income tax on dividend 2026 india

 Why Dividend Taxation Matters in 2026

Dividends have long been a cherished source of income for equity investors in India. Whether you hold shares of Infosys, Reliance Industries, HDFC Bank, or units of an equity mutual fund, the dividend income you receive is subject to income tax. The rules governing dividend taxation in India underwent a fundamental transformation with effect from 1 April 2020, when the Dividend Distribution Tax (DDT) regime was abolished and replaced with the classical system of taxation in the hands of the shareholder or unit-holder.

For Financial Year 2025-26 (Assessment Year 2026-27), these rules remain fully operative under the Income Tax Act, 1961. Every investor — resident individual, HUF, NRI, or corporate entity — must understand how dividend income is treated, what TDS applies, which exemptions are available, and how to correctly report it in the Income Tax Return (ITR).

This comprehensive guide covers every dimension of dividend taxation in India for the year 2026, including worked examples in Indian Rupees (₹), updated TDS rates, deductions, and practical planning strategies.

What Is Dividend Income? — Definition Under Indian Law

Definition Under Section 2(22) of the Income Tax Act, 1961

Under Section 2(22), ‘dividend’ includes:

  • Any distribution of accumulated profits (whether capitalised or not) by a company to its shareholders — in cash or in kind
  • Distribution of debentures, debenture-stock, deposit certificates, or bonus shares to preference shareholders
  • Distribution on liquidation of the company
  • Distribution on reduction of share capital
  • Any payment made by a closely held company by way of loan or advance to a shareholder holding substantial interest (deemed dividend — Section 2(22)(e))
Types of Dividends Covered

Type of Dividend

Source

Taxable?

Interim Dividend

Paid during the financial year before final accounts

Yes — taxable in year of receipt

Final Dividend

Declared at AGM after year-end

Yes — taxable in year of declaration

Special / One-Time Dividend

Declared for specific events

Yes

Mutual Fund Distribution (Dividend Plan)

Distributed by AMC

Yes — now called IDCW

Deemed Dividend (Sec 2(22)(e))

Loan/advance from closely held company

Yes — taxed as dividend

Bonus Shares

Capitalisation of reserves

Not taxable as dividend at receipt

From DDT to Classical Taxation — The 2020 Shift and Its FY 2026 Implications

The Old DDT Regime (Up to 31 March 2020)

Under the Dividend Distribution Tax (DDT) regime, companies and mutual funds paid a tax of approximately 20.56% (including surcharge and cess) on dividends declared. Dividends received by shareholders up to ₹10 lakh per annum were exempt from tax under Section 10(34). Dividends above ₹10 lakh attracted an additional tax of 10% under Section 115BBDA.

The New Classical System (From 1 April 2020 — Applicable FY 2026)

The Finance Act, 2020 scrapped DDT and Section 10(34) exemption entirely. From 1 April 2020, dividends are:

  • Fully taxable in the hands of the recipient at their applicable income tax slab rate
  • Subject to TDS by the paying company or mutual fund
  • Required to be declared in the ITR under the head ‘Income from Other Sources’ (Section 56(2)(i))

⚡ Key Point: There is NO exemption for dividend income in FY 2026. Every rupee of dividend received from shares or mutual funds is taxable.

Under Which Head Is Dividend Income Taxed?

Primary Head — Income from Other Sources

Dividend income from shares (both listed and unlisted companies) and from mutual fund units is generally taxed under the head ‘Income from Other Sources’ as per Section 56(2)(i) of the Income Tax Act, 1961.

Exception — When Shares Are Held as Stock-in-Trade

If shares are held as stock-in-trade (i.e., you are a trader, not an investor), dividend income may be treated as business income and reported under ‘Profits and Gains of Business or Profession’ (PGBP). In such cases, deduction for all related expenses is allowable.

Deemed Dividend Under Section 2(22)(e)

Deemed dividend from closely held companies (loans/advances to major shareholders) is also taxed under ‘Income from Other Sources’. The company does not pay this; it is taxable in the hands of the shareholder who received the loan.

Tax Rates on Dividend Income — FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27)

For Resident Individuals and HUFs — Slab-Based Taxation

Dividend income is added to the total income of the individual and taxed at the applicable income tax slab rate. Under the New Tax Regime (default from FY 2024-25):

Total Income Slab

Tax Rate (New Regime)

Tax Rate (Old Regime)

Up to ₹3,00,000

Nil

Nil

₹3,00,001 – ₹7,00,000

5%

5% (up to ₹5L) / 20% (₹5-7L)

₹7,00,001 – ₹10,00,000

10%

20%

₹10,00,001 – ₹12,00,000

15%

30%

₹12,00,001 – ₹15,00,000

20%

30%

Above ₹15,00,000

30%

30%

Note: Health & Education Cess of 4% is applicable on the total tax amount. Surcharge applies for income above ₹50 lakh (10%), ₹1 crore (15%), ₹2 crore (25%), and ₹5 crore (37% under old regime; capped at 25% for new regime).

For Domestic Companies

Dividend received by domestic companies from other domestic companies is taxable at the applicable corporate tax rate (22% under Section 115BAA for domestic companies opting for the new regime, or 25%/30% otherwise). Intercorporate dividends received by domestic companies are, however, eligible for deduction under Section 80M (see below).

For Foreign Companies

Dividend income received by a foreign company from an Indian company is taxable at 20% under Section 115A (plus surcharge and cess), unless a lower rate is prescribed under the applicable Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA).

For Non-Resident Indians (NRIs)

Dividend income received by NRIs from Indian companies is taxable at 20% under Section 115A (plus applicable surcharge and cess). TDS is also deducted at 20% (plus surcharge and cess) at source. NRIs may benefit from lower DTAA rates with their country of residence.

TDS on Dividend from Shares — Section 194 (FY 2026)

TDS Under Section 194

Under Section 194 of the Income Tax Act, any domestic company paying dividend to a resident shareholder is required to deduct TDS. Key provisions:

Parameter

Details

Applicable Section

Section 194

Who deducts TDS?

The dividend-paying company (Indian domestic company)

Threshold limit

₹5,000 per financial year per shareholder

TDS Rate (PAN furnished)

10%

TDS Rate (PAN not furnished)

20% under Section 206AA

When to deduct?

At the time of payment or credit, whichever is earlier

Due date to deposit TDS

7th of the following month

💡 Important: If your total dividend income from a single company does not exceed ₹5,000 in a financial year, NO TDS is deducted. However, the income is still taxable and must be self-reported in your ITR.

TDS Under Section 194K — Mutual Funds

Parameter

Details

Applicable Section

Section 194K

Who deducts TDS?

The Mutual Fund / Asset Management Company (AMC)

Threshold limit

₹5,000 per financial year (per investor per AMC)

TDS Rate (PAN furnished)

10%

TDS Rate (PAN not furnished)

20%

Applicable to

IDCW (Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal) payouts from equity and debt MFs

Not applicable to

Capital gains redemptions (covered by Section 194 or 195 for NRIs)

TDS Under Section 195 — For NRIs

For non-residents, TDS on dividend is governed by Section 195. TDS is deducted at 20% (plus applicable surcharge and cess) or at the DTAA rate (if lower and Form 10F / Tax Residency Certificate is submitted).

Dividend Tax Calculation Examples — FY 2025-26 (₹ Indian Rupees)

Example 1: Salaried Individual — Dividend from Shares (New Tax Regime)

Mr. Arjun Sharma (salaried, Mumbai) has:

  • Salary income: ₹12,00,000
  • Dividend from TCS shares: ₹40,000
  • Dividend from Infosys shares: ₹18,000

Total dividend income = ₹58,000

Total gross income = ₹12,58,000

Tax on ₹12,58,000 under new regime:

  • ₹0–₹3L = Nil
  • ₹3L–₹7L = 5% × ₹4L = ₹20,000
  • ₹7L–₹10L = 10% × ₹3L = ₹30,000
  • ₹10L–₹12L = 15% × ₹2L = ₹30,000
  • ₹12L–₹12.58L = 20% × ₹58,000 = ₹11,600

Total tax = ₹91,600 + 4% cess = ₹95,264

TDS already deducted by TCS = 10% × ₹40,000 = ₹4,000

TDS already deducted by Infosys = 10% × ₹18,000 = ₹1,800 (TDS applicable as total from Infosys > ₹5,000)

Net tax payable after TDS credit = ₹95,264 − ₹5,800 = ₹89,464

Example 2: Retired Senior Citizen — Dividend from Mutual Fund IDCW

Mrs. Priya Menon (age 67, Chennai) — retired, no other income except:

  • IDCW from HDFC Equity Fund: ₹48,000 per year
  • IDCW from SBI Bluechip Fund: ₹32,000 per year

Total dividend (IDCW) = ₹80,000

Senior citizen basic exemption (old regime) = ₹3,00,000

Since ₹80,000 < ₹3,00,000, NO income tax is payable.

TDS deducted by HDFC MF = 10% × ₹48,000 = ₹4,800

TDS deducted by SBI MF = 10% × ₹32,000 = ₹3,200

Total TDS deducted = ₹8,000

Since no tax is payable, she can claim FULL refund of ₹8,000 by filing ITR. She can also submit Form 15H to avoid TDS deduction in the first place.

Example 3: HNI Investor — Surcharge Impact

Mr. Vikram Nair (HNI, Bengaluru) earns:

  • Business income: ₹2,80,00,000 (₹2.80 crore)
  • Dividend from shares: ₹25,00,000 (₹25 lakh)

Total income = ₹3,05,00,000 (above ₹2 crore, surcharge @ 25% under new regime)

Tax on dividend portion @ 30% slab = ₹7,50,000

Surcharge @ 25% = ₹1,87,500

Health & Education Cess @ 4% = ₹37,500

Effective tax on dividend = ₹9,75,000 (effective rate ~39%)

TDS deducted by companies @ 10% = ₹2,50,000 — balance of ₹7,25,000 payable as advance tax / self-assessment tax.

Example 4: NRI — Dividend from Indian Shares

Mr. Rajesh Kumar (NRI, USA — India-US DTAA rate for dividends = 15%):

  • Dividend from Wipro shares: ₹1,20,000

DTAA rate = 15% (lower than 20% under Section 115A)

TDS deducted at DTAA rate = 15% × ₹1,20,000 = ₹18,000 (upon submission of Form 10F + Tax Residency Certificate)

If DTAA not claimed: TDS = 20% + surcharge + cess = approx. 20.8% × ₹1,20,000 = ₹24,960

Deductions Available Against Dividend Income

Section 57(i) — Interest Expense

Under Section 57(i), a deduction is allowed for interest paid on a loan taken to invest in shares or mutual funds that generate dividend income. The deduction is limited to a maximum of 20% of the gross dividend income received.

📌 Cap on Deduction: Even if your actual interest expense is ₹50,000, if your dividend income is ₹1,00,000, the maximum deduction allowed under Section 57(i) is 20% × ₹1,00,000 = ₹20,000. No other deduction (like brokerage or administrative charges) is allowable.

Section 57(i) — Worked Example
  • Dividend income from shares: ₹2,00,000
  • Interest paid on loan taken to purchase shares: ₹70,000
  • Maximum deduction = 20% × ₹2,00,000 = ₹40,000
  • Taxable dividend income = ₹2,00,000 − ₹40,000 = ₹1,60,000
Section 80M — Intercorporate Dividend Deduction (For Companies)

Domestic companies receiving dividends from another domestic company can claim a deduction under Section 80M for the amount of dividend received, to the extent it is further distributed as dividend to its own shareholders. This avoids cascading effect of taxation on intercorporate dividends.

DTAA Benefits — For NRIs and Foreign Companies

India has DTAAs with 90+ countries. NRIs and foreign entities can claim lower withholding tax rates on dividends under the applicable DTAA by submitting Form 10F and a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) to the paying company before dividend payment.

How to Avoid TDS on Dividend — Form 15G and Form 15H

Form 15G — For Individuals Below 60 Years

Resident individuals below 60 years of age whose total taxable income (including dividend) does not exceed the basic exemption limit (₹2,50,000 under old regime; ₹3,00,000 under new regime) can submit Form 15G to the company or mutual fund to prevent TDS deduction.

Form 15H — For Senior Citizens (60 Years and Above)

Senior citizens (age 60 or above) whose tax liability for the year is nil can submit Form 15H to avoid TDS. The total income can exceed the basic exemption limit in this case, as long as the net tax liability works out to zero.

Form

Who Can Use

Age Criterion

Condition

Form 15G

Resident Individual / HUF

Below 60 years

Taxable income ≤ basic exemption limit AND estimated tax = Nil

Form 15H

Resident Senior Citizen

60 years and above

Only condition: estimated tax = Nil

⚠️ Warning: Submitting Form 15G/15H with incorrect information may attract a penalty under Section 277A of the Income Tax Act. Always verify your total income estimate before submitting.

Dividend Taxation in Mutual Funds — IDCW vs Growth Option

IDCW (Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal) — Formerly Dividend Plan

In 2021, SEBI mandated a name change: what was previously called the ‘Dividend Plan’ of a mutual fund is now called ‘IDCW Plan’ (Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal). The taxation remains the same: any IDCW payout is taxable in the hands of the investor as ‘Income from Other Sources’ in the year of receipt, at the applicable slab rate. TDS @ 10% (Section 194K) is deducted if the payout exceeds ₹5,000 per year.

Growth Option — How It Differs

Under the Growth option, no dividend / IDCW is declared. The NAV grows over time, and the investor redeems units when needed. The gain on redemption is taxed as capital gains (STCG or LTCG depending on holding period), not as dividend income. This is generally more tax-efficient for investors in higher tax brackets.

Parameter

IDCW Plan

Growth Plan

Tax Treatment

Income from Other Sources — slab rate

Capital Gains — 20% (STCG) or 12.5% (LTCG)

TDS Applicable?

Yes — 10% above ₹5,000/year (Sec 194K)

Yes — on redemption (Sec 194 / 194K)

Cash Flow

Regular payouts

No payouts; reinvested in NAV

Better For

Investors needing regular income

Long-term wealth creation

Tax Efficiency

Lower (taxed at slab)

Higher (concessional CG rates)

Deemed Dividend Under Section 2(22)(e) — A Special Case

What Is Deemed Dividend?

Section 2(22)(e) treats certain loans and advances given by a closely held company (a company in which the public is not substantially interested) to its shareholders as ‘deemed dividend’. This prevents promoters from extracting money from their companies as interest-free loans to avoid dividend tax.

Conditions for Deemed Dividend
  • The company must be a closely held company (private company or unlisted public company where public is not substantially interested)
  • The loan/advance must be given to a shareholder who holds at least 10% of voting power
  • The amount of deemed dividend is limited to the accumulated profits of the company
Tax on Deemed Dividend

Deemed dividend is taxable in the hands of the shareholder under ‘Income from Other Sources’ at the normal slab rate. TDS under Section 194 also applies. The company does NOT get a deduction for this amount.

📌 Note: Deemed dividend under Section 2(22)(e) does NOT apply to listed companies or government companies. It primarily affects promoters of private limited companies.

Advance Tax Obligations on Dividend Income — FY 2026

When Is Advance Tax Required?

If your total tax liability (after TDS credit) exceeds ₹10,000 in a financial year, you are required to pay advance tax in four instalments:

Instalment

Due Date

Amount to Pay

1st Instalment

15 June 2025

At least 15% of advance tax liability

2nd Instalment

15 September 2025

At least 45% of advance tax liability

3rd Instalment

15 December 2025

At least 75% of advance tax liability

4th Instalment

15 March 2026

100% of advance tax liability

Relaxation for Dividend Income — Section 234C Proviso

If dividend income is received after the due date of a particular advance tax instalment, the shortfall in that instalment due to such dividend is not treated as a default under Section 234C. The taxpayer is required to pay advance tax on dividend income in the remaining instalments after it is received, without interest for the earlier shortfall.

💡 Practical Tip: Keep track of dividend credit dates (visible in Form 26AS / AIS). Pay advance tax on dividend as soon as you receive it to avoid interest under Section 234B and 234C.

How to Report Dividend Income in ITR — FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27)

Which ITR Form to Use?

Taxpayer Type

Applicable ITR Form

Schedule for Dividend

Salaried individual with dividend income

ITR-2

Schedule OS (Other Sources)

Self-employed / business income + dividend

ITR-3

Schedule OS

Firms / LLPs

ITR-5

Schedule OS

Companies

ITR-6

Schedule OS

NRIs with dividend from India

ITR-2 or ITR-3

Schedule OS + Schedule FSI

Documents Required for ITR Filing
  • Form 26AS — Shows TDS deducted on dividend by companies and MFs
  • Annual Information Statement (AIS) — Shows all dividend credit transactions reported by companies/MFs to the Income Tax Department
  • Dividend warrants / bank statements showing dividend credits
  • Mutual Fund IDCW account statements from AMC
  • Form 16A from companies if TDS > ₹5,000
  • DTAA benefit documents (Form 10F, TRC) for NRIs
Common Mistakes to Avoid in ITR
  • Not reporting dividends below ₹5,000 (no TDS) — all dividend income is taxable regardless of TDS
  • Confusing IDCW payouts with redemption proceeds — different tax treatment
  • Not reconciling AIS / Form 26AS dividend data with actual receipts — mismatches may trigger notices
  • Forgetting to claim the 20% interest deduction under Section 57(i)
  • Not claiming TDS credit correctly in Schedule TDS2

Tracking Dividend Income — Form 26AS and AIS in 2026

Form 26AS

Form 26AS is a consolidated tax credit statement available on the Income Tax e-filing portal (www.incometax.gov.in). It shows all TDS deducted on your dividend income under Section 194 and 194K, along with the names of the deductors (companies and MFs).

Annual Information Statement (AIS)

The AIS provides a comprehensive view of all dividend transactions reported by companies and mutual funds to the Income Tax Department — even those below the ₹5,000 TDS threshold. It is crucial to check AIS carefully, as the IT Department uses this data to verify your ITR. Any unreported dividend income may attract a Section 139(8A) notice or best-judgement assessment under Section 144.

Tax Planning Strategies to Optimise Dividend Taxation in FY 2026

Strategy 1: Prefer Growth Option Over IDCW for Higher Tax Brackets

If you are in the 30% tax bracket, choosing the Growth plan of a mutual fund is far more tax-efficient. LTCG on equity MFs (held > 12 months) is taxed at 12.5%, saving 17.5 percentage points versus 30% on IDCW payouts.

Strategy 2: Use Form 15H/15G for Eligible Investors

Senior citizens and low-income investors should proactively submit Form 15H / 15G to all companies and AMCs at the start of the financial year. This prevents TDS deduction and avoids the hassle of claiming refunds.

Strategy 3: Maximise Section 57(i) Deduction

If you have taken a loan to invest in dividend-yielding stocks or MF IDCW plans, ensure you claim the interest expense deduction (up to 20% of dividend income) under Section 57(i). Maintain documentation of the loan agreement and interest payments.

Strategy 4: DTAA Planning for NRIs

NRIs should proactively submit Form 10F and Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) to Indian companies before dividend payment dates to benefit from lower DTAA rates. For example, India-Singapore DTAA caps dividend tax at 10%; India-Mauritius DTAA at 5-15%. This can significantly reduce withholding tax.

Strategy 5: Consider Dividend-Free Investment Instruments

For very high-income investors (30% slab + 25% surcharge = ~39% effective rate on dividends), equity mutual funds in Growth option, direct equity with no/low dividend yield, or tax-free bonds may be more efficient than dividend-heavy portfolios.

Strategy 6: Timing of Dividend Receipt

For taxpayers expecting a lower income year (e.g., career break, first year of retirement), receiving dividends in a year with lower slab rates reduces the overall tax outgo. While you cannot always control when a company declares dividends, you can choose IDCW pay-out dates in MFs and plan accordingly.

Dividend vs Share Buyback — Tax Comparison in 2026

Share buybacks were historically more tax-efficient due to the special buyback tax paid by companies. However, as per the Finance Act 2024 (effective 1 October 2024), buyback proceeds received by shareholders are now taxable as dividend income in the hands of the shareholder (similar to regular dividends). This change continues to apply in FY 2026.

Parameter

Regular Dividend

Buyback Proceeds (Post Oct 2024)

Tax Head

Income from Other Sources

Income from Other Sources (as dividend)

Tax Rate

Slab rate

Slab rate

TDS

10% (Sec 194) if > ₹5,000

As applicable

Cost of Acquisition Benefit

No

Allowable as capital loss (unrecovered cost basis can be claimed as capital loss)

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) on Dividend Taxation 2026

Q1: Is dividend income from foreign shares taxable in India?

Yes. If you are a resident Indian, dividend received from foreign company shares is taxable under ‘Income from Other Sources’ at your slab rate. You can claim Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) under Section 90/91 for taxes paid in the foreign country on such dividends, subject to DTAA provisions.

Q2: Are dividends from REITs and InvITs taxable?

REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts) and InvITs (Infrastructure Investment Trusts) can distribute income in multiple forms — dividend, interest, rental income, or capital gains. Only the ‘dividend’ portion distributed by the SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle) to the REIT/InvIT, and then to unit-holders, is exempt at the SPV level under Section 10(23FC). The portion received by unit-holders as dividend is taxable at slab rate. Interest distributions from REITs/InvITs are taxable as interest income.

Q3: Can dividend income be set off against capital losses?

No. Dividend income is taxed under ‘Income from Other Sources’ and cannot be set off against capital losses. Capital losses can only be set off against capital gains. This is an important distinction many investors miss.

Q4: What if I receive dividend but my TDS is shown in Form 26AS under a wrong PAN?

Contact the company’s registrar or the AMC immediately to correct the PAN mapping. Filing ITR with incorrect TDS credit can result in a tax demand. Verify Form 26AS and AIS carefully before filing.

Q5: Are dividends received through stock brokers taxable differently?

No. Dividends are credited directly by the company to your registered bank account (as per SEBI mandate) or via your broker’s pool account in some cases. Regardless of the channel, the tax treatment remains the same.

Q6: Can a company deduct GST or any other tax on dividends before paying?

No. Companies can only deduct TDS (Section 194) before paying dividends. GST does not apply to dividends. The net dividend amount after TDS is the amount credited to shareholders.

Q7: Is dividend received from cooperative societies taxable?

Dividend received from cooperative societies is taxable under ‘Income from Other Sources’. However, a deduction up to ₹3,500 per cooperative society (subject to certain conditions) is available under Section 80P(2)(d).

Comprehensive Dividend Tax Rate Summary — FY 2025-26

Recipient Category

Tax Rate on Dividend

TDS Section

TDS Rate

Threshold

Resident Individual (30% slab)

30% + 4% cess = 31.2%

Sec 194

10%

₹5,000

Resident Individual (20% slab)

20% + 4% cess = 20.8%

Sec 194

10%

₹5,000

Resident Individual (5% slab)

5% + 4% cess = 5.2%

Sec 194

10%

₹5,000

HUF

Slab rate (same as individual)

Sec 194

10%

₹5,000

Senior Citizen (60+)

Slab rate

Sec 194

10%

₹5,000

Domestic Company

22% + surcharge + cess

NA (no TDS on cos)

NRI / Foreign Company

20% or DTAA rate

Sec 195

20% or DTAA

No threshold

MF Unit-holder (IDCW)

Slab rate

Sec 194K

10%

₹5,000

PAN not furnished

20%

Sec 206AA

20%

No threshold

Conclusion

Dividend taxation in India has gone through a fundamental shift over the past six years, and FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27) operates entirely under the classical taxation model. Every dividend rupee received — whether from blue-chip shares, small-cap companies, or mutual fund IDCW plans — is taxable in the hands of the recipient at their applicable income tax slab rate.

The key takeaways for investors in 2026 are: (a) understand your tax bracket and how dividends add to your total income, (b) claim the Section 57(i) interest deduction if applicable, (c) use Form 15G/15H if eligible, (d) choose Growth over IDCW if you are in a higher tax bracket, and (e) always reconcile your dividend income with Form 26AS and AIS before filing your ITR.

Proactive tax planning around dividends can result in meaningful savings. Always consult a qualified Chartered Accountant (CA) or registered tax advisor for advice tailored to your specific financial situation.

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