Tax on FD Interest
Calculate actual post-tax return on Fixed Deposits. Bank deducts 10% TDS when FD interest exceeds Rs 40,000/year. Find your effective post-tax FD yield and compare with tax-free alternatives.
Tax on FD Interest
See your real post-tax FD yield
TDS threshold: Rs 40,000/year (Rs 50,000 for senior citizens). Bank deducts 10% TDS; balance payable via ITR.
A 7.5% FD looks attractive — but at the 30% tax bracket, your effective post-tax yield is just 5.25%. Compare that to PPF at 7.1% (fully tax-free) or debt mutual funds. For short-term goals, FDs are still useful; for long-term wealth, tax efficiency matters enormously.
Tax on Fixed Deposit Interest in India
Interest earned on fixed deposits is fully taxable as "Income from Other Sources" at your applicable income tax slab rate. There is no flat tax rate — a person in the 5% bracket pays 5%, while someone in the 30% bracket pays 30% on the same FD interest. Banks deduct TDS at 10% when your total FD interest with that bank crosses Rs 40,000 per year (Rs 50,000 for senior citizens).
How bank TDS on FD works
Your bank deducts 10% TDS when annual FD interest exceeds the threshold. However, this is not your final tax — it is only an advance deduction. If you are in the 30% slab, you owe an additional 20% to the government, which you pay via ITR or advance tax. If you are in a lower slab (5%), you get a refund of the excess TDS when you file your ITR.
How to avoid TDS on FD
If your total annual income is below the basic exemption limit, you can submit Form 15G (for individuals below 60 years) or Form 15H (for senior citizens) to your bank. The bank will then not deduct TDS. Important: this is a declaration that your income is below the taxable limit — submitting it when your income is actually taxable is a punishable offence.
FD vs PPF vs debt funds — post-tax comparison
At the 30% slab, a 7.5% FD gives an effective post-tax yield of just 5.25%. Compare this with PPF at 7.1% fully tax-free, or ELSS which targets 12–15% pre-tax returns (12.5% LTCG tax above Rs 1.25L). For short-term liquidity needs, FDs are still useful. But for wealth building over 3+ years, tax-efficient alternatives significantly outperform FDs in the 20–30% slab.