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Income tax on Switching in Mutual Funds (2025)

You may have started investing in mutual funds few years back without giving much importance to whether you invested in growth option or dividend option (or now called Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal option) or regular plans vs direct plans of the same schemes. But now, maybe you want to make changes.

What kind of changes?

But switching of funds (even within the same scheme of a fund house) does have tax implications. Let’s briefly discuss these in simple terms.

The effects of switching are similar to withdrawal/redemption from one scheme and investing in other scheme. Why? Because if you look at it, then its simply a withdrawal and reinvestment transaction within the fund house (with money not passing through investor’s bank account). So any capital gains (losses) arising from this switch are treated in similar manner as in the case of gains (losses) being taxed on withdrawing money from a mutual fund.

So switching within the same scheme of a mutual fund from growth to dividend option (or vice-versa, i.e. from dividend to growth option) OR from regular plan to direct plan (or vice-versa i.e. from direct plan to regular plan)) is considered a sale and therefore liable to capital gains tax.

And how does the taxation happen exactly?

Its similar to regular manner of taxation of mutual fund capital gains. Here is a short refresher:

So now you have your answer to questions like “When I switch from one fund to another fund, or when I switch from regular plan to direct plan, does it amount to a sell transaction and attract capital gains tax?”

Few points to note:

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