Tax on Gifts Received in India FY 2026-27: Rs 50,000 Rule, Relatives Exempt, Wedding Gifts (Sec 56(2)(x))
In short: Under Section 56(2)(x) of the Income Tax Act, gifts above Rs 50,000 in a financial year received from non-relatives are fully taxable as “Income from Other Sources” at your slab rate. Gifts from specified relatives are unlimited tax-free regardless of amount. Wedding gifts received by the bride or groom are tax-free regardless of who gave them. Inheritance, gifts under a will, gifts in contemplation of death, and gifts from local authorities or registered charitable trusts are also exempt. The Rs 50,000 threshold is aggregate per year, not per gift — receiving Rs 30,000 from one friend and Rs 30,000 from another (total Rs 60,000) makes the entire Rs 60,000 taxable.
The Rs 50,000 Threshold Explained
Section 56(2)(x) treats any sum of money or property received without consideration (or for inadequate consideration) as income. The exemption: if the total aggregate from non-relatives in a financial year is Rs 50,000 or less, no tax. The moment it crosses Rs 50,000, the entire amount becomes taxable — not just the excess above the threshold. This is critical to understand.
Worked Example
| Scenario | Aggregate from non-relatives | Tax impact |
|---|---|---|
| Rs 40,000 from friend on birthday | Rs 40,000 | No tax (below threshold) |
| Rs 30,000 friend A + Rs 25,000 friend B | Rs 55,000 | Entire Rs 55,000 taxable |
| Rs 60,000 single gift from colleague | Rs 60,000 | Entire Rs 60,000 taxable |
| Rs 5L wedding gift from friend | Rs 0 effective | Wedding exempt regardless |
| Rs 10L from father | Rs 0 effective | Father is relative — exempt |
Who Counts as a “Relative”
The Income Tax Act has a precise definition. Gifts from these relatives are tax-free unlimited:
- Spouse
- Brother or sister of the individual
- Brother or sister of the spouse
- Brother or sister of either parent
- Any lineal ascendant or descendant (parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, children, grandchildren)
- Any lineal ascendant or descendant of spouse (in-laws, spouse's grandparents, etc.)
- Spouse of any of the above (e.g., brother-in-law's wife, sister-in-law's husband)
Cousins, friends, colleagues, neighbours, distant relatives, fiances (until married) — all are non-relatives for this purpose. Gifts from them above Rs 50,000 aggregate per year are taxable.
Wedding Gift Exemption
The Income Tax Act explicitly exempts gifts received on the occasion of marriage of the individual. This is the broadest exemption — any amount, from any person (relative or not), in cash, kind, or property, received on or around the wedding is tax-free. The key conditions: (a) it must be the marriage of the recipient themselves (not a sibling's marriage), and (b) the gift should be on or close to the wedding date.
This is why elaborate Indian wedding gifting works tax-efficiently. Lakhs in cash or jewellery from non-relatives during the wedding window are entirely tax-free. See our wedding credit card strategy guide for the spending side.
Other Exempt Categories
- Inheritance under a will: Property or money received via will is exempt. Any income subsequently earned from inherited assets is taxable normally.
- Gifts in contemplation of death: Made by someone expecting their death — exempt.
- Gifts from local authority or government: Exempt.
- Gifts from registered educational, medical, charitable trust: Exempt.
- Gifts from any fund/foundation/university registered under Section 12A or 12AA: Exempt.
- HUF receiving gifts from members: Exempt under specific rules.
Movable vs Immovable Property Gifts
The Rs 50,000 threshold applies to movable property (cash, cheque, jewellery, shares, mutual fund units, paintings, sculptures, etc.) and to immovable property received without consideration. For immovable property with inadequate consideration (sold to you below stamp duty value), the difference must exceed Rs 50,000 to trigger tax.
Reporting Gifts in ITR
Taxable gifts (above Rs 50,000 from non-relatives) must be declared under “Income from Other Sources” in the ITR. The tax is computed at your applicable slab rate. The IT Department often catches under-reporting via:
- SFT reporting from banks when large credits hit your account
- Property registrar data for immovable property transactions
- Demat broker reports for share transfers
Mismatch between AIS/Form 26AS and your declared income triggers scrutiny. See our AIS reconciliation guide.
Cash Gift Limit Under Section 269ST
Separately from Section 56(2)(x), Section 269ST prohibits receiving cash above Rs 2,00,000 in aggregate from a single person in a single transaction or related transactions. Violation: penalty equal to the cash amount received. So a wedding gift of Rs 5L from a friend, while exempt under Section 56, would still trigger Section 269ST penalty if paid entirely in cash. Always insist on bank transfer for high-value gifts.
Documentation You Should Keep
- For gifts from relatives: A simple gift deed mentioning the relationship, amount, and reason. Notarisation optional but recommended for amounts above Rs 1L.
- For wedding gifts: Wedding invitation, photographs, gift register (some families maintain this), bank statement showing the credit.
- For inheritance: Will copy, probate (if obtained), legal heir certificate.
- For all gifts: Bank transaction proof — never cash above Rs 2L from a single person.
FAQs
Are gifts from in-laws tax-free?
Yes — in-laws (lineal ascendants of spouse) are explicitly covered in the relatives list.
Is a Rs 51,000 gift from one friend taxable?
Yes — the entire Rs 51,000 is taxable, not just Rs 1,000 above the threshold.
What about Diwali bonus from my employer?
Not a gift — it is part of salary income, taxable under “Salaries” head, not Section 56.
If I receive cash gifts on wedding, do I need to report them?
No need to report wedding gifts in ITR since they are exempt. But maintain bank records — large cash credits without clear source can trigger questions. Cash above Rs 2L from a single person violates Section 269ST regardless of the gift exemption.Are gifts to my HUF taxable?
Gifts from HUF members to the HUF are exempt under specific rules. Gifts from non-members above Rs 50,000 are taxable in the hands of HUF.
Sources
- Income Tax Act, Section 56(2)(x) – Gift taxation
- Section 56(2)(vii) and (viia) – earlier gift provisions (legacy)
- Section 269ST – cash transaction limits
- Definition of “relative” under Explanation to Section 56