Section 82 โ€“ Capital Gain Exemption | Income Tax Act 2025 | CA Devesh Thakur | eTaxSave
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๐Ÿ“˜ Income Tax Act 2025 Series โ€” Section 82

Section 82: Capital Gain Exemption

โœ๏ธ CA Devesh Thakur ๐ŸŒ eTaxSave.com ๐Ÿ“š Income Tax Series

Complete guide to Section 82 of the Income Tax Act, 2025 (Old Section 54) โ€” Capital Gain Exemption on Sale of Residential House. Flowcharts, case laws, CGAS rules, โ‚น10 Cr cap, two-house option & the RLITAS framework โ€” decoded simply.

๐Ÿ“ CA Devesh Thakur’s Section 82 Handwritten Notes
Section 82 Income Tax Act 2025 โ€“ Capital Gain Exemption Handwritten Notes by CA Devesh Thakur

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Section 82 Capital Gain โ€“ CA Devesh Thakur

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๐Ÿงพ

1. Core Concept โ€” Understand This First

When an individual or HUF sells a residential house property and earns Long-Term Capital Gain (LTCG), the government allows exemption if that gain is reinvested into another residential house.

๐Ÿ‘‰ That’s the entire intent.

Everything else = conditions, limits, and traps.

Section 82 of the Income Tax Act, 2025 is simply a restatement of the old Section 54 โ€” with better structure and clarity. No conceptual change. Only clarity improvement.

2. Applicability Conditions โ€” Foundation Layer

All of the following conditions must be met simultaneously. If even ONE fails โ€” no exemption.

๐Ÿ 

Type of Assessee

Only Individual or HUF. Companies, firms, LLPs, etc. are not eligible under Section 82.

๐Ÿก

Asset Sold

Must be a Residential House Property. Agricultural land, commercial property, or other assets don’t qualify here.

๐Ÿ“…

LTCG Required

The gain must be Long-Term Capital Gain. Short-term capital gain on the old property = no Section 82 exemption.

๐Ÿ˜๏ธ

Investment in New House

Must invest in a New Residential House in India. Foreign property does not qualify.

โฐ

Time Limits

Purchase: 1 year before or 2 years after sale. Construction: 3 years after sale.

๐Ÿ”’

Lock-in Period

New house must not be sold within 3 years of purchase/completion. Otherwise cost adjustment applies.

โŒ If even ONE condition fails โ†’ No exemption

This is non-negotiable. Students and professionals often try to argue partial compliance โ€” the law does not permit it.

๐Ÿ”

3. Complete Decision Flowchart

Section 82 โ€” Step-by-Step Decision Path
๐ŸŸข START โ€” Sold a Property?
โ†“
NO
Not eligible โŒ
YES
Residential House โœ”
โ†“
Is the gain LTCG?
โ†“
NO
No exemption โŒ
YES
Proceed โœ”
โ†“
Invested in New Residential House in India?
โ†“
NO
No exemption โŒ
YES
Check Timelines โœ”
โ†“
โฐ Within time limit? (1 yr before / 2 yrs purchase / 3 yrs construction)
โ†“
NO
No exemption โŒ
YES
Calculate Exemption โœ”
โ†“
Compare: Capital Gain vs Cost of New House โ†’ Full or Partial Exemption
โ†“
Apply Special Rules: โ‰ค โ‚น2 Cr = 2 houses option | Max exemption = โ‚น10 Cr
โ†“
Amount unutilised before ITR due date?
โ†“
YES
Deposit in CGAS โœ”
NO
Exemption Granted โœ”
โ†“
๐Ÿ END

4. Exemption Logic โ€” Full vs Partial

The amount of exemption under Section 82 depends on a direct comparison between the Capital Gain earned and the Cost of the New House purchased.

๐ŸŸข Case 1: Full Exemption
Capital Gainโ‚น50 Lakh
New House Costโ‚น70 Lakh
Exemption Allowedโ‚น50 Lakh
Taxable GainNIL โœ”

Cost โ‰ฅ Gain โ†’ Full gain is exempt

๐ŸŸก Case 2: Partial Exemption
Capital Gainโ‚น80 Lakh
New House Costโ‚น50 Lakh
Exemption Allowedโ‚น50 Lakh
Taxable Gainโ‚น30 Lakh โš ๏ธ

Cost < Gain โ†’ Only cost amount is exempt

๐Ÿ“Œ The Simple Formula

Exemption = Lower of (Capital Gain, Cost of New House)

Subject to the โ‚น10 Crore cap (Section 7 below).

โš ๏ธ

5. Most Ignored Rule โ€” Sale Within 3 Years

If the new house is sold within 3 years of purchase or construction, the exemption already claimed is clawed back via a cost adjustment rule. This is where students lose marks and professionals make costly mistakes.

๐Ÿ”ด Case A: Full Exemption Claimed Earlier
Original Gainโ‚น50 Lakh
Exemption Claimedโ‚น50 Lakh
New House sold in <3 yrsโš ๏ธ
Adjusted Cost of New HouseZERO โ—

Entire sale proceeds become taxable as STCG!

๐Ÿ”ด Case B: Partial Exemption Claimed Earlier
Original Gainโ‚น80 Lakh
Exemption Claimedโ‚น50 Lakh
New House Costโ‚น50 Lakh
Adjusted Costโ‚น50L โˆ’ โ‚น50L = ZERO โ—

Cost = Original Cost โˆ’ Exemption Claimed

๐Ÿ”‘ Key Takeaway

The cost of the new house is reduced by the exemption amount if sold within 3 years. This inflates the capital gain on the new house’s sale โ€” effectively reversing the earlier exemption.

6. Capital Gain Account Scheme (CGAS)

If the capital gain is earned but not fully utilised before the due date of filing ITR, the taxpayer must deposit the unutilised amount in a Capital Gain Account Scheme (CGAS) with an authorised bank to preserve the exemption.

1
Capital Gain earned on sale of residential house
2
Amount not used for new house before ITR due date?
3
Deposit in CGAS before ITR due date to protect exemption claim
4
Use CGAS amount within 2 years (purchase) or 3 years (construction)
5
Still unused after deadline? โ†’ Taxable as Capital Gain โ—

๐Ÿ’ก Common Mistake

Many people think they can simply wait to buy the house. Wrong. If you don’t deposit unutilised gains in CGAS before ITR due date, the exemption is forfeited for that amount โ€” even if you later buy the house within the time limit.

๐Ÿ”ฅ

7. Special Provisions

๐Ÿ ๐Ÿ 

Two House Option

If Capital Gain is โ‰ค โ‚น2 Crore, the taxpayer can invest in two houses (instead of one). This option is available only once in a lifetime. Cannot be exercised again in future years.

๐Ÿ”ด

โ‚น10 Crore Cap

Even if you invest more, maximum exemption is capped at โ‚น10 Crore. Example: Gain = โ‚น20 Cr, Investment = โ‚น20 Cr โ†’ Exemption = โ‚น10 Cr only. Remaining โ‚น10 Cr is taxable.

โ‚น10 Crore Cap โ€” Illustration
Capital Gainโ‚น20 Crore
New House Investmentโ‚น20 Crore
Exemption Allowedโ‚น10 Crore (Max)
Taxable Gainโ‚น10 Crore โ—
Two House Option โ€” Illustration
Capital Gainโ‚น1.8 Crore
House 1 Costโ‚น90 Lakh
House 2 Costโ‚น90 Lakh
Total Investmentโ‚น1.8 Crore
Taxable GainNIL โœ”

8. Section 54 vs Section 82 โ€” Real Difference

ParameterSection 54 (Old ITA 1961)Section 82 (New ITA 2025)
AssesseeIndividual / HUFIndividual / HUF Same
Asset TypeResidential HouseResidential House Same
Gain TypeLTCGLTCG Same
Time Limits1 yr before / 2 yrs / 3 yrs1 yr before / 2 yrs / 3 yrs Same
โ‚น10 Cr CapYes (introduced via amendment)Yes โ€” explicitly stated Clearer
2 House OptionYes (once, โ‰คโ‚น2 Cr gain)Yes โ€” explicitly stated Clearer
CGASRequiredRequired Same
Core Concept๐Ÿ‘‰ No conceptual change. Only clarity improvement.
โš–๏ธ

9. Important Judicial Decisions โ€” Simplified

Most blogs dump case names without meaning. Here’s what actually matters for each decision:

โœ… Allowed
Multiple Flats = One House
CIT v. Smt. Sunita Aggarwal โ€” If used as single residential unit โ†’ Allowed
โœ… Allowed
Property in Wife’s Name
CIT v. V. Natarajan โ€” Still eligible if investment made by assessee
โœ… Allowed
Construction Before Sale
CIT v. J.R. Subramanya Bhat โ€” Allowed if completed after transfer
โœ… Allowed
Allotment Date Considered
Vinod Kumar Jain v. CIT โ€” Allotment (not possession) date is the trigger
โœ… Allowed
Agreement Date Matters
CIT v. Mrs Shahzada Begum โ€” Transfer can occur even before registration
โŒ Not Allowed
Temporary Structure Not a House
Sandeep Hoda v. PCIT โ€” Not treated as residential house property
โœ… Allowed
Joint Ownership Allowed
Jennifer Bhide case โ€” Name inclusion does not disqualify
โœ… Allowed
Delay in Return, Investment Done
Fatima Bai v. ITO โ€” Exemption still allowed if investment within time limit
โœ… Allowed
Booking + Installments = Valid
CIT v. T.N. Aravinda Reddy โ€” Booking amount counts as valid purchase
โœ… Allowed
Multiple Agreements, Single Unit
Mahindra & Mahindra case โ€” Still qualifies as one house

10. Common Mistakes โ€” Reality Check

Let’s be blunt โ€” students and even professionals mess these up regularly:

โŒ
Confusing Section 82 with Section 54F โ€” Section 54F (old) / Section 83 (new) applies to other long-term capital assets, not residential house. Different section, different conditions.
โŒ
Ignoring the LTCG condition โ€” Short-term capital gain on old house? No Section 82. Period.
โŒ
Missing CGAS deposit deadline โ€” Not depositing unutilised gains in CGAS before ITR due date forfeits the exemption.
โŒ
Forgetting the โ‚น10 Crore cap โ€” High net worth individuals assume full exemption on large investments. Wrong โ€” max is โ‚น10 Cr.
โŒ
Ignoring the 3-year cost adjustment rule โ€” Selling the new house within 3 years without understanding the cost adjustment leads to massive unexpected tax liability.
โŒ
Misinterpreting purchase vs construction timelines โ€” 2 years for purchase, 3 years for construction. Mixing them up causes wrong computation.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Key Insight

If you’re making these mistakes, you don’t understand the section โ€” you’re just memorising it. Understanding the intent (why the exemption exists) prevents 90% of errors.

๐Ÿง 

11. Memory Framework โ€” RLITAS Rule

A simple, effective, exam-proof checklist. Before claiming Section 82 exemption, run through each letter:

R
Residential
Is the property sold a Residential House?
L
LTCG
Is the gain Long-Term Capital Gain?
I
Investment
Has investment been made in new house in India?
T
Time Limit
Is the time limit (1yr/2yr/3yr) followed?
A
Amount
Is the amount comparison done (full vs partial)?
S
Special Rules
Are โ‚น10 Cr cap, 2-house option & CGAS checked?

๐Ÿ“Œ RLITAS โ€” Simple, Effective, Exam-Proof

Run through this before every Section 82 problem in exam or practice. If any letter fails, there is no exemption or the exemption is limited.

Comment ‘Capital Gain’ on Instagram to get the full Section 82 notes. Follow @cadeveshthakur.official.

12. Final Conclusion

Section 82 (Income Tax Act, 2025) is not a new concept โ€” it is a refined, structured version of the old Section 54 with explicit language and better clarity.

โœ” The Real Challenge

The real challenge is not understanding the law โ€” it’s applying it correctly under pressure (exam or real case).

If you:

  • Follow the flow (use RLITAS)
  • Understand the logic (not just memorise)
  • Remember the traps (CGAS, 3-year rule, โ‚น10 Cr cap)

You won’t just pass exams โ€” you’ll avoid costly tax mistakes in real life.

This is exactly what CA Devesh Thakur teaches across all platforms โ€” not just section names and conditions, but the why behind every rule.

๐Ÿ’ฌ Get Full Notes

Comment ‘Capital Gain’ on the Instagram reel to receive complete Section 82 handwritten notes. Follow @cadeveshthakur.official on Instagram so you never miss an update from the Income Tax Act 2025 Series!

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