retired bank manager from Pune. Wanted to transfer his Wakad 2BHK (market value ~₹85 lakh) to his only son Vishal, 34, an IT consultant in the same city. Did the deed in April 2025.

“My CA-friend first suggested a Sale Deed for ₹85 lakh — the 'official' way, he said. The stamp duty in Maharashtra would have been 5% of market value = ₹4.25 lakh, plus 1% registration ₹85,000 (capped at ₹30,000), plus the headache of explaining to the Income Tax Department where Vishal got ₹85 lakh from. Then a property lawyer at Mulshi sub-registrar's office told me — 'Sir, you are father, he is son. Use a Gift Deed. Maharashtra Stamp Act, Article 34, blood relative — only 0.5%.' I checked on igrmaharashtra.gov.in myself. He was right. We drafted the Gift Deed (lawyer charged ₹6,000), I paid stamp duty of ₹42,500 (0.5% of ₹85 lakh) and registration fee ₹30,000 (capped). Both of us went to Sub-Registrar Mulshi with two witnesses (Vishal's friend and my younger brother), did biometrics, signed in front of the SR, and got the registered deed back in 5 working days. Total cost: ₹78,500 all-in vs ~₹4.40 lakh under sale route. I saved ₹3.83 lakh in stamp duty alone. Vishal then filed mutation at PMC ward office — took 6 weeks (had to RTI once when it crossed the 30-day Right to Service window, but that's a different story). Today the flat is in Vishal's name on the 7/12 extract and the PMC tax bill. No capital gains for me (no consideration), no income tax for him (relative under §56). Cleanest transfer I've ever done in 40 years of banking.”

—Rajesh, May 2025

About 18 lakh Gift Deeds are registered every year across India (state IGR aggregate data, 2024). Maharashtra alone records ~3.2 lakh; Tamil Nadu ~2.8 lakh; Karnataka ~2.1 lakh. Roughly 76% are between blood relatives — almost always claiming the concessional stamp duty rate. The single biggest mistake families make is using a Sale Deed (or worse, an unregistered “transfer letter”) when a Gift Deed would have been faster, cheaper, and tax-free.

What this is — and how it differs from Sale Deed and Will

A Gift Deed is a written, registered instrument by which a person (the donor) voluntarily transfers ownership of property to another person (the donee) without any consideration — no cash, no goods, no services in return. §122 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 defines a “gift” as the transfer of certain existing movable or immovable property made voluntarily and without consideration, by one person, called the donor, to another, called the donee, and accepted by or on behalf of the donee.

Three things must happen for a valid gift:

  • Voluntary intent of the donor (no fraud, coercion, undue influence — §123).
  • Acceptance by the donee during the lifetime of the donor and while the donor is still capable of giving (§122 + §124).
  • Registration of the deed for immovable property under §17 of the Registration Act, 1908, on stamp paper as per the Indian Stamp Act, 1899 (and the relevant state amendment).

How it differs from related instruments:

  • vs Sale Deed. A Sale Deed involves consideration (money). Stamp duty is the full state rate (4-7% of market value); buyer must show source of funds; capital gains apply to seller.
  • vs Will. A Will is operative only on the testator's death. Until then, the property remains the testator's. A Gift Deed is operative immediately upon registration and acceptance — the donee becomes the legal owner the same day. (See Register a Will — complete 2026 guide.)
  • vs Relinquishment Deed. A Relinquishment Deed is used when a co-owner (typically a legal heir) gives up his/her share in inherited property in favour of another co-owner. Gift Deed is broader — between any two persons, not necessarily co-owners.
  • vs Settlement Deed. A Settlement Deed is a wider family arrangement (often in lieu of Will) that may settle multiple properties on multiple beneficiaries with conditions. Gift Deed is one-to-one and unconditional once accepted.

When to prefer a Gift Deed:

  • Parent → child transfer (most common in India).
  • Spouse → spouse (e.g., husband adds wife's name or transfers single ownership).
  • Sibling → sibling.
  • Grandparent → grandchild.
  • HUF Karta → coparcener.
  • Donor wants the transfer to take effect now, not after death.

Step-by-step process

Step 1 — Confirm the donee qualifies as a "relative" for stamp & tax concessions

Two separate definitions matter, and they are not the same:

  • Income-tax “relative” — §56(2) Explanation. Spouse, brother/sister, brother/sister of spouse, brother/sister of either parent, lineal ascendant or descendant of self or spouse, spouse of any of the above. A gift from any of these is fully tax-free in the donee's hands, regardless of value.
  • State Stamp Act “blood relative” / “near relative”. Each state has its own list. Examples:
    • Maharashtra (Article 34, Schedule I, Maharashtra Stamp Act 1958): husband, wife, son, daughter, grandson, granddaughter, wife of pre-deceased son. Concessional rate 0.5% of market value (capped at ₹200 in some sub-categories pre-2017; revised since).
    • Karnataka (Karnataka Stamp Act 1957, Article 28): family members — father, mother, husband, wife, son, daughter, daughter-in-law, grandchildren. ₹1,000-₹5,000 fixed depending on relation + ₹500 registration.
    • Delhi (Indian Stamp Act 1899 as applicable to Delhi): 0.5% of market value for blood relatives (notified August 2018) vs 6% (men) / 4% (women) for normal Sale/Gift.
    • Tamil Nadu (TN Amendment Act): 1% of market value (capped at ₹25,000) for gifts to family members (parents, spouse, son, daughter, brother, sister, grandchild).
    • Uttar Pradesh (UP Amendment Act 2015): blood-relative gifts attract a fixed stamp duty of ₹5,000 + 1% registration fee.
    • Gujarat (Gujarat Stamp Act): 4.9% stamp duty for blood-relative gifts (no concession; this surprises many).

If your relationship is borderline (e.g., uncle to nephew, niece, first cousin) — most states classify these as “non-relatives” for stamp duty. You'll pay the full Sale-Deed rate. Verify with the SR office before drafting.

Step 2 — Draft the Gift Deed

A Gift Deed must contain:

  • Full name, age, parentage, address and PAN of donor.
  • Full name, age, parentage, address and PAN of donee.
  • Relationship between them (e.g., “father and son”).
  • Complete description of the property — survey number, plot number, building name, flat number, area in sq.ft / sq.m, boundaries on all four sides, undivided share of land if apartment.
  • Title chain — how donor came to own the property (purchase deed reference, inheritance, society allotment).
  • Express recital: “Out of natural love and affection, the donor hereby transfers, conveys, gifts and assigns absolutely and forever, free from all encumbrances, the said property to the donee, who hereby accepts the said gift…
  • Acceptance clause signed by the donee.
  • Witnesses (two — name, age, address, PAN).
  • Execution date and place.

Lawyer drafting fees: ₹3,000 to ₹15,000 depending on city and complexity. A standard apartment deed costs ₹4,000-7,000 in tier-1 cities.

Step 3 — Calculate stamp duty + registration fee on the state IGR portal

Each state has a portal that gives you the ready reckoner / circle rate / guideline value for your locality:

The market value for stamp duty is the higher of: (a) the actual market value of the property, or (b) the state ready-reckoner / circle-rate value. For a Gift Deed where there is no consideration, the calculation is purely on the ready-reckoner value.

Step 4 — Pay the stamp duty

Three ways:

  • e-Stamp paper (Stock Holding Corporation of India Limited — SHCIL — authorised vendor): walk into an SHCIL counter or an authorised collection centre, pay by cash / cheque / DD, receive an e-Stamp certificate.
  • e-SBTR (Electronic Secured Bank Treasury Receipt) — Maharashtra-specific, generated by partner banks like Bank of Maharashtra / IDBI on payment.
  • GRAS / e-Challan — pay online via the state government receipt accounting system; download the challan; carry to SR.

Step 5 — Book the Sub-Registrar appointment online

Maharashtra: https://igrmaharashtra.gov.in → “Public Data Entry (PDE)” → enter party details → generate token → book SR slot.
Karnataka: https://kaverionline.karnataka.gov.in → Citizen Login → “Book Appointment”.
Delhi: https://srams.delhi.gov.in.
Most states: walk-in slot at the SR for “small towns”; online appointment for tier-1 city SR offices.

Step 6 — Appear at the Sub-Registrar with documents

Both donor and donee plus two witnesses must physically appear at the SR office on the appointed day. Carry:

  • Original Gift Deed (printed on stamp paper / with e-Stamp certificate attached).
  • Two photocopies of the deed.
  • PAN + Aadhaar of donor, donee, both witnesses.
  • Latest 7/12 extract / property tax receipt / society NOC / mutation extract showing donor as current owner.
  • Title deed chain (original or certified copies).
  • Encumbrance Certificate (EC) for past 13-30 years.
  • Building plan approval / OC (for newly built or unregistered apartments).
  • 2 passport-size photographs each of donor and donee.
  • Stamp duty payment proof + registration fee challan.

The SR office:

  • Captures biometrics (thumbprint + photograph) of all four parties.
  • Captures signatures on the deed in his presence.
  • Stamps “Registered” + assigns a document number + registration year + book number + page number.
  • Returns the original deed (with the SR's endorsement) within 1 to 7 working days, depending on workload.

Step 7 — File for mutation in municipal records

Registration transfers ownership in the SR's Books of Records — but the municipal property tax record and the revenue 7/12 / khata extract still show the old owner until you file a mutation application.

  • Apply at Tehsildar / Talathi office (rural / 7/12) or Municipal Corporation ward office (urban / property tax).
  • Documents: registered Gift Deed copy, latest tax receipt, application form, identity proof, ₹100-₹500 fee.
  • Statutory time: 15-30 days under most state Right to Service Acts; in practice 1-3 months.

If mutation is delayed beyond the RTS limit, see RTI for property mutation delay — copy-ready template.

Step 8 — Update society / electricity / water records

  • Submit registered Gift Deed to housing society — get the share certificate transferred to donee's name (Maharashtra: 8 weeks under MSCS Act; Karnataka: 60 days under KCS Act).
  • Apply to MSEB / BESCOM / DJB / BWSSB for name change in electricity and water bills (₹100-500 fee).
  • Update PAN-linked address records if the donor was using this property as primary address.

Stamp duty + registration fee table

+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+
| State           | Normal    | Blood-relative | Registration  | Notes          |
|                 | Gift / SD | concession     | fee           |                |
+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+
| Maharashtra     | 5%        | 0.5% of MV     | 1% (capped    | Article 34,    |
|                 |           | (spouse, son,  | ₹30,000 in    | Sched I, MH    |
|                 |           | daughter,      | metro)        | Stamp Act 1958 |
|                 |           | grandchild)    |               |                |
+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+
| Karnataka       | 5%        | ₹1,000 (spouse)| ₹500 fixed    | Article 28,    |
|                 |           | ₹5,000 (others |               | KA Stamp Act   |
|                 |           | family)        |               | 1957           |
+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+
| Delhi (NCT)     | 6% (M) /  | 0.5% of MV     | 1%            | Notification   |
|                 | 4% (F)    | (blood relative|               | dt 4 Aug 2018  |
|                 |           | only)          |               |                |
+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+
| Tamil Nadu      | 7%        | 1% of MV       | 1% of MV      | Capped         |
|                 |           | (capped        |               | ₹4,000         |
|                 |           | ₹25,000)       |               | registration   |
+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+
| Uttar Pradesh   | 7%        | ₹5,000 fixed   | 1%            | UP Stamp       |
|                 |           |                |               | Amendment 2015 |
+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+
| Telangana       | 5%        | 1% of MV       | 0.5%          |                |
+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+
| West Bengal     | 6-7%      | 0.5% of MV     | 1%            | Spouse, child, |
|                 |           |                |               | parent only    |
+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+
| Gujarat         | 4.9%      | 4.9% (NO       | 1% capped     | No concession  |
|                 |           | concession)    | ₹30,000       |                |
+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+
| Income Tax      | n/a       | NIL (relative  | n/a           | §56(2)(x); IT  |
| (donee side)    |           | per §56 list)  |               | Act 1961       |
+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+
| Capital gains   | n/a       | NIL (no        | n/a           | No "transfer"  |
| (donor side)    |           | consideration) |               | for cap gains  |
|                 |           |                |               | under §47(iii) |
+-----------------+-----------+----------------+---------------+----------------+

M = Male, F = Female, MV = Market Value (state ready-reckoner). Always verify on the state IGR portal before paying — rates change with annual budget cycles.

Common reasons your Gift Deed gets stuck or challenged

  • Donor's mental capacity in dispute — for elderly donors (75+), legal heirs sometimes later challenge the deed claiming the donor was not of sound mind. Best practice: get a doctor's certificate of mental capacity (MMSE score) on the day of execution and annex it.
  • Pending mortgage / bank loan on the property. A property under mortgage cannot be gifted without a NOC from the lender. SBI, HDFC, ICICI usually issue this in 7-15 days for relative-transfers if EMI is current.
  • Minor as donee. Acceptance must be by the natural guardian (typically father; or court-appointed guardian for orphaned/non-Hindu minors). The deed is valid but the minor cannot manage the property until majority — guardian holds on minor's behalf.
  • Property in joint names (e.g., husband + wife). All co-owners must consent and sign as donors. A unilateral gift by one co-owner of his/her undivided share is allowed but only of that share — not the whole property.
  • Wrong stamp value paid. If you paid stamp on, say, an under-stated market value, the SR can refuse registration or refer the matter to the Collector of Stamps for adjudication under §31 of the Indian Stamp Act — leading to deficit duty + penalty.
  • State-specific blood-relative ambiguity. Grandparent → grandchild qualifies in Maharashtra but not in some other states. Daughter-in-law qualifies in Karnataka but not uniformly elsewhere. Check state-specific notification before paying.
  • Donor revoking the gift. Once registered and accepted, a Gift Deed is irrevocable (§126 of TP Act allows revocation only on agreed contingencies recorded in the deed itself, or if the gift is voidable for fraud/undue influence — has to be challenged in Civil Court within 3 years).
  • No witnesses available — the SR will refuse to register without two competent witnesses present. Most SR offices have stand-by witnesses (peon / typist) for ₹100-200 — not ideal but workable.

If stuck — the escalation ladder

Rung 1 — Sub-Registrar / DSR

  • Speak to the Sub-Registrar in writing. Most “stuck” cases — refusal to register due to alleged document defect, valuation dispute, biometric machine failure — are resolved at this level if you cite the correct rule.
  • Next: District Sub-Registrar (DSR) — written representation, typically resolved in 15-30 days.

Rung 2 — Inspector General of Registration (IGR)

Rung 3 — CPGRAMS

  • https://pgportal.gov.in → “Ministry of Law & Justice” → “Department of Legal Affairs” or directly to the state Revenue Department.
  • Useful for cross-state issues or SR-office misconduct allegations.

Rung 4 — Civil Court / Writ

  • If the SR has refused registration despite full compliance, file a writ of mandamus under Article 226 in the jurisdictional High Court directing the SR to register.
  • If a registered Gift Deed is later challenged on grounds of fraud/coercion, the heirs file a civil suit under §31 of the Specific Relief Act 1963 for cancellation. Limitation: 3 years from knowledge.

Rung 5 — Right to Information (RTI)

The Sub-Registrar's office, the District Registrar, and the Inspector General of Registration are all public authorities under §2(h) of the RTI Act 2005.

RTI helps when:

  • Your registration application is shown as “received” but no document number has been issued for 30+ days — file RTI to PIO at the SR office for the status of registration, dealing officer name, reasons for delay.
  • A registered Gift Deed has gone “missing” between SR and citizen-pickup — RTI for the dispatch register entry + collection register.
  • The Collector of Stamps has alleged deficit duty without a written order — RTI for the §31 adjudication file notings + valuation basis.
  • Mutation in revenue/municipal records has crossed the Right to Service window — RTI to PIO Tehsildar / Municipal Corporation. See RTI for property mutation delay.
  • You suspect parallel registration / fraud (someone else registered a Gift Deed of the same property) — RTI for the register of all transactions on that property/khata in a date range.

RTI does NOT help when:

  • You want the SR to value your property at a different rate from the ready-reckoner — that's a quasi-judicial decision, not “information”. File adjudication under §31 Stamp Act.
  • You want to revoke a duly registered and accepted Gift Deed — only Civil Court can do that, on §126 TP Act grounds.
  • Your dispute is about the content of the deed (allegations of fraud, coercion, undue influence) — that's a civil suit for cancellation, not an RTI matter.
  • The donee is being sued by donor's other heirs claiming the gift was a sham — substantive law, requires court adjudication.
  • Stamp duty rates feel “too high” — that's a legislative policy issue; RTI cannot reduce duty.

FAQs

Q. Is a Gift Deed of immovable property valid without registration?
No. §17 of the Registration Act 1908 makes registration compulsory for any gift of immovable property worth ₹100 or more. An unregistered gift of immovable property does not transfer title, even if signed and accepted. (For movable property like jewellery, a Gift Deed can be unregistered + accompanied by physical delivery — but a registered deed is still the safest evidence.)

Q. Can a Gift Deed be challenged later?
Yes, but on narrow grounds: fraud, coercion, undue influence (§19 of Indian Contract Act), donor's mental incapacity, want of acceptance, or contingencies recorded in the deed itself (§126 TP Act). Limitation is 3 years from the date the heir/affected party comes to know. After that, the deed is virtually unassailable.

Q. Can I gift property to a person who is not a relative — friend, partner, charity?
Yes — the gift is legally valid. But: (a) stamp duty will be at the full rate (no blood-relative concession); (b) for the donee, §56(2)(x) treats any non-relative gift above ₹50,000 in aggregate during the year as “income from other sources”, taxable at the donee's slab rate. So a ₹85 lakh flat gifted to a friend creates ₹85 lakh of taxable income for the friend — a tax bomb. Charities registered under §80G are exempt.

Q. Can NRIs gift property in India to relatives in India?
Yes. Under FEMA Notification 21(R)/2018, an NRI may gift Indian immovable property (other than agricultural land / farm house / plantation) to a resident Indian or another NRI relative. Stamp duty applies as for resident donors. Donor's PAN and OCI/passport, plus a Power of Attorney to a representative in India (notarised + apostilled if executed abroad) is the usual structure.

Q. Can a Gift Deed be made conditional?
Section 122 says a gift must be without consideration and accepted. But you can attach non-monetary conditions — e.g., “donee shall maintain donor for life” or “donor shall continue to reside in the property”. If donee fails to honour, donor can sue for cancellation under §126. But conditions that effectively make it a sale (e.g., “donee shall pay ₹X”) destroy the gift character.

Q. What about agricultural land?
State Land Reform / Tenancy Acts often restrict gifting of agricultural land — only to certain agriculturist relatives, with district-collector permission, and with a maximum holding ceiling. Maharashtra (Tenancy Act §63), Karnataka (Land Reforms Act §79A — repealed 2020 but still applies to old transactions), Tamil Nadu, Punjab — all have variations. Consult a local lawyer.

Q. Can a Gift Deed include movable property (gold, shares, FDs)?
Yes. For movables, registration is optional but delivery of possession is essential. For shares — execute a transfer + lodge with the company / depositary. For mutual funds — submit a nomination/transfer request with the AMC. For FDs — close + reinvest in donee's name (banks do not “transfer” an FD).

Q. Will the Income Tax Department question a Gift Deed of high value?
The IT Department may issue a §142(1) / §131 enquiry asking the donee to prove the relationship (birth certificate, marriage certificate, PAN of donor) and the donor's source of acquisition of the property. Keep all originals for at least 8 years. If donor and donee are clearly related and the deed is on record, the enquiry closes routinely.

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