A tax levied by the government on legal documents and transactions such as property transfers, share purchases, and loan agreements.
Stamp Duty is a state-level tax in India payable on the execution of various instruments (documents) as specified in the Indian Stamp Act 1899 and respective State Stamp Acts. It applies to: property sale/purchase deeds, lease agreements, partnership deeds, loan agreements, share transfers, insurance policies, and court documents. Rates vary by state and document type (typically 3–8% for property, 0.005–0.015% for share market transactions). Non-payment or under-payment renders the document inadmissible as evidence in court. E-stamping and franking have modernized the payment process.
Buying a ₹80,00,000 flat in Maharashtra (stamp duty 6% + 1% registration): Stamp Duty = ₹80,00,000 × 6% = ₹4,80,000. Registration fee = ₹80,000. Total: ₹5,60,000. In Karnataka (5.6%): ₹4,48,000. Women buyers in many states get 1–2% concession. These costs are over and above the property price.
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For property: Stamp duty and registration charges on a house property can be claimed as deduction under Section 80C of the Income Tax Act (up to ₹1.5 lakh limit, shared with other 80C investments) in the year of payment. For business properties, it's added to the cost of the asset (capitalized) and impacts capital gains calculation on future sale.
The document is 'not duly stamped' and: 1) Cannot be admitted as evidence in court, 2) Cannot be used for registration, 3) If detected later, penalty of 2% per month on deficient amount (up to 400% of deficit in some states) is charged. Revenue authorities can impound under-stamped documents during audits.
A tax paid directly by an individual or organization to the government, where the burden cannot be shifted to another person. Examples include income tax, corporate tax, and capital gains tax.
A tax levied on goods and services rather than on income, where the burden can be passed on from the seller to the end consumer. GST is India's primary indirect tax.
The legal framework of laws, regulations, and filings that a business must adhere to, including tax filings, labor laws, corporate regulations, and industry-specific requirements.
The profit earned from selling a capital asset (property, shares, mutual funds, etc.) for more than its purchase price, taxable under the Income Tax Act.
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