In a clarification issued by CBDT, the nodal tax governing agency has said a Mutual Fund shall be required to deduct TDS (tax deduction at source) at the rate of 10 per cent only on dividend payment and no tax shall be required to be deducted by the MFs on income which is in the nature of capital gains.
The clarification makes it clear entire capital gains in the hands of a mutual fund holder will not be taxed but only to the extent of amount received as dividend. The tax will also alloy if such dividend income is over Rs 5,000 in a year.
CBDT has said that necessary clarification regarding the application of taxes would be made in the relevant provision of the law so that there is no confusion about its proper and fair application.
Finance Minister
The Finance Bill, 2020, has proposed the insertion of a new section A-194K - in the Income Tax Act, which states "any person responsible for paying income arising from units of mutual fund or a specified company must deduct tax at the rate of ten percent of such income".
The provision generated doubts whether capital gains will be taxed or the entire redemption amount made by the unitholders will be taxed at source.
According to Section 194K, any "resident" deriving an "income" from mutual funds, specified under Section 10 Clause (23D), will be subject to have a 10 per cent TDS.
Before the clause was introduced, TDS on mutual funds was deducted for NRI investors and not residents.
Earlier, only dividend income on mutual funds exceeding Rs 1 lakh was taxed at 10 per cent.