Mutual funds are highly effective instruments for generating long-term wealth, but many investors forget a crucial detail: the profit you see on your dashboard isn’t your actual take-home gain.
The moment you sell (redeem), switch to another fund, or receive a dividend, you trigger a tax event. How much you owe the government depends entirely on the type of fund and how long you held it.
1. Equity Mutual Funds & Equity-Oriented Hybrid Funds
(Funds with 65% or more allocation to Indian stocks)
Taxes on equity funds are calculated based on a 12-month holding period threshold. The rules became slightly stricter following recent budget revisions:
| Type of Gain | Holding Period | Tax Rate | Exemptions |
| Short-Term Capital Gain (STCG) | Up to 12 months | 20% | None |
| Long-Term Capital Gain (LTCG) | More than 12 months | 12.5% | Gains up to ₹1.25 Lakh per financial year are tax-free. |
The ₹1.25 Lakh Rule: If you make a profit of ₹2,00,000 on an equity fund held for 18 months, you don’t pay tax on the whole amount. You subtract the ₹1,25,000 exemption, meaning you only pay 12.5% tax on the remaining ₹75,000.
2. Debt Funds, Balanced Hybrids, & Debt-Oriented Hybrids
(Funds with less than 65% equity allocation)
The taxation rules for debt and hybrid investments have undergone significant changes, split entirely by when you originally made the investment:
For Investments Made On or After April 1, 2023
Under Section 50AA of the Income Tax Act, the concept of long-term holding periods has been removed for newer debt fund purchases.
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The Rule: All capital gains, regardless of how many years you hold the fund, are added directly to your annual income and taxed according to your personal income tax slab rate (e.g., 5%, 20%, or 30%). Indexation benefits are no longer available.
For Historical Investments Made Before April 1, 2023
If you are redeeming older units that you bought prior to the rule change, a 2-year (24-month) holding period threshold applies:
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Held for 2 Years or Less (STCG): Taxed at your personal income tax slab rate.
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Held for More than 2 Years (LTCG): Taxed at a flat 12.5% without indexation.
3. How Mutual Fund Dividends Are Taxed
If your mutual fund plan regularly pays out dividends instead of reinvesting them (Growth option), those payouts are treated as regular income:
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Taxable Income: The entire dividend amount is added directly to your “Income from Other Sources” and taxed at your regular income tax slab rate.
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TDS (Tax Deducted at Source): The fund house (AMC) is legally required to deduct a 10% TDS under Section 194K if your total dividend earnings across their schemes exceed ₹5,000 in a single financial year. You can claim credit for this deducted TDS when you file your final Income Tax Return (ITR).
Key Investor FAQs
How are taxes calculated if I invested via a monthly SIP?
Taxation follows the FIFO (First-In, First-Out) method. Every single SIP installment is treated as a brand-new investment with its own distinct purchase date. For example, if you start a monthly SIP in January 2025 and sell your entire portfolio in February 2026, only your very first installment (January 2025) qualifies for the lower Long-Term Capital Gains tax rate. The subsequent installments have not crossed the 12-month mark and will be taxed as short-term gains.
Does a Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) or an internal fund switch trigger taxes?
Yes. Moving your money from an Equity Fund to a Debt Fund within the same app is legally treated as selling your equity units and buying debt units. Every individual monthly withdrawal under an SWP is treated as a partial sale of your units, and capital gains are calculated and taxed on each payout automatically.
