Dividend Mutual Funds (IDCW)
What dividend plans actually are, how they're taxed, and why most long-term investors are better off in the growth option.
IDCW — what SEBI renamed "dividend plans"
In 2021, SEBI renamed "Dividend" plans to IDCW (Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal) — a more accurate name. When a fund pays an "IDCW", it is distributing part of your own invested corpus back to you, while the NAV drops by the same amount. It is not a bonus or a return on top of your investment.
Growth vs IDCW — direct comparison
- All gains reinvested — maximum compounding
- No tax until you redeem
- LTCG at 12.5% on equity gains above ₹1.25L
- Ideal for wealth building over 5-10+ years
- Works well for both equity and debt funds
- Regular cash in your bank account
- IDCW taxed as income in the year received (slab rate)
- TDS of 10% deducted on equity IDCW above ₹5,000/yr
- Suitable for retirees needing cash flow
- Dividend not guaranteed — at fund manager's discretion
Tax on mutual fund IDCW
| Fund type | Tax on IDCW | TDS |
|---|---|---|
| Equity funds | Added to your income, taxed at slab rate | 10% TDS if IDCW > ₹5,000 per year per AMC |
| Debt / liquid funds | Added to your income, taxed at slab rate | 10% TDS if IDCW > ₹5,000 per year per AMC |
| NRI investor (equity) | Slab rate (DTAA may reduce) | 20% TDS (or DTAA rate) |
When IDCW makes sense
- Retirees in zero-tax bracket: If total income is below ₹3L (new regime), IDCW has no tax cost and provides needed cash flow without systematic withdrawal complexity.
- Systematic cash flow without redeeming: Rather than setting up SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan), some investors prefer IDCW for simplicity — though SWP is usually more tax-efficient.
- Short-term parking: Liquid/overnight fund IDCW for treasury management (corporate treasury use case).
SWP: a better alternative for regular income
For most investors who want regular income from mutual funds, a Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) in a growth option fund is more tax-efficient than IDCW:
- You control the withdrawal amount and timing
- Only the gain portion of each SWP redemption is taxed — principal portion is tax-free
- LTCG rate (12.5% for equity after 1 year) is lower than IDCW slab rate for most investors
- Compounding continues on the remaining corpus