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Capital gains tax basics for stocks, mutual funds, property and crypto

Capital gains are not one single bucket. Stocks, mutual funds, property, gold, ESOPs and virtual digital assets can follow different tax logic and reporting paths.

Quick answer: Capital gains usually arise when a capital asset is transferred or sold. Listed equity and equity-oriented mutual funds have specific short-term and long-term rules. Property, gold, debt funds, ESOPs and crypto need separate handling. FD interest is not capital gains; it is generally interest income.

What counts as capital gains

Capital gains arise when a capital asset is transferred. A capital asset can include property, securities, mutual fund units, jewellery and several other asset types. The Income-tax Act, 2025 defines capital asset broadly, while excluding items such as stock-in-trade and certain personal effects. Jewellery, artwork and similar valuable items are specifically not treated as simple personal effects.

In a filing tool, this means “capital gains” should not be one field. A user who sold listed shares is not the same as a user who sold land, redeemed debt mutual funds or transferred crypto. Each one needs its own line in the engine.

Short-term vs long-term

The short-term or long-term classification depends on the holding period and the asset type. Under the uploaded Act, a short-term capital asset is generally an asset held for not more than 24 months before transfer. For listed securities, units of UTI, equity-oriented funds and zero-coupon bonds, the 24-month reference is replaced by 12 months.

Asset typeShort-term if heldWhy it matters
Listed equity shares12 months or lessOften special-rate capital gains schedule.
Equity-oriented mutual funds12 months or lessShort-term and long-term rates can differ.
Property / gold / other assetsUsually based on longer asset-specific holding rulesNeeds separate treatment and sometimes cost/indexation review.
Specified mutual funds / market-linked debenturesCan have specific deeming rulesNeeds CA validation for transaction type and acquisition date.
Crypto / VDASpecial treatmentNot handled like normal equity capital gains.

Common capital gains buckets

Listed equity shares

When listed shares are sold, the tool should ask for short-term and long-term gains separately. It should also capture losses because capital loss set-off and carry-forward need a proper return.

Equity mutual funds

Equity-oriented mutual funds are often treated closer to listed equity than to debt funds. The holding period and long-term threshold must be checked.

Debt mutual funds and other mutual funds

Debt and specified mutual fund rules have changed over time. This category needs transaction-date logic. The MVP captures it separately so a CA can later add the exact rule based on acquisition and redemption dates.

Property

Property gains require sale consideration, stamp duty value, acquisition cost, improvement cost, transfer expenses, holding period and sometimes exemption checks if reinvestment is made.

Gold and jewellery

Gold and jewellery can create capital gains. Users often miss this because they think only shares and mutual funds create capital gains.

ESOP / RSU sale

ESOPs and RSUs can have salary perquisite taxation at vest/exercise and capital gains on sale. The dates and fair value matter.

Crypto / VDA

Virtual digital assets have a special tax treatment and are not the same as listed equity. Loss set-off and deduction rules need careful handling.

What is not capital gains

FD interest is not capital gains. Savings interest, FD interest and interest on securities usually fall under income from other sources, not capital gains. This is why Your CA Partner has now separated “Interest income” from “Capital gains” in the income step.

Documents needed

  • Broker capital gains statement
  • Mutual fund capital gains statement
  • Contract notes for large transactions
  • Property purchase deed and sale deed
  • Improvement expense proof
  • Crypto exchange statement
  • ESOP exercise and sale documents
  • AIS, TIS and Form 26AS
The MVP currently handles common capital gains buckets for preview. Detailed loss set-off, indexation, grandfathering, exemption claims and transaction-date rules should be reviewed before public filing use.

FAQs

Do I need ITR-2 if I sold shares?

Many individual taxpayers with capital gains and no business income use ITR-2, because the return needs capital gains schedules.

Is dividend income capital gains?

No. Dividend is usually reported separately as income, not as capital gains from sale.

Can capital losses reduce tax?

Capital loss treatment depends on the type of loss and applicable set-off rules. This needs correct schedule reporting.

Source note: This article is written for educational ITR filing guidance and should be reviewed before final filing. Rules can depend on assessment year, taxpayer status, dates and transaction facts.