Yes, dividend is taxable under the Income Tax Act, 1961. Here's a detailed, expert-level reply tailored to your rules: Dividend income is now taxable in the hands of the recipient/shareholder as per Section 56(2)(i), under the head "Income from Other Sources". Taxability of Dividend Income (From AYRead more
Yes, dividend is taxable under the Income Tax Act, 1961. Here’s a detailed, expert-level reply tailored to your rules:
Dividend income is now taxable in the hands of the recipient/shareholder as per Section 56(2)(i), under the head “Income from Other Sources”.
Taxability of Dividend Income (From AY 2021-22 onwards):
Recipient | Tax Treatment |
---|---|
Resident Individual | Taxed at applicable slab rates under Income from Other Sources (Section 56) |
Domestic Company | Taxed at applicable corporate tax rate |
Foreign Company/Non-resident | Taxed @ 20% (plus surcharge and cess) under Section 115A(1)(a) (subject to DTAA) |
TDS on Dividend – Section 194 & 195:
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Section 194:
TDS @ 10% if the dividend paid to resident exceeds ₹5,000 in a financial year. -
Section 195:
TDS on dividend paid to non-resident is generally 20% (plus surcharge and cess), subject to benefits of DTAA.
Section 115BB of the Income Tax Act, 1961 – Tax on winnings from lotteries, crossword puzzles, card games, and other games of any sort or gambling or betting: "Where the total income of an assessee includes any income by way of winnings from lotteries, crossword puzzles, races including horse races,Read more
Section 115BB of the Income Tax Act, 1961 – Tax on winnings from lotteries, crossword puzzles, card games, and other games of any sort or gambling or betting:
Rate of Tax:
Flat 30% on the gross winnings (without any basic exemption limit).
Surcharge and cess (currently 4%) are added to the 30% tax.
No deduction of expenses or allowances is permitted against such income.
No benefit of slab rates or chapter VI-A deductions (like 80C, 80D, etc.) on this income.
TDS Deduction – Section 194B:
For cash winnings, TDS is deducted directly.
For non-cash winnings (like car, bike, etc.), the winner must pay tax equivalent to the fair market value of the prize before claiming it, or the provider pays it on their behalf (grossing up required).