The judgment also read down CBDT Circular No. 13/2014, which had earlier directed tax authorities to treat Category III AIFs as indeterminate trusts if investor details were missing from the deed.
This often pushed such funds into the highest tax bracket of over 40%.
What the court said?
Why the ruling matters?
The decision ensures that Category III AIFs are now taxed as determinate trusts, meaning income will be taxed in the hands of the trustee at
Rohit Beri, Founder of ArthAlpha, called the ruling a "significant step" for the industry.
“The Court has now clarified that Category III AIFs are determinate trusts. Even though investor names may not feature in the trust deed, their share is clearly ascertainable through contribution agreements and the information memorandum. As a result, long-term capital gains will attract the concessional
Compliance steps
Experts say the ruling removes a key technical hurdle that had been creating tax uncertainty for funds and investors alike.
Arun Patel, Founder & Partner at Arunasset Investment Services, explained the shift.
“For years, the tax department relied on a 2014 circular which said that if a Category-III AIF’s trust deed didn’t spell out the names
On compliance, Patel advised funds to focus on documentation and record-keeping:
“Investor agreements should clearly spell out commitments, units, and profit-sharing ratios. An updated investor register covering names, units, capital calls, and
Long-term impact on the AIF industry
The judgment is expected to reduce tax burdens, improve post-tax returns, and make Category III AIFs more attractive for investors.
With regulatory clarity in place, industry participants believe the decision could bolster confidence in the domestic AIF sector and attract more capital