Long Term Capital Gains LTCG Tax in India: A Practical WealthSure Guide for Smart ITR Filing
Long term capital gains LTCG tax can feel simple when you see one tax rate online. However, the real calculation often depends on the asset type, holding period, sale date, purchase cost, exemptions, residential status, tax regime, and correct Income Tax Return disclosure.
For many Indian taxpayers, capital gains become stressful only during ITR filing. A salaried person may sell equity mutual funds and assume the tax platform will calculate everything automatically. A freelancer may sell shares and forget advance tax. An NRI may sell Indian property and miss TDS, DTAA, or repatriation checks. A first-time filer may not know why AIS, TIS, Form 26AS, broker statements, Form 16, and bank interest do not match perfectly.
The Income Tax Department has strengthened digital reporting through the Income Tax eFiling portal, Annual Information Statement, Taxpayer Information Summary, and Form 26AS. As a result, capital gains data now appears from brokers, mutual fund registrars, banks, property transactions, and other reporting entities. Therefore, incorrect reporting can lead to mismatch notices, delayed refunds, interest, penalties, or scrutiny.
This guide explains LTCG tax in India with practical examples, checklists, ITR form guidance, and tax planning insights. WealthSure supports taxpayers through expert-assisted tax filing, capital gains computation, NRI tax filing, notice response, and financial advisory services.
Why LTCG Tax Needs More Attention Than Regular Salary ITR Filing
Most salaried taxpayers understand Form 16. They may also know basic deductions under 80C, 80D, HRA, home loan interest, or NPS. However, capital gains tax follows a different logic. It does not always depend on the old tax regime or new tax regime in the same way as salary deductions do.
Instead, LTCG tax depends on the capital asset. Equity shares, equity-oriented mutual funds, real estate, gold, debt mutual funds, listed bonds, unlisted shares, foreign assets, and business assets can have different tax treatment. Also, the Finance Act updates may change rates, exemptions, and indexation rules for a particular assessment year.
For FY 2024-25 and later years, taxpayers should carefully check the sale date and applicable provisions. The Income Tax Department explains that LTCG is generally taxable at 12.5 percent without indexation, while resident individuals and HUFs may have specific relief for land or building acquired before 23 July 2024 and transferred on or after that date. For listed equity shares, equity-oriented funds, and units covered under Section 112A, LTCG above the threshold is taxed at the applicable special rate. You can refer to the official Income Tax Department of India and Income Tax eFiling portal for updated tax utilities and instructions.
WealthSure insight: Do not treat capital gains as a last-minute ITR entry. Reconcile broker reports, mutual fund capital gains statements, AIS, TIS, Form 26AS, bank statements, and purchase records before filing your Income Tax Return.
What Is Long Term Capital Gains LTCG Tax?
Long term capital gains LTCG tax applies when you sell a capital asset after holding it for the prescribed long-term period. The holding period differs by asset class. For example, listed equity shares and equity-oriented mutual funds generally become long-term after more than 12 months. Immovable property usually has a different holding period. Other assets may follow separate rules.
The gain is usually the difference between the sale consideration and the allowable cost. Depending on the asset, the cost may include purchase cost, improvement cost, transfer expenses, and in selected cases, indexed cost or grandfathered value. However, indexation availability depends on current law and asset type.
For ITR filing India, you should not only calculate tax. You must also disclose the capital gains schedule correctly. If your ITR shows salary but AIS shows large mutual fund redemptions or property TDS, the Income Tax Department may ask for clarification.
Common assets that may create LTCG
- Listed equity shares sold after the required holding period
- Equity-oriented mutual fund units and certain ETFs
- Residential or commercial property
- Gold, jewellery, gold ETFs, and similar assets
- Unlisted shares and securities
- Foreign shares, ESOPs, RSUs, and offshore funds
- Business assets sold by professionals or small business owners
If you have salary income plus LTCG, you may need ITR-2 for salaried taxpayers with capital gains. If you also have business or professional income, you may need business and professional ITR filing through ITR-3. Therefore, choosing the right ITR form is as important as calculating the tax.
LTCG Tax Rates in India: A Practical Snapshot
Tax rates can change by assessment year. Therefore, always verify the applicable rules before filing. The table below gives a practical overview for Indian taxpayers, but your final liability depends on income type, asset class, residential status, transaction date, surcharge, cess, exemptions, and documentation.
| Asset Type | Typical Long-Term Trigger | Broad LTCG Treatment | Important Filing Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Listed equity shares | Generally more than 12 months | Special rate under Section 112A on gains above eligible threshold | Report scrip-wise or consolidated details as required by ITR utility |
| Equity-oriented mutual funds | Generally more than 12 months | Special LTCG rules for eligible funds | Use capital gains statement and reconcile with AIS |
| Land or building | Based on property holding period rules | Current law generally applies special LTCG rate, with limited relief for certain resident individuals and HUFs | Check purchase date, sale date, TDS, stamp value, and exemption eligibility |
| Gold and jewellery | Based on asset holding period rules | Depends on latest capital gains provisions | Maintain purchase bills and valuation support |
| Foreign shares or assets | Depends on asset category | May require foreign asset reporting and DTAA review | NRIs and residents with foreign assets need careful disclosure |
Do not rely only on a simple online calculator
Capital gains tax calculators are useful for quick estimates. However, they may not capture all facts, such as grandfathering, exemptions, foreign income, TDS, advance tax interest, property stamp value, clubbing, carry-forward losses, or updated return situations. For complex cases, use capital gains tax support with expert review.
How to Calculate Long Term Capital Gains LTCG Tax Step by Step
A clean calculation starts with the right data. It does not start with the tax rate. First, you identify the asset. Next, you confirm the holding period. Then, you calculate the capital gain. After that, you apply exemptions or set-offs. Finally, you report the gain in the correct ITR schedule.
Step 1: Identify the asset and transaction date
The transaction date matters because rate changes may apply from a specific date. For shares and mutual funds, the contract note, redemption statement, or capital gains report usually gives sale dates. For property, the registered sale deed, agreement date, payment terms, stamp duty value, and TDS details matter.
Step 2: Confirm the holding period
Do not assume that all assets become long-term after one year. Listed equity and equity-oriented funds usually follow a 12-month test. However, real estate and other assets may follow different rules. Therefore, verify the holding period for each asset.
Step 3: Compute the gain correctly
Capital gain usually starts with sale value minus eligible cost and transfer expenses. In property cases, stamp duty valuation rules may also apply. In share cases, grandfathering data may affect eligible cost for older holdings. In mutual funds, different schemes may have different tax treatment.
Step 4: Check exemptions, losses, and advance tax
Taxpayers may consider exemptions such as investment in eligible residential property or specified bonds, subject to conditions. Also, capital losses can sometimes be set off or carried forward under income tax rules. However, you must file your return on time to carry forward many losses.
Step 5: File the correct ITR and reconcile AIS
Before submitting the return, compare your capital gains calculation with AIS, TIS, Form 26AS, broker statements, mutual fund reports, and bank statements. You can start with Income Tax Return filing online for simple cases. For complex transactions, choose assisted filing.
Old Tax Regime vs New Tax Regime: Does It Change LTCG Tax?
The old tax regime and new tax regime mainly affect salary and regular income deductions. For example, deductions under 80C, 80D, HRA, LTA, NPS, and home loan interest may change your normal taxable income depending on the regime. However, many capital gains are taxed at special rates.
Therefore, a taxpayer cannot simply say, "I selected the new regime, so my LTCG tax will be lower." The capital gains section still needs proper computation. Also, tax saving deductions may reduce normal income, but they may not directly reduce every type of capital gains tax.
This is where planning matters. If you earn salary above Rs 15 lakh, sell equity mutual funds, and receive bonus income, your ITR may involve salary tax, special rate LTCG tax, surcharge checks, advance tax, and deductions. In such cases, use tax planning services before the year ends, not after the return deadline.
Example 1: Salaried employee above Rs 15 lakh with mutual fund LTCG
Rohan earns Rs 21 lakh salary. He also redeems equity mutual funds after holding them for more than one year. His common confusion is whether 80C and 80D can reduce his LTCG tax. The correct approach is to calculate salary tax under both regimes, apply eligible deductions if choosing old regime, compute equity LTCG separately, and check advance tax liability. If his AIS shows redemptions, the ITR should match the capital gains statement. WealthSure can help him upload Form 16 through upload your Form 16 and review the capital gains schedule.
Example 2: Freelancer with professional income and share gains
Meera is a consultant. She earns professional fees and sells listed shares. She assumes her broker statement is enough. However, she also needs to consider business income, expenses, TDS, GST where applicable, advance tax, and capital gains. She may need ITR-3, not ITR-2. WealthSure’s business and professional ITR filing support can help her report both professional income and capital gains correctly.
Example 3: NRI selling Indian property
An NRI sells a flat in India and receives sale proceeds after TDS. The common mistake is to assume that TDS equals final tax. In reality, final tax depends on capital gains computation, exemptions, residential status, DTAA position, repatriation needs, and ITR disclosure. WealthSure’s NRI tax filing service and DTAA advisory can help the taxpayer avoid under-reporting or double taxation issues.
Documents You Need Before Filing ITR With LTCG
Accurate long term capital gains LTCG tax filing depends on documents. If you file based on memory, WhatsApp notes, or incomplete screenshots, you may miss important information. Therefore, create a capital gains folder before filing your Income Tax Return.
- Form 16 from employer, if you are salaried
- AIS, TIS, and Form 26AS downloaded from the Income Tax eFiling portal
- Broker capital gains report for equity shares and ETFs
- Mutual fund capital gains statement from RTA or platform
- Purchase invoices, sale bills, and cost proof for gold or jewellery
- Property purchase deed, sale deed, improvement bills, and brokerage proof
- TDS certificates for property transactions, if applicable
- Foreign asset statements, ESOP records, RSU documents, and bank statements
- Details of capital losses from current or earlier years
- Proof of tax saving deductions and exemption investments
If you receive a mismatch notice after filing, do not panic. First, compare the notice with your return, AIS, and computation. Then respond with facts and documents. WealthSure provides notice response support and Income Tax notice drafting and filing responses for eligible cases.
Common LTCG Tax Mistakes That Trigger Notices or Higher Tax
Capital gains errors often happen because taxpayers treat ITR filing as data entry. However, capital gains reporting requires interpretation. A small mismatch can create a notice, especially when the reporting entity has already shared transaction data with the Income Tax Department.
Mistake 1: Ignoring AIS and TIS
AIS may show share sales, mutual fund redemptions, property transactions, interest, dividends, and TDS. If your return ignores these entries, the system may flag a mismatch. Therefore, download AIS and TIS before filing. Also, correct the source data where needed.
Mistake 2: Choosing ITR-1 despite capital gains
ITR-1 Sahaj is not suitable for many capital gains situations. If you have capital gains, foreign assets, business income, or NRI status, you may need another form. For simple salary cases without capital gains, ITR filing for salaried taxpayers may work. For capital gains, review ITR-2 or ITR-3.
Mistake 3: Assuming all LTCG gets the same exemption
The equity LTCG threshold does not apply to every asset. Property, gold, debt funds, and foreign assets may follow different rules. Therefore, do not apply one exemption across all assets.
Mistake 4: Missing advance tax
Capital gains can create advance tax liability. If you sell assets during the year and do not pay required advance tax, interest may apply. You can use WealthSure’s advance tax calculation support to estimate and plan payments.
Mistake 5: Not reporting foreign assets
Residents with foreign assets must pay special attention to reporting schedules. Foreign shares, ESOPs, RSUs, overseas bank accounts, and foreign income can create complex disclosure requirements. For such cases, WealthSure offers foreign income reporting and capital gains on foreign assets support.
Capital Gains, SIPs, Mutual Funds, and Wealth Planning
LTCG tax is not only a compliance topic. It also affects investment decisions. If you redeem mutual funds randomly, you may create avoidable tax friction. However, if you plan redemptions around goals, asset allocation, loss harvesting, and tax rules, you can make better decisions.
For example, SIP investment India strategies should connect with goals such as emergency fund creation, home purchase, child education, retirement, and wealth creation. You should not invest only to save tax. Instead, you should invest with risk profile, time horizon, liquidity, and tax impact in mind.
Market-linked investments carry risk. Tax benefits also depend on eligibility, documents, and applicable law. Therefore, WealthSure provides SIP investment solutions where available, as well as goal-based investing and retirement planning support.
Which ITR Form Should You Use for LTCG?
Choosing the wrong ITR form can invalidate the filing experience or create defects. Therefore, match the form with your income profile. The correct form depends on salary, house property, capital gains, business income, foreign assets, partnership income, and residential status.
| Taxpayer Profile | Likely ITR Form | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Salaried person with no capital gains | ITR-1, if eligible | Simple salary filing may work if all eligibility conditions are met |
| Salaried person with LTCG | Usually ITR-2 | Capital gains schedules are required |
| Freelancer or professional with capital gains | Usually ITR-3 | Business or professional income must be reported |
| Presumptive taxpayer without complex gains | ITR-4, if eligible | Capital gains may restrict eligibility in some situations |
| NRI with Indian capital gains | Usually ITR-2 or ITR-3 | Residential status and capital gains need careful reporting |
For firms and LLPs, check ITR-5 filing. For companies, review ITR-6 filing. For trusts and NGOs, review ITR-7 filing. Taxpayers who missed reporting capital gains may consider revised or updated return filing, subject to eligibility and timelines.
Free vs Assisted Tax Filing for LTCG: What Should You Choose?
Free tax filing can work for simple cases. For example, a salaried person with Form 16, bank interest, and no capital gains may use a free filing option after checking AIS. However, capital gains make the return more sensitive.
Assisted filing becomes useful when you have property gains, equity transactions, mutual fund redemptions, losses, foreign assets, NRI status, notice history, business income, or high-value transactions. It also helps when you are unsure about the correct ITR form, tax regime, advance tax, deductions, or disclosure schedule.
WealthSure offers multiple assisted filing plans, including Starter Plan, Growth Plan, Wealth Plan, and Elite 360 Plan. The right plan depends on your income profile and complexity.
Have salary, investments, and capital gains in the same year?
Do not leave LTCG tax reporting to guesswork. WealthSure can help you reconcile documents, compute tax, select the right ITR form, and file with expert review.
LTCG Tax Planning Checklist Before You Sell an Asset
Many taxpayers seek tax advice after selling an asset. However, planning works better before the transaction. Before you sell property, shares, mutual funds, gold, or foreign assets, ask these questions.
- Will the gain be short-term or long-term?
- Which tax rate applies for this asset and assessment year?
- Is any exemption available if I reinvest?
- Will I lose a tax benefit if I delay or pre-pone the sale?
- Do I have capital losses that can be set off?
- Will advance tax apply after the sale?
- Will the transaction appear in AIS or Form 26AS?
- Which ITR form will I need?
- Do I need NRI, FEMA, or DTAA support?
- Will the sale affect surcharge, cess, or overall tax planning?
For wider planning, consider Tax Optimizer, automated deduction discovery, investment-linked tax planning, and tax saving suggestions.
For investment and regulatory awareness, refer to credible sources such as the Securities and Exchange Board of India, the Reserve Bank of India, and the Government of India portal.
When an Income Tax Notice Comes After Capital Gains Filing
An Income Tax notice does not always mean tax evasion. It may arise from a mismatch, missing schedule, incorrect cost, wrong ITR form, TDS difference, or AIS entry. However, you should respond within the required timeline and with proper evidence.
For example, a taxpayer may report mutual fund LTCG based on a platform statement. Later, AIS may show another redemption from a different folio. The department may ask for clarification. In another case, a property seller may report sale value, but Form 26AS may reflect TDS based on a different amount. These issues need document-backed replies.
WealthSure can support eligible taxpayers with Income Tax scrutiny or assessment support, appeal filing, and CPGRAM Income Tax issue support.
FAQs on Long Term Capital Gains LTCG Tax
1. Is free tax filing enough if I have long term capital gains?
Free tax filing may be enough if your case is simple, your documents are complete, and you understand how to report capital gains correctly. For example, if you have one mutual fund redemption, a clean capital gains statement, no foreign assets, no business income, no losses, and no notice history, you may be able to file online. However, long term capital gains LTCG tax becomes more sensitive when you have multiple brokers, property sale, old shares, grandfathering issues, capital losses, NRI status, or high-value transactions. Free tools may calculate tax, but they may not always explain mismatch risks, wrong ITR form selection, or exemption conditions. Therefore, assisted filing is useful when you want expert review. WealthSure supports both digital filing and expert-assisted filing, so you can choose based on your complexity. The goal is not to overpay for help. The goal is to file accurately, disclose income properly, and reduce avoidable notices.
2. Which ITR form should I use if I have LTCG from shares or mutual funds?
If you are a salaried taxpayer and have long term capital gains from shares or equity mutual funds, you will usually need ITR-2, provided you do not have business or professional income. ITR-1 is generally not suitable when capital gains need to be reported. If you are a freelancer, consultant, trader with business income, partner, or professional, ITR-3 may apply. If you are an NRI with Indian capital gains, you may also need ITR-2 or ITR-3 depending on your income profile. The correct form matters because each form has different schedules. Capital gains require details such as asset category, sale value, cost, transfer expenses, exemptions, and tax rate classification. If you file the wrong form, the return may become defective or incomplete. WealthSure’s ITR experts review salary, capital gains, business income, foreign assets, and residential status before selecting the form, which helps avoid errors in Income tax Return filing online.
3. Does choosing the old tax regime or new tax regime reduce LTCG tax?
The old tax regime and new tax regime mainly affect normal income such as salary, pension, business income, and deductions. Capital gains often follow special tax rates. Therefore, selecting the old tax regime does not automatically reduce long term capital gains LTCG tax. However, regime selection still matters for your total tax outgo. For example, a salaried taxpayer may claim 80C, 80D, HRA, home loan interest, or NPS benefits under the old regime, if eligible. These deductions may reduce regular taxable income. At the same time, eligible LTCG may still be taxed under special provisions. So, the right approach is to calculate both regimes for regular income and then add capital gains tax correctly. This is especially important for taxpayers earning above Rs 15 lakh, because surcharge, advance tax, and deduction planning may also affect the final outcome. WealthSure’s tax planning services can compare both regimes and help you make a documented decision.
4. How long does it take to get an income tax refund after reporting LTCG?
Refund timelines depend on return processing, accuracy of disclosures, bank validation, TDS matching, AIS reconciliation, and Income Tax Department checks. There is no guaranteed refund timeline. If your ITR has salary income and properly reported capital gains, processing may be smooth. However, delays may happen when AIS and ITR values do not match, bank details are not validated, TDS is not reflected, or the return has a defect. Capital gains cases may also need careful review because the department receives information from brokers, mutual fund registrars, property TDS filings, and other reporting entities. Before filing, compare your return with AIS, TIS, Form 26AS, Form 16, capital gains statements, and bank records. If you receive a notice or clarification request, respond within the due date. WealthSure does not promise faster refunds, but it can help you file accurately, reduce mismatch risk, and prepare notice responses where required.
5. What should I do if I receive an Income Tax notice for capital gains?
First, read the notice carefully. Check the assessment year, notice section, response deadline, mismatch details, and documents requested. Then compare the notice with your filed ITR, AIS, TIS, Form 26AS, broker statement, mutual fund capital gains statement, property sale documents, and bank entries. Do not ignore the notice. Also, do not submit a casual explanation without evidence. Many capital gains notices arise because a taxpayer missed a transaction, used the wrong cost, selected the wrong ITR form, or failed to report TDS correctly. In some cases, the reporting entity data itself may need correction. If your original return has an error, a revised return or updated return may be possible, subject to timelines and conditions. WealthSure offers notice response support and Income Tax notice drafting services for eligible cases. Expert help can make your response more structured, factual, and aligned with the Income Tax eFiling process.
6. Can I claim tax saving deductions against long term capital gains?
Tax saving deductions do not work the same way for every type of income. Deductions such as 80C, 80D, 80CCD, HRA, LTA, and home loan interest mainly affect regular taxable income under the old tax regime, subject to eligibility. Many long term capital gains are taxed under special provisions, and deductions may not directly reduce those gains in the way taxpayers expect. However, certain capital gains exemptions may be available if you reinvest in eligible assets, such as residential property or specified bonds, subject to conditions, limits, and timelines. Therefore, the right question is not only whether you can claim deductions. You should ask which exemption or set-off applies to your asset and transaction. A salaried taxpayer selling equity funds, an NRI selling property, and a business owner selling land may need different planning. WealthSure’s tax saving suggestions and capital gains tax optimization services can help evaluate eligible options without making unrealistic claims.
7. Are SIP investments taxed as LTCG when redeemed?
Yes, SIP investments may create capital gains when you redeem mutual fund units. However, each SIP instalment has its own purchase date. Therefore, the holding period is calculated separately for each instalment. If you redeem equity-oriented mutual fund units, units held beyond the prescribed long-term period may qualify for LTCG treatment, while newer units may create short-term capital gains. This is why a single redemption can contain both short-term and long-term gains. The fund type also matters. Equity funds, debt funds, international funds, gold funds, and hybrid funds may have different tax treatment. Do not assume that every mutual fund redemption gets the same LTCG exemption. Download a capital gains statement from your mutual fund platform or registrar and reconcile it with AIS. WealthSure can help you plan redemptions, file ITR, and connect tax filing with goal-based investing. Market-linked investments carry risk, and tax benefits depend on applicable law.
8. How should freelancers report LTCG along with professional income?
Freelancers and professionals must report professional income and capital gains separately in the correct ITR form. In many cases, ITR-3 applies because business or professional income is involved. If presumptive taxation applies, ITR-4 may seem attractive, but eligibility must be checked carefully, especially when other income or capital gains exist. A freelancer should collect invoices, expense records, TDS details, GST records where applicable, bank statements, broker reports, mutual fund capital gains statements, AIS, TIS, and Form 26AS. Advance tax is also important because both professional income and capital gains can create instalment-based tax liability. A common mistake is to report only net receipts and ignore investment transactions. Another mistake is to treat trading, investing, and professional income without classification. WealthSure’s business and professional ITR filing service helps freelancers compute income, classify gains, select the right form, review deductions, and file a more reliable Income Tax Return.
9. Do NRIs need to file ITR in India for LTCG?
NRIs may need to file an Income Tax Return in India if they have taxable Indian income, including capital gains from Indian assets. Examples include sale of Indian property, shares, mutual funds, or other assets. NRI tax filing also requires careful review of residential status, TDS, DTAA relief, foreign income position, bank account type, repatriation, and exemptions. In property sales, TDS can be significant, but TDS is not always the final tax liability. The NRI may need to file ITR to report the actual gain, claim eligible refund, or pay additional tax. Documentation is very important. Keep purchase deed, sale deed, valuation reports, improvement bills, TDS certificates, bank statements, and remittance documents. WealthSure provides NRI tax filing service, residential status determination, DTAA advisory, foreign income reporting, and FEMA and repatriation support. Since cross-border rules can change, NRIs should avoid generic advice and use case-specific guidance.
10. Is expert-assisted filing worth it for long term capital gains LTCG tax?
Expert-assisted filing is worth considering when the cost of an error is higher than the fee. Long term capital gains LTCG tax can involve rate changes, exemptions, set-offs, advance tax, foreign asset reporting, AIS mismatch, property valuation, TDS, and correct ITR form selection. If your case is simple and you are confident, a free filing option may be enough. However, if you sold property, redeemed multiple mutual funds, traded through more than one broker, received ESOPs, changed residential status, have capital losses, or received a notice, expert review can reduce stress and improve accuracy. A good advisor will not promise guaranteed tax savings or guaranteed refunds. Instead, they will explain the law, review documents, compute tax, disclose income correctly, and help you respond to issues. WealthSure combines fintech tools with expert consultation, so taxpayers can file with better clarity and build stronger financial habits beyond tax filing.
Conclusion: File LTCG Correctly and Plan Beyond Tax Season
Long term capital gains LTCG tax is not just another ITR field. It connects your investments, property decisions, wealth creation strategy, and compliance record. Free filing can work when the case is simple. However, paid or assisted filing becomes valuable when capital gains, business income, NRI status, foreign assets, losses, deductions, or notices enter the picture.
Accurate income disclosure is now more important because AIS, TIS, Form 26AS, Form 16, broker reports, mutual fund statements, and property transaction data are increasingly connected. Therefore, taxpayers should reconcile documents before filing, choose the correct ITR form, understand old tax regime vs new tax regime implications, and plan advance tax where needed.
Tax planning should also extend beyond filing. Review your SIPs, insurance, retirement goals, emergency fund, CIBIL score, and investment allocation. Use tax saving options only when they fit your wider financial plan. WealthSure can support you with assisted tax filing, tax planning services, notice response, NRI tax filing, capital gains support, and financial advisory services.
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Compliance note: Tax laws may change by assessment year. Final tax liability depends on income, regime, deductions, exemptions, residential status, transaction details, and disclosures. WealthSure may provide advisory, filing, documentation, and compliance support. Investment services are advisory or execution-based as applicable. Market-linked investments carry risk. Tax benefits depend on eligibility and documentation.