Dividend Taxation — How It Changed After 2020
Mutual fund dividends (now officially called Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal — IDCW) were tax-free in the hands of investors until March 31, 2020, as...
Dividend Taxation — How It Changed After 2020
Mutual fund dividends (now officially called Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal — IDCW) were tax-free in the hands of investors until March 31, 2020, as the fund house paid Dividend Distribution Tax (DDT) before distributing dividends. From April 1, 2020, the DDT was abolished and dividends became fully taxable in the hands of investors at their applicable income tax slab rate. Additionally, TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) of 10% is deducted by the AMC if total dividend from a single AMC exceeds Rs 5,000 in a financial year for resident investors.
This was one of the biggest changes in mutual fund history, causing significant confusion among investors and distributors alike. Before April 2020, investors preferred dividend plans because "dividends are tax-free." What many did not realize was that the fund house was paying DDT of about 29.12% (for equity funds) and 29.12% (for debt funds including surcharge and cess) from the fund corpus before distributing dividends. Investors were indirectly bearing the tax through lower NAV. After April 2020, dividends are added to the investor's total income and taxed at the applicable slab rate. For a person in the 30% bracket, the effective tax on dividends is about 31.2% (including cess) — similar to before, but now it is visible and direct. However, for a person in the 5% bracket or with income below the basic exemption limit, dividends are now taxed at a much lower rate or even zero. The shift made Growth plans significantly more tax-efficient for high-income investors because gains are taxed only on redemption (and at lower capital gains rates), while IDCW plans trigger tax every time a distribution is made. Distributors should guide most clients towards Growth plans unless the client specifically needs regular income and is in a low tax bracket. Note: SEBI renamed "Dividend" to "IDCW" (Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal) to clarify that these are not dividends in the traditional sense — they represent a return of invested capital plus any income.
A Practical Example
Consider two investors — Kavitha (annual income Rs 4,50,000, in the 5% tax bracket under old regime) and Deepak (annual income Rs 25,00,000, in the 30% bracket). Both invest Rs 10,00,000 in the same equity mutual fund. The fund declares an IDCW of Rs 50,000 to each.
Kavitha: The Rs 50,000 IDCW is added to her income. Her total income becomes Rs 5,00,000. Tax on the dividend portion at 5% = Rs 2,500. Since the IDCW is below Rs 5,000 from that AMC (actually it exceeds, so TDS of 10% applies). Wait — Rs 50,000 exceeds Rs 5,000, so TDS of 10% = Rs 5,000 is deducted by AMC. Kavitha can claim a refund of Rs 2,500 (TDS Rs 5,000 minus actual tax Rs 2,500) when filing ITR.
Deepak: Rs 50,000 is added to his Rs 25 lakh income. Marginal tax rate = 30%. Tax on dividend = Rs 50,000 x 30% = Rs 15,000 plus 4% cess = Rs 15,600. TDS deducted = Rs 5,000. Deepak must pay the remaining Rs 10,600 as self-assessment tax.
If both had chosen the Growth plan instead, no tax event occurs until redemption. The Rs 50,000 stays invested and compounds. This is why Growth is almost always better for high-income investors.
What Makes This Important
Frequently Asked Questions
SEBI renamed dividend plans to IDCW (Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal) in April 2021 to clarify that mutual fund "dividends" are not like company dividends. Company dividends come from profits, but MF IDCW comes from the fund's NAV — it is essentially a partial withdrawal of the investor's own capital plus any accumulated income. The name change was meant to prevent investor confusion.
🧠 Quick Quiz
4 questions to check your understanding
