If you sold shares, ETFs or mutual funds through Fisdom during the year, you need your capital gain statement (also called the Tax P&L report) before you file your income tax return. It lists every sell transaction with buy date, sell date, cost and sale value — exactly what Schedule CG of the ITR asks for. Here is the complete, step-by-step process to download it from Fisdom app.
What is the Fisdom capital gain (Tax P&L) statement?
It is the broker’s official year-wise summary of your realised profits and losses. It separates intraday trades (taxed as speculative business income), short-term capital gains (equity held ≤ 12 months, taxed under Section 111A) and long-term capital gains (equity held > 12 months, taxed under Section 112A), and usually includes F&O results and charges too. New to these terms? Read our full guide to Capital Gain Tax in India — LTCG & STCG explained.
How to download the capital gain statement from Fisdom — step by step
Open the Fisdom app
Log in to the Fisdom app with your credentials.
Go to Reports
From the menu choose Reports (under Account/Profile).
Pick the Capital gain statement
Select Capital gains statement — for stocks and mutual funds as applicable.
Select FY and download / email
Choose the financial year (e.g. FY 2025-26) and tap Download — the statement is downloaded or emailed to your registered ID.
Step 2–3: open Reports and choose Capital gains, then select the financial year.
Step 4: click Download — your capital gain (Tax P&L) statement is saved as an Excel file.
Got the statement? Classify your trades in seconds
The raw Excel from Fisdom still needs to be split into intraday, STCG and LTCG totals — and errors here are the #1 reason for capital-gains mismatch notices. TaxFetch does the classification for you:
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Upload your Tax P&L / capital gain statement to the TaxFetch Stock Trading Profit Classifier and it instantly classifies every trade into Intraday (speculative), Short-Term and Long-Term buckets, totals your STCG & LTCG, and gives you a clean PDF/Excel summary for your ITR.
Try the Stock Trading Profit Classifier → Capital Gain Calculator →Which ITR form do you need?
If you only have capital gains (delivery-based equity/MF), ITR-2 is your form. If you also traded intraday or F&O, that income is business income and you’ll need ITR-3. Long-term gains on listed equity up to ₹1.25 lakh a year are exempt; gains above that are taxed at 12.5%, while short-term equity gains are taxed at 20% (Section 111A, on transfers on/after 23 July 2024). All the rates, holding periods and set-off rules are covered in our complete LTCG & STCG guide.
FAQs — Fisdom capital gain statement
I invested in MFs through Fisdom — is this statement enough?
It covers investments made via Fisdom. If you also hold funds bought elsewhere, download those AMC/RTA statements (CAMS/KFintech) too.
Can I request the statement over email?
Yes, Fisdom support can send your capital-gain statement to your registered email on request.
When should I download this statement?
Right after the financial year ends (April onwards) and before you file your ITR. For FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27), the usual due date is 31 July 2026 for non-audit taxpayers — always confirm the current year’s deadline.
Is this statement enough to file my ITR?
It covers trades done with Fisdom. If you used other brokers or hold mutual funds elsewhere, download each broker’s statement (and CAMS/KFintech for MFs) — then reconcile the totals with your AIS/TIS on the income-tax portal.
Download guides for other brokers
Trade with more than one broker? Step-by-step download guides for every major Indian broker:
- Zerodha →
- Groww →
- Upstox →
- Angel One →
- ICICI Direct →
- HDFC Securities →
- Kotak Securities →
- Motilal Oswal →
- Paytm Money →
- 5Paisa →
- Alice Blue →
- Axis Direct →
- Choice →
- Dhan →
- Fyers →
- Geojit →
- IIFL →
- SBI Securities →
- Sharekhan →
- SMC Global →
Disclaimer: This guide is for general information. Broker menus and labels change from time to time — the flow above reflects the commonly used path. Consult a tax professional for advice on your specific situation. Need help? Talk to a TaxFetch tax expert.