Section 54EC of the Income Tax Act 1961 allows taxpayers to claim exemption from Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) arising on transfer of any long-term capital asset — most commonly land or property — by reinvesting the gain amount (up to ₹50 lakh per financial year) in specified long-term bonds issued by notified infrastructure institutions, within six months of the transfer.
Definition
The notified institutions eligible under Section 54EC are: Rural Electrification Corporation (REC), National Highways Authority of India (NHAI), Power Finance Corporation (PFC), and Indian Railway Finance Corporation (IRFC). These bonds carry a mandatory lock-in of 5 years from the date of investment (extended from 3 years by Finance Act 2018). Premature redemption, pledge as collateral, or assignment during the lock-in period forfeits the exemption and the deferred gain becomes taxable in the year of breach. The maximum investment eligible for exemption is ₹50 lakh per financial year — across all 54EC bonds combined, not per issuer.
Section 54EC applies to LTCG on all long-term capital assets (property, land, unlisted shares, gold). It does not apply to short-term capital gains. For listed securities (stocks, equity mutual funds), the more appropriate exemption route is Section 112A (12.5% LTCG tax with ₹1.25L annual exemption) rather than 54EC bonds, which yield only ~5.25% p.a. taxable interest.
Why it matters for investors
Property sales by NRIs and resident Indians frequently generate substantial LTCG — selling a flat purchased at ₹40L for ₹1 crore after indexation yields a gain that, if untaxed, is available for compounding. Section 54EC provides a legal deferral mechanism: the gain is sheltered for 5 years in AAA-rated government-backed bonds. The trade-off is liquidity foregone — ₹50L locked at ~5.25% for 5 years versus potentially higher equity returns. The interest earned on 54EC bonds is taxable as income from other sources at slab rates — only the capital gain itself is exempt, not the coupon. NRIs selling Indian property face TDS of 20% (plus surcharge/cess) withheld by the buyer under Section 195 — they can apply for a lower/nil TDS certificate from the Assessing Officer if they plan to claim 54EC exemption.
The ₹50 lakh cap (across both financial years straddling the sale date, if sale occurs near year-end) limits the utility for large-ticket transactions. For property sales generating gains above ₹1 crore, the Section 54 exemption (reinvestment in residential property) may cover a larger proportion.
Worked example
Scenario: Suresh sells a plot of land in Raipur in November 2024 for ₹1,20,00,000. Indexed cost of acquisition (after Cost Inflation Index adjustment): ₹70,00,000. LTCG = ₹50,00,000.
Section 54EC calculation:
- LTCG arising: ₹50,00,000
- Investment in REC 54EC bonds within 6 months (by May 2025): ₹50,00,000
- Exemption claimed: ₹50,00,000 (entire LTCG)
- Tax on LTCG (at 20% + surcharge + cess without indexation post-Finance Act 2024 for property): Nil (fully exempted)
- Interest earned on REC bonds at 5.25% p.a. over 5 years: ₹50L × 5.25% × 5 = ₹13,12,500 (taxable at Suresh's slab rate)
Interpretation: Suresh avoids ₹10,40,000+ in LTCG tax by deploying ₹50L in REC bonds. He earns ₹13.1L gross interest over 5 years but pays income tax on it at slab rates. Net effective deferral value depends on his opportunity cost over the lock-in period.
Note: This example uses illustrative figures. Indexation treatment may vary based on Finance Act applicable at time of sale. Past performance is not indicative of future returns.
See also
- LTCG (Long-Term Capital Gains) — the gain type Section 54EC shelters
- Indexation Benefit — reduces the computed LTCG before 54EC investment
- TDS — Section 195 TDS withheld by buyer on NRI property sale proceeds
- Capital Gains Tax in India — Complete Guide
- NRI (Non-Resident Indian) — special TDS and exemption rules apply
Primary source
Income Tax Act 1961, Section 54EC (Capital gain not to be charged on investment in certain bonds): incometax.gov.in — Section 54EC. Finance Act 2018 extended lock-in from 3 to 5 years. REC bond issuance details: recindia.nic.in.
Past performance is not indicative of future returns. Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks. Read all scheme-related documents carefully. ARN-314872. Content is informational and not investment advice.