Gifting stocks to your spouse, child or friend? Check how the tax rules differ in three scenarios
What’s a gift that has the potential to be worth more tomorrow than it is today? Stock. But before transferring shares to a family member or friend, it’s important to understand the tax rules. Who receives the gift determines whether it’s tax-free and how future gains are taxed. Here’s a look at the rules and the implications before you make the final transfer.
Explaining how gifted stocks are taxed (when presented to a family member) under different scenarios, CA Divam Sharma, Co-founder & Fund Manager, Green Portfolio, says, “they are fully tax-exempt at the time of transfer if the recipient is a close relative, which includes spouse, siblings, parents, children, and lineal ascendants or descendants.”
Two important things investors should keep in mind when gifting stocks to a family member:
One, the donor’s original cost of acquisition and holding period carry forward to the recipient, so long-term or short-term capital gains treatment on eventual sale is calculated from the original purchase date, not the date of the gift.
- For example, Raj bought 100 shares of ABC Ltd. in June 2022 at ₹500 per share, investing ₹50,000.
- In August 2026, when the shares were worth ₹1,200 each (total value ₹1.2 lakh), he gifted them to his daughter, Priya.
- Priya sells the shares in December 2026 for ₹1,300 per share ( ₹1.3 lakh).
- Sale value: ₹1,30,000
- Cost of acquisition: ₹50,000 (Raj’s original purchase cost, not ₹1.2 lakh)
- Long-term capital gain: ₹80,000
Since Raj originally bought the shares in 2022, Priya also benefits from that holding period, and the gains are treated as long-term capital gains, even though she held the shares for only a few months.
Two, any income earned on stocks gifted to a spouse or minor child gets clubbed back with the donor’s income, so this is not a route to shift tax liability within the immediate family.
- Neha gifts shares worth ₹10 lakh to her husband, Amit and over the next year:
- The shares pay dividends of ₹40,000.
- The ₹40,000 dividend is clubbed with Neha’s income and taxed according to her tax slab.
- Amit sells some shares and earns a capital gain of ₹2 lakh.
- Those gains are also clubbed back with the donor’s income under the clubbing provisions
Taxation rules for gifting stocks to non-family members:
For non-relatives, gifts aggregating to more than ₹50,000 during a financial year are fully taxable in the recipient’s hands as income from other sources at the recipient’s slab rate, says Sharma
Rahul gifts listed shares worth ₹80,000 to his friend Karan.
Since Karan is not a specified relative and the aggregate value of gifts received during the financial year exceeds ₹50,000, the entire ₹80,000 (not just ₹30,000) becomes taxable in Karan’s hands as Income from Other Sources, and tax is payable according to his applicable income-tax slab.
“We recommend executing a simple gift deed alongside the off-market demat transfer for clean documentation, particularly when the value is significant,” Sharma explains
If the Income Tax Department later seeks clarification, the gift deed and demat transaction records serve as documentary evidence that the transfer was a genuine gift rather than a sale or another transaction.