Can you really gift mutual funds without paying a single rupee in tax? The answer is yes - but only under strict conditions. As per Section 2(14) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, mutual fund units are classified as capital assets. However, gifting them doesn’t always trigger capital gains tax - unless you cross the ₹50,000 limit or gift to a non-relative. Tax expert Amit Maheshwari, Partner at AKM Global, breaks down the rules.
“Mutual funds are transferable property, but gifting via will, inheritance, or to defined relatives is not considered a transfer,” says Maheshwari. “That means zero tax for the donor. But if you gift to a friend or colleague above ₹50,000 FMV, the entire value becomes taxable in the recipient’s hands as Income from Other Sources.”
Yes - and the definition is broad. Under Section 2(14), a capital asset includes any property - movable, immovable, tangible, or intangible - held by an individual, whether linked to business or not. Judicial precedents have consistently upheld that mutual fund units fall under this umbrella because they are:
This classification becomes critical when you gift, sell, or redeem units - because only then do tax implications arise.
The Income Tax Act carves out exceptions under Section 47. Gifting mutual funds is not treated as a transfer (and hence no capital gains tax for the giver) in these cases:
Result? Zero tax liability for both donor and recipient - regardless of FMV.
Under Section 56(2)(x), any gift (cash, property, shares, mutual funds) received without consideration is taxable if its aggregate FMV exceeds ₹50,000 in a financial year - unless from a relative.
Example: You gift ₹2 lakh worth of equity MF units to your friend. The entire ₹2 lakh is added to your friend’s income and taxed at their slab rate (up to 30% + cess). But if gifted to your brother? 100% tax-free.
The definition is exhaustive. Gifts to these are fully exempt:
Cousins, friends, in-laws (except spouse’s siblings), colleagues? Not exempt.
For listed equity/debt funds: NAV on date of gift.
For unlisted or interval funds: Valuation by merchant banker or as per Rule 11UA.
You can check NAV on AMFI, Value Research, or fund house websites. Keep screenshots - in case of scrutiny.
The cost of acquisition for the recipient is the original cost to the donor (not FMV at gift). Holding period includes donor’s tenure for LTCG/STCG classification.
Example: Father bought units in 2020 for ₹1 lakh. Gifts to son in 2025 when FMV is ₹3 lakh. Son sells in 2026 for ₹3.5 lakh.
Equity Funds (≥65% in Indian stocks):
Debt Funds (≤35% in equity):
Hybrid/Other Funds:
Follow this step-by-step process:
No stamp duty. No TDS. Just ensure correct PAN linkage.
Parents can gift MFs to minor kids (via guardian). Income is clubbed with parent till child turns 18. But post-18, child files separately - and enjoys ₹1.25 lakh LTCG exemption.
Yes - you can gift mutual funds tax-free to relatives or under ₹50,000. Plan early. Use wills. Leverage HUF. Avoid non-relative high-value gifts.
As Amit Maheshwari says: “Gifting MFs is powerful estate planning - if you follow the rules.”
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