In a move designed to ease financial stress for property owners and housing societies, the Gujarat government has issued a notification announcing a significant waiver of stamp duty. The decision primarily benefits transfers carried out through allotment letters or share certificates issued by housing societies, associations, and non-trading corporations.
The waiver, set at 80% of the originally payable stamp duty, is a targeted relief following recent hikes in penalties for unpaid duties earlier this year.
The new measure applies specifically to property transfers executed through allotment letters or share certificates. Only societies, associations, and non-trading corporations are eligible for this relief. As per the official notification, these entities will now be required to pay only 20% of the original stamp duty amount, resulting in substantial savings for members involved in such transactions.
The notification clearly states that this benefit will only apply to property transfers completed on or before June 20, 2025. Any transaction processed after this date will not be eligible for the reduced stamp duty. Moreover, the government will not entertain refund claims for duties and penalties already paid before the notification came into effect.
This announcement follows public opposition to the government’s earlier decision in April 2024 to significantly increase penalties on unpaid stamp duties. The earlier revision had raised recovery rates up to four times the unpaid amount for voluntarily disclosed shortfalls, and up to 6 times for identified evasion cases. The latest waiver can be seen as a corrective measure in response to that backlash.
Despite the 80% waiver, a minimum duty amount remains applicable. If the reduced duty and applicable penalties calculated under section 39 (1)(b) of the Gujarat Stamp Act, 1958 fall below the original duty amount, then the applicant will be required to pay the full original duty. This clause ensures that a base level of revenue is still secured by the state.
The waiver has been implemented under Section 9(a) of the Gujarat Stamp Act, 1958. This section empowers the state government to remit or reduce stamp duty as it deems necessary. The application of this legal provision in the current context is intended to offer temporary relief while maintaining regulatory oversight.
The government has also clarified that the waiver is available for transactions that are voluntarily disclosed or identified during inspection, as long as they are addressed before the notification’s deadline. This clause encourages societies and associations to come forward with pending dues while benefiting from the reduced financial burden.
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The Gujarat government’s recent waiver of stamp duty marks a notable shift in its approach to regulating property transactions. By balancing enforcement with relief, it aims to facilitate compliance while reducing hardship for middle-class property owners and cooperative bodies. The notification serves as both an incentive for voluntary compliance and a remedy to previous penalty hikes.
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Published on: Jul 8, 2025, 1:36 PM IST
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