How long do I need to hold my property for long-term capital gains?

Short answerYou need to hold immovable property for more than 24 months for the gain to be long-term — taxed at 12.5% plus surcharge and cess. Held for 24 months or less, the gain is short-term and taxed at your slab rate.

The 24-month rule

For land and buildings, the long-term threshold is more than 24 months. Cross it and the gain is long-term, taxed at 12.5% (from 23 July 2024). Sell within 24 months and it is short-term, taxed at your slab rate with TDS up to 30%.

Counting from when

The period runs from the date of acquisition. For inherited property, you include the previous owner’s holding period, so it is almost always long-term. Holding periods and rates change with the Finance Act — confirm before selling.

Why it matters — an example

Example: you bought a flat 20 months ago and a buyer appears. Selling now makes the gain short-term, taxed at slab rates (up to 30%) with heavy TDS. Waiting just over four more months makes it long-term at 12.5% — often a large saving in both tax and blocked TDS. The timing decision can be worth lakhs. The holding period also decides whether the reinvestment exemptions are even available — Section 54 and 54EC only apply to long-term gains, so a short-term sale is taxed at slab rates with no shelter at all. That makes crossing the 24-month line doubly valuable: a lower rate and access to the exemptions. Our NRI property service can model the difference.

Talk to CA Vijay R Singh

Deciding when to sell to get the long-term rate? You can message him directly, or book a short call to talk through your situation.

This answer is general information for NRIs, not tax advice. Tax rates, thresholds and forms change with each Finance Act — please confirm the current position for your own facts, or speak to us, before acting.

© 2026 Vijay R Singh & Co., Chartered Accountants | FRN 136869W | M.No. 153926 | +91 98607 23959 | info@cavijaysingh.com | Andheri East, Mumbai 400069

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