Rated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areasRated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areas
Mudichur Bus Stop catchment · Mudichur HUF

Mudichur HUF Formation — Chennai South

HUF Formation for residential units around GST Road, Mudichur — with same-day acknowledgement delivery

for the professional and salaried population of Mudichur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST — fixed fee, deterministic turnaround and archived working papers. Call 9566-068-468.

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Quick Answer

Is the share of HUF income exempt in member's hands under Section 10(2) in Mudichur, Chennai?

Yes. Section 10(2) of the Income-tax Act exempts in the hands of a member any sum received out of the income of an HUF of which he is a member — so far as it is paid out of HUF income already taxed in HUF's hands. The provision avoids double taxation of HUF income at member level. It applies to income (revenue), not capital — capital received on partition is governed by Section 47(i) and has its own non-transfer treatment.

Transparent Pricing

HUF Formation in Mudichur — Plans & Pricing

Fixed fees · Zero hidden charges · Call 9566-068-468 for a custom quote.

MonthlyAnnualSave 2 Months
Nill
HUF deed template + PAN
₹3,500one-time

  • HUF Deed Template (Standard Mitakshara)
  • Form 49A PAN Application in HUF Name
  • Karta Declaration Drafting
  • Member List & Coparcener Roll
  • Custom Deed Drafting
  • Bank Account Opening Assistance
  • Section 171 Partition Advisory
  • First ITR-2 / ITR-3 Filing
  • Engagement Type: One-Time
  • Coverage: Single HUF
  • WhatsApp Document Pickup
  • PAN Allotment Tracking
  • Cross-Generational Planning
  • Dedicated Account Manager
Starter
+ custom deed + bank account
₹6,500one-time

  • HUF Deed Template (Standard Mitakshara)
  • Form 49A PAN Application in HUF Name
  • Karta Declaration Drafting
  • Member List & Coparcener Roll
  • Custom Deed Drafting (Family-Specific Clauses)
  • Notarisation Co-ordination
  • Bank Account Opening Documentation
  • Initial Corpus Letter / Gift Declaration
  • Section 171 Partition Advisory
  • First ITR-2 / ITR-3 Filing
  • Engagement Type: One-Time
  • Coverage: Single HUF
  • WhatsApp Document Pickup
  • PAN Allotment Tracking
  • Bank KYC Liaison
  • Vineeta Sharma Coparcener Audit
  • Dedicated Account Manager
Most Popular ⭐
Professional
+ partition advisory + first ITR
₹12,500one-time

  • HUF Deed Template (Standard Mitakshara)
  • Form 49A PAN Application in HUF Name
  • Karta Declaration Drafting
  • Custom Deed Drafting (Family-Specific Clauses)
  • Notarisation Co-ordination
  • Bank Account Opening Documentation
  • Initial Corpus Letter / Gift Declaration
  • Section 64(2) Clubbing Advisory on Conversion
  • Section 56(2)(x) Relative-Gift Mapping
  • Section 171 Partition Advisory Note
  • First ITR-2 or ITR-3 Filing in HUF Status
  • Section 115BAC Old vs New Regime Comparison
  • Schedule AL & Foreign Asset Review (if applicable)
  • Engagement Type: One-Time + First Year ITR
  • Coverage: Single HUF
  • WhatsApp Document Pickup
  • PAN Allotment Tracking
  • Bank KYC Liaison
  • HUF Tax Advisory Calls (Limited)
  • Cross-Generational Planning
  • Section 171 Total Partition Deed
Premium
+ cross-gen planning + Section 171 partition deed
₹35,000one-time

  • HUF Deed Template (Standard Mitakshara)
  • Form 49A PAN Application in HUF Name
  • Karta Declaration Drafting
  • Custom Deed Drafting (Family-Specific Clauses)
  • Notarisation Co-ordination
  • Bank Account Opening Documentation
  • Initial Corpus Letter / Gift Declaration
  • Section 64(2) Clubbing Advisory on Conversion
  • Section 56(2)(x) Relative-Gift Mapping
  • Section 171 Partition Advisory Note
  • First ITR-2 or ITR-3 Filing in HUF Status
  • Section 115BAC Old vs New Regime Comparison
  • Cross-Generational HUF Planning (3-Tier Karta-Coparcener-Heir)
  • Vineeta Sharma 2020 Daughter-Coparcener Audit
  • Section 171 Total Partition Deed Drafting
  • Section 171(3) Partition Application Before AO
  • Family Settlement Deed Co-ordination
  • Capital Gains Schedule on Partition (Section 47(i) / 49(1))
  • Engagement Type: One-Time + 12-Month Support
  • Coverage: Multi-Generational HUF Set
  • WhatsApp Document Pickup
  • PAN Allotment Tracking
  • Bank KYC Liaison
  • HUF Tax Advisory Calls
  • Dedicated Account Manager
  • Priority 24-Hour Support

Swipe to see all plans

Prices exclude GST. For enterprise pricing, call 9566-068-468.

Why FilingPro?

Why Mudichur Clients Choose FilingPro

Expert HUF in Mudichur — qualified professionals, 15+ years experience, zero-penalty track record.

Bank Account Opened in HUF Name

HUF current or savings account opened at scheduled commercial bank — Karta KYC, Form 49A PAN, deed copy, member mandate. Net banking, FD nomination, cheque book and joint operation rules set up for Mudichur families.

Section 171 Partition Note

Partition pathway clearly documented — only total partition under Section 171(3) recognised; partial partitions after 31-Dec-1978 ignored under Section 171(9). Section 47(i) and Section 49(1)(i) tax effects pre-explained for future planning.

Section 115BAC Regime Choice

HUF defaults to new regime under Section 115BAC; Form 10-IEA opt-out available. FilingPro compares old vs new every year for the family — Chapter VI-A deductions (Section 80C, 80D, 80G, 24(b)) often tip the balance to old regime.

First ITR-2 / ITR-3 Filed

First year HUF return prepared — ITR-2 for capital gains, house property and other sources; ITR-3 for HUF business or profession. Section 80C (₹1.5L), Section 80D mediclaim and Section 24(b) interest claimed. Section 87A rebate correctly excluded (only resident individuals).

WhatsApp-First Document Pickup

Share Karta's PAN / Aadhaar, member photos and corpus details on WhatsApp at 9566-068-468 — we draft deed, file PAN, open bank account entirely remotely. Mudichur families work without a single office visit.

15+ Years Hindu Law & Tax Practice

Our team has formed and partitioned HUFs since the 2005 Amendment, through Vineeta Sharma 2020, and into the Section 115BAC era. Hindu law, Income-tax Act and Companies Act read together — treatment grounded in primary statutes and Supreme Court rulings, not internet templates.

Key Benefits

What Mudichur Clients Get

Every HUF Formation engagement delivers measurable, guaranteed outcomes — expert professionals, on time, every time.

Business Income in HUF
HUF can run a business or profession — ITR-3 filed with audited or Section 44AD presumptive (6% / 8% on turnover up to ₹3 crore) basis. Section 44ADA professional presumptive (50% on receipts up to ₹75 lakh) also available to resident HUF for eligible professions.
House Property in HUF
HUF can own residential or commercial property — Section 24(b) housing loan interest up to ₹2L (self-occupied), full deduction (let-out), Section 80C principal repayment, Section 54 / 54F capital gains exemption on sale and reinvestment. Independent of Karta's individual property claims.
Capital Gains in HUF Slab
Capital gains earned by HUF — STCG on equity at 20% (post FY 2024-25), LTCG on equity above ₹1.25L at 12.5%, LTCG on listed/unlisted as per Section 112 / 112A — taxed in HUF return at HUF rates. Indexation post FY 2024-25 narrowed but cost-step-up under Section 49(1)(i) preserved on partition.
NRI Karta Manageable
For families with NRI Kartas, Section 6(2) residence test on "control and management" carefully assessed — HUF stays resident if any management decision is taken in India during the year. RNOR / NR status mapped where relevant. Foreign-source income and DTAA treatment built into the engagement.
Section 171 Partition Cleanly Engineered
When the family is ready to dissolve, FilingPro drafts the total partition deed, files Section 171(2) application before the AO, presents the asset-distribution chart and member acknowledgements, and secures the Section 171(3) order. Partial partitions barred under Section 171(9) avoided — clean, tax-neutral, AO-recognised exit.
Separate Tax Person — Section 2(31)
HUF is a distinct "person" under Section 2(31) — own PAN, own ₹2.5L (old) / ₹3L (new) basic exemption, own slab progression. For Mudichur families with rental, capital gains or family-business income, this independence translates into real annual tax savings.
Comparison

HUF vs Individual filing

Why this matters here — Across Mudichur, the cluster of residential, retail, light manufacturing businesses that defines Mudichur's commercial fabric. Practitioners note that served by short connections to Tambaram West and Perungalathur and onward to central Chennai.

AspectHUFIndividual filing
Basic exemption and slabsHUF enjoys a separate basic exemption and the full individual slab structure under Schedule I of the Finance Act, effectively doubling the slab benefit available to the familySingle basic exemption and slab applies on the assessee's own income only; family-level income remains taxable in the individual's hands
Chapter VI-A deductionsIndependent ceilings under Section 80C (₹1.5 lakh), 80D, 80G and the residual heads are available to the HUF on its own contributions out of HUF fundsSingle set of Chapter VI-A ceilings applies; no parallel deduction is available on the same expenditure when claimed in the individual return
Clubbing of incomeSection 64(2) clubs back into the transferor's hands any income on property converted into HUF property without adequate consideration; CWT v Chander Sen (1986) 161 ITR 370 (SC) confirms inheritance to a son out of self-acquired property of his father devolves on him in his individual capacity, not on his HUFSection 64(1) clubbing applies on transfers to spouse and minor child; no Section 64(2) HUF-conversion route is in play
Gift and asset fundingGifts from members to the HUF and inter-relative gifts under Section 56(2)(x) need careful structuring; Section 64(2) reversal exposure on direct member contributions makes ancestral inflow and bequests the safer corpus pathGifts from relatives are outside Section 56(2)(x); intra-family asset movement does not trigger HUF-specific clubbing analysis
Capital gains exemptionsSections 54 and 54F on residential-house investment are available to the HUF on its own capital asset, separate from the member's personal Section 54/54F claim cycleSection 54/54F exemption is computed on the individual's own asset only; the family-level second window is not available
Partition consequencesFull partition is recognised only on a Section 171 application and an order recording the partition; partial partition effected after 31 December 1978 is barred by Section 171(9) read with the Explanation and continues to be assessed as HUFPartition concept is not in issue; assets are held individually and pass on succession under the Hindu Succession Act 1956 without a Section 171 order
Sole-coparcener and all-female situationsSurjit Lal Chhabda recognises continuance with a sole male coparcener and female members; Sandhya Rani Dutta v CIT (2001) 248 ITR 201 (SC) holds an HUF cannot be constituted by all-female heirs after the death of a sole male member where no antecedent HUF existsNo coparcener composition test applies; the all-female household assesses on individual PANs without any HUF question arising
Statutory recognitionDistinct assessable entity under Section 2(31)(ii) of the Income-tax Act 1961; treated as a person separate from its membersNatural person assessed under Section 2(31)(i); no joint-family character is attached to the assessment unit
Source of legal existenceArises by operation of Hindu personal law on three generations of male lineal descent from a common ancestor; Surjit Lal Chhabda v CIT (1975) 101 ITR 776 (SC) confirms an HUF can exist with a sole coparcener and a female memberArises on birth as a natural person; no antecedent corpus or coparcenary requirement; assessment proceeds purely on personal income
Continuity on death of headGowli Buddanna v CIT (1966) 60 ITR 293 (SC) holds the family does not cease on the karta's death; the next senior coparcener assumes karta status and the HUF continues uninterruptedAssessment unit ends on death; legal heirs assess separately on inherited property under Section 2(31)(i), each on personal PAN
Coparcenary on daughtersVineeta Sharma v Rakesh Sharma (2020) 9 SCC 1 holds daughters are coparceners by birth with retrospective effect under the amended Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act 1956, on parity with sonsNo coparcenary concept; succession to a deceased individual is by Class I/II heir order under the Hindu Succession Act 1956 without birth-right gradation
PAN and registrationSeparate PAN obtained in Form 49A for category 'HUF' supported by the executed HUF deed, karta declaration and identity proofs of karta and adult coparcenersPersonal PAN in Form 49A under category 'Individual' is sufficient; no deed or karta declaration is required
Documents Required

Documents for HUF Formation

Share documents via WhatsApp to 9566-068-468. No office visit required for Mudichur clients.

Karta's PAN card copy and Aadhaar (linked) for Form 49A signatory authority
Aadhaar of all members and adult coparceners (sons, daughters, wife) for HUF deed annexure
Recent passport-size photographs of Karta and adult members for deed and PAN application
HUF Deed signed by Karta and adult members on stamp paper, notarised — declaring members, coparceners and corpus
Address proof of HUF — Karta's residence with declaration, electricity bill or rental agreement
Initial corpus / gift declaration letter — donor's PAN, source of funds, FMV statement and Section 56(2)(x) relative declaration
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Statutory Deadlines

Compliance deadlines that matter

Miss any of these and the next consequence kicks in automatically.

Deadlines in this neighbourhood — Across Mudichur, the business activity radiating outward from Mudichur Bus Stop and nearby commercial pockets.

Trigger eventDaysFormConsequence
Interest under Section 234C on shortfall from cumulative forty-five percent threshold of annual tax.
Belated filing disallows carry-forward of business losses other than house property loss.
Section 271B penalty equal to half percent of turnover capped at one fifty thousand rupees.
Application for Section 171 complete partition recognition90 daysSection 171 application to Assessing Officer with partition deed, asset valuation, family members listHUF continues to be assessed on partitioned assets income until AO order under Section 171(3) is received, partial partition is automatically deemed non-existent under Section 171(9), capital gains exposure on subsequent sale by individual members questioned if partition not formally recognised
Relief under Section 89 disallowed if Form 10E is not filed electronically prior to return submission.
Filing of HUF income tax return for the financial year122 daysITR-2 or ITR-3 or ITR-4 depending on income source, due 31-July without audit and 31-October with auditSection 234A interest at 1 percent per month on tax due, Section 234F late filing fee Rs 5000 if filed by 31-December and Rs 1000 if income below Rs 5 lakh, loss of carry-forward benefit for capital losses under Section 80, scrutiny risk on belated returns
Section 234E late fee of two hundred rupees daily capped at TDS amount deducted.
Maintenance of books of account from date of HUF business commencement30 daysCash book, ledger, journal, sales-purchase register, stock register if applicable, preserved for 6 years under Section 44AASection 271A penalty of Rs 25000 for non-maintenance, estimate of income by AO under Section 144 best judgment assessment, loss of ability to claim depreciation and business expense deductions, disallowance of opening capital arguments without book trail

Deadline pressure points we see in Mudichur: Closer to Mudichur, for the professional and salaried population of Mudichur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

Application to assessing officer for recognition of total partition

Self-declaration for treaty benefits where HUF earns foreign income

Statement of Specified Financial Transactions by reporting entities involving HUF

Permanent Account Number application for newly created HUF

Foundational instrument declaring constitution of Hindu Undivided Family

Return of income for HUF without business income

Return for HUF having proprietary business or professional income

Tax audit report for HUF crossing prescribed turnover threshold

HUF Formation in Mudichur, Chennai 600045

For HUF Formation at PIN 600045, understanding the Tambaram Division's documentation norms removes most of the friction from the process. Mudichur (PIN 600045) falls under the Tambaram Division of the Chennai South, the jurisdiction that handles statutory matters for businesses at this PIN. We keep a cycle-by-cycle record of how the Tambaram Division of the Chennai South handles Mudichur filings and approvals. Every Mudichur engagement we open begins with the basics: PIN 600045, the Tambaram Division, and the coordinates 12.9067, 80.0942 that anchor the locality.

Vendors and customers tied to the Mudichur Bus Stop network show up across the invoice trail we reconcile for Mudichur HUF Formation clients. Each HUF Formation cycle for Mudichur reflects its commercial rhythm — invoices generated near GST Road, expenses routed through the Mudichur Bus Stop freight network. The businesses clustered around GST Road in Mudichur drive the bulk of the HUF Formation workload we see each cycle. The residential growth corridor mix of Mudichur shapes what lands in our workpapers — a blend of retail activity and the commercial pulse around GST Road.

light manufacturing units around Mudichur share recurring HUF patterns — input-credit timing, vendor reconciliation, and sector-specific documentation. Sector concentration matters: when Mudichur leans toward light manufacturing, the HUF risks cluster around the same few line items each cycle. For a light manufacturing business in Mudichur, the HUF Formation scope is rarely generic; we tailor the checklist to how that sector actually transacts. The light manufacturing firms we serve in Mudichur value a HUF partner who already understands their sector's compliance rhythm.

The qualified-review step on every Mudichur HUF file is where errors get caught before they reach the portal. We keep a repeatable HUF checklist for Mudichur so nothing in the cycle is improvised or missed. Every HUF file we open for Mudichur is reconciled, reviewed by a qualified practitioner, and archived for seven years. Working papers for Mudichur HUF Formation engagements stay archived and retrievable, which makes any later notice or query straightforward to answer.

Serving Mudichur and Perungalathur from one team keeps HUF Formation turnaround identical across the cluster. Businesses straddling Mudichur and Perungalathur get a single HUF point of contact rather than two. HUF Formation clients in Perungalathur are handled by the same practitioners who run our Mudichur desk. We treat Mudichur and Perungalathur as one catchment for HUF Formation, which keeps documentation and turnaround consistent.

The longer we serve Mudichur, the more precisely we predict where a HUF file needs attention. Common patterns in the Tambaram Division give Mudichur businesses an early-warning map we use to pre-empt HUF issues. Each engagement in Mudichur adds to a record of what the Chennai South jurisdiction expects, sharpening the next HUF file. Recurring gaps in Mudichur retail records are the first thing our HUF Formation review closes out.

Relocating a registered office into Mudichur (PIN 600045) changes the assessing division, and we handle that HUF Formation transition cleanly. First-time HUF Formation for a Mudichur business is where getting the basics right saves years of cleanup later. We onboard new Mudichur entities onto a HUF Formation cadence that is audit-ready from the very first cycle. Incorporating in Mudichur comes with jurisdiction, registration and HUF steps that we sequence so nothing stalls the launch.

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Expert Guide

HUF Formation in Mudichur — Complete Guide

Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act 1956, as amended by the 2005 Amendment Act and authoritatively interpreted by the Supreme Court in Vineeta Sharma v Rakesh Sharma (2020) 9 SCC 1, makes daughters coparceners by birth — irrespective of whether the father was alive on 9 September 2005. FilingPro audits every Mudichur family for Vineeta Sharma compliance, includes daughters in the coparcener roll of the deed, and ensures the family's HUF is constitutionally and statutorily robust against future challenge.

HUF Formation in Mudichur, Chennai

HUF Formation in Mudichur for Hindu, Buddhist, Jain and Sikh families is delivered with a Mitakshara-compliant HUF deed declaring Karta, members and coparceners (including post-Vineeta Sharma 2020 daughter coparceners), Form 49A PAN allotment, Section 56(2)(x) compliant corpus and bank account opening.

HUF Deed Drafting Consultant in Mudichur — Section 2(31) IT Act

A dedicated HUF formation consultant in Mudichur drafts the deed, files Form 49A PAN, opens the bank account, audits the family for Vineeta Sharma 2020 daughter-coparcener compliance, and maps Section 64(2) clubbing implications of any conversion of self-acquired property into HUF property.

Section 171 HUF Partition Advisory in Mudichur

For families considering total partition under Section 171 of the Income-tax Act, FilingPro drafts the partition deed, files the Section 171(2) application before the Assessing Officer for a Section 171(3) order, computes Section 47(i) and Section 49(1)(i) cost-of-acquisition treatment for distributed assets, and ensures partial partitions barred under Section 171(9) are not inadvertently triggered.

Karta Declaration & Bank Account Opening for HUF in Mudichur

Karta declaration drafted with Hindu law authority — senior-most coparcener (post-2005 male or female under Vineeta Sharma) — and bank account opened in HUF name with Form 49A PAN, KYC of Karta, and authorised member mandate. Standing instructions, FD nomination and net banking access set up for Mudichur families.

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Qualified professionals handle your HUF in Mudichur. WhatsApp documents — we begin within 24 hours. From ₹3,500/one-time. Free consultation.
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Key Facts — HUF Formation in Mudichur
HUF Deed drafted on Mitakshara lines for Mudichur families — Karta declaration, member roll, coparcener list (sons + post-2005 daughters per Vineeta Sharma), and corpus statement on stamp paper with notarisation.
Form 49A PAN application filed in HUF name with Karta as signatory — PAN allotment in 7-15 working days, electronically signed using Karta's Aadhaar OTP.
Section 56(2)(x) "relative" mapping — gifts from members of the HUF are exempt as "relative gifts"; gifts from non-members above ₹50,000 are flagged as taxable Other Sources.
Section 64(2) clubbing audit on any self-acquired property converted into HUF property — income reverts to converter individual; spouse-share continues clubbed even after notional partition.
Vineeta Sharma v Rakesh Sharma (2020) 9 SCC 1 daughter-coparcener compliance — daughters by birth, irrespective of whether father was alive on 9 September 2005, included in coparcenary roll.
Section 6 Hindu Succession Act 1956 (post-2005 amendment) audit — coparcenary up to 4 generations of lineal descendants from common ancestor, male and female.
Section 115BAC old vs new regime comparison done annually — HUFs default to new regime; Form 10-IEA opt-out evaluated against Chapter VI-A deductions saved.
Section 171 partition pathway clearly explained — only total partition recognised, partial partitions after 31-Dec-1978 ignored under sub-section (9), Section 171(3) AO order required to dissolve HUF status for tax.
First ITR-2 (no business income) or ITR-3 (with business / professional income) prepared and filed in HUF status — Section 80C, 80D, 80G, 24(b) deductions claimed; Section 87A rebate correctly excluded.
HUF bank account opening at scheduled commercial banks — Karta-authenticated KYC, Form 49A PAN proof, deed copy, member mandate, FD nomination and net banking access for Mudichur families.
People Also Ask — HUF in Mudichur
How long does it take to form an HUF and get the PAN?
From engagement to PAN allotment is typically 10-15 working days — HUF deed drafted and notarised in 2-3 days, Form 49A PAN application filed and Aadhaar e-KYC done in 1 day, NSDL / UTIITSL processing of the PAN takes 7-12 working days. Bank account opening is parallelled and typically completes within 3-7 days of PAN allotment.
Can a Hindu working abroad form an HUF in India?
Yes. Section 6(2) of the Income-tax Act tests HUF residence on "control and management" of the family's affairs, not on physical residence. A non-resident Karta can manage an Indian HUF; the HUF is resident if any part of control and management is in India during the previous year. Where the Karta is fully overseas and no control is exercised in India, the HUF becomes non-resident — taxable in India only on India-source income.
Is creating an HUF still tax-efficient in 2026?
Yes for many families — HUF gets its own basic exemption (₹2.5L old / ₹3L new regime, slabs as notified), its own ₹1.5L Section 80C, Section 80D mediclaim, Section 80G donations, and a separate slab progression. The biggest restriction is Section 64(2) clubbing on conversion of self-acquired property and the absence of Section 87A rebate. Where the family has genuine ancestral assets or relative gifts as corpus, HUF planning continues to deliver real tax savings.
Can an HUF own a residential house?
Yes. HUF can purchase, own and hold a residential house. Loan interest under Section 24(b) up to ₹2,00,000 (self-occupied) is deductible, principal under Section 80C, and Section 54 / 54F capital gains exemption on sale and reinvestment are all available to the HUF. Where the house is HUF property and any member resides in it, that does not convert it back to individual property — it remains HUF property until partition.
Are gifts from non-relatives to HUF taxable?
Yes if exceeding ₹50,000 in aggregate in a financial year. Section 56(2)(x) treats sum of money or property received without consideration as Income from Other Sources where the aggregate exceeds ₹50,000 in the financial year and the donor is not a "relative" of the HUF. "Relative" of an HUF is defined in Explanation to Section 56(2)(x) as any member of the HUF — so gifts from members are exempt at any value; gifts from non-members above the threshold are fully taxable.
What happens if the family does not formally partition but stops treating it as HUF?
Tax-wise, nothing changes. Section 171(1) deems the HUF to continue being assessed as HUF until an order under Section 171(3) records total partition. Without such an order, the HUF status continues for tax purposes — ITRs must continue to be filed in HUF name, PAN remains active, and any income earned (even if informally received by individual members) continues to be assessed as HUF income. Partial partitions are barred under Section 171(9). Only formal Section 171 partition dissolves HUF for tax.
Can an HUF be a partner in a partnership firm?

An HUF cannot itself be a partner in a partnership firm; the karta may be a partner in his representative capacity for the HUF, and the share-of-profit is then assessable in the HUF's hands as the beneficial owner of the partnership interest.

What is the procedure if HUF deed is lost?

If the HUF deed is lost, a fresh declaration may be executed reciting the family composition, corpus source and prior existence of the HUF with reference to bank, PAN and tax records evidencing continuity; the new declaration is archived as the operative document.

Can the karta be replaced during his lifetime?

The karta cannot be unilaterally replaced; he may voluntarily resign from kartaship with the next senior coparcener assuming the role, or the family may by family settlement effect a transition; a karta-change deed records the transition for evidentiary purposes.

Is the HUF dissolved on the death of the sole coparcener?

On the death of the sole male coparcener leaving only female members, the HUF cannot be perpetuated under Sandhya Rani Dutta unless an antecedent HUF with male coparceners existed; the assets devolve on the heirs under the Hindu Succession Act 1956.

Can an HUF give a loan to a member?

Yes, an HUF can advance a loan to a member at an arm's-length rate of interest with proper documentation; the interest received is HUF income and the loan does not constitute a partial partition if structured as a documented financial transaction.

What is the Section 171 application procedure for partition?

A Section 171 application is filed before the Assessing Officer enclosing the partition deed, identifying assets and shares, supported by valuation reports; the Assessing Officer conducts an inquiry, examines the coparceners and records an order recognising the partition.

What Mudichur clients want to know before signing: Closer to Mudichur, in the residential growth corridor micro-market of Mudichur.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Huf Formation

Reading this guide locally — Across Mudichur, in the residential growth corridor micro-market of Mudichur.

What is a Hindu Undivided Family and how does Indian tax law recognise it

Coparceners versus members of the HUF

Within the HUF structure, the law distinguishes between coparceners and members. Coparceners are persons who acquire a birth-right in the joint family property and who can demand partition; members are those who are part of the family but do not have this birth-right. Prior to the Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act 2005, only male descendants up to four generations from a common male ancestor were coparceners; female members such as wives, mothers, daughters and daughters-in-law were members but not coparceners. The 2005 amendment, which inserted Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act in its present form, made daughters coparceners by birth on the same footing as sons — including the right to demand partition, the right to dispose of their coparcenary share by will, and the obligation to be a party to any partition. The Supreme Court in Vineeta Sharma v Rakesh Sharma (2020) 9 SCC 1 conclusively held that this right is retrospective and does not require the father coparcener to be alive on the date of the 2005 amendment.

HUF as a separate assessable person

Once recognised, the HUF is taxed as a person entirely separate from its Karta and members under Section 4 of the Income Tax Act, with its own Permanent Account Number, its own return of income under Section 139, and access to the basic exemption limit available to individuals (₹2.5 lakh under the old regime; ₹3 lakh under the default new regime as amended by Finance Act 2023). This separateness is the principal tax-planning rationale for forming an HUF: a family that earns income from ancestral property, joint investments, or a family-owned business can split that income between the individual Karta and the HUF, with each entity getting an independent slab benefit. However, the Supreme Court in CWT v Chander Sen (1986) 161 ITR 370 (SC) and the earlier decision in CIT v Sandhya Rani Dutta (2001) 248 ITR 201 (SC) significantly narrowed the scope of automatic HUF inheritance after the 1956 Hindu Succession Act, holding that property inherited under Section 8 of the 1956 Act is taken as individual property and not as HUF property.

Statutory recognition under Section 2(31)(ii) of the Income Tax Act

The Hindu Undivided Family is one of the seven categories of persons enumerated in Section 2(31) of the Income Tax Act 1961, appearing specifically at clause (ii) immediately after individuals and before companies. Unlike the Companies Act 2013 or the Limited Liability Partnership Act 2008, no statute creates the HUF — it is a creature of personal law derived from the Mitakshara and Dayabhaga schools of Hindu jurisprudence, which the Income Tax Act merely recognises as a separate assessable entity for the purpose of taxation. The Supreme Court in Surjit Lal Chhabda v CIT (1975) 101 ITR 776 (SC) held that a Hindu joint family is an entity of immemorial antiquity and that an HUF can come into existence in the moment of marriage of a male Hindu, with the family expanding upon birth of children. The Act does not define HUF itself but borrows the concept entirely from substantive Hindu law, which is why the formation of an HUF is governed by Hindu Adoption and Maintenance Act 1956 and the Hindu Succession Act 1956 rather than the Income Tax Act.

Closure and continuity of an HUF over generations

Continuity through generations

An HUF has perpetual existence in principle — new members join automatically by birth, marriage or adoption, and the HUF continues as long as there is at least one coparcener and at least one other member (or even just one coparcener post-Vineeta Sharma, since a sole surviving coparcener can constitute the HUF with the prospect of future expansion). On the death of the Karta, the next senior coparcener becomes the Karta without any formal change in the HUF's identity — the PAN remains the same, the bank account continues with a change in operating signatory, and the income tax record continues without interruption. The HUF's continuity through generations is one of its principal differentiating features from a partnership (which dissolves on death of any partner under Section 42 of the Partnership Act unless otherwise agreed) or a trust (which terminates when the trust property is exhausted or the trust period ends).

Wealth preservation and estate planning role

An HUF serves as an intergenerational wealth-preservation vehicle that complements individual estate planning. Assets held by the HUF do not form part of any individual member's estate for inheritance purposes — they devolve within the HUF by survivorship and birth-right rather than by will or intestate succession applicable to individual property. The Karta cannot will away HUF property in his individual capacity; coparceners cannot mortgage their unascertained shares; and HUF property is generally protected from individual creditors of any single member. These features make the HUF a useful structure for preserving ancestral wealth, holding family business assets, and ensuring continuity of family-owned enterprises. With proper structuring complementing individual estate planning through wills, trusts and gifts, an HUF forms a robust intergenerational wealth-holding framework.

When to consider closing or restructuring an HUF

An HUF should be considered for partition and closure when the family relationships have deteriorated to the extent that joint decision-making is no longer feasible, when the original purpose of forming the HUF (such as holding a specific business or property) has ceased, when the children have moved to different countries and joint Indian residence-based planning is no longer efficient, when the tax-saving rationale has weakened (for example, after the increase in basic exemption under the new regime which has reduced the marginal value of slab-splitting for many taxpayers), or when a substantial Section 64(2) clubbing risk has been identified that frustrates the HUF's tax planning purpose. Partition under Section 171 is the only recognised exit route, and its consequences in terms of capital gains exemption (Section 47(i)), cost basis for the recipient (Section 49(1)(i)), and joint and several liability for pre-partition tax (Section 171(6)) should be carefully evaluated before initiating the process.

How is an HUF created — formation methods recognised by law

Automatic formation by marriage and birth

The most common and least disputed method of HUF formation is automatic creation by operation of law upon the marriage of a male Hindu. The Supreme Court in Gowli Buddanna v CIT (1966) 60 ITR 293 (SC) held that a single male and his wife constitute a Hindu Undivided Family even before the birth of any child, and the Apex Court in Surjit Lal Chhabda reaffirmed that a man may have an HUF for income-tax purposes consisting only of himself and his wife. No deed, registration or declaration is required for this automatic formation — the HUF is born when the marriage is solemnised under the Hindu Marriage Act 1955. However, for tax compliance purposes the HUF must obtain its own PAN under Section 139A by filing Form 49A in the name of the HUF, with the Karta signing as the authorised person. Without a PAN, the HUF cannot open a bank account, cannot file a return, and cannot enter into any contractual relationship in its own name.

Formation by partition of a larger HUF

An HUF can also come into existence through partition of a pre-existing larger HUF — when a coparcener of an existing HUF separates with his share, the share that devolves on him constitutes a new HUF along with his wife and lineal descendants. Such partition must be a total partition under Section 171 of the Income Tax Act, since the Finance Act 1979 inserted Section 171(9) which prohibits recognition of partial partitions effected on or after 31 December 1978. A claim of total partition has to be made before the Assessing Officer in the year of the partition, and the Assessing Officer is required to record a finding under Section 171(3) after due inquiry. Until such a finding is recorded, the HUF continues to be assessed as undivided under Section 171(1) even if the family has in fact physically divided the property. The resulting smaller HUFs each constitute fresh assessable entities with effect from the date of the recorded partition.

Formation through gift or will received as HUF property

A third route to HUF formation is through a gift or testamentary bequest made expressly to a person and his family or to the HUF of a specific Karta. The donor must clearly express the intention that the property is given to the donee as HUF property and not as individual property — case law from CIT v M K Stremann (1965) 56 ITR 62 (Madras) and CIT v Arvind Narottam (1969) 76 ITR 419 (Gujarat) holds that the donor's intention is decisive. A gift from a father to his son specifying that the gift is for the son and his branch of the family will create HUF property in the son's hands, even if no HUF previously existed in the son's name. Section 56(2)(x) of the Income Tax Act provides important relief: gifts received by an HUF from any of its members are not treated as income in the HUF's hands, which is the cornerstone of HUF-based tax planning through corpus formation by way of member gifts.

The role and powers of the Karta

Karta's liability and limitations

The Karta's personal liability for HUF debts is limited to the extent of his coparcenary interest in the HUF property, subject to the doctrine of pious obligation which has been substantially modified by the Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act 2005. Section 6(4) of the amended Hindu Succession Act expressly abolishes the doctrine of pious obligation in respect of debts contracted after 20 December 2004, meaning sons are no longer liable for their father's debts on grounds of pious obligation for any such post-amendment debt. For income tax demands raised against the HUF, Section 171(6) provides that on partition of the HUF, every member becomes jointly and severally liable for the tax assessed for the period before partition, but each member's share of liability is in proportion to the share of joint family property allotted to him on partition.

Who can be a Karta under traditional and modern Hindu law

The Karta is the manager of the HUF and traditionally the senior-most male member of the family. Hindu personal law as expounded in Mulla's Principles of Hindu Law and applied by the Supreme Court in Tribhovan Das v Gujarat Revenue Tribunal (1991) provided that the Karta is the senior coparcener, and on his death or retirement the next senior coparcener becomes Karta. After the 2005 amendment to the Hindu Succession Act, daughters became coparceners on the same footing as sons, and the Delhi High Court in Sujata Sharma v Manu Gupta (2016) 226 DLT 647 expressly held that the eldest coparcener — including a daughter — can be the Karta of an HUF. This is a significant departure from the traditional male-only position. The Karta need not be the oldest male in the family if he has retired by mutual agreement, but the senior coparcener has a prima facie right to be the Karta.

Powers of the Karta in managing HUF property

The Karta has wide powers of management over HUF property — he can carry on family business, contract debts for legal necessity, manage agricultural operations, and enter into ordinary transactions. However, his powers are not absolute. For alienation of immovable HUF property by sale, mortgage or gift, the Karta must establish either legal necessity, benefit of the estate, or performance of indispensable religious duties — the trilogy of grounds laid down by the Privy Council in Hunooman Persaud v Mussumat Babooee (1856) and reaffirmed by the Supreme Court in Sunil Kumar v Ram Prakash (1988) 2 SCC 77. A Karta cannot gift HUF property to a member except within reasonable limits for marriage or religious purposes. Karta's transactions in the ordinary course bind the HUF and all coparceners, but for sale of immovable property the principle of legal necessity remains a precondition that a purchaser is expected to verify.

What Mudichur clients usually ask next: Closer to Mudichur, for the professional and salaried population of Mudichur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

Survivorship Rule

Traditional Mitakshara principle by which deceased coparcener's interest passes to surviving coparceners, modified by 1956 Act.

Testamentary Disposition

Right of coparcener post-Hindu Succession Act to bequeath undivided interest in coparcenary property by will.

Resident HUF

HUF whose control and management of affairs is wholly or partly in India during the previous year as per Section 6(2).

Non-Resident HUF

HUF whose entire control and management is situated outside India, taxed only on income sourced or accruing in India.

Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident HUF

Intermediate residential status applicable where Karta has been non-resident for nine of preceding ten years.

Basic Exemption for HUF

Threshold limit of two and half lakh under old regime or three lakh under new regime below which no tax.

Old Tax Regime for HUF

Slab structure with full deductions under Chapter VIA, optional after Finance Act 2023 default switch.

New Tax Regime for HUF

Default concessional slab regime under Section 115BAC with limited deductions, applicable from assessment year 2024-25.

Section 80C for HUF

Deduction up to one and half lakh available to HUF for LIC of members, PPF deposits not permitted post 2005.

PPF Restriction on HUF

Public Provident Fund accounts in HUF name discontinued from 13-May-2005; existing accounts not renewable beyond maturity.

Capital Gains for HUF

Gains on transfer of family assets taxed in HUF hands; exemption under Sections 54, 54F and 54EC available.

House Property Income of HUF

Rental income from family-owned properties assessed under Section 22 with standard deduction of thirty percent.

Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

Real client situations (names changed); illustrative of the kind of work we do.

Separate HUF booksRetail trading

HUF business carried on with separate books for a {{area_name}} retail family

Issue: A retail-trading HUF in {{area_name}} had been operating without segregated books — the karta's individual receipts and the HUF receipts had been commingled in a single bank account and a single set of books. An assessment query challenged the HUF character of the income on the commingling ground.
Approach: We segregated the books retrospectively — identified the HUF capital, the HUF-traceable inflows from ancestral sources, and the individual receipts; reopened separate bank accounts for the HUF and the karta-individual; reconciled the closing balances to the segregated heads; and produced the segregated trial balance before the Assessing Officer along with the foundational HUF deed and the ancestral-source trail.
Outcome: The Assessing Officer accepted the segregated position; HUF income head sustained for the assessment year; books henceforth maintained on segregated lines; no Section 271AAB or 271(1)(c) exposure crystallised.
GST composition HUFRetail trading

HUF GST composition scheme adoption for a {{area_name}} retail family business

Issue: An HUF carrying on retail business in {{area_name}} with aggregate turnover of approximately ₹85,00,000 had been registered under regular GST and was facing monthly GSTR-3B compliance burden disproportionate to its size. Composition scheme under Section 10 of the CGST Act was available on the turnover profile.
Approach: We filed Form CMP-02 opting into composition scheme effective the first day of the next financial year, transitioned the GST treatment from regular tax-invoice to bill-of-supply, reversed the ITC under Section 18(4) on stock held as on the transition date, and aligned the books to the flat 1% composition rate. The compliance routine shifted to quarterly CMP-08 and annual GSTR-4.
Outcome: Composition opting effective from the new financial year; monthly GSTR-3B obligation replaced by quarterly CMP-08; compliance cost reduced by approximately 60% at the HUF level; the flat 1% rate produced effective GST cost lower than the regular ITC-netting alternative.
Section 80G HUF donationCharitable inclination

HUF Section 80G donation deduction for a {{area_name}} family

Issue: An HUF in {{area_name}} made an annual donation of approximately ₹2,00,000 to an approved Section 80G institution out of HUF funds. The deduction had historically been claimed in the karta's individual return on the assumption that the HUF could not claim 80G, leaving the HUF's parallel ceiling unutilised.
Approach: We corrected the deduction routing — claimed the Section 80G deduction in the HUF return on the donation made out of HUF funds with the receipt issued in the HUF name and PAN, withdrew the parallel claim in the karta's individual return on the same donation. Independent donation streams in the karta's individual capacity continued to be claimed in the individual return as before.
Outcome: Section 80G deduction at the 50%-100% qualifying limit captured at the HUF level; karta's individual Section 80G capacity preserved for independent donations; family-level effective saving of approximately ₹30,000 on the donation in the first corrected assessment year.
Section 68 HUFBusiness family

HUF cash-deposit explanation under Section 68 in {{area_name}}

Issue: A business-family HUF in {{area_name}} faced a Section 68 query on cash deposits of approximately ₹14,00,000 made during the demonetisation cycle. The Assessing Officer required satisfactory explanation of the source, identity and genuineness of the deposit, failing which an addition at the maximum marginal rate plus Section 271AAC penalty would follow.
Approach: We compiled the explanation pack — the HUF cashbook with the daily balance reconciliation evidencing the deposit source from documented cash sales in the prior period, the trade-debtor settlement trail with copies of customer cash receipts, the HUF deed and the karta's identity proofs. The reply addressed identity, genuineness and source threefold satisfaction as required for Section 68 discharge.
Outcome: Section 68 query closed without addition; Section 271AAC penalty exposure averted; the HUF books were strengthened with a cash-handling protocol thereafter to forestall any repeat exposure.

Why these Mudichur engagements look the way they do: Closer to Mudichur, the cluster of residential, retail, light manufacturing businesses that defines Mudichur's commercial fabric, which is why for the professional and salaried population of Mudichur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Client Reviews

What Mudichur Clients Say

Sridhar V
HUF Formation
“Wanted to form HUF for our textile family business. FilingPro drafted the deed on Mitakshara lines, included my daughter as coparcener under Vineeta Sharma 2020, filed Form 49A and opened the HUF current account at ICICI. Saved ₹62,000 in tax in the very first year through HUF basic exemption and 80C.”
2 months agoVerified Client
Krishnan R
HUF Formation
“Inherited ancestral property from my late father. FilingPro confirmed it qualified as HUF property under Mitakshara, drafted the HUF deed declaring me as Karta with my wife and two children as members, filed PAN in HUF name. Now rental income is taxed in HUF separately — clean structure.”
3 months agoVerified Client
Latha M
HUF Formation
“After my husband's demise, I needed clarity on whether I could be Karta of our HUF. FilingPro walked me through Vineeta Sharma 2020 — confirmed I am the senior-most coparcener and can be Karta. Updated the deed, changed bank mandate, filed ITR-2 in HUF name. Deeply grateful for the patient guidance.”
6 weeks agoVerified Client
Venkatesh K
HUF Formation
“Was about to "throw" my mutual fund portfolio into HUF for tax savings. FilingPro flagged Section 64(2) clubbing — the LTCG would still be taxed in my hands until partition. Saved me from a costly mistake and instead structured corpus through my father's gift — fully Section 56(2)(x) exempt.”
4 months agoVerified Client
Raghavan S
HUF Formation
“Our family wanted to do a partial partition of one rental property out of the HUF. FilingPro showed us Section 171(9) — partial partitions after 1978 are not recognised. Restructured as a total partition application under Section 171(2), AO passed Section 171(3) order, every member got definite shares. No Section 64 surprises later.”
1 month agoVerified Client
Jayashree N
HUF Formation
“Our HUF was filing ITR for years but no formal deed existed. Banks were asking for documentation. FilingPro drafted retrospective HUF deed declaring corpus from my father-in-law's gift in 2014, notarised, opened proper HUF account at HDFC. Compliance gaps closed cleanly.”
2 months agoVerified Client
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Common Questions

HUF FAQ — Mudichur

Common questions from Mudichur clients. Call 9566-068-468 for specific queries.

Yes. Section 10(2) of the Income-tax Act exempts in the hands of a member any sum received out of the income of an HUF of which he is a member — so far as it is paid out of HUF income already taxed in HUF's hands. The provision avoids double taxation of HUF income at member level. It applies to income (revenue), not capital — capital received on partition is governed by Section 47(i) and has its own non-transfer treatment.
Yes. Section 2(31) of the Income-tax Act 1961 lists HUF as a distinct "person" alongside individuals, companies, firms and others. HUF has its own PAN, files its own return (ITR-2 if no business income, ITR-3 if business or profession income), claims its own basic exemption limit and its own Chapter VI-A deductions under Section 80C, 80D, 80G and others. HUF income is not clubbed with the Karta's individual income except in the limited circumstances under Section 64(2).
Yes — we handle HUF Formation for individuals and businesses across Mudichur (PIN 600045) and nearby Perungalathur. The work is done end-to-end by our own team, with documents collected online over WhatsApp or email and in-person meetings available at our Maduravoyal and Nerkundram offices. Call 9566-068-468 to begin.
No. Salary / remuneration arises from a personal employer-employee relationship — HUF being an artificial person cannot be in employment. Where the Karta works for a company in which the HUF holds shares (or for a firm in which Karta is a partner representing HUF capital), the remuneration he receives is his individual income, not HUF income, even if his shareholding / partnership stems from HUF investment. The classic Raj Kumar Singh Hukam Chandji (1970) 78 ITR 33 (SC) test applies — income earned by personal exertion is individual; income earned by deployment of HUF capital is HUF.
All coparceners are members, but not all members are coparceners. Coparceners — sons, sons of sons, sons of sons of sons (up to 4 generations from common ancestor) and post-2005 daughters and their lineal descendants — have a birth right in coparcenary property and can demand partition. Other members — wife, daughter-in-law, mother, widowed daughter — are entitled to maintenance and a share on partition but cannot themselves demand partition. Both contribute to the assessment as one "HUF person" under Section 2(31).
Mudichur (PIN 600045) falls under the Tambaram Division, Chennai South commissionerate. Getting the jurisdiction right matters because registrations, filings and notices are routed through the correct office. We confirm and handle the right jurisdiction for every Mudichur engagement.
Although an HUF arises by operation of Hindu law on the marriage of a male Hindu and birth of children, FilingPro records its existence through (i) a written HUF deed declaring the Karta, members, coparceners and capital corpus, (ii) PAN application in Form 49A in the HUF name with Karta as signatory, and (iii) opening a bank current or savings account in the HUF name. Corpus is created by an initial gift from a member or relative, ancestral property already held jointly, or assets received on partition.
Section 2(31) of the Income-tax Act 1961 lists Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) as a separate "person" liable to tax. Section 2 of the Hindu Succession Act 1956 extends "Hindu" to Buddhists, Jains and Sikhs by religion, and to any person not Muslim, Christian, Parsi or Jew. Accordingly, families governed by Hindu law — including Buddhist, Jain and Sikh families — can form an HUF. The family arises automatically by operation of law on marriage of a male Hindu; no document creates the HUF, but a deed records its existence and corpus.
Delays in statutory work can mean penalties, interest or blocked services that usually cost far more than acting on time. For Mudichur clients we track the relevant due dates and remind you in advance so HUF stays on schedule. Call 9566-068-468 if you suspect you have already missed a deadline.
No. An HUF is not created by document — it arises by operation of Hindu law when a male Hindu marries (and now under 2005 amendment, when a female Hindu becomes a coparcener with descendants). The deed records the existence and corpus. A single asset transfer on stamp paper without a recognisable family unit is treated as a gift to a non-existent person and may be assessed under Section 56(2)(x) on whoever ultimately receives it. FilingPro's deed template ensures the family, members, Karta and corpus are all recorded.
Form 49A in HUF name is filed with — (i) HUF deed signed by Karta and adult members on a non-judicial stamp paper duly notarised, (ii) Karta's PAN and Aadhaar as signatory, (iii) address proof of HUF (typically Karta's residence with declaration), (iv) photograph of Karta, and (v) capital / corpus declaration listing the initial gift or ancestral asset. Application can be filed online on the NSDL or UTIITSL portal; PAN is allotted in 7-15 working days.
Not sure whether HUF applies to you? Call 9566-068-468 and describe your situation — we will tell you plainly whether you need it, when, and what it involves, before you spend anything. Many Mudichur enquiries start exactly this way.
Under the old regime, HUF enjoys a basic exemption of ₹2,50,000 for AY 2025-26, identical to a resident individual below 60. Under the new regime under Section 115BAC (default for HUF unless Form 10-IEA opted out), the basic exemption is ₹3,00,000. Slabs above are as notified in the Finance Act. The Section 87A rebate is available only to a "resident individual" — not to an HUF — so HUF starts paying tax from rupee one above the basic exemption.
No. The Explanation to Section 56(2)(x) of the Income-tax Act defines "relative" in case of an HUF to mean any member of the HUF. A gift from a member (Karta, coparcener or other member) to the HUF — in cash, jewellery, immovable property or shares — is therefore exempt from tax in the hands of the HUF irrespective of value. However, Section 64(2) clubbing applies to the income subsequently arising from the converted self-acquired property until partition.
Yes. Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act 1956 as amended by the Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act 2005 (with effect from 9 September 2005) makes daughters of a coparcener coparceners by birth in their own right, with the same rights and liabilities as sons. The Supreme Court in Vineeta Sharma v Rakesh Sharma (2020) 9 SCC 1 conclusively held that the right is by birth — the father need not be alive on 9 September 2005. Daughters can demand partition, become Karta and pass coparcenary rights to their children.
On a claim of total partition, the Karta or any member files an application before the Assessing Officer under Section 171(2). The AO conducts an enquiry (notice to all members, examination of partition deed, asset distribution chart) and passes an order under Section 171(3) recording either "total partition" with effective date or rejecting the claim. The HUF is then assessed up to the partition date and members are assessed individually thereafter on their respective shares. Without a Section 171(3) order, the HUF continues to be assessed even if family has informally partitioned.

We serve businesses in every part of Mudichur, from 3rd Street, Ambedkar Street, Grand Southern Trunk Road, Perungalathur Maempalam and Perungalathur - Kolapakkam Road to the Cheran Street, Kamaraj High Road, Krishna Road and Muthuvelar Street commercial pockets, with HUF handled end to end.

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Professional HUF Formation in Mudichur, Chennai. Call @ 9566-068-468. Offices at Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming). 15+ years experience, 4.9★ rated.

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