SIP Taxation — STCG, LTCG, ELSS
SIP investments are subject to capital gains tax when units are redeemed. The critical nuance is that each SIP installment is treated as a separate purchase for...
SIP Taxation — STCG, LTCG, ELSS
SIP investments are subject to capital gains tax when units are redeemed. The critical nuance is that each SIP installment is treated as a separate purchase for tax purposes — meaning different installments may attract different tax rates depending on their individual holding periods. Tax treatment varies based on fund category (equity vs debt), holding duration (short-term vs long-term), and applicable exemptions (LTCG threshold, Section 80C for ELSS).
Taxation is where most SIP investors — and even many distributors — get confused. Here is the key concept: when units from a SIP are redeemed, the FIFO (First In, First Out) method applies. The units purchased by the earliest installment are sold first. Each installment's holding period is calculated individually from its purchase date to the redemption date. So if a 15-month-old SIP is redeemed, the first three installments (held over 12 months) are treated as long-term capital gains, while the last twelve installments (held under 12 months) are short-term capital gains. This matters enormously for tax planning. After the Union Budget 2024, the equity taxation landscape changed: equity LTCG is now taxed at 12.5% on gains above ₹1.25 Lakh per financial year, and equity STCG is now taxed at 20%. Debt fund gains (purchased after April 2023) are taxed at the investor's income tax slab rate with no indexation benefit. ELSS funds add another layer — each SIP installment has a 3-year lock-in from its individual purchase date, but qualifies for Section 80C deduction up to ₹1.5 Lakh per year. Smart tax planning around SIP redemption can save investors lakhs over their investment lifetime.
A Practical Example
Ananya started a ₹20,000 per month equity SIP in April 2023. By September 2024, her SIP has run for 18 months with a total investment of ₹3,60,000. She needs to redeem everything.
If Ananya had waited 6 more months, all installments would have become LTCG, and she would have paid zero tax (total gain still under ₹1.25L exemption).
What Makes This Important
Mathematical Formula
Equity Fund Tax Rates (FY 2025-26, post Budget 2024): STCG (holding period < 12 months): 20% flat rate LTCG (holding period > 12 months): 12.5% on gains above ₹1.25 Lakh per FY Debt Fund Tax (for purchases after 1 April 2023): All gains: Taxed at investor's income tax slab rate No indexation benefit available ELSS: Investment: Deductible under Section 80C (up to ₹1.5L/year) Redemption: Equity LTCG rules apply (12.5% above ₹1.25L) Lock-in: 3 years per individual SIP installment
Step-by-Step Calculation
Tax Harvesting Example: Kumar has ₹10,000/month equity SIP running for 3 years. Total invested: ₹3,60,000. Current value: ₹5,10,000. Unrealized LTCG: ₹1,50,000. Without tax harvesting — if he redeems later when gains grow to ₹3L: Taxable LTCG: ₹3,00,000 - ₹1,25,000 = ₹1,75,000 Tax: ₹1,75,000 × 12.5% = ₹21,875 With annual tax harvesting: Year 1: Redeem units with ₹1.25L LTCG → Tax: ₹0 (within exemption) Reinvest immediately → new cost base is reset higher Year 2: Again harvest ₹1.25L LTCG → Tax: ₹0 Total tax saved over 2 years: ₹21,875+ This strategy works best with large SIP portfolios where annual gains exceed ₹1.25 Lakh.
Frequently Asked Questions
Each financial year, redeem equity mutual fund units that have long-term gains up to ₹1.25 Lakh and reinvest immediately in the same or similar fund. This utilizes your annual LTCG exemption, resets the purchase cost to a higher level, and reduces future tax liability. It is legal, ethical, and highly effective.
🧠 Quick Quiz
4 questions to check your understanding
