Introduction

Income from House Property is one of the five heads of income under the Income Tax Act, 1961. This head covers income earned from letting out property or deemed rent from self-occupied property.

📌 Key Provisions for Assessment Year 2025-26 (F.Y. 2024-25):

  • Self-Occupied Property: Maximum 2 properties can be treated as self-occupied
  • Interest Deduction (Self-Occupied): Maximum ₹2,00,000 per year
  • Interest Deduction (Let Out): No limit on interest deduction
  • Standard Deduction: 30% of Net Annual Value (only for let out property)
  • Municipal Taxes: Deductible only if paid by owner during the year
  • Pre-construction Interest: 1/5th deductible over 5 years

Key Points to Remember:

  • Section 22: Chargeability of income from house property
  • Section 23: Determination of Annual Value
  • Section 24: Deductions from income from house property
  • Section 25: Special provisions for property let out on rent

Part I: Chargeability and Exemptions

Essential Conditions for Chargeability (Section 22)

For income to be taxable under "House Property", ALL four conditions must be satisfied:

Condition No. Condition Explanation
1 Owner of the Property The assessee must be the legal owner of the property. Ownership includes deemed ownership under certain circumstances.
2 Buildings or Lands Appurtenant Property should consist of any building or land appurtenant thereto (land attached to building).
3 Not Used for Business/Profession The property should not be used by the owner for his own business or profession. If used for business, income is taxable under "Profits and Gains of Business or Profession".
4 Annual Value Determinable The annual value of the property must be determinable. Annual value is the notional rent that property can fetch in a year.

Example 1: Checking Chargeability

Question: Mr. A owns a house. He uses the ground floor for his medical clinic and lets out the first floor for ₹15,000 per month. How will this be taxed for A.Y. 2025-26?

Solution:

  • Ground Floor: Used for profession (medical clinic) → Taxable under "Profits and Gains of Business or Profession"
  • First Floor: Let out for residential purpose → Taxable under "Income from House Property"
  • Income from House Property: ₹15,000 × 12 = ₹1,80,000 (subject to deductions)

Property Income Exempt from Tax [Section 23(1)]

The following properties are exempt from taxation under this head:

Exemption Type Description Condition
1. Agricultural Land Any land used for agricultural purposes Must be used exclusively for agriculture and not for residential/commercial purposes
2. Own Business/Profession Property used for assessee's own business or profession Entire property must be used for business. If partly let out, that portion is taxable under house property
3. Property Not Capable of Earning Income Property which cannot be occupied due to its condition Property is uninhabitable or legally restricted from occupation. Annual value = NIL

Example 2: Exemption Cases

Case 1: Mr. B owns agricultural land of 10 acres where he grows wheat and rice.

Tax Treatment: Income from agricultural operations is EXEMPT from tax. Not taxable under house property.


Case 2: Mrs. C owns a shop building which she uses entirely for her retail business.

Tax Treatment: Not taxable under house property. Business income taxable under "Profits and Gains of Business or Profession".


Case 3: Mr. D owns a house which was damaged in an earthquake and is not habitable.

Tax Treatment: Annual value = NIL. No income chargeable under house property until it becomes habitable.

Part II: Computation - Let Out House Property

Income from let out property is computed in FOUR steps:

Step 1: Gross Annual Value (GAV)

GAV is determined by comparing Expected Rent and Actual Rent:

Formula for GAV:

GAV = Higher of:

  • (a) Expected Rent (Fair Rent or Municipal Value, whichever is higher, subject to Standard Rent)
  • (b) Actual Rent Received/Receivable

Less: Unrealized Rent (if conditions satisfied)

Component Definition Treatment
Municipal Value Value assessed by municipal authorities for tax purposes Used for comparison with Fair Rent
Fair Rent Rent that similar property can fetch in the market Compared with Municipal Value, higher is taken
Standard Rent Maximum rent fixed under Rent Control Act Acts as ceiling if applicable
Actual Rent Rent actually received or receivable during the year Compared with Expected Rent
Unrealized Rent Rent not received from tenant Deducted if recovery action initiated

Example 3: Calculation of GAV

Given Information:

  • Municipal Value: ₹2,00,000
  • Fair Rent: ₹2,40,000
  • Standard Rent: ₹2,20,000
  • Actual Rent Received: ₹2,50,000
  • Property remained vacant for 2 months

Solution:

Step 1: Expected Rent
Higher of MV and FR: ₹2,40,000
Subject to Standard Rent: ₹2,20,000
Expected Rent: ₹2,20,000
Step 2: Actual Rent (annualized)
Rent received for 10 months: ₹2,50,000
Step 3: GAV
Higher of Expected and Actual: ₹2,50,000

Note: Vacancy period adjustment is already reflected in actual rent received.

Step 3: Standard Deduction [Section 24(a)]

Standard Deduction:

30% of Net Annual Value (NAV)

This deduction is allowed as a flat rate to cover repairs, collection charges, and other maintenance expenses.

Step 4: Interest on Borrowed Capital [Section 24(b)]

Purpose of Loan Deduction Allowed Conditions
Purchase/Construction Actual interest paid (No limit for let out property) Loan must be taken for purchase, construction, repair, or renewal
Repairs/Renewal Actual interest paid Work must be completed during the previous year
Pre-construction Period Interest 1/5th of pre-construction interest for 5 years Allowed after construction is complete

Final Calculation - Let Out Property

Income from House Property:

Gross Annual Value (GAV) ₹ xxx
Less: Municipal Taxes paid by owner ₹ xxx
Net Annual Value (NAV) ₹ xxx
Less: Deductions under Section 24
(a) Standard Deduction @ 30% of NAV ₹ xxx
(b) Interest on borrowed capital ₹ xxx
Income from House Property ₹ xxx

Example 4: Complete Computation - Let Out Property

Problem:

Mr. Sharma owns a house property which is let out. Following are the details for the A.Y. 2025-26 (F.Y. 2024-25):

  • Municipal Value: ₹3,00,000
  • Fair Rent: ₹3,50,000
  • Standard Rent: ₹3,20,000
  • Rent Received: ₹30,000 per month (12 months)
  • Municipal Taxes: ₹40,000 (paid by owner)
  • Interest on loan taken for construction: ₹1,20,000

Calculate Income from House Property.

Solution:

Step 1: Gross Annual Value
Municipal Value ₹3,00,000
Fair Rent ₹3,50,000
Higher of above ₹3,50,000
Restricted to Standard Rent ₹3,20,000
Expected Rent ₹3,20,000
Actual Rent (₹30,000 × 12) ₹3,60,000
GAV (Higher of Expected and Actual) ₹3,60,000
Step 2: Net Annual Value
GAV ₹3,60,000
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹40,000
NAV ₹3,20,000
Step 3 & 4: Deductions
NAV ₹3,20,000
Less: Standard Deduction @ 30% ₹96,000
Less: Interest on borrowed capital ₹1,20,000
Income from House Property ₹1,04,000

Part III: Computation - Self Occupied House Property

Annual Value of Self Occupied Property

Key Rules for Self Occupied Property:

  • Annual Value = NIL (Zero) for self-occupied property
  • Maximum TWO properties can be treated as self-occupied
  • Conditions for self-occupation:
    • Property is not let out during the year
    • Owner or family resides in the property
    • Property is not used for any other purpose
  • If more than 2 properties are self-occupied: Owner can choose any 2 as self-occupied, rest will be deemed let out
Particulars Let Out Property Self Occupied Property
Annual Value As computed (GAV - Municipal Tax) NIL (Zero)
Standard Deduction u/s 24(a) 30% of NAV - Allowed NOT Allowed
Interest u/s 24(b) Actual Interest - No Limit Maximum ₹2,00,000
Result Usually Positive Income Usually Loss (Negative)

Deductions Available for Self Occupied Property

Deduction Type Availability Maximum Limit
Standard Deduction [Sec 24(a)] NOT ALLOWED Not Applicable
Interest on Loan [Sec 24(b)] ALLOWED ₹2,00,000 (for self-occupied)

Computation Formula - Self Occupied Property:

Annual Value (Self Occupied) ₹ 0
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹ xxx (if paid)
Net Annual Value ₹ 0 (or negative)
Less: Standard Deduction @ 30% NOT ALLOWED
Less: Interest on borrowed capital ₹ xxx (Max ₹2,00,000)
Income from House Property ₹ (Loss)

Note: Loss from self-occupied property can be set off against income from other heads.

Special Provisions for Interest Deduction:

  • If property acquired/constructed with borrowed capital:
    • Acquisition completed by 31st March: Interest deduction up to ₹2,00,000
    • Pre-construction period interest: 1/5th allowed for 5 years (within ₹2,00,000 limit)
  • If loan taken for repairs/renewal: Interest allowed up to ₹30,000
  • Excess interest: Cannot be carried forward if it exceeds the limit

Example 5: Self Occupied Property Computation

Problem:

Mrs. Verma owns a house property in which she resides with her family. Details for A.Y. 2025-26 (F.Y. 2024-25):

  • Municipal Value: ₹4,00,000
  • Municipal Taxes paid: ₹50,000
  • Interest on housing loan: ₹2,80,000
  • Property was purchased in 2023 with loan

Calculate Income from House Property.

Solution:

Computation of Income from House Property
Annual Value (Self Occupied) ₹ 0
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹ 50,000
Net Annual Value ₹ (50,000)
Less: Deductions u/s 24
(a) Standard Deduction @ 30% Not Allowed
(b) Interest on borrowed capital
    Actual Interest: ₹2,80,000
    Restricted to maximum ₹ 2,00,000
Income from House Property ₹ (2,50,000)

Note: Loss of ₹2,50,000 can be set off against other heads of income like salary, business income, etc.

Disallowed Interest: ₹80,000 (₹2,80,000 - ₹2,00,000) - This cannot be claimed or carried forward.

Example 6: Multiple Properties (Mixed)

Problem:

Mr. Kumar owns three properties with following details for A.Y. 2025-26 (F.Y. 2024-25):

Property A (Delhi - Let Out):

  • Municipal Value: ₹2,50,000
  • Rent Received: ₹3,00,000
  • Municipal Taxes: ₹30,000
  • Interest on loan: ₹80,000

Property B (Mumbai - Self Occupied):

  • Municipal Taxes: ₹40,000
  • Interest on loan: ₹1,50,000

Property C (Bangalore - Self Occupied):

  • Municipal Taxes: ₹25,000
  • Interest on loan: ₹1,00,000

Calculate total Income from House Property.

Solution:

Property A (Let Out):

GAV (Actual Rent > MV) ₹3,00,000
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹30,000
NAV ₹2,70,000
Less: Standard Deduction @ 30% ₹81,000
Less: Interest on loan ₹80,000
Income from Property A ₹1,09,000

Property B & C (Self Occupied - Maximum 2 allowed):

Both can be treated as self-occupied as only 2 properties are self-occupied.

Property B:

Annual Value ₹0
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹40,000
Less: Interest (Max ₹2,00,000) ₹1,50,000
Income from Property B ₹(1,90,000)

Property C:

Annual Value ₹0
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹25,000
Less: Interest ₹1,00,000
Income from Property C ₹(1,25,000)

Total Income from House Property:

Property A ₹1,09,000
Property B ₹(1,90,000)
Property C ₹(1,25,000)
Net Income from House Property ₹(2,06,000)

Note: Net loss of ₹2,06,000 can be set off against other heads of income.

Flowchart: Computation of Income from House Property

START Property Type? (Let Out / Self) Let Out Calculate GAV (Higher of Expected & Actual Rent) Calculate NAV GAV - Municipal Tax Deduct: • 30% of NAV • Interest (No Limit) Self Occupied Annual Value = NIL (Zero) How many self-occupied? ≤ 2 Properties Deduct: • No 30% deduction • Interest: Max ₹2,00,000 > 2 Properties Choose any 2 as Self-Occupied Rest treated as deemed let out Income from House Property (Can be Positive Income or Loss) END

Mind Map: Income from House Property

INCOME FROM HOUSE PROPERTY CHARGEABILITY (Section 22) Owner of Property Buildings/Lands Not for Business/ Profession EXEMPTIONS Agricultural Land Own Business/ Profession Not Capable of Earning Income LET OUT PROPERTY GAV Calculation (Expected vs Actual) NAV = GAV - Municipal Tax 30% Standard Deduction Interest on Loan (No Limit) SELF OCCUPIED Annual Value = NIL (Zero) Max 2 Properties as Self-Occupied No 30% Deduction Interest: Max ₹2,00,000 DEDUCTIONS Section 24(a) Standard Deduction Section 24(b) Interest on Loan

Comprehensive Examples

Example 7: Complex Scenario with Vacancy and Unrealized Rent

Problem:

Mr. Patel owns a house property with following details for A.Y. 2025-26 (F.Y. 2024-25):

  • Municipal Value: ₹3,60,000
  • Fair Rent: ₹4,00,000
  • Standard Rent: ₹3,80,000
  • Property was let out at ₹35,000 per month from 1st April 2024 to 31st December 2024 (9 months)
  • Tenant vacated without paying last 2 months rent (₹70,000)
  • Property remained vacant from 1st January 2025 to 31st March 2025 (3 months)
  • Municipal Taxes: ₹45,000 (paid by owner)
  • Interest on housing loan: ₹1,50,000
  • Legal action initiated for recovery of unrealized rent

Calculate Income from House Property.

Solution:

Step 1: Determine GAV
(a) Expected Rent:
Municipal Value ₹3,60,000
Fair Rent ₹4,00,000
Higher of MV and FR ₹4,00,000
Restricted to Standard Rent ₹3,80,000
Expected Rent ₹3,80,000
(b) Actual Rent:
Rent for 9 months @ ₹35,000 ₹3,15,000
Add: Unrealized rent (2 months) ₹70,000
Total Actual Rent Receivable ₹3,85,000
Less: Unrealized Rent (recovery action initiated) ₹70,000
Actual Rent ₹3,15,000
(c) GAV:
Higher of Expected (₹3,80,000) and Actual (₹3,15,000) ₹3,80,000
Step 2: Calculate NAV
GAV ₹3,80,000
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹45,000
NAV ₹3,35,000
Step 3 & 4: Deductions
NAV ₹3,35,000
Less: Standard Deduction @ 30% ₹1,00,500
Less: Interest on borrowed capital ₹1,50,000
Income from House Property ₹84,500

Notes:

  • Vacancy period is automatically adjusted as actual rent is for 9 months only
  • Unrealized rent deducted as legal action was initiated for recovery
  • Expected rent is higher, so GAV is ₹3,80,000

Example 8: Pre-construction Period Interest

Problem:

Mrs. Gupta purchased a house property in December 2023 with a housing loan. Details for A.Y. 2025-26 (F.Y. 2024-25) are:

  • Date of purchase: 15th December 2023
  • Loan taken: ₹50,00,000
  • Interest from April 2023 to December 2023 (Pre-construction): ₹2,50,000
  • Interest from April 2024 to March 2025 (Current year): ₹3,00,000
  • Property is let out at ₹40,000 per month
  • Municipal Value: ₹4,00,000
  • Municipal Taxes: ₹50,000

Calculate Income from House Property for A.Y. 2025-26.

Solution:

Computation of Income from House Property
GAV (Actual Rent: ₹40,000 × 12 = ₹4,80,000) ₹4,80,000
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹50,000
NAV ₹4,30,000
Less: Deductions u/s 24
(a) Standard Deduction @ 30% ₹1,29,000
(b) Interest on borrowed capital:
   • Pre-construction interest: ₹2,50,000 ÷ 5 ₹50,000
   • Current year interest ₹3,00,000
   • Total Interest ₹3,50,000
Income from House Property ₹(49,000)

Important Notes:

  • Pre-construction interest is spread over 5 years (1/5th each year)
  • Current year interest is fully deductible for let out property
  • Loss can be set off against other heads of income
  • Remaining 4/5th of pre-construction interest (₹2,00,000) will be allowed in next 4 years

Practice Questions

5 Marks Questions

Question 1 (5 Marks)

Mr. Rajesh owns two house properties. Details for A.Y. 2025-26 (F.Y. 2024-25) are:

Property 1 (Mumbai - Let Out):

  • Municipal Value: ₹5,00,000
  • Fair Rent: ₹5,50,000
  • Standard Rent: ₹5,20,000
  • Actual Rent: ₹6,00,000
  • Municipal Taxes: ₹60,000
  • Interest on loan: ₹1,80,000

Property 2 (Delhi - Self Occupied):

  • Municipal Taxes: ₹40,000
  • Interest on housing loan: ₹2,40,000

Compute total Income from House Property.

Property 1 (Let Out):
Expected Rent (Higher of MV & FR, limited to SR) ₹5,20,000
Actual Rent ₹6,00,000
GAV (Higher of both) ₹6,00,000
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹60,000
NAV ₹5,40,000
Less: Standard Deduction @ 30% ₹1,62,000
Less: Interest ₹1,80,000
Income from Property 1 ₹1,98,000
Property 2 (Self Occupied):
Annual Value ₹0
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹40,000
Less: Interest (Max ₹2,00,000) ₹2,00,000
Income from Property 2 ₹(2,40,000)
Total Income from House Property:
Property 1 + Property 2 ₹1,98,000 - ₹2,40,000
Net Income from House Property ₹(42,000)

Question 2 (5 Marks)

Explain the concept of Gross Annual Value (GAV) and Net Annual Value (NAV) with a suitable example showing calculation of Expected Rent when Fair Rent, Municipal Value, and Standard Rent are given.

Answer:

Gross Annual Value (GAV):

  • GAV is the annual rent that a property is expected to fetch
  • It is determined by comparing Expected Rent and Actual Rent
  • Higher of the two is taken as GAV
  • Unrealized rent can be deducted if recovery action is initiated

Expected Rent Calculation:

  1. Compare Municipal Value and Fair Rent - take HIGHER
  2. Compare this amount with Standard Rent - take LOWER (if Standard Rent is applicable)
  3. This gives Expected Rent

Net Annual Value (NAV):

  • NAV = GAV - Municipal Taxes paid by owner
  • Only taxes actually paid during the year are deductible
  • NAV is the base for calculating standard deduction

Example:

Municipal Value ₹3,00,000
Fair Rent ₹3,50,000
Standard Rent ₹3,20,000
Actual Rent Received ₹3,40,000
Municipal Taxes paid ₹40,000

Calculation:

Step 1: Expected Rent
Higher of MV (₹3,00,000) and FR (₹3,50,000) ₹3,50,000
Restricted to Standard Rent ₹3,20,000
Expected Rent ₹3,20,000
Step 2: GAV
Higher of Expected (₹3,20,000) and Actual (₹3,40,000) ₹3,40,000
Step 3: NAV
GAV ₹3,40,000
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹40,000
NAV ₹3,00,000

Question 3 (5 Marks)

Mrs. Sharma owns a house which she purchased with a loan in June 2023. The construction was completed in November 2023. Following are the details for A.Y. 2025-26 (F.Y. 2024-25):

  • Interest paid during construction (April 2023 to November 2023): ₹3,00,000
  • Interest paid during F.Y. 2024-25: ₹4,00,000
  • Property is let out at ₹50,000 per month
  • Municipal Taxes: ₹60,000

Compute Income from House Property assuming Municipal Value is ₹5,00,000.

Computation of Income from House Property
GAV (Actual Rent: ₹50,000 × 12) ₹6,00,000
Less: Municipal Taxes ₹60,000
NAV ₹5,40,000
Less: Deductions u/s 24
(a) Standard Deduction @ 30% of NAV ₹1,62,000
(b) Interest on borrowed capital:
Interest Calculation:
Pre-construction interest: ₹3,00,000
Allowed: 1/5th of ₹3,00,000 ₹60,000
Current year interest ₹4,00,000
Total Interest deductible ₹4,60,000
Final Computation:
NAV ₹5,40,000
Less: Standard Deduction ₹1,62,000
Less: Interest ₹4,60,000
Income from House Property ₹(82,000)

Notes:

  • Pre-construction interest is spread over 5 years (1/5th = ₹60,000 per year)
  • For let out property, there is no limit on interest deduction
  • Loss of ₹82,000 can be set off against other income
  • Remaining 4/5th (₹2,40,000) will be allowed in subsequent 4 years

Question 4 (5 Marks)

Explain the essential conditions for chargeability of income under the head "House Property" with suitable examples. Also mention the properties which are exempt from taxation under this head.

Answer:

Essential Conditions for Chargeability (Section 22):

ALL four conditions must be satisfied simultaneously:

  1. Ownership of Property:
    • Assessee must be the legal owner of the property
    • Deemed ownership is also included
    • Example: Mr. A owns a flat - he is the owner
  2. Buildings or Lands Appurtenant:
    • Property should consist of buildings or land attached to building
    • Example: House with garden - both are covered
  3. Not Used for Business/Profession:
    • Property should not be used for owner's business or profession
    • If used for business - taxable under "Business Income"
    • Example: If Mr. A uses his flat for his CA practice - not taxable under house property
  4. Annual Value Determinable:
    • It must be possible to determine annual rental value
    • Example: Habitable property has determinable value

Properties Exempt from Tax [Section 23(1)]:

Type Explanation Example
Agricultural Land Land used exclusively for agriculture 10 acres of farmland used for rice cultivation
Property for Own Business Used entirely for assessee's business/profession Doctor's clinic building used for medical practice
Not Capable of Earning Income Property cannot be occupied House damaged beyond repair after natural disaster

Important Note: If property is partly let out and partly used for business, proportionate income is taxable under house property.

Question 5 (5 Marks)

Mr. Singh owns three properties. For A.Y. 2025-26 (F.Y. 2024-25):

  • Property A: Self-occupied, Interest on loan: ₹1,80,000, Municipal Tax: ₹30,000
  • Property B: Self-occupied, Interest on loan: ₹1,50,000, Municipal Tax: ₹25,000
  • Property C: Self-occupied, Interest on loan: ₹1,20,000, Municipal Tax: ₹20,000

Compute Income from House Property. Which properties should Mr. Singh choose as self-occupied to minimize tax liability?

Analysis:

Maximum 2 properties can be treated as self-occupied. The third property will be deemed let out with Annual Value calculated as per expected rent.

Strategy: Choose properties with HIGHEST interest as self-occupied (subject to ₹2,00,000 limit) to maximize deduction.

Option 1: Treat A & B as Self-Occupied, C as Deemed Let Out

Property A (Self-Occupied):
Annual Value ₹0
Less: Municipal Tax ₹30,000
Less: Interest (Max ₹2,00,000, actual ₹1,80,000) ₹1,80,000
Loss from A ₹(2,10,000)
Property B (Self-Occupied):
Annual Value ₹0
Less: Municipal Tax ₹25,000
Less: Interest ₹1,50,000
Loss from B ₹(1,75,000)
Property C (Deemed Let Out):
Assume Expected Rent ₹2,00,000
Less: Municipal Tax ₹20,000
NAV ₹1,80,000
Less: 30% Standard Deduction ₹54,000
Less: Interest (No limit) ₹1,20,000
Income from C ₹6,000
Total Income from House Property:
A + B + C ₹(2,10,000) + ₹(1,75,000) + ₹6,000
Net Loss ₹(3,79,000)

Recommendation: Treat Properties A and B as self-occupied as they have higher interest amounts. This maximizes the loss that can be set off against other income.

Note: In the absence of expected rent for Property C, we have assumed a notional amount. The actual computation would depend on Fair Rent, Municipal Value, and Standard Rent.

3 Marks Questions

Question 6 (3 Marks)

Distinguish between "Let Out Property" and "Self Occupied Property" with respect to computation of income from house property.

Answer:

Basis Let Out Property Self Occupied Property
Annual Value Determined by comparing Expected Rent and Actual Rent Taken as NIL (Zero)
Standard Deduction (30%) Allowed on NAV NOT Allowed
Interest on Loan Fully deductible (No limit) Maximum ₹2,00,000
Result Usually results in positive income Usually results in loss
Number Limit No limit on number of properties Maximum 2 properties can be self-occupied

Example:

If property has NAV of ₹3,00,000 and interest of ₹1,50,000:

  • If Let Out: Income = ₹3,00,000 - ₹90,000 (30%) - ₹1,50,000 = ₹60,000
  • If Self Occupied: Income = ₹0 - ₹0 - ₹1,50,000 = ₹(1,50,000)

Question 7 (3 Marks)

What is "Unrealized Rent"? Under what conditions can it be deducted from GAV?

Answer:

Unrealized Rent: Rent which could not be realized from the tenant during the previous year.

Conditions for Deduction:

  1. Tenant's Default: Rent has not been received due to tenant's inability to pay
  2. Vacancy: Tenant has vacated the property
  3. Legal Action: Owner has taken all reasonable steps to recover the rent, including legal proceedings
  4. Not Recoverable: The Assessing Officer is satisfied that the rent cannot be recovered

Treatment:

  • Unrealized rent is DEDUCTED from Actual Rent Received
  • If later recovered, it will be taxable in the year of recovery

Example:

Rent for 12 months @ ₹20,000 ₹2,40,000
Rent received (10 months) ₹2,00,000
Unrealized rent (2 months) ₹40,000
Less: Unrealized rent (recovery action initiated) ₹40,000
Actual Rent for GAV ₹2,00,000

Question 8 (3 Marks)

Mr. Kumar's house property remained vacant for 4 months. Rent receivable: ₹25,000 per month. Municipal Value: ₹2,50,000. Calculate GAV.

Solution:

Calculation of GAV:
(a) Expected Rent:
Municipal Value ₹2,50,000
(No Fair Rent or Standard Rent given)
Expected Rent ₹2,50,000
(b) Actual Rent:
Property let out for 8 months (12 - 4)
Rent @ ₹25,000 × 8 months ₹2,00,000
Actual Rent ₹2,00,000
GAV:
Higher of Expected (₹2,50,000) and Actual (₹2,00,000) ₹2,50,000

Note: Vacancy period is automatically adjusted in actual rent. GAV is higher of expected and actual rent.

Question 9 (3 Marks)

Explain the treatment of Municipal Taxes in computation of income from house property.

Answer:

Municipal Taxes - Key Points:

  1. Deductible from GAV: Municipal taxes are deducted from GAV to arrive at NAV
  2. Who Pays: Only taxes paid by the OWNER are deductible. Taxes paid by tenant are NOT deductible
  3. When Paid: Taxes must be actually PAID during the previous year. Mere liability or assessment is not sufficient
  4. Types of Taxes: Includes property tax, house tax, sewerage tax, drainage tax, etc.

Formula:

NAV = GAV - Municipal Taxes (paid by owner during the year)

Example:

GAV ₹4,00,000
Municipal Tax assessed ₹50,000
Municipal Tax paid by owner during the year ₹40,000
Municipal Tax paid by tenant ₹10,000
Deduction allowed: ₹40,000
NAV ₹3,60,000

Note: ₹10,000 paid by tenant is not deductible. Unpaid assessed tax of ₹10,000 is also not deductible.

Question 10 (3 Marks)

Mrs. Gupta owns 4 self-occupied properties. Advise her on tax implications.

Answer:

Tax Treatment of Multiple Self-Occupied Properties:

Rule: Maximum TWO properties can be treated as self-occupied. Remaining properties are deemed let out.

Advice for Mrs. Gupta (4 properties):

  1. Choose 2 as Self-Occupied:
    • Annual Value = NIL
    • Interest deduction: Maximum ₹2,00,000 per property
    • No 30% standard deduction
    • Usually results in loss
  2. Remaining 2 are Deemed Let Out:
    • Annual Value calculated as per expected rent
    • Standard deduction @ 30% allowed
    • Interest - no limit

Strategy: Choose properties with HIGHEST interest (up to ₹2,00,000) as self-occupied to maximize tax benefit.

Example Scenario:

Property Interest Recommendation
Property 1 ₹1,80,000 Self-Occupied (Full deduction)
Property 2 ₹1,50,000 Self-Occupied (Full deduction)
Property 3 ₹1,00,000 Deemed Let Out (Full deduction + 30%)
Property 4 ₹80,000 Deemed Let Out (Full deduction + 30%)

2 Marks Questions

Question 11 (2 Marks)

What is Standard Deduction under Section 24(a)?

Answer:

Standard Deduction [Section 24(a)]:

  • Rate: 30% of Net Annual Value (NAV)
  • Purpose: To cover repairs, collection charges, and other maintenance expenses
  • Applicability: Allowed ONLY for LET OUT property
  • Not Allowed: For SELF-OCCUPIED property
  • Nature: Flat deduction - no actual expenses need to be proved

Example:

If NAV = ₹3,00,000

Standard Deduction = 30% of ₹3,00,000 = ₹90,000

Question 12 (2 Marks)

Define "Expected Rent" in the context of house property income.

Answer:

Expected Rent: It is the rent that a property is expected to fetch in the market.

Calculation:

  1. Compare Municipal Value and Fair Rent
  2. Take HIGHER of the two
  3. Compare with Standard Rent (if applicable)
  4. Take LOWER value (restricted to Standard Rent)

Formula:

Expected Rent = Higher of (Municipal Value, Fair Rent), subject to Standard Rent

Example:

  • MV = ₹2,00,000, FR = ₹2,50,000, SR = ₹2,20,000
  • Higher of MV and FR = ₹2,50,000
  • Restricted to SR = ₹2,20,000
  • Expected Rent = ₹2,20,000

Question 13 (2 Marks)

What is the maximum limit for interest deduction on self-occupied property?

Answer:

Interest Deduction for Self-Occupied Property:

  • Maximum Limit: ₹2,00,000 per year
  • Applicable for: Loan taken for purchase, construction, repair, or renewal
  • Pre-construction Interest: 1/5th allowed for 5 years (within ₹2,00,000 limit)
  • Excess Interest: Cannot be carried forward or claimed

Special Case - Loan for Repairs:

  • If loan taken only for repairs/renewal: Maximum ₹30,000

Example:

If actual interest paid = ₹2,80,000

Deduction allowed = ₹2,00,000

Disallowed amount = ₹80,000 (cannot be claimed)

Question 14 (2 Marks)

Compute NAV: GAV = ₹5,00,000, Municipal Tax paid by owner = ₹60,000, Municipal Tax paid by tenant = ₹20,000

Solution:

Gross Annual Value (GAV) ₹5,00,000
Less: Municipal Tax paid by owner ₹60,000
Net Annual Value (NAV) ₹4,40,000

Note: Municipal tax of ₹20,000 paid by tenant is NOT deductible. Only tax paid by owner is allowed as deduction.

Question 15 (2 Marks)

List any four properties exempt from taxation under house property.

Answer:

Properties Exempt from Taxation:

  1. Agricultural Land: Land used exclusively for agricultural operations
  2. Property for Own Business/Profession: Property used entirely for assessee's business or profession
  3. Property Not Capable of Earning Income: Property which cannot be occupied due to its condition or legal restrictions
  4. Palace of Ex-Ruler: Palace of an ex-ruler which is not let out and remains with the ex-ruler (special provision)

Note: For properties exempt under points 1 & 2, the entire property must be used for that purpose. Partial use will result in proportionate taxation.

Disclaimer: This resource is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Please consult a qualified Chartered Accountant or Tax Professional for specific situations.

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