Tax & Savings
Contents
FD vs Debt Mutual Fund
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Bank FD with TDS vs debt fund taxed at slab rate — the post-tax return comparison for conservative investors.
Visual Comparison
Key Differences
| Feature | Fixed Deposit | Debt Mutual Fund |
|---|---|---|
| Returns | Fixed 6.5–7.5% | 8–9% (varies by fund category) |
| Tax | Interest at slab rate, TDS at 10% | At slab rate (no indexation now) |
| Liquidity | Penalty on premature exit | Usually no exit load after 1 year |
| Risk | Zero — insured up to ₹5L | Credit risk + interest rate risk |
| Inflation hedge | Fixed rate may lag inflation | Some categories beat inflation |
When to Choose Which
Choose Fixed Deposit
- Capital safety is paramount
- Short-term parking (< 1 year)
- Emergency fund component
- Very low risk tolerance
Choose Debt Mutual Fund
- Better post-tax returns (higher income bracket)
- Medium-term (1–3 years)
- Want liquidity without penalty
- No TDS deduction requirement
Frequently Asked Questions
For investors in 30% tax bracket with 1–3 year horizon, debt funds with higher pre-tax yields can give better post-tax returns. But returns are not guaranteed.
FD is safer — bank deposits insured up to ₹5 lakh. Debt funds carry credit risk (issuer default) and interest rate risk.
Overnight funds and liquid funds investing in government securities have lowest credit risk. Avoid credit risk funds if safety is priority.
Post Finance Act 2023, debt fund gains are taxed at slab rate (no LTCG/indexation benefit), same as FD. The tax advantage has been removed.
Liquid funds typically return 6.5–7.5% (similar to FD) with better liquidity (T+1 redemption) and no TDS if below ₹5,000 gain.