How to Report Interest Income, FDs & Dividends Correctly in Your ITR (FY 2024–25)

Many salaried individuals and retirees miss out on reporting interest and dividend income — either by mistake or because they think “TDS is already deducted.”
But under-reporting or omitting these incomes can lead to mismatches with Form 26AS/AIS, refund delays, or even scrutiny.

👉 This blog will help you understand:

  • What types of interest income are taxable
  • How and where to report them in your ITR
  • Deductions available under 80TTA and 80TTB
  • Common mistakes and how to avoid them

What Counts as Interest Income?

You may be earning interest from multiple sources, including:

  • Savings account
  • Fixed Deposits (FDs)
  • Recurring Deposits (RDs)
  • Company deposits or NCDs
  • Post Office schemes (MIS, Senior Citizens Scheme, etc.)
  • Income tax refunds (interest paid by IT Dept)
  • Loan to friends/family (interest received)

All interest income is taxable unless specifically exempt.

Is Dividend Income Taxable?

Yes. From FY 2020–21 onwards, all dividends received from shares and mutual funds are taxable in the hands of the investor.

  • They are taxed at slab rate (just like interest income)
  • TDS is applicable if dividend > ₹5,000 per company

Where to Report These in Your ITR?

In ITR-1 / ITR-2:

  • Savings Interest → “Income from Other Sources”
  • FD/RD Interest → “Income from Other Sources”
  • Dividend Income → “Income from Other Sources”
  • IT Refund Interest → Also under “Other Sources”

Declare the gross amount (before TDS) — TDS will be auto-filled in Form 26AS / AIS

What About Deductions?

Section 80TTA – For individuals (below 60 yrs)

  • Deduction up to ₹10,000 on savings account interest only
  • Not allowed on FDs or RDs

Section 80TTB – For senior citizens (60+)

  • Deduction up to ₹50,000 on all bank/post office interest (FDs, RDs, savings, etc.)

Not available if you opt for New Regime

Real-Life Example

Mrs. Leela (Age 65) has:

  • ₹15,000 interest on savings
  • ₹40,000 interest on FDs
  • ₹12,000 dividend from mutual funds

👉 Total Interest Income = ₹55,000
👉 Dividend = ₹12,000

In Old Regime, she can claim:
80TTB deduction = ₹50,000
👉 Taxable interest = ₹5,000
👉 Dividend = Fully taxable at slab rate

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Ignoring AIS – leads to mismatch
  • Assuming “TDS is done, so I don’t have to show it”
  • Not claiming 80TTA or 80TTB (when eligible)
  • Reporting net amount instead of gross
  • Missing interest from small accounts like Post Office, joint accounts

How to Track All Interest & Dividend Income

Use these steps before filing:

  • Download Form 26AS and AIS from the e-filing portal
  • Add any missing entries not shown in AIS (e.g. interest from private loans)
  • Add up all your interest + dividend income and report gross amount

Let BizGuardian Help You File Accurately

At BizGuardian, we:

  • Review Form 26AS & AIS
  • Consolidate all interest + dividend income
  • Apply correct deductions under 80TTA/80TTB
  • File your ITR with zero mismatch risk

👉 Get your return filed smoothly — and avoid TDS mismatches!

 Don’t leave your refund unclaimed — Contact BizGuardian today.
[ Email: support@bizguardian.in / WhatsApp : 9003009901]

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How to Report Interest Income, FDs & Dividends Correctly in Your ITR (FY 2024–25)

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