By CA Surekha S. Ahuja
The transfer of Indian property within resident and non-resident families involves a careful interplay of succession law, property law, taxation and FEMA regulations. This article reflects the provisions of the Income-tax Act, 2025 applicable from Assessment Year 2026–27. Stamp duty, registration requirements, probate and succession laws are governed by the applicable State laws and other relevant legislation. Readers should verify the latest legal position from the Income Tax Department's official portal and seek professional advice before implementing any succession or estate-planning strategy.
Why This Guide Matters
In Part 1, we examined an important but often overlooked reality—resident and NRI heirs may not face identical tax consequences when they ultimately sell the same inherited property.
We discussed:
- the difference in capital gains taxation;
- higher withholding requirements under Section 195 for NRI sellers;
- the importance of obtaining a Lower Deduction Certificate before sale;
- DTAA relief;
- reinvestment provisions;
- CGAS compliance; and
- the significance of determining the correct cost of acquisition and fair market value wherever applicable.
The next question naturally follows.
If tax consequences differ at the time of sale, how should parents transfer the property in the first place?
Should they execute:
- a Will,
- a Gift Deed,
- a Family Settlement, or
- leave the property jointly to their children?
Many families assume that choosing one method over another will substantially reduce future tax liability.
In most situations, that assumption is incorrect.
The transfer instrument primarily determines ownership, flexibility, succession planning and family certainty, whereas the future tax liability generally depends upon the law applicable when the heir eventually sells the property.
Accordingly, selecting the appropriate transfer mechanism is principally an estate-planning decision rather than a capital gains tax planning exercise.
Quick Answer: Which Transfer Method Is Generally Preferable?
| Issue | Practical Position |
|---|---|
| Maximum flexibility | Will |
| Immediate transfer during lifetime | Gift Deed |
| Settlement amongst family members | Family Settlement |
| Mixed Resident and NRI families | A properly drafted Will with clearly defined ownership shares often provides the greatest flexibility |
| Future capital gains tax | Generally depends upon the residential status of the heir and the law applicable at the time of sale—not merely on the transfer instrument |
The Estate Planning Principle Every Parent Should Understand
Parents frequently spend considerable time deciding whether to execute a Will or a Gift Deed, believing that one option will necessarily reduce the future tax burden on their children.
In reality, the method of transfer generally does not determine the capital gains tax payable when the inherited property is eventually sold.
The future tax consequences are ordinarily influenced by factors such as:
- the residential status of each heir;
- the applicable provisions of the Income-tax Act, 2025;
- the period of holding;
- the cost of acquisition;
- availability of exemption provisions;
- compliance with TDS requirements; and
- FEMA regulations wherever applicable.
Planning Implication
Parents should first determine how they wish to distribute ownership, and only thereafter examine the resulting tax implications. Designing an estate plan solely around perceived tax savings often leads to avoidable complications and family disputes.
Will vs Family Settlement vs Gift Deed – A Practical Comparison
| Particulars | Will | Family Settlement | Gift Deed |
|---|---|---|---|
| When ownership passes | After the death of the testator | Immediately | Immediately |
| Can it be modified? | Yes, during the lifetime of the testator | Normally difficult after execution | Generally irrevocable once validly executed |
| Registration | Optional, though registration is often advisable | Generally required where rights in immovable property are created or extinguished | Mandatory |
| Stamp duty | Generally no stamp duty on execution of a Will | Governed by State law | Governed by State law |
| Probate | May be required in specified cases depending upon the applicable succession law | Usually not required | Not applicable |
| Tax implications at transfer | Generally none | Generally none in a genuine family arrangement | Gifts to specified relatives are generally exempt under Section 56(2)(x) |
| Primary advantage | Flexibility | Immediate certainty | Immediate transfer of ownership |
When Is a Will Generally the Better Choice?
A Will is often the most suitable succession planning instrument where parents wish to:
- retain ownership and control during their lifetime;
- revise the distribution if family circumstances change;
- provide unequal shares where justified;
- deal separately with multiple properties and financial assets; or
- accommodate future changes in the residential status of children.
Perhaps the greatest advantage of a Will is flexibility.
So long as the testator remains legally competent, a Will may ordinarily be amended, replaced or revoked at any time.
Planning Implication
Where children may later settle abroad, return to India or experience changes in financial circumstances, a Will usually provides considerably greater flexibility than an irrevocable Gift Deed.
When Can a Family Settlement Be Appropriate?
A Family Settlement may be appropriate where:
- all stakeholders have already agreed on the proposed distribution;
- family disputes require resolution;
- ownership needs to be regularised immediately; or
- family members prefer certainty without waiting for succession to take effect after death.
Properly documented family settlements have frequently helped families avoid prolonged litigation while preserving long-term relationships.
When Should a Gift Deed Be Considered?
A Gift Deed may be appropriate where:
- immediate transfer of ownership is genuinely intended;
- the transfer is made in favour of specified relatives covered by Section 56(2)(x);
- parents no longer require ownership or control of the property; and
- the family understands that the transfer is generally irrevocable.
However, because ownership passes immediately, parents should carefully evaluate their own financial security before gifting away valuable assets.
CA's Practical Tip
Many parents execute Gift Deeds believing they are simplifying succession.
In practice, a carefully drafted Will often achieves the same objective while allowing parents to retain complete control over their assets throughout their lifetime.
Can One Child Receive the House and the Other Receive Cash?
This question arises frequently in families where:
- one child resides permanently in India; and
- another child has settled abroad.
Parents often ask:
Can the entire residential property be left to one child while the other receives cash or other financial assets of equivalent value?
The answer is Yes.
Indian succession law generally permits such arrangements, provided they are properly documented and the intention of the parents is clearly recorded.
The distribution may be made through:
- a Will;
- a Family Settlement; or
- any other legally valid succession arrangement.
The key objective should be fairness, clarity and ease of administration, rather than mechanical equality in every asset.
Common Structures Adopted by Families
| Structure | Practical Position |
|---|---|
| Entire house to one child and cash to another | Legally permissible through an appropriately drafted succession document |
| Joint inheritance | Both children inherit specified ownership shares |
| Different assets for different heirs | One child receives immovable property while another receives financial investments or business assets |
Each approach has advantages depending upon:
- the composition of family assets;
- residential status of the beneficiaries;
- future financial requirements; and
- long-term succession objectives.
Planning Implication
Equal treatment does not necessarily require each child to receive an identical asset. In many families, allocating different assets of broadly comparable value provides a more practical and efficient succession outcome.
Gifts Between Family Members
Section 56(2)(x) provides that gifts received from specified relatives are generally not taxable in the hands of the recipient.
Broadly:
| Relationship | General Position |
|---|---|
| Parent and child | Generally exempt |
| Spouses | Generally exempt |
| Brothers and sisters | Generally exempt |
| Lineal ascendants and descendants | Generally exempt |
| Non-relatives | May be taxable under Section 56(2)(x), subject to applicable provisions |
Accordingly, transfers within the immediate family ordinarily do not result in tax under these provisions.
However, the statutory definition of "relative" should always be examined carefully before implementing any transfer arrangement.
(Continued in Part 2B: Joint Ownership, Stamp Duty, Practical Action Plan, Common Mistakes, FAQs and Bottom Line.)