Buying a home is one of the biggest financial decisions in a person’s life. But what happens when the stamp duty valuation of your flat is significantly higher than what you actually paid? For many homebuyers, this creates a sudden and heavy tax liability under Section 56(2)(x) of the Income Tax Act.

However, a recent ruling by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) Mumbai has brought huge relief and an important lesson for prospective homebuyers across India.

The Case of Vishnu Madhukar Kanerkar

Vishnu Madhukar Kanerkar purchased a flat in Mumbai for ₹85 lakh during the financial year 2016-17 (Assessment Year 2017-18). The stamp duty authorities, however, valued the same property at ₹1.16 crore. The Income Tax Department invoked Section 56(2)(x) and added the difference of ₹31.76 lakh as taxable income from other sources.

The Assessing Officer passed the order, and the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] also upheld the addition. It looked like the homebuyer would have to pay tax on ₹31.76 lakh.

But the story didn’t end there.

The assessee obtained a valuation report from a registered valuer (showing ₹82.20 lakh) and the Assessing Officer also referred the matter to the Departmental Valuation Officer (DVO). The DVO valued the property at ₹92.42 lakh.

Now the difference between the actual purchase price (₹85 lakh) and the DVO’s fair market value (₹92.42 lakh) came down to just 8.73% — well within the 10% safe harbour limit.

Understanding Section 56(2)(x) – The 10% Rule Every Homebuyer Must Know

Section 56(2)(x) of the Income Tax Act taxes any immovable property received by an individual or HUF for a consideration lower than its stamp duty value. The difference is added to the buyer’s total income and taxed at normal slab rates.

However, a proviso to this section provides relief: If the stamp duty value does not exceed 110% of the actual consideration paid (i.e., difference is up to 10%), then no addition is made. This 10% tolerance limit was introduced as a beneficial provision to protect genuine buyers from hardship caused by inflated stamp duty/ready reckoner rates.

In this case, the ITAT held that this 10% safe harbour is curative and beneficial in nature and therefore applies retrospectively — even to transactions before AY 2019-20.

ITAT’s Landmark Ruling

In its order dated 27th May 2026 in ITA No. 1974/Mum/2026, the ITAT Mumbai bench comprising SMT. Beena Pillai (JM) and Shri Arun Khodpia (AM) deleted the entire addition of ₹31.76 lakh.

The Tribunal relied on:

  • The DVO’s valuation replacing the stamp duty value for practical purposes.
  • Earlier judgments, including the Gujarat High Court ruling and a recent Special Bench decision in Shreyas Naynesh Modi.
  • The principle that beneficial provisions must be applied liberally.

The Tribunal ruled that once the difference is within 10% of the DVO’s fair market value, no tax liability arises under Section 56(2)(x).

Key Takeaways for Prospective Homebuyers – How You Can Protect Yourself

  1. Don’t panic on high stamp duty valuation – Get your property valued by a Registered Valuer immediately.
  2. Request DVO valuation – If the case reaches assessment, insist on reference to the Departmental Valuation Officer.
  3. Document everything – Keep ready reckoner rate justifications, property condition reports, and age of building as supporting evidence.
  4. Fight till ITAT – Many such cases are being won at the Tribunal level on the 10% rule.
  5. Act fast – File appeals at every level and specifically plead retrospective application of the 10% safe harbour.

This ruling serves as an important case study showing that even if stamp duty value is 37% higher, a proper valuation by DVO can bring the difference within the safe limit and save you from a massive tax blow.

Also Read: Can a Housing Society Claim Tax Deduction on Interest from Co-operative Banks?

You May Also Like

Delhi’s New Master Plan 2041: A Vision for Sustainable Urban Growth

Delhi Development Authority (DDA) unveiled the new Master Plan for 2041 on September 1, 2024.

How Much Kangana Paid For Her Bandra Office?

Kangana Ranaut’s office in Bandra, is in midst of a controversy, but…

📰 Homebuyer Claims Dispute Between Shapoorji and Nirmal Lifestyle Delaying Mulund Project, MahaRERA Asks Shapoorji to File Its Response

A Mulund homebuyer told MahaRERA that Shapoorji Pallonji’s Olympia C D project has been stalled due to a dispute with Nirmal Lifestyle. MahaRERA restored the complaint and directed the developer to file its response by November 18.

Planning to Buy a House, then Please Read This

Planning to buy a house? Then wait a sec, read this article…