Double stamp duty on property may go

| House owners may soon get some relief from the double stamp duty incidence that currently occurs on property transactions. |
| According to the 2006 National Urban Housing and Habitat Policy, that is awaiting Cabinet approval, stamp duty would be imposed only on the first transaction of land. |
| The policy states: "Group housing needs to be encouraged by societies and co-operatives. Stamp duty in such cases at the stage of raw land and first sale thereafter would be imposed on a value added basis, so that transaction costs are not artificially high to the first purchaser and housing land remains a liquid asset." |
| In other words, it implies the following: Say a builder purchases land for an apartment complex for Rs 50 lakh and decides to sell each apartment for Rs 1 crore. The buyer of the apartments would then pay stamp duty only on the value of the house, as per the sale agreement, and not the land. |
| Currently, stamp duty would have been levied both on the land and the apartment. |
| Stamp duty varies from state to state and, therefore, the exact revenue impact of the proposed legislation is difficult to determine. |
| For instance, Haryana has a stamp duty of 8 per cent, Uttar Pradesh 10 per cent and Punjab 6 per cent in rural areas and 9 per cent in urban areas. |
| Typically, to avoid double incidence of stamp duty, land is held in a company that is not building the houses. At the time of the sale of the residential unit, the land holding company transfers the land to the buyer. |
| "This move will be hugely beneficial for property buyers. The service tax law has a concept of group housing called residential complexes that can have more than 12 residential units. These units can be apartments or even row houses," said Satya Poddar, partner, Ernst & Young. |
| The proposed legislation may actually increase revenue collections from stamp duty. |
| "Whenever tax burden is lifted, compliance improves. Since people were doing everything to avoid double tax, they might just pay the tax now," said Poddar. |
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First Published: Feb 26 2007 | 12:00 AM IST

