Zerodha Console
Zerodha Console is the back-office and portfolio-reporting portal operated by Zerodha , one of India’s two largest stockbrokers, and is accessible at console.zerodha.com. Console provides Zerodha clients with a consolidated view of their trading history, ledger statements, tax profit-and-loss reports, demat account statements, and account management functions. It serves as the administrative complement to Kite , which is Zerodha’s order-execution interface.
Console aggregates data across all segments in which a client trades, including NSE and BSE equities, equity futures and options, currency derivatives, commodity derivatives (MCX and NCDEX), and direct mutual fund units held through Zerodha Coin . The portal generates documents required for Indian income tax filing: the tradewise profit-and-loss report, the capital gains report covering both short-term and long-term gains, the F&O turnover statement for tax audit determination, and the full contract note archive going back to account opening.
Console handles depository participant functions including pledge and unpledge of securities as margin collateral, demat account holdings statements sourced from CDSL or NSDL , and the demat account modification and conversion request flows. Administrative functions such as nomination updates, bank account changes, DP charge history, dividend credit tracking, and personal account profile management are accessible within Console.
The portal is integrated with Kite , Zerodha Coin , and third-party platforms operating through the Kite Connect API . It uses the same Zerodha authentication session as Kite, allowing clients to switch between the two portals without separate login.
History and background
Development context
When Zerodha launched in 2010 as a discount broker, clients viewed their back-office data through the NEST terminal’s built-in reporting module and through a separate back-office URL provided by Zerodha’s technology vendor. As Zerodha’s client base grew and the brokerage moved away from NEST to its proprietary Kite platform (2015-2016), a dedicated back-office web portal became necessary to replace the legacy Q back-office reporting interface that had served Zerodha clients in the transition period.
Console was developed as a complementary portal to Kite , sharing infrastructure and login sessions. The name “Console” reflects its function as an administrative control panel distinct from Kite’s transactional interface. The portal was made available to all Zerodha clients as the primary back-office interface, replacing the older Q portal and delivering a substantially improved user experience for report generation, fund management, and account administration.
The design of Console reflected Zerodha’s general product philosophy: a clean, functional interface without unnecessary visual complexity, oriented toward the practical needs of active traders and long-term investors who needed reliable access to their trade data, tax documents, and account records.
Growth of the tax reporting function
The growth of retail participation in the futures and options segment during 2019-2023 increased demand for tax-computation assistance among Zerodha’s client base. The proportion of clients trading F&O grew substantially, and many of these clients were first-time F&O traders who had not previously filed income tax returns as business owners and were unfamiliar with the tax treatment of F&O income as non-speculative business income under Section 28 of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
Console’s tradewise P&L and capital gains reports were expanded to handle increasingly complex scenarios including STT (Securities Transaction Tax) rebate calculations applicable to options sellers, the bifurcation of intraday equity trades as speculative business income and delivery equity trades as capital gains, and the interaction of F&O losses with the tax audit threshold under Section 44AB of the Income Tax Act. A series of Z-Connect blog posts explaining how to use Console’s tax reports for income tax return filing became widely referenced in the retail investor community, helping normalise the use of Console for tax preparation.
As capital gains tax rates were revised by the Finance Act 2024 (effective 23 July 2024), which raised short-term capital gains on equity to 20% and long-term capital gains on equity to 12.5%, Console’s capital gains report was updated to reflect the new rates applicable for the 2024-25 financial year. The report clearly delineates transactions before and after 23 July 2024 for clients who traded across the effective date.
Integration with regulatory changes
SEBI ’s peak margin regulations, phased in between December 2020 and September 2021, required brokers to report client margin obligations at four intraday snapshots (09:15, 11:30, 14:00, and 15:30). Console was updated during this period to display clients’ margin utilisation history and to generate a margin summary that clients could use to understand shortfall events. Clients who received margin shortfall penalties during the phase-in period could view the shortfall event details in Console’s ledger.
The T+1 settlement cycle, which NSE and BSE completed rolling out by January 2023, changed the timing of credit entries in clients’ ledgers. Sale proceeds from equity delivery trades that previously appeared in the ledger on T+2 (two business days after the trade date) began appearing on T+1 (the next business day). Console’s fund statement display was updated to reflect T+1 credit timing, and the portal added settlement date indicators on each trade entry.
SEBI ’s 2020 circular on the margin pledge framework required clients to authorise pledge transactions through CDSL ’s eDIS mechanism with TPIN verification, preventing brokers from pledging client securities without explicit client action. Console’s pledge and unpledge interface was updated to implement the eDIS-compliant flow, where clients are redirected to CDSL’s TPIN verification page or use biometric Aadhaar OTP to authorise each pledge transaction.
Architecture and technical stack
Console is a server-rendered web application, in contrast to Kite ’s single-page application architecture. The portal is served over HTTPS from console.zerodha.com. Data is fetched from Zerodha’s back-end systems, which aggregate trade data from exchange-provided contract note data, the depository participant’s demat data feed from CDSL or NSDL , and Zerodha’s own internal ledger and OMS systems.
The authentication layer is shared with Kite . A session token issued by Zerodha’s identity service is accepted by both console.zerodha.com and kite.zerodha.com, allowing direct navigation between the two portals. The token uses time-based expiry and requires re-authentication via TOTP (time-based one-time password) for sensitive operations such as fund withdrawal submissions and account modification requests.
Console’s reporting engine performs computations on trade data to derive P&L figures, capital gains tax estimates, and turnover calculations. The computations follow the first-in-first-out (FIFO) inventory method for valuation of delivery equity holdings, consistent with Indian income tax guidance on securities valuation. For ESOP-derived shares, Console includes guidance noting that the perquisite value at exercise is not captured in Console’s cost-basis data and must be entered separately.
Reports are available for download in PDF and CSV formats. The CSV exports are structured to be importable by ClearTax and Quicko, tax-filing platforms that Zerodha has partnered with as recommended third-party services. The structured export format reduces the manual data-entry burden for clients filing tax returns.
Console pages are optimised for loading speed on the typical hardware and connection speeds used by Indian retail clients accessing from home broadband or mobile data connections. The portal degrades gracefully on mobile browsers, though its primary use case is desktop access given the data-heavy, report-oriented nature of its functions.
Features
Dashboard
Console’s dashboard presents a summary of the client’s account status. The default view shows the total portfolio value (demat holdings at current market prices plus available cash), the day’s unrealised gain or loss across open positions, the fund balance, and quick links to the most recently accessed reports. Segment-wise portfolio breakdown distinguishes equity holdings, mutual fund units, and commodity positions.
A calendar view on the dashboard marks dividend credit dates for equity holdings where Zerodha’s data feed includes ex-dividend and record date data sourced from exchange announcements. Bonus issue, stock split, and rights issue events are also flagged. The calendar view helps clients anticipate corporate action-related fund movements without consulting individual stock pages.
Ledger statement
The ledger statement in Console records all credit and debit entries to the client’s trading account in chronological order. Entry categories include:
- Brokerage debits (NSE or BSE flat fee per executed order)
- Statutory charge debits: STT (Securities Transaction Tax), exchange transaction charges, SEBI turnover fees, GST on brokerage and charges, stamp duty
- Sale proceeds credits from equity deliveries (on T+1 or T+2 settlement)
- F&O premium credits and debits on contract expiry, settlement, or exercise
- MTM settlement debits and credits for open futures positions
- Fund addition credits (from net banking, UPI, NEFT, or RTGS)
- Fund withdrawal debits (to the client’s primary bank account)
- DP (depository participant) charges for debit transactions (sale of demat securities, pledge initiation, inter-DP transfer)
- Margin penalty debits where shortfall is identified by the exchange
- Dividend credits passed through the broker’s pool account (for certain corporate actions where dividends are credited to the broker before onward transfer to clients’ bank accounts)
The ledger can be filtered by date range and entry type, and downloaded in CSV format. Each entry carries a reference code (exchange settlement number, internal transaction ID, or payment gateway reference) to facilitate reconciliation with bank statements and contract notes. Year-to-date and full financial-year ledger downloads are available for bulk archival.
Trade history and contract notes
The trades section of Console lists all executed orders with the instrument, exchange, segment, price, quantity, timestamp, order type, product type, and trade value. Filters allow narrowing by segment, date range, and product type. The trade history is exhaustive, going back to account opening, making Console the definitive record of a client’s trading activity.
Contract notes are the legally mandated trading documentation issued by Zerodha for each trading day on which the client executed at least one trade. SEBI regulations require stockbrokers to issue contract notes to clients within 24 hours of the trading session. Console makes contract notes available as digitally signed PDFs, with the digital signature issued under a certificate authority registered under the Information Technology Act, 2000, ensuring legal admissibility.
Annual contract note archives are downloadable in bulk. Clients subject to tax audit under Section 44AB of the Income Tax Act use Console’s contract notes as the primary documentary evidence submitted to their auditor. The digital signature on each contract note authenticates its origin and integrity.
P&L report
The P&L report in Console presents realised profit and loss for a user-selected financial year (April to March) across all traded segments. The report is structured to align with Indian income tax return categories:
Equity delivery: Holdings sold within the same financial year are categorised as short-term capital gains (STCG, for holdings held one year or less) or long-term capital gains (LTCG, for holdings held more than one year). The grandfathering provision under Section 112A applies to equity holdings acquired before 31 January 2018: the deemed cost of acquisition is the higher of actual cost and the fair market value as of 31 January 2018 (the higher of: actual cost or the lower of FMV on 31 Jan 2018 and the actual selling price). Console includes a note on this computation and applies it where applicable.
Equity intraday: Intraday equity trades (buying and selling the same security within the same trading day) are classified as speculative business income under Section 43(5) of the Income Tax Act. Console’s P&L report presents net speculative income separately from capital gains, enabling correct ITR category assignment.
Futures and options, equity, currency, and commodity: All F&O trades are classified as non-speculative business income. Console aggregates realised P&L from all F&O trades (including premium received or paid, settlement proceeds, and MTM adjustments) and presents the net non-speculative profit or loss. For index options, STT is charged only on the sell side (buy side STT is zero for options), and for stock options, STT is charged on the intrinsic value at expiry if the option is exercised. Console’s charge details include STT line items.
Mutual funds: Capital gains from mutual fund unit redemptions are categorised based on fund type and holding period. For equity mutual funds, units held more than one year qualify for LTCG treatment at 12.5% above Rs 1 lakh (post Finance Act 2024); units held one year or less are STCG at 20%. For debt mutual funds and fund-of-funds (after the Finance Act 2023 amendment), all gains are treated as short-term capital gains regardless of holding period for investments made after 1 April 2023.
Capital gains report
The capital gains report condenses the P&L report into the format required for Indian income tax return forms (ITR-2 for capital gains, ITR-3 for business income including F&O). The report presents:
- Short-term capital gains on listed equity shares and equity ETFs
- Long-term capital gains on listed equity shares and equity ETFs (above Rs 1 lakh exemption)
- Short-term capital gains on debt mutual funds
- Long-term capital gains on debt mutual funds held before April 2023 with indexation (transitional cases)
- F&O turnover (sum of absolute profits and losses) for assessing whether tax audit applies under Section 44AB
Console includes a disclaimer noting that the capital gains report is based on data available in the system and that clients should verify with a tax professional for complex situations (multiple brokers, ESOP shares, unlisted security transfers, or inherited securities).
F&O turnover report
The F&O turnover report is a specific document used to determine whether a client’s aggregate F&O activity crosses the threshold for mandatory tax audit under Section 44AB of the Income Tax Act. The turnover for F&O purposes is computed as the sum of absolute values of profit and loss on each closed F&O contract, plus the premium received on options sold, following the method prescribed in guidance from the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI).
Console’s turnover report presents this computation in a format that can be directly provided to a chartered accountant for audit purposes. As the audit threshold has been revised over the years (from Rs 1 crore to Rs 10 crore for businesses electing presumptive taxation under Section 44AD, though F&O is generally excluded from presumptive taxation), Console’s guidance notes reflect the current applicable thresholds.
Demat account services
Console serves as the interface for Zerodha’s depository participant (DP) functions. Zerodha is registered as a DP with CDSL under DP ID 12081600. Clients with a demat account with Zerodha can:
- View their demat holdings statement, sourced from CDSL’s system and updated daily
- Initiate pledge of securities as margin collateral through the eDIS-compliant flow
- Initiate unpledge to release previously pledged collateral
- View the status of all open pledges, the haircut percentage applied by the exchange, and the collateral margin value credited to the trading account
- Track DP charges (debited for demat debit transactions) in the ledger
- Submit demat account modification requests (address update, bank account change, contact update) with documentary upload
- View and download the full demat statement (CDSL Client Master Report) for account verification
Clients who hold shares in an NSDL demat account at another broker can transfer them to Zerodha’s CDSL account via off-market transfer. Console provides the target DP ID and client ID details needed to initiate an inter-DP transfer from the source depository. The transfer itself must be initiated at the client’s originating DP; Console does not initiate incoming transfers.
Funds and withdrawals
The funds section shows the split between cash available for trading, margin blocked by open positions, collateral margin from pledged securities, premium receivable from sold options (held in the exchange’s settlement account), and withdrawable balance. The withdrawable balance calculation accounts for T+1 sale proceeds timing, ensuring clients do not inadvertently withdraw funds pending settlement.
Fund addition is initiated through the funds section of Kite or directly through Console. Processing times vary by method: UPI credits are near-instant; NEFT credits within the NEFT batch cycle (within two hours during NEFT operating hours); RTGS credits typically within thirty minutes for eligible amounts.
Withdrawal requests are processed during the daily withdrawal batch, with funds credited to the client’s registered primary bank account the next working day. Zerodha’s withdrawal policy, consistent with SEBI ’s client fund protection requirements, restricts withdrawals to the primary bank account registered at account opening or updated through the KYC modification process.
Coin mutual funds interface
Zerodha Coin mutual fund holdings appear in Console’s portfolio view as demat-format mutual fund units. Console displays the current NAV, the number of units, the invested value, the current value, and the unrealised gain or loss for each mutual fund scheme in the client’s Coin portfolio. SIP transaction history from Coin appears in the trade history with relevant identifiers.
Console’s capital gains report includes Coin mutual fund redemptions categorised by fund type and holding period, using the same FIFO method applied to equity holdings.
Corporate actions
Console tracks corporate actions affecting the client’s equity holdings. Dividend credits appear in the ledger with the company name, per-share dividend, and total credit amount. Bonus issues and stock splits are reflected in the holdings view after the exchange record date. Rights entitlements (REs) appear in the holdings during the rights issue window and can be bought, sold, or renounced through Kite .
Buyback offer eligibility is flagged for holdings where the client may be eligible to tender shares. Console provides guidance on the buyback tender process, which typically involves selling through the exchange’s tender offer mechanism on NSE and BSE.
NPS (National Pension System) module
Console includes a National Pension System module that allows Zerodha clients to open NPS accounts (Tier I and Tier II) directly within the Console interface, and to make contributions and view their NPS portfolio within the same login session. This function is enabled through Zerodha’s registration as a Point of Presence (POP) for NPS under the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA).
NPS contributions made through Console are processed via the NPS Trust’s payment architecture and reflected in the client’s Permanent Retirement Account Number (PRAN) with the allocated pension fund. The NPS portfolio view within Console shows the total corpus, the fund allocation across pension fund managers and asset classes, and the current NAV of units held. Section 80CCD(1B) deduction eligibility (additional Rs 50,000 deduction for NPS contributions beyond the Section 80C limit) can be evidenced by the NPS contribution statement downloadable from Console.
Referral programme
Console hosts Zerodha’s referral programme, which allows existing clients to generate referral links and track the status of referred accounts. The programme credits a reward to the referring client’s trading account when the referred individual opens an account and executes a first qualifying trade within the specified period. Referral reward credits appear in the ledger with a referral reference.
Profile and account management
The profile section of Console allows clients to view and update personal details subject to KYC requirements:
- View PAN, date of birth, and address (updates require document submission)
- View and update nominee details (requires a separate nomination form submission)
- Update the two-factor authentication TOTP device (requires security verification)
- View DP charges history
- Download the account opening form and KYC acknowledgement
- Manage the list of apps authorised via Kite Connect OAuth tokens (clients can revoke access to specific third-party applications)
Integration with the Zerodha ecosystem
Console receives data from and provides data to multiple product surfaces in the Zerodha ecosystem:
Kite trade data flows into Console’s P&L, trade history, and ledger sections. Orders placed through Kite , through Kite Connect by third-party applications, or through platform integrations such as Sensibull and Smallcase all appear in Console’s trade history and contract notes under the client’s account.
Zerodha Coin mutual fund transactions appear in Console’s portfolio and are included in the capital gains report. Coin SIP mandates registered through NACH or UPI AutoPay appear in Console’s scheduled transactions view.
Kite Connect API authorisation management within Console’s profile section allows clients to view all third-party applications that have been granted access to their Zerodha account via Kite Connect OAuth. Clients can revoke individual app tokens from this view without needing to contact Zerodha’s support team.
Pledge and unpledge management for Smallcase baskets and other equity positions is conducted through Console’s pledge interface, with eDIS authorisation required for each pledge instruction.
GoldenPi bond purchases and Ditto Insurance interactions, while separate platforms, direct clients back to Console for their overall financial overview within the Zerodha login ecosystem.
Regulatory framework
Console’s functions are shaped by SEBI regulations applicable to stockbrokers and depository participants. Specific regulatory obligations include:
Contract note regulations: Brokers must issue digitally signed contract notes within 24 hours of trading. Console’s contract note archive satisfies this requirement for all Zerodha clients and provides a permanent downloadable record.
SEBI circular on client reporting (2021): Requires brokers to provide clients with a consolidated account statement and portfolio valuation. Console’s portfolio summary and downloadable statements address this requirement.
Income Tax Act, 1961, Section 44AB: The F&O turnover report in Console is structured to help clients determine whether they are liable for tax audit. Console’s explainer notes clarify that this is informational and does not constitute professional tax advice.
CDSL operating instructions: Console’s pledge and unpledge flows follow CDSL’s eDIS protocol, under which clients authorise debit transactions via CDSL’s TPIN-based verification or biometric Aadhaar OTP linked to the client’s CDSL account.
PMLA (Prevention of Money Laundering Act) and KYC norms: Account modification requests processed through Console, including bank account changes and address updates, require documentary submission and are subject to Zerodha’s PMLA compliance framework and SEBI ’s KYC (Know Your Customer) requirements for market intermediaries.
PFRDA regulations: The NPS module’s operation as a Point of Presence is governed by PFRDA’s POP regulations, including client suitability requirements, fee disclosure, and PRAN registration procedures.
Comparison with competitors
Back-office portals at other discount brokers offer broadly similar core functions. Upstox’s back-office (accessible under the Reports section of the Upstox platform) provides P&L reports, ledger statements, and contract notes. Angel One’s back-office provides similar reporting, with the addition of research and advisory content integrated for full-service clients.
Among full-service brokers, ICICI Direct’s integrated platform combines order placement and back-office reporting within a single interface, avoiding the context-switch between Kite (for trading) and Console (for reporting). HDFC Securities follows a similar integrated model. Both charge higher brokerage per trade but offer tighter integration with their parent banks’ services.
Console’s distinguishing features relative to competitor portals include the granularity of the tax P&L report with FIFO-based cost-basis computation, the structured CSV export format compatible with ClearTax and Quicko, the NPS module within the same portal, and the eDIS-compliant pledge management directly within the broker’s back-office rather than redirecting clients to a separate depository portal. The contract note archive extending to account opening and the F&O turnover report in ICAI-prescribed format are also more comprehensively implemented in Console than in most competing broker portals.
Annual information statement reconciliation
Since the launch of the Annual Information Statement (AIS) by the Income Tax Department of India, taxpayers are able to view a comprehensive record of their financial transactions (securities purchases and sales, dividend income, interest income, mutual fund transactions, foreign remittances) as reported by various financial institutions to the tax department. Zerodha reports clients’ securities transactions to the tax authorities through the Statement of Financial Transactions (SFT) filing mechanism.
Console’s tax P&L report and contract note data can be reconciled against the AIS by the client or their tax adviser to verify that reported figures match. Discrepancies between Console’s records and the AIS (which may arise from timing differences or from transactions conducted outside Zerodha) are a common point of focus during ITR preparation. The Console data is generally considered reliable as it reflects Zerodha’s OMS and depository records, which are submitted to CDSL and the exchanges.
Console’s role in Zerodha’s ecosystem
Console occupies a distinct but complementary position within the Zerodha product ecosystem relative to Kite , Coin , and Tickertape :
- Kite is the order-placement and market-monitoring interface, used during active trading hours.
- Coin is the direct mutual fund investment interface, accessed when placing MF orders.
- Tickertape is the research and screening interface, used in the pre-investment evaluation phase.
- Console is the post-trade, compliance, and reporting interface, used after market hours for portfolio review, tax preparation, and back-office queries.
This division of function means Console is typically accessed outside trading hours, evenings, weekends, and tax season, rather than during the trading day. The login is shared across Console, Kite Web , and Coin , providing a unified authentication experience while keeping the functional interfaces separate. The cross-linkage between Console and other Zerodha products (e.g., Coin MF holdings viewable in Console, pledge management for both equity and MF holdings) reflects a deliberate integration architecture.
Audit and compliance features
Console is designed to satisfy SEBI ’s requirements for broker record-keeping and client disclosure:
Trade confirmation disclosure: SEBI’s circular on contract note issuance (SEBI/MRD/DoP/SE/Cir-11/2003) requires brokers to issue contract notes within 24 hours of each trading day. Console generates and delivers these as digitally signed PDFs.
Demat statement: Console’s demat holdings and transaction history can be cross-verified with the CDSL or NSDL CAS (Consolidated Account Statement), which aggregates demat holdings across all depositories. CDSL’s CAS is sent to clients’ registered email monthly if there was demat activity.
PMLA record-keeping: The Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002, as implemented by SEBI ’s anti-money-laundering (AML) guidelines, requires brokers to maintain records of client transactions for specified periods and to file Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs) in required scenarios. Console’s transaction archive supports Zerodha’s AML record-keeping obligations.
KYC document archive: Console provides clients access to their KYC (Know Your Customer) documents submitted at account opening (identity proof, address proof, bank account proof, income proof for F&O trading), facilitating updates when client details change. KYC updates (address change, bank account addition, nominee modification) are managed through a dedicated section of Console, separate from the trade and back-office reporting modules.
Digital signature and document delivery
Contract notes, ledger statements, and P&L reports exported from Console are available as digitally signed PDFs. SEBI ’s regulations require contract notes to bear a valid digital signature from the broker; Console’s document generation infrastructure applies Zerodha’s registered digital signature to each generated contract note. This digital signing satisfies both the regulatory requirement and clients’ need for a tamper-evident record that can be submitted to tax authorities, auditors, or courts as authentic documentation of trades executed.
Zerodha delivers contract notes and account statements to the email address registered in the client’s KYC record in addition to making them available on Console. The combination of push delivery (email) and pull access (Console download) ensures clients have multiple channels to retrieve their documentation.
Console becomes available once a Zerodha trading and demat account is active. Investors who do not yet hold an account can open a Zerodha account online and then access Console at console.zerodha.com using the same login; the how to open a Zerodha account guide details the process.
See also
- Kite (Zerodha trading platform)
- Kite Web
- Kite Mobile app
- Zerodha Coin
- Kite Connect API
- Zerodha Varsity
- Demat account
- CDSL
- NSDL
- SEBI
- Zerodha
References
- Zerodha. “Console, portfolio and back-office portal”. console.zerodha.com. Accessed May 2026.
- Zerodha Z-Connect Blog. “How to read your contract note”. z-connect.zerodha.com. Accessed May 2026.
- Zerodha Z-Connect Blog. “How to file ITR for F&O trading using Console”. z-connect.zerodha.com. Accessed May 2026.
- SEBI. “Circular on peak margin collection”. SEBI/HO/MIRSD/DPIEA/CIR/P/2020/229. December 2020.
- SEBI. “Circular on issuance of contract notes by stockbrokers”. SEBI/MRD/DoP/SE/Cir-11/2003. June 2003.
- SEBI. “Circular on margin pledge framework”. SEBI/HO/MRD/DP/CIR/P/2019/119. October 2019.
- Income Tax Act, 1961. Section 44AB, audit of accounts of certain persons carrying on business or profession.
- Income Tax Act, 1961. Section 112A, tax on long-term capital gains on certain assets.
- CDSL. “eDIS operating procedure”. cdslindia.com. Accessed May 2026.
- ICAI. “Guidance note on tax audit under Section 44AB”. icai.org. Accessed May 2026.
- Zerodha. “DP charges”. zerodha.com/charges. Accessed May 2026.
- PFRDA. “Point of Presence registration and regulations”. pfrda.org.in. Accessed May 2026.
- Ministry of Finance. Finance Act 2023, amendments to capital gains tax rates on debt mutual funds. March 2023.
- Ministry of Finance. Finance Act 2024, amendments to capital gains tax rates on equity. July 2024.
External links
- Zerodha Console portal
- Zerodha support, Console FAQ
- Zerodha Z-Connect blog
- CDSL, depository services
- ClearTax, tax filing with Zerodha data
- Quicko, tax filing for traders