Mutual fund taxation in India depends on two things: what type of fund you own, and how long you've held it. Equity mutual funds carry a 20% short-term capital gains tax and 12.5% long-term capital gains tax on profits above ₹1.25 lakh annually. Debt mutual funds bought on or after April 1, 2023, are taxed entirely at your income slab rate — there's no long-term benefit, regardless of how many years you hold them. This guide breaks down every fund type, the exact rates that apply, how SIPs are taxed instalment by instalment, what's changed for NRIs, and where the real tax savings still exist.
Three things every investor should know upfront:
When you sell mutual fund units at a profit, that profit is called a capital gain — and it's taxable. The rate depends on the fund category and how long you held it.
Equity and debt funds don't follow the same rules. Holding period matters for equity funds; for debt funds bought after April 2023, it doesn't matter at all. Some fund types, like ELSS, also come with a deduction benefit that reduces your taxable income — but only if you're in the old tax regime.
Type of fund. Equity, debt, and hybrid funds are taxed differently under the Income Tax Act. The classification isn't always obvious from the fund name — always check how much of the fund's portfolio sits in domestic equity shares.
Dividends. Any dividend paid out by a mutual fund is added to your total income and taxed at your slab rate. This wasn't always the case — before DDT was abolished, the fund house paid tax on your behalf. That's no longer how it works.
Capital gains. Sell units for more than you paid and the difference is a capital gain. Whether that gain is short-term or long-term — and what rate applies — depends on the fund type and how long you held before redeeming.
Holding period. For equity funds, crossing the 12-month mark changes the tax rate from 20% to 12.5%. For debt funds bought before April 2023, 24 months is the threshold. For post-April 2023 debt funds, holding period is irrelevant — all gains are taxed at slab rate regardless.
Mutual funds generate returns in two forms: dividends and capital gains. Understanding how each is taxed separately matters — they follow completely different rules.
Dividend Distribution Tax no longer exists. The fund house doesn't pay tax on dividends before distributing them — that responsibility now sits entirely with the investor.
Any dividend you receive from a mutual fund is added to your gross income and taxed at your income slab rate. Under Section 194K, if your dividend from a single fund house exceeds ₹10,000 in a financial year, TDS is deducted before the amount reaches you. You can claim credit for that TDS when filing your ITR.
Capital gains arise only when you redeem — they're taxable in the financial year the sale happens, not the year you invested.
Equity mutual funds:
Debt mutual funds (purchased on or after April 1, 2023):
Equity-Linked Savings Schemes come with a mandatory 3-year lock-in, which means the holding period condition for long-term treatment is automatically satisfied by the time you can redeem.
Gains after the 3-year period are taxed at 12.5% on the amount above ₹1.25 lakh — same as any other equity fund after 12 months. The real advantage is the upfront deduction: investments up to ₹1.5 lakh per year qualify for a deduction under Section 80C, which can reduce your taxable income by that amount. This deduction is available only under the old tax regime — if you've opted for the new regime, the 80C benefit doesn't apply, though the LTCG tax treatment remains the same.
Dividends from ELSS and short-term gains (not applicable due to the lock-in) follow standard rules.
The capital gains tax rates for NRIs mirror what resident Indians pay — 12.5% LTCG on equity above ₹1.25 lakh, 20% STCG on equity, and slab-rate taxation on post-April 2023 debt funds. What differs is the process.
TDS is deducted at source when an NRI redeems mutual fund units. If your country of residence has a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement with India, you may qualify for a reduced tax rate under the treaty. To claim DTAA benefits, you'll need a valid Tax Residency Certificate issued by your home country's tax authority. Present this to the fund house before redemption where possible.
If excess TDS was deducted — which happens when the standard Indian rate is higher than the DTAA rate — file an Indian ITR to claim the refund. The process is straightforward but requires accurate documentation of the redemption amounts and TDS certificates.
Notes worth reading before you file:
A Systematic Investment Plan works by purchasing a fixed number of units at each contribution date. Each instalment is treated as a separate purchase for tax purposes.
This is where the common misunderstanding lives. Many investors assume that after 12 or 13 months of SIP contributions, all their units qualify for long-term treatment. They don't. Each instalment has its own 12-month clock running from the date that specific payment was made.
How it plays out in practice: Say you've run a monthly SIP in an equity fund for 13 months and decide to redeem everything. Units from month 1 have crossed 12 months — long-term, taxed at 12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh. Units from months 2 through 13 haven't — short-term, taxed at 20%. Redemptions follow FIFO (First In, First Out), meaning the oldest units sell first.
The practical implication: if you want more of your units to qualify for LTCG treatment, stagger your redemptions. Don't redeem everything at once when some units are still a few weeks away from crossing the 12-month mark.
STT is levied at 0.001% on the redemption of equity mutual fund units and equity-oriented hybrid funds. It's deducted at source — you don't pay it separately. Debt funds, gold funds, and international funds don't attract STT. On a ₹1 lakh redemption, STT is ₹1 — small, but worth knowing so the slight shortfall in proceeds doesn't catch you off guard.
An SWP lets you take out a fixed amount from your fund at regular intervals — monthly, quarterly, or annually. Each withdrawal is a partial redemption, and FIFO applies to determine whether the units being sold are short-term or long-term. Planning withdrawal timing carefully — and spacing them so older units sell first — can shift more of the gain into the long-term bracket.
The longer you stay invested in equity mutual funds, the lower your tax rate — that's not an accident, it's by design. Debt funds no longer reward patience the same way, which changes the calculus for conservative investors. Know the rules for your fund type before you invest, and revisit them before you redeem — that's where the real difference in net returns shows up.
None are fully tax-free, though equity funds come closest. Long-term gains up to ₹1.25 lakh per financial year from equity mutual funds are exempt from tax — anything above that is taxed at 12.5%. ELSS funds follow the same LTCG rule after the 3-year lock-in ends. Debt funds purchased after April 2023 have no exemption at all — every gain is taxed at slab rate. Short-term gains on equity funds are taxed at a flat 20% with no exemption threshold.
Each instalment has its own 12-month holding period starting from its purchase date — the portfolio doesn't all turn long-term simultaneously. If you've run a monthly SIP for 13 months and redeem in full, only the first month's units qualify as long-term. Everything bought in months 2 through 13 is still short-term, taxed at 20%. Before planning a large redemption, check which instalments have crossed the 12-month mark and prioritize redeeming only those if LTCG treatment is your goal.
Pre-April 2023 debt funds still follow the old rules, which are significantly more favourable. Hold them for 24 months or less and gains are taxed at your slab rate. Hold for more than 24 months and the rate is 12.5% without indexation — a flat rate that's lower than most investor's slab rates. If you own debt funds from both before and after the April 2023 cut-off, track them separately. The tax outcome at redemption will be very different depending on the purchase date.
NRIs pay the same capital gains rates as resident Indians — 12.5% LTCG on equity gains above ₹1.25 lakh, 20% STCG, and slab rate on post-April 2023 debt funds. The difference is that TDS gets deducted at source when an NRI redeems. If your country has a DTAA with India, you may qualify for a lower treaty rate — but you'll need a Tax Residency Certificate from your home country to claim it. If more TDS was deducted than your actual liability, file an Indian ITR to get the excess back.
Securities Transaction Tax is charged at 0.001% on equity mutual fund redemptions and equity-oriented hybrid fund sales. It's deducted automatically at the time of redemption — you don't file or calculate it separately. Debt funds, gold funds, and international funds aren't subject to STT. On a ₹5 lakh redemption, STT comes to just ₹5 — a tiny amount, but worth knowing so you're not puzzled when the proceeds land slightly short of what you expected.
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