Since inception of birth, your
mom and dad are always there to protect you, even if you feel independent. Now,
thanks to your parents, they will be again ahead to help you indirectly by
letting you save more tax. They can bring down your tax liability in various
ways, provided they are in a lower tax bracket or already retired. If your mom
or dad falls in lower tax bracket, you can invest money on their name to save
more income tax. It is not just income tax, but you may even earn higher
interest as interest rate for senior citizens is usually more.
There are different ways by
which you can save income tax by involving your parents directly or indirectly.
The following Simple Smart
Strategies which can reduce your tax outgo.
·
Gift
money to your parents and Save tax on
Future Income
Do you have already been in higher tax bracket and have some surplus cash that you intend to invest. Maybe, you can think of an indirect method of investing (that is not in your own name), and save some tax on the income. You can take a slightly circuitous route on investments for better mileage. One way of saving on taxes is to gift your parents assets and cash for investments.
Let's assume that your parents are senior citizens (above 60) and having no income or lower income. You can gift them any amount of cash for investing in high-return instruments such as senior citizen's savings scheme without attracting gift-tax and as their money will become theirs any income arising out of it would be treated as their income, Not yours.
As senior citizens do not have
to pay any tax for annual income up to Rs2.5 lakh and eligible another
deduction of Rs1 lakh under section 80C. So the interest income does not become
taxable unless it exceeds this exemption limit plus investing up to under
section 80C. This means you can invest up to Rs 36 lakh through each of your senior
mom and dad without any source of income.
Of this, both can individually
put Rs 15 lakh in a senior citizens savings scheme that earns a return of 9 per
cent and pays interest every quarter and eligible under section 80C. Each will
get yearly interest of nearly Rs1.4 lakh.
If they invest the remaining Rs
21 lakh each in the Bank fixed deposit (FD) at an interest rate of 9.5 per cent
that pays interest each quarter, it will fetch them an income of nearly Rs2.07
lakh annually.
That means both parents have
earned Rs2.8 lakh from the senior citizen saving scheme and another Rs4.14 lakh
from Bank fixed deposits each year. A total savings of Rs6.94 lakh – the
tax-free and section 80C limit (Rs 2.5 lakh+ Rs1 lakh) that each parent enjoys.
So, they don’t even need to file tax returns. Imagine this, if you had invested
the same amount in your own name and assuming you are in the highest 30% tax
bracket, you would have to pay taxes to the tune of Rs2.14 lakh approximately.
That’s a big amount saved and the
benefit can be more in case of your parents come under the category of Super
Senior Citizen (more than 80 years of age) who enjoy tax-free income up to Rs5
lakh per annuam.
However, this strategy won’t
work in the case of your spouse or minor children because of clubbing
provisions under section 64 would apply on them.
· Living
in parents’ house and pay them rent
You can surely avail HRA
exemption if you live with your parents. You can pay rent to them, but remember
rent received will be taxable for your parents and the property must be
registered on their name. So, if your parents fall in lower tax bracket, it
will surely be helpful for you to save some tax. Your parents will be taxed for
the rental income after a 30% deduction. So, if you pay your father a rent of
Rs3 lakh a year (Rs 25,000 a month), he will be taxed for only Rs2.1 lakh.
It gets better if the property
is jointly owned by both parents. Then you can divide the rent two-ways so that
the tax liability gets split between the two parents. If their income exceeds
the basic exemption limit, you can help them save tax by investing in their
name under Section 80C options such as the Senior Citizens’ Saving Scheme,
five-year bank fixed deposits or tax-saving equity mutual funds.
· Sell
them junk shares and offset losses
As you know that tax laws allow
you to adjust short-term losses from stocks against certain gains. But what if,
you have been holding junk stocks in your portfolio for more than a year? You
cannot offset long term capital losses with long term gains or short term
gains, so it is a complete loss of money. But if you will involve your parents,
they can help you offset these long term losses against a gain from other
assets such as property, debt funds, etc. and carry forward unadjusted loss for
up to 8 financial years.
Sell the junk stocks to them in
an off-market transaction. An off-market transaction is a private
deal between the buyer and seller without the exchange as an intermediary. The
losses you book can then be adjusted against capital gains from other assets
such as property, gold, debt funds, etc. Keep a few things in mind while you go
about this. The sale should be at the market price of the shares and the buyer
should pay the sum by cheque. Otherwise, the taxman might treat the transfer as
a gift.
· Buy a
health policy for them
This is the simplest and most
commonly used strategy to save tax through your parents. Buy a health policy
for them and get deduction for the premium paid under Section 80D, up to Rs.
15000 from your taxable income. If the parents are senior citizens, the
deduction is even higher to Rs. 20000.
This deduction is over and above of Rs. 15000
that one can claim as deduction for the health insurance premium paid for
himself and his family (spouse and children). This deduction is available
irrespective of whether parents are financially dependent on the taxpayer or
not. But it should not keep you from buying a health insurance cover for your
parents. After all, they looked after your needs when you were a child. Now it
is time you repay that debt.
Above are the few ways to save
more income tax by involving your mom and dad. So, never overlook your parents,
they will always be helpful throughout your life.
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