When you invest in stocks, companies may reward shareholders in three main ways:

Dividends

Bonus shares

Buybacks

Each has different tax rules, and understanding them is important for net returns.

1. 📊 Dividend Taxation

What is a dividend?

A dividend is cash paid by a company from its profits to shareholders.

How is it taxed?

Since april 2020, dividends are taxed in the hands of the investor.

 Tax rules:

Added to your total income

Taxed as per your income tax slab rate

If dividend income exceeds ₹5,000 in a year → 10% TDS is deducted by the company

Example:

Dividend received: ₹20,000

If you're in 30% tax slab → you pay 30% tax (plus cess)

👉 So, dividend = fully taxable income.

2. 🎁 Bonus Shares Taxation

What are bonus shares?

Bonus shares are free additional shares given to existing shareholders.

Example:

1:1 bonus = 1 extra share for every 1 share held

Tax rules:

 At the time of receiving:

No tax

 At the time of selling:

Cost of acquisition = 0 (or adjusted cost based on holding rules)

Entire sale proceeds become capital gains

Capital gains tax:

Short-term (held < 1 year): 15%

Long-term (held > 1 year): 10% (above ₹1 lakh gains)

👉 Bonus shares are tax-free when received, taxed only when sold.

3. 💰 Buyback Taxation

What is a buyback?

A buyback is when a company repurchases its own shares from shareholders at a fixed price.

Tax rules (important change since 2019):

 For shareholders:

Entire buyback proceeds are tax-free in your hands

 For companies:

Company pays a Buyback Distribution Tax (BDT)

Capital gains impact:

You do NOT pay capital gains tax on buyback shares

Holding cost becomes irrelevant for taxation

👉 Buyback = tax-free payout for investors

4. 🆚 Quick Comparison Table

Income Type

When Taxed

Who Pays Tax

Tax Rate

Dividend

On receipt

Investor

As per slab

Bonus Shares

On sale

Investor

Capital gains

Buyback

At company level

Company

Tax-free for investor

5. ⚠️ Important Practical Insights

 Dividend is least tax-efficient

Because it is taxed at your slab rate (up to 30%+).

 Bonus is neutral

No tax upfront, but taxable when sold.

 Buyback is most tax-efficient

You receive money tax-free, but companies adjust pricing accordingly.

6. 💡 Simple Example

Imagine you own shares worth ₹1 lakh:

Dividend:

You get ₹5,000 → taxed up to 30%

Bonus:

You get extra shares → no tax now, tax later on sale

Buyback:

Company buys shares for ₹20,000 → you receive full amount tax-free

7. 📌 Bottom Line

Dividend = taxable income (as per slab)

Bonus = tax-free now, taxed later as capital gains

Buyback = tax-free in investor’s hands (company pays tax)

 

Disclaimer:

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any agency, organization, employer, or company. All information provided is for general informational purposes only. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, we make no representations or warranties of any kind, express or implied, about the completeness, reliability, or suitability of the information contained herein. Readers are advised to verify facts and seek professional advice where necessary. Any reliance placed on such information is strictly at the reader’s own risk.

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