A complete, plain-English guide to how your Indian mutual fund gains are taxed — in India and in your country of residence. Updated for Budget 2024.
⚡ Budget 2024 update: LTCG rate increased from 10% → 12.5% and STCG from 15% → 20%, effective July 23, 2024. Annual LTCG exemption increased from ₹1L → ₹1.25L. These rates apply to NRI TDS as well. Cess of 4% applies on all tax amounts.
How your Indian mutual fund gains are treated across the most common NRI destinations. Jump to any country for the full picture.
*UK Indian Mutual Funds classified as Non-Reporting Offshore Funds — gains taxed as income, not capital gains. Select a country above for full details.
⚡ Budget 2024 update: LTCG rate increased from 10% → 12.5% and STCG from 15% → 20%, effective July 23, 2024. Annual LTCG exemption increased from ₹1L → ₹1.25L. These rates apply to NRI TDS as well. Cess of 4% applies on all tax amounts.
India and the US have a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA). You can avoid paying tax twice — by filing your Indian ITR and claiming Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) for taxes paid in India against your US tax liability.
⚠️ Important — PFIC Rules: The US IRS may classify Indian mutual funds as Passive Foreign Investment Companies (PFICs). PFIC treatment can result in punitive tax rates on unrealised gains. There is no statutory dollar threshold — PFIC rules can apply regardless of investment size. If you hold Indian mutual funds and are a US person (citizen, green card holder, or resident), consult a US tax specialist before investing further or making redemptions. Equity funds with direct equity exposure may be partially exempt under the de minimis rule.
| Gain Type | Holding Period | 2025 Rate |
|---|---|---|
| STCG (Short Term) | Less than 1 year | Ordinary Income rate (18–37%) |
| LTCG (Long Term) | More than 1 year | 0%, 15%, or 20% |
| LTCG – High Earner | More than 1 year | +3.8% NIIT (above $200K) |
| LTCG – Maximum | More than 1 year | 23.8% maximum |
LTCG rate is 0% if your total 2025 taxable income is below $48,350 (single) or $96,700 (married filing jointly).
💡 Tip: Files for the Oct 15 extension in the US — this gives you time to file your Indian ITR first (due July 31) and obtain Form 26AS showing TDS paid, which you'll need to claim FTC in the US.
AMC deducts TDS at source — 12.5% for LTCG equity or 20% for STCG equity.
File ITR-2 in India. Declare the capital gains and the TDS already deducted. Obtain Form 26AS confirming TDS payment.
Attach Form 1116 to your US 1040. Enter the Indian taxes paid as foreign tax credit. This reduces your US tax liability dollar for dollar.
Submit Form 1040 with Form 1116 attached. Keep all Indian tax documents for at least 7 years as the IRS may request them.
⚡ Budget 2024 update: LTCG rate increased from 10% → 12.5% and STCG from 15% → 20%, effective July 23, 2024. Annual LTCG exemption increased from ₹1L → ₹1.25L. These rates apply to NRI TDS as well. Cess of 4% applies on all tax amounts.
UAE has no personal income tax. Under the India-UAE DTAA, your Indian mutual fund gains are also exempt from tax in India. This means you pay zero — but only if you file your Indian ITR and claim the refund.
Apply at the EmaraTax portal (emaratax.uae.gov.ae). Fee: AED 1,050 for individuals (AED 50 submission + AED 1,000 processing). Takes 5–7 working days. Valid for one financial year. Renew annually.
Log in to incometax.gov.in. Under "File" → "Income Tax Forms" → Form 10F. Upload TRC and submit. This activates DTAA protection for the year.
AMC deducts TDS. You will receive the net amount. Keep the redemption statement.
File ITR-2 in India. Declare MF gains and claim refund of TDS. The refund is deposited directly to your NRO account.
⚡ Budget 2024 update: LTCG rate increased from 10% → 12.5% and STCG from 15% → 20%, effective July 23, 2024. Annual LTCG exemption increased from ₹1L → ₹1.25L. These rates apply to NRI TDS as well. Cess of 4% applies on all tax amounts.
Canada has a 50% capital gains inclusion rate — meaning only half of your Indian mutual fund gains are added to your income and taxed at your slab rate. This makes India an attractive investment destination for Canada-based NRIs.
✅ Key advantage: Canada's 50% inclusion rule means a ₹1Cr gain results in only ₹50L added to your taxable income. Combined with DTAA FTC, your effective tax on Indian MF gains is significantly lower than face value.
| Income Bracket (CAD) | Federal Rate |
|---|---|
| $57,375 or less | 14.5% (blended 2025 rate)* |
| $57,376 – $114,750 | 20.5% |
| $114,751 – $177,882 | 26% |
| $177,883 – $253,414 | 29% |
| Over $253,414 – 33% | 33% |
*Bill C-4 cut the lowest bracket from 15% to 14% effective July 1, 2025; CRA applies a blended 14.5% for the full 2025 tax year. From 2026, the full-year rate is 14%. Note: Provincial tax applies additionally. Total combined rate (federal + provincial) can range from ~20% to ~54% depending on province and income.
⚠️ India's ITR deadline (July 31) is after Canada's deadline (April 30). File Canadian return first, then get Indian ITR proof for FTC in the following year's Canadian return, or file a T1 adjustment later.
⚡ Budget 2024 update: LTCG rate increased from 10% → 12.5% and STCG from 15% → 20%, effective July 23, 2024. Annual LTCG exemption increased from ₹1L → ₹1.25L. These rates apply to NRI TDS as well. Cess of 4% applies on all tax amounts.
Australia offers a 50% Capital Gains Discount for assets held longer than 12 months. For Indian mutual funds, this means holding your investment for over a year cuts your taxable gain in half — a significant, actionable advantage.
✅ Actionable tip: If your Indian MF investment is approaching the 12-month mark, wait until it crosses 1 year before redeeming. The 50% CGT discount cuts your Australian tax bill in half — on a ₹1Cr gain, this can save ₹8–15L in tax depending on your income level.
| Income Bracket (AUD) | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| $0 – $18,200 | Nil |
| $18,201 – $45,000 | 19% |
| $45,001 – $120,000 | 32.5% |
| $120,001 – $180,000 | 37% |
| Over $180,000 | 45% |
Capital gains are added to ordinary income. The 50% CGT discount (for assets held >12 months) halves the gain before adding it to income.
⚡ Budget 2024 update: LTCG rate increased from 10% → 12.5% and STCG from 15% → 20%, effective July 23, 2024. Annual LTCG exemption increased from ₹1L → ₹1.25L. These rates apply to NRI TDS as well. Cess of 4% applies on all tax amounts.
Singapore has no capital gains tax — on anything. Under the India-Singapore DTAA, your gains are also exempt from tax in India. Obtain a Certificate of Residence (COR) from IRAS, file your Indian ITR, and claim back every rupee of TDS deducted.
✅ Best outcome alongside UAE: Singapore NRIs investing in India pay zero tax everywhere. The COR process is simple and the India TDS refund is automatic once you file ITR. Every Singapore-based NRI investing in Indian equity MFs should be doing this.
| Capital Gains Tax :: 0% — No capital gains tax in Singapore :: green |
|---|
| Scope :: Shares, MFs, property, all capital assets |
| Income Tax on Dividends :: Applicable at slab rate (if applicable) |
| Filing Required :: Yes — if income > SGD 22,000/yr |
| Tax Authority :: IRAS (iras.gov.sg) |
⚡ Budget 2024 update: LTCG rate increased from 10% → 12.5% and STCG from 15% → 20%, effective July 23, 2024. Annual LTCG exemption increased from ₹1L → ₹1.25L. These rates apply to NRI TDS as well. Cess of 4% applies on all tax amounts.
Germany taxes capital gains at a flat rate of 26.375% (25% + 5.5% solidarity surcharge). Under the India-Germany DTAA, you have two options: claim a Foreign Tax Credit in Germany for Indian taxes paid, OR apply for exemption in India and get a refund there.
📌 Two DTAA routes for Germany NRIs: Route A (FTC): Pay 26.375% in Germany. Claim credit for Indian TDS already paid. Net additional tax in Germany = 26.375% minus India TDS. Route B (TRC/India Refund): Under DTAA, India-source MF gains are exempt in India. Get a refund of India TDS by filing ITR. Pay Germany tax only. Usually Route B is preferable if Indian TDS is significant.
⚡ Budget 2024 update: LTCG rate increased from 10% → 12.5% and STCG from 15% → 20%, effective July 23, 2024. Annual LTCG exemption increased from ₹1L → ₹1.25L. These rates apply to NRI TDS as well. Cess of 4% applies on all tax amounts.
Every Indian mutual fund is classified as a Non-Reporting Offshore Fund in the UK. This means your gains are NOT treated as capital gains — they are treated as ordinary income and taxed at your marginal rate, up to 45%. This is the most important thing UK-based NRIs need to know.
⚠️ Critical warning for UK NRIs: Indian Mutual Funds are Non-Reporting Funds in the UK. This means gains are taxed as income (not capital gains) at your marginal rate — potentially 45% — with no annual CGT allowance available. If you plan to return to India, consider redeeming after you return when gains will be taxed at Indian rates only (12.5% LTCG).
| Band | Taxable Income | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | Up to £12,570 | 0% |
| Basic Rate | £12,571 – £50,270 | 20% |
| Higher Rate | £50,271 – £125,140 | 40% |
| Additional Rate | Over £125,140 | 45% |
Indian MF gains added to your income. No CGT allowance applies to Non-Reporting Funds. All gains taxed at marginal rate.
The definitive guide to LTCG harvesting, HUF structuring, NPS optimisation, and estate planning for Indian HNIs and NRIs with ₹50L+ in assets.
Legitimate, underused provisions in Indian tax law. Click any strategy to go deep.
Use the ₹1.25L annual exemption deliberately. Book gains and rebuy. A family of four has ₹5L in annual exemptions sitting unused.
Save ₹15,600–₹78,000/yr per personCreate a Hindu Undivided Family entity — a separate ₹2.5L basic exemption + ₹1.25L LTCG exemption. Legal. Underused. Powerful.
Save ₹1–2L annually via HUFSection 80CCD(2): employer NPS contribution up to 14% of salary, completely outside the ₹1.5L 80C limit. On ₹50L salary, that's ₹7L extra deduction.
Save ₹2L+ in tax on ₹50L salaryIndexation is gone. The right debt instruments now depend on your tax slab. Many HNIs are still in wrong products — paying unnecessary tax.
Indexation is gone. Reclaim 0.5–1.5% in annual returnsNomination vs Will vs Private Trust vs HUF. The definitive guide. Most HNI estates are structured wrong — and the family pays for it after you're gone.
Protect ₹Crore — and your familyEvery Indian investor gets ₹1.25L in tax-free LTCG per year. Most people let this expire unused — then pay 12.5% on the full gain when they eventually sell. Harvesting converts that future tax liability into zero, today.
✅ The simple rule: Every March, review your equity mutual fund portfolio. Book any LTCG up to ₹1.25L per person. Immediately rebuy the same funds. Cost basis resets. Future tax liability on those units: zero.
Log into CAMS or Kfintech. Look at your equity MF holdings. Identify units held over 12 months with unrealised LTCG.
Redeem enough units to realise exactly ₹1.25L in LTCG. No tax on this amount. TDS may still be deducted — claim refund via ITR.
Invest the same amount back into the same fund. Your cost basis has now reset to today's NAV. Future gains start fresh.
Spouse, adult children, parents — each person gets their own ₹1.25L exemption. A family of four = ₹5L in annual tax-free gains.
Annual tax saved on ₹6.25L LTCG at 12.5%: ₹78,125. Over 10 years with compounding, this is a ₹12–15L advantage.
A Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) is a separate legal entity that gets its own basic exemption (₹2.5L), LTCG exemption (₹1.25L), and 80C limit (₹1.5L). Most Hindu families qualify. Very few use it. The setup cost is minimal. The annual saving is not.
📌 Who qualifies: Any Hindu, Sikh, Jain, or Buddhist family can create an HUF. It's created automatically when a Hindu man marries — most people just don't formalise it. You don't need to be wealthy. You need to have a family.
Clubbing provision: If you personally gift assets to the HUF, income from those assets may be clubbed back to you for tax purposes. The HUF works best with HUF-specific income (ancestral property income, business income) or fresh investment from HUF's own resources.
A simple declaration document. Can be done by a CA or lawyer for ₹2,000–5,000.
Apply online at NSDL with the HUF deed. Takes 5–7 working days. Free.
Open a current or savings account in the HUF name (PAN required).
Gift or invest in the HUF. HUF can hold mutual funds, FDs, property.
Only Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, Buddhists: Muslims and Christians cannot form an HUF. Also, if the family partitions (formally divides assets), the HUF ceases to exist and partition tax implications apply.
Most people know about Section 80CCD(1B) — the extra ₹50K NPS deduction. Far fewer use Section 80CCD(2), where your employer contributes to NPS on your behalf. On a ₹50L salary, this is ₹7L in deductions that sit completely outside the ₹1.5L 80C limit. Budget 2024 raised the private sector limit from 10% to 14% of basic salary, effective FY 2025-26.
✅ The key number: Under Section 80CCD(2), your employer can contribute up to 14% of your basic salary to NPS on your behalf (raised from 10% for private sector employees in Budget 2024, effective FY 2025-26). This entire amount is tax-deductible — with no upper limit in rupees, and completely separate from your ₹1.5L 80C bucket.
| Section | Who contributes | Limit | 80C Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| 80C | You | ₹1,50,000 | Part of ₹1.5L |
| 80CCD(1B) | You (extra NPS) | ₹50,000 | Extra beyond 80C (old regime only) |
| 80CCD(2) | Employer | Up to 14% of basic | Completely separate! |
Since the 2023 Finance Act, the gains in a debt mutual fund are taxed at your slab rate — 30%+ for most HNIs — no matter how long you hold. But the same underlying bond, held directly in your demat, qualifies for 12.5% LTCG after just 12 months. Most portfolios we review still haven't been restructured for this.
⚠️ The wrapper problem: Coupon interest is taxed at your slab rate either way — that part doesn't change. What changes is the gains component. Inside a debt mutual fund, Section 50AA taxes every rupee of gain at slab rate, regardless of holding period. A listed bond held directly gets 12.5% LTCG on price appreciation after 12 months. Same credit risk. Same coupons. The difference shows up entirely in how your gains are taxed.
| Return Component | Debt Mutual Fund | Listed Bond (Direct) |
|---|---|---|
| Coupon / interest | Slab (~31.2% with cess) | Slab (~31.2% with cess) |
| Gains (held >12 months) | Slab — Sec. 50AA | 12.5% LTCG |
This is why structuring matters most in a falling-rate or discount-bond environment — a larger share of your total return arrives as price appreciation, which is exactly the component where the two routes diverge. Buy the bond at a discount, and the wrapper decision can move your post-tax return materially.
Most families have nominations on their investments, a vague intention to write a Will "sometime," and no structured estate plan. Here's what each tool actually does — and where families get it wrong.
A nominee is legally a custodian — they hold the assets and must hand them over to your legal heirs under succession law. If your nominee and your intended heir are different people, you've set up a dispute, not a transfer. Courts have affirmed this repeatedly.
Dying without a Will means the Hindu Succession Act (or your personal law) distributes your estate among Class I heirs in equal shares — your widow, children, and mother all get the same cut, regardless of what you actually wanted. A Will costs almost nothing. Not having one can cost your family years.
Until December 2025, probate was mandatory for Wills involving property in Mumbai, Chennai, and Kolkata. The Repealing & Amending Act, 2025 made it voluntary nationwide. That cuts delay for many families — but also removes a layer of judicial validation. Whether to seek probate voluntarily is now a strategic call, not a legal default.
A Private Trust bypasses probate, stays fully private, allows conditional distributions, and is very difficult to contest. For families with ₹3 Cr+, minor children, NRI beneficiaries, or a business — it's often the missing piece. Setup is more involved than a Will, which is exactly why structure matters.
Side-by-side on the dimensions that matter. Most families need at least two of these working together — the right combination depends on your assets and your family.
| Aspect | 🛡 Nomination | 📜 Will | 🏛 Private Trust | 👑 HUF |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Legal nature | Custodian only | Testamentary instruction | Separate legal entity | Separate tax entity |
| Probate needed? | No ✓ | Voluntary (post-2025 reform) | No ✓ | No ✓ |
| Speed of transfer | Days to weeks | Weeks to years (if contested) | Immediate | Immediate |
| Privacy | Semi-private | Private unless probated | Fully private | Semi-private |
| Can be contested? | Yes | Yes — by legal heirs | Very difficult | Yes (partition) |
| Conditional distributions | No | Limited via executor | Full control ✓ | No |
| Minor children | Problematic | Guardian named | Trustee manages ✓ | Karta manages |
| NRI beneficiaries | Simple | Complex FEMA issues | Clean structure | Possible |
| Tax benefit | None | None | Structure-dependent | Separate exemptions ✓ |
| Covers all assets? | Only nominated accounts | All assets ✓ | Assets transferred in | HUF-owned assets only |
| Best for | Liquid asset access | Everyone — minimum baseline | ₹3Cr+ or complex estates | Hindu families — tax saving |
The BARS NRI team handles FEMA compliance, DTAA setup, TRC applications, and Indian ITR filing for NRIs across all 7 countries. Free 30-minute video consultation — any timezone.
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