Clubbing of Income from Self-Acquired Property Converted to HUF Property [Section 64(2)]

Key Rule

When an individual converts their self-acquired property into HUF (Joint Family) property, any income generated from that property continues to be taxable in the individual’s hands (not the HUF’s).

How This Works

  1. Self-Acquired Property→ Property earned through personal income (not inherited)
  2. Conversion to HUF→ Transferring ownership to Hindu Undivided Family
  3. Tax Effect→ Despite transfer, income (rent, capital gains, etc.) remains taxable as individual income

Examples

Case 1: Residential House Conversion

  • A (individual) converts his self-acquired flat into HUF property
  • Rent received:₹20,000/month
  • Tax Treatment:₹20,000/month taxable in  A’s personal income (not HUF)

Case 2: Commercial Property Transfer

  • B gifts her self-acquired shop to HUF
  • Rental income:₹50,000/month
  • Tax Treatment:₹50,000/month taxable in  B’s personal income

Case 3: Inherited Property (Not Self-Acquired)

  • C inherits property from father → automatically becomes HUF property
  • Rental income:Taxable to HUF (Section 64(2) doesn’t apply)

Exceptions Where Clubbing Doesn’t Apply

  1. Property acquired with HUF funds→ Income taxable to HUF
  2. Ancestral property→ Already belongs to HUF
  3. Gift from non-relatives to HUF→ Taxable to HUF

Tax Planning Implications

✔ No Tax Benefit: Converting self-acquired to HUF property doesn’t shift tax liability

✔ HUF Advantage Lost: Cannot use separate HUF basic exemption (₹2.5 lakh) for this income

✔ Better Alternative: Consider direct gifting to family members (but may attract other clubbing provisions)

Common Mistake: Assuming HUF conversion reduces tax – it doesn’t for self-acquired property!

Comparison: Self-Acquired vs. HUF Property

ASPECT SELF-ACQUIRED → HUF ORIGINAL HUF PROPERTY
Who is taxed? Individual HUF
Basic exemption Individual’s ₹2.5L HUF’s ₹2.5L
Capital gains Individual liable HUF liable
Applicable section 64(2) Normal HUF taxation

Key Takeaways

  1. Section 64(2) is anti-avoidance– Prevents tax saving through HUF transfers
  2. Only applies to self-acquired → HUF conversions
  3. HUF benefits(separate PAN, deductions) don’t apply to such converted property income

Pro Tip:
If planning to transfer assets to family, consider:

  • Direct gifts(but check other clubbing rules)
  • Creating HUF with ancestral propertyinstead
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