Capital Gains Tax on Luxury Apartments: A Guide for L&T Thanisandra Investors
For investors evaluating L&T Thanisandra over a long horizon, the question of capital gains tax is part of the total return calculation. A property that appreciates 60% over 7 years sounds great until you understand the tax treatment of the gain. The good news for Indian residential property investors is that the tax framework — long-term capital gains rates, indexation benefits, reinvestment exemptions — is generally favourable. Understanding how it works helps you plan the eventual exit efficiently. Here is the comprehensive guide.
How capital gains are calculated
Capital gains on residential property are calculated as sale price minus indexed cost of acquisition and improvement, with applicable adjustments. The two key categories:
- Short-term capital gains (STCG) — property held for less than 24 months. Gain is added to regular income and taxed at applicable income tax slab rate (typically up to 30% plus surcharge for high-income individuals).
- Long-term capital gains (LTCG) — property held for 24+ months. Taxed at 20% with indexation benefit, plus applicable surcharge and cess.
For most L&T Thanisandra investors with multi-year horizons, LTCG treatment will apply, which is meaningfully more favourable than STCG.
The indexation benefit
Indexation adjusts the cost of acquisition for inflation, reducing the effective taxable gain. The Cost Inflation Index (CII) published annually by the Income Tax Department provides the multiplier. For long-held properties, indexation can reduce taxable gains by 30–50% or more, significantly reducing effective tax burden.
Illustrative example: If you bought L&T Thanisandra in 2026 for ₹3 Cr (all-in cost) and sold in 2034 for ₹5 Cr, the nominal gain is ₹2 Cr. Indexation might lift the indexed cost basis to ₹3.6 Cr (reflecting inflation over the period), reducing the indexed gain to ₹1.4 Cr. Tax at 20% on ₹1.4 Cr = ₹28 lakh (plus surcharge and cess). Without indexation, tax on ₹2 Cr at 20% would be ₹40 lakh. The indexation savings are substantial.
Section 54: reinvestment exemption
Indian tax law offers a powerful exemption for reinvesting capital gains into another residential property:
- Section 54 — reinvest LTCG from one residential property into another residential property within 2 years (purchase) or 3 years (construction). Up to the full gain can be exempted.
- Section 54F — reinvest sale proceeds (not just gains) from non-residential property into residential property; subject to specific conditions.
- Section 54EC — reinvest LTCG into specified bonds (NHAI, REC, etc.) within 6 months; exemption up to ₹50 lakh per financial year.
For investors planning to upgrade properties or rotate residential investments over time, these exemptions can effectively defer or eliminate capital gains tax — turning residential property into a remarkably tax-efficient long-term asset class.
NRI capital gains specifics
- TDS at sale — buyers must deduct TDS at applicable rate (typically 20% on LTCG for NRI sellers) and deposit with tax authorities.
- Lower TDS certificate — NRI sellers can apply for lower TDS certificates if their actual tax liability is below the standard 20%.
- Tax filing requirement — NRIs selling Indian property must file Indian tax returns to claim refund of any excess TDS.
- Repatriation timing — proceeds repatriation requires tax clearance certificates; plan timing accordingly.
- DTAA benefits — Double Tax Avoidance Agreements with major NRI residence countries prevent double taxation.
Surcharge and cess
On the calculated tax, additional surcharge applies for high-income individuals:
- 10% surcharge — for total taxable income between ₹50 lakh – ₹1 Cr.
- 15% surcharge — for income between ₹1–2 Cr.
- 25% surcharge — for income between ₹2–5 Cr (capped at 25% for capital gains).
- Health and Education Cess — 4% on tax including surcharge.
Strategic tax planning for L&T Thanisandra
Several strategic considerations for tax-efficient investment:
- Hold for long-term — 24+ months minimum to qualify for LTCG treatment; longer holds maximise indexation benefits.
- Plan reinvestment if applicable — Section 54 reinvestment can defer gains tax indefinitely if rotated into other residential property.
- Maintain documentation — keep complete records of purchase price, all one-time charges, and improvements. These add to cost basis.
- Improvement deductions — major improvements (renovation, structural changes) can be added to cost basis with proper documentation.
- Loss offsetting — capital losses (from other investments) can offset capital gains under specific conditions.
- Timing of sale — financial year of sale affects when liability arises; plan with tax advisor.
Documentation to maintain
- Purchase agreement and registration — establishes acquisition cost and date.
- All payment receipts — including stamp duty, registration, GST, parking, club membership, maintenance corpus.
- Home loan statements — for interest paid (relevant for income tax filings, not directly for capital gains).
- Major improvement records — invoices and payment proof for renovations or structural work.
- Property tax payments — establishes ongoing ownership and maintenance.
Common tax planning mistakes
- Selling within 24 months — triggers STCG at slab rates; almost always more expensive than waiting.
- Missing reinvestment windows — Section 54 timelines are specific; missing them forfeits exemption opportunity.
- Inadequate documentation — without proper records, claiming improvements or correct basis becomes difficult.
- Not engaging tax professionals — substantial gains warrant professional planning; the savings often dwarf advisory costs.
- Repatriation timing mistakes — for NRIs, mismatched repatriation timing can cause tax complications.
How indexation compounds value
Indexation is one of the more powerful aspects of Indian capital gains framework. For properties held 7–10+ years, indexation can reduce effective tax rates significantly — sometimes to single digits as a percentage of nominal gain. Combined with Section 54 reinvestment, residential property can be exceptionally tax-efficient over long horizons.
Verdict
Capital gains tax on L&T Thanisandra investment, when planned thoughtfully, is manageable and often modest as a percentage of nominal gains. Long-term holding (24+ months minimum, longer ideally), indexation benefits, and Section 54 reinvestment options combine to make residential property one of the more tax-efficient long-term investment options for both resident Indian and NRI investors. Professional tax planning at the time of purchase and again at the time of sale is worth the investment.
For broader investment context, see L&T Thanisandra as a Portfolio Asset. For NRI specifics, see NRI Guide to Buying L&T Thanisandra. For project details, the Home page.
