View Categories

What’s the tax on mutual fund withdrawals?

Tax on mutual fund withdrawals in India depends on the type of fund and the holding period

When you withdraw (redeem) units from a mutual fund, the tax you pay depends on:

  • the type of fund (equity-oriented vs non-equity)
  • how long you held the units
  • the date of investment (because rules changed)

For Equity-Oriented Mutual Funds (65%+ in equity shares)

  • If you redeem within 12 months of investment → it’s treated as Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG) and taxed at 20% + cess & surcharge.
  • If you redeem after 12 months → it’s treated as Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG). Gains up to 1,25,000 in a financial year are exempt; gains above that are taxed at 12.5% + cess & surcharge.

For Non-Equity or Debt-Oriented Funds

When you withdraw (redeem) units from a debt-oriented mutual fund (i.e., a scheme that invests primarily in debt or money-market instruments), taxation depends on when you invested and the holding period. Recently, the tax rules have changed, so accurate record-keeping is critical.

Key Rules for Debt Funds

  • For units purchased on or after 1 April 2023: All gains (irrespective of how long you hold the investment) are treated as Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG) and taxed at your applicable income tax slab rate. Indexation benefit and the prior long-term capital gains (LTCG) special rates do not apply.
  • For units purchased on or before 31 March 2023:
    • If you sell/ redeem within 24 months: gains will be taxed at your income-tax slab rate (STCG)
    • If you hold for longer than the threshold (more than 24 months), then the gains are treated as LTCG and taxed at a flat 12.5% (plus cess/surcharge) without indexation benefit.

Since tax rules are dynamic and subject to change, we recommend consulting your tax advisor for the latest and detailed guidance.

Ask us Anything
Open chat

Let’s Talk About Your Financial Goals – Aram Se

Prefer chatting on WhatsApp?

WhatsApp logo Continue on WhatsApp