UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

FORM N-CSR

 

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED
MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

 

Investment Company Act file number 811-6506

 

Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

 

One Madison Avenue, 17th Floor, New York, NY 10010

(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

 

Marc A. De Oliveira

Franklin Templeton

100 First Stamford Place

Stamford, CT 06902

(Name and address of agent for service)

 

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: 1-888-777-0102

 

Date of fiscal year end: November 30

 

Date of reporting period: May 31, 2025

 

 

 

ITEM 1.REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS

 

(a)The Report to Shareholders is filed herewith

 

Semi-Annual Report
May 31, 2025
WESTERN ASSET
INTERMEDIATE MUNI
FUND INC. (SBI)

Fund objective
The Fund’s investment objective is to provide common shareholders a high level of current income exempt from regular federal income taxes*, consistent with prudent investing.

Under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest at least 80% of its total assets in municipal obligations. In addition, under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest at least 80% of its total assets in debt securities that are, at the time of investment, rated investment grade by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization or, if unrated, of equivalent quality as determined by the investment manager. The Fund also maintains a dollar-weighted average effective maturity of between three and ten years.
What’s inside
III
IV
1
2
20
21
22
23
24
27
41
47
48
* Certain investors may be subject to the federal alternative minimum tax (“AMT”), and state and local taxes will apply. Capital gains, if any, are fully taxable. Please consult your personal tax or legal adviser. 

II
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

Letter from the president
Dear Shareholder,
We are pleased to provide the semi-annual report of Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. for the six-month reporting period ended May 31, 2025. Please read on for Fund performance information during the Fund’s reporting period.
As always, we remain committed to providing you with excellent service and a full spectrum of investment choices. We also remain committed to supplementing the support you receive from your financial advisor. One way we accomplish this is through our website, www.franklintempleton.com. Here you can gain immediate access to market and investment information, including:
Fund prices and performance,
Market insights and commentaries from our portfolio managers, and
A host of educational resources.
We look forward to helping you meet your financial goals.
Sincerely,
Jane Trust, CFA

President and Chief Executive Officer
June 30, 2025
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

III

Performance review
For the six months ended May 31, 2025, Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. returned -3.82% based on its net asset value (NAV)i and -5.81% based on its New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) market price per share. The Fund’s unmanaged benchmark, the Bloomberg 1-15 Year Municipal Bond Indexii, returned -0.68% for the same period.
Certain investors may be subject to the federal alternative minimum tax, and state and local taxes will apply. Capital gains, if any, are fully taxable. Please consult your personal tax or legal adviser.
The Fund has a practice of seeking to maintain a relatively stable level of distributions to shareholders. This practice has no impact on the Fund’s investment strategy and may reduce the Fund’s NAV. The Fund’s manager believes the practice helps maintain the Fund’s competitiveness and may benefit the Fund’s market price and premium/discount to the Fund’s NAV.
During the six-month period, the Fund made distributions to shareholders totaling $0.25 per share. As of May 31, 2025, the Fund estimates that 55% of the distributions were sourced from net investment income and 45% constituted a return of capital.* The performance table shows the Fund’s six-month total return based on its NAV and market price as of May 31, 2025. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Performance Snapshot as of May 31, 2025 (unaudited)
Price Per Share
6-Month
Total Return**
$8.35 (NAV)
-3.82
%†
$7.44 (Market Price)
-5.81
%‡
All figures represent past performance and are not a guarantee of future results. Performance figures for periods shorter than one year represent cumulative figures and are not annualized.
** Total returns are based on changes in NAV or market price, respectively. Returns reflect the deduction of all Fund expenses, including management fees, operating expenses, and other Fund expenses. Returns do not reflect the deduction of brokerage commissions or taxes that investors may pay on distributions or the sale of shares.
† Total return assumes the reinvestment of all distributions, including returns of capital, if any, at NAV.
‡ Total return assumes the reinvestment of all distributions, including returns of capital, if any, in additional shares in accordance with the Fund’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan.
*
These estimates are not for tax purposes. The Fund will issue a Form 1099 with final composition of the distributions for tax purposes after year-end. A return of capital is not taxable and results in a reduction in the tax basis of a shareholder’s investment. For more information about a distribution’s composition, please refer to the Fund’s distribution press release or, if applicable, the Section 19 notice located in the press release section of our website, www.franklintempleton.com.

IV
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

Looking for additional information?
The Fund is traded under the symbol “SBI” and its closing market price is available in most newspapers under the NYSE listings. The daily NAV is available online under the symbol “XSBIX” on most financial websites. Barron’s and The Wall Street Journal’s Monday edition both carry closed-end fund tables that provide additional information. In addition, the Fund issues a quarterly press release that can be found on most major financial websites as well as www.franklintempleton.com.
In a continuing effort to provide information concerning the Fund, shareholders may call 1-888-777-0102 (toll free), Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Eastern Time, for the Fund’s current NAV, market price and other information.
Thank you for your investment in the Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. As always, we appreciate that you have chosen us to manage your assets and we remain focused on achieving the Fund’s investment goals.
Sincerely,
Jane Trust, CFA
President and Chief Executive Officer
June 30, 2025
RISKS:The Fund is a diversified closed-end management investment company designed primarily as a long-term investment and not as a trading vehicle. The Fund is not intended to be a complete investment program and, due to the uncertainty inherent in all investments, there can be no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective. The Fund’s common stock is traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Similar to stocks, the Fund’s share price will fluctuate with market conditions and, at the time of sale, may be worth more or less than the original investment. Shares of closed-end funds often trade at a discount to their net asset value. Diversification does not assure against market loss. The Fund’s investments are subject to a number of risks, including interest rate risk, credit risk, leveraging risk and management risk. As interest rates rise, bond prices fall, reducing the value of the fixed income securities held by the Fund. Lower rated, higher yielding bonds, known as “junk bonds”, are subject to greater liquidity and credit risk, including the risk of default, than higher rated obligations. Municipal securities purchased by the Fund may be adversely affected by changes in the financial condition of municipal issuers and insurers, regulatory and political developments, uncertainties and public perceptions, and other factors. The Fund may use derivatives, such as options and futures, which can be illiquid, may disproportionately increase losses, and have a potentially large impact on Fund performance. The Fund may invest in securities of other investment companies. To the extent it does, Fund stockholders will indirectly pay a portion of the operating costs of such companies, in addition to the expenses that the Fund bears directly in connection with its own
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

V

Performance review (cont’d)
operation. Investing in securities issued by other investment companies, including exchange-traded funds (“ETFs”) that invest primarily in municipal securities, involves risks similar to those of investing directly in the securities in which those investment companies invest. Leverage may result in greater volatility of NAV and market price of common shares and increases a shareholder’s risk of loss. The Fund may enter into tender option bond (“TOB”) transactions, which expose the Fund to leverage and credit risk, and generally involve greater risk than investments in fixed rate municipal bonds, including the risk of loss of principal. The interest payments that the Fund would typically receive on inverse floaters acquired in such transactions vary inversely with short-term interest rates and will be reduced (and potentially eliminated) when short-term interest rates increase. Inverse floaters will generally underperform the market for fixed rate municipal securities when interest rates rise. The value and market for inverse floaters can be volatile, and inverse floaters can have limited liquidity. Investments in inverse floaters issued in TOB transactions are derivative instruments and, therefore, are also subject to the risks generally applicable to investments in derivatives. The market values of securities or other assets will fluctuate, sometimes sharply and unpredictably, due to changes in general market conditions, overall economic trends or events, governmental actions or intervention, actions taken by the U.S. Federal Reserve or foreign central banks, market disruptions caused by trade disputes or other factors, political developments, armed conflicts, economic sanctions and countermeasures in response to sanctions, major cybersecurity events, investor sentiment, the global and domestic effects of a pandemic, and other factors that may or may not be related to the issuer of the security or other asset. The Fund may also invest in money market funds, including funds affiliated with the Fund’s manager and subadviser.
All investments are subject to risk including the possible loss of principal. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. All index performance reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes. Please note that an investor cannot invest directly in an index.
i
Net asset value (NAV) is calculated by subtracting total liabilities, including liabilities associated with financial leverage (if any), from the closing value of all securities held by the Fund (plus all other assets) and dividing the result (total net assets) by the total number of the common shares outstanding. The NAV fluctuates with changes in the market prices of securities in which the Fund has invested. However, the price at which an investor may buy or sell shares of the Fund is the Fund’s market price as determined by supply of and demand for the Fund’s shares.
ii
The Bloomberg 1–15 Year Municipal Bond Index is a market value weighted index of investment grade (Baa3/BBB or higher) fixed-rate municipal bonds with maturities of one to fifteen years.
Important data provider notices and terms available at www.franklintempletondatasources.com.

VI
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

Fund at a glance(unaudited)
Investment breakdown (%) as a percent of total investments
The bar graph above represents the composition of the Fund’s investments as of May 31, 2025, and November 30, 2024, and does not include derivatives, such as futures contracts. The Fund is actively managed. As a result, the composition of the Fund’s investments is subject to change at any time.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

1

Schedule of investments (unaudited)
May 31, 2025
 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Municipal Bonds — 136.0%
Alabama — 6.1%
Alabama State Corrections Institution Finance
Authority Revenue, Series A
5.000%
7/1/42
$750,000
$771,006
  
Black Belt Energy Gas District, AL, Gas Project
Revenue Bonds:
Series D-1, Refunding
5.500%
2/1/29
200,000
209,426
  (a)(b)
Series F
5.500%
12/1/28
2,000,000
2,085,722
  (a)(b)
Energy Southeast, A Cooperative District Energy,
AL, Supply Revenue, Series B-1
5.750%
11/1/31
1,000,000
1,083,820
  (a)(b)
Jefferson County, AL, Sewer Revenue, Warrants,
Series 2024, Refunding
5.250%
10/1/45
1,500,000
1,534,087
  
Mobile County, AL, IDA Revenue:
Solid Waste Disposal Facility, Calvert LLC
Project, Series A
5.000%
6/1/54
310,000
291,409
  (c)
Solid Waste Disposal Facility, Calvert LLC
Project, Series B
4.750%
12/1/54
250,000
225,891
  (c)
Southeast Alabama Gas Supply District, Gas
Supply Revenue, Project No 1, Series A,
Refunding
5.000%
4/1/31
400,000
422,377
  
Southeast Energy Authority, AL, Cooperative
District, Energy Supply Revenue, Series B
5.250%
1/1/33
575,000
593,713
  (a)(b)
Total Alabama
7,217,451
Alaska — 0.2%
Alaska State Housing Finance Corp. Revenue,
State Capital Project, Series B, Refunding
4.000%
12/1/36
250,000
245,306
  
Arizona — 3.0%
Chandler, AZ, IDA Revenue:
Intel Corp. Project
5.000%
9/1/27
500,000
509,508
  (a)(b)(c)
Intel Corp. Project
3.800%
6/15/28
500,000
503,301
  (a)(b)
Intel Corp. Project
4.100%
6/15/28
250,000
250,322
  (a)(b)(c)
Intel Corp. Project
4.000%
6/1/29
650,000
640,440
  (a)(b)(c)
La Paz County, AZ, IDA, Lease Revenue, Charter
School Solutions Harmony Public Schools Project
5.000%
2/15/38
500,000
492,610
  
Navajo Nation, AZ, Revenue, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
12/1/25
135,000
135,497
  (d)
Phoenix, AZ, Civic Improvement Corp., Airport
Revenue, Junior Lien, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/27
1,000,000
1,001,219
  
Total Arizona
3,532,897
See Notes to Financial Statements.

2
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Arkansas — 0.3%
Arkansas State Development Finance Authority,
Environmental Improvement Revenue,
United States Steel Corporation Project, Green
Bonds
5.700%
5/1/53
$350,000
$354,012
  (c)
California — 13.9%
Alameda, CA, Corridor Transportation Authority
Revenue, Second Subordinated Lien, Series B,
Refunding
5.000%
10/1/34
500,000
506,484
  
California State Community Choice Financing
Authority Revenue:
Clean Energy Project, Green Bonds, Series B
5.000%
12/1/32
1,600,000
1,645,978
  (a)(b)
Clean Energy Project, Green Bonds, Series B-1
5.000%
8/1/29
600,000
623,931
  (a)(b)
Clean Energy Project, Green Bonds, Series B-1
4.000%
8/1/31
500,000
494,364
  (a)(b)
Clean Energy Project, Green Bonds, Series C
5.000%
10/1/32
300,000
312,618
  (a)(b)
Clean Energy Project, Green Bonds, Series E
5.000%
9/1/32
1,400,000
1,470,749
  (a)(b)
Clean Energy Project, Green Bonds, Series H
5.000%
8/1/33
600,000
638,680
  (a)(b)
California State MFA Revenue:
Senior Lien, LINXS APM Project, Series A
5.000%
12/31/34
350,000
353,148
  (c)
Senior Lien, LINXS APM Project, Series A
5.000%
12/31/43
400,000
389,895
  (c)
Waste Management, Inc. Project, Series B
3.850%
6/1/26
2,000,000
2,000,246
  (a)(b)(c)
California State MFA Special Facility Revenue,
United Airlines, Inc., Los Angeles International
Airport Project
4.000%
7/15/29
250,000
243,504
  (c)
California State PCFA Water Furnishing Revenue,
Poseidon Resources
5.000%
7/1/27
1,000,000
1,000,705
  (c)(d)
Folsom Cordova, CA, USD:
School Facilities Improvement District No 4,
GO, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
10/1/38
500,000
551,387
  (e)
School Facilities Improvement District No 5,
GO, Series B, Refunding
5.000%
10/1/38
600,000
661,664
  (e)
Los Angeles, CA, Department of Water & Power,
Power System Revenue, Series C
5.000%
7/1/37
750,000
758,626
  
M-S-R Energy Authority, CA, Natural Gas
Revenue, Series B
6.125%
11/1/29
2,245,000
2,357,923
  
River Islands, CA, Public Financing Authority,
Special Tax Revenue:
Community Facilities District No 2003-1
5.500%
9/1/37
350,000
368,784
  
Community Facilities District No 2023-1
5.500%
9/1/43
250,000
257,431
  
Riverside, CA, Electric Revenue:
Series A, Refunding
5.000%
10/1/36
750,000
792,359
  
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

3

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)
May 31, 2025
 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
California — continued
Series A, Refunding
5.000%
10/1/43
$250,000
$257,677
  
San Francisco, CA, City & County Airport
Commission, International Airport Revenue, SFO
Fuel Co. LLC, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
1/1/33
645,000
666,785
  (c)
Total California
16,352,938
Colorado — 2.4%
Base Village Metropolitan District No 2, CO, GO,
Series A, Refunding
5.500%
12/1/36
500,000
500,150
  
Colorado State Health Facilities Authority
Revenue:
Commonspirit Health Initiatives, Series B-2
5.000%
8/1/26
250,000
252,019
  (a)(b)
Improvement Second Tier Bonds, Bethesda
Project
5.500%
9/15/54
400,000
385,578
  
Denver, CO, City & County Airport System
Revenue, Subordinated, Series B, Refunding
5.000%
11/15/32
1,000,000
1,073,484
  (c)
Denver, CO, City & County Special Facility
Apartment Revenue, United Airlines Inc. Project,
Refunding
5.000%
10/1/32
100,000
99,933
  (c)
Southern Ute Indian Tribe Reservation, CO, GO,
Series A
5.000%
4/1/35
350,000
368,994
  (d)
Vauxmont Metropolitan District, CO, GO,
Subordinate Limited Tax, Series 2019, Refunding,
AG
5.000%
12/15/28
125,000
128,837
  
Total Colorado
2,808,995
Connecticut — 1.8%
Connecticut State HEFA Revenue, Sacred Heart
University Issue, Series I-1, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/36
250,000
254,755
  
Connecticut State Special Tax Revenue,
Transportation Infrastructure, Series A
5.000%
1/1/37
500,000
512,942
  
Connecticut State, GO, Series A
5.000%
4/15/39
1,290,000
1,329,400
  
Total Connecticut
2,097,097
Florida — 7.2%
Broward County, FL, Airport System Revenue,
Series 2017
5.000%
10/1/36
250,000
251,823
  (c)
Broward County, FL, Port Facilities Revenue,
Series 2022
5.000%
9/1/37
450,000
465,964
  (c)
Florida State Development Finance Corp.,
Educational Facilities Revenue, Renaissance
Charter School Inc. Projects, Series A
6.000%
6/15/35
150,000
150,064
  (d)
See Notes to Financial Statements.

4
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Florida — continued
Florida State Development Finance Corp.,
Revenue:
Brightline Passenger Rail Project, Refunding,
AG
5.000%
7/1/44
$500,000
$489,733
  (c)
Brightline Passenger Rail Project, Refunding,
AG
5.250%
7/1/47
1,250,000
1,253,870
  (c)
Florida State Insurance Assistance Interlocal
Agency Inc., Revenue, Series A-1, Refunding
5.000%
9/1/26
1,100,000
1,114,062
  
Florida State Mid-Bay Bridge Authority Revenue,
Series A, Refunding
5.000%
10/1/27
545,000
546,653
  
Hillsborough County, FL, Aviation Authority
Revenue, Tampa International Airport, Series E
5.000%
10/1/43
250,000
248,100
  (c)
Miami-Dade County, FL, Health Facilities
Authority Hospital Revenue, Nicklaus Children’s
Hospital, Refunding
5.000%
8/1/36
250,000
253,321
  
Miami-Dade County, FL, Seaport Revenue, Senior
Bonds, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
10/1/47
1,000,000
969,233
  (c)
Orange County, FL, Health Facilities Authority
Revenue:
Orlando Health Inc., Series A, Refunding
4.500%
10/1/56
225,000
204,194
  
Orlando Health Obligated Group, Series A
5.000%
10/1/42
250,000
255,512
  
Palm Beach County, FL, Health Facilities Authority
Revenue, Toby & Leon Cooperman Sinai
Residences of Boca Raton Expansion,
Series 2022, Refunding
4.000%
6/1/31
150,000
147,918
  
Pasco County, FL, Capital Improvement, Cigarette
Tax Allocation Bonds, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer
Center Project, Series A, AG
5.750%
9/1/54
1,825,000
1,924,451
  
Wildwood, FL, Village Community Development
District No 15, Special Assessment Revenue,
Series 2024
4.200%
5/1/39
150,000
140,320
  (d)
Total Florida
8,415,218
Georgia — 1.7%
Georgia State Municipal Electric Authority, Power
Revenue:
Plant Vogtle Units 3&4, Project M, Series A
5.250%
7/1/64
200,000
204,463
  
Plant Vogtle Units 3&4, Project P, Series A
5.500%
7/1/64
200,000
203,542
  
Main Street Natural Gas Inc., GA, Gas Project
Revenue:
Series A
5.000%
5/15/33
250,000
256,543
  
Series B
5.000%
6/1/29
1,000,000
1,032,549
  (a)(b)
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

5

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)
May 31, 2025
 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Georgia — continued
Series C
5.000%
9/1/30
$300,000
$313,564
  (a)(b)
Total Georgia
2,010,661
Guam — 0.2%
Guam Government, Business Privilege Tax
Revenue, Series F, Refunding
4.000%
1/1/36
200,000
191,734
  
Hawaii — 0.4%
Honolulu, HI, City & County Wastewater System
Revenue:
First Senior Bond Resolution, Series A
3.000%
7/1/41
400,000
314,565
  
First Senior Bond Resolution, Series A,
Refunding
5.000%
7/1/36
150,000
168,370
  
Total Hawaii
482,935
Illinois — 20.4%
Chicago, IL, Board of Education, Dedicated
Capital Improvement, Special Tax Revenue,
Series 2018
5.000%
4/1/38
500,000
506,462
  
Chicago, IL, Board of Education, GO:
Dedicated, Series A
5.000%
12/1/43
1,000,000
958,414
  
Dedicated, Series G, Refunding
5.000%
12/1/34
270,000
268,433
  
Series C, Refunding, AG
5.000%
12/1/32
2,000,000
2,060,736
  
Series D
5.000%
12/1/46
1,500,000
1,365,923
  
Chicago, IL, GO:
Chicago Works, Series A
5.500%
1/1/39
250,000
257,592
  
Series A
5.500%
1/1/35
250,000
258,278
  
Series A
5.000%
1/1/40
610,000
602,836
  
Chicago, IL, O’Hare International Airport Revenue:
Senior Lien, Series D
5.250%
1/1/36
500,000
509,626
  
Senior Lien, Series D
5.250%
1/1/37
400,000
407,004
  
Series C, Refunding
5.000%
1/1/43
600,000
599,033
  (c)
Chicago, IL, Transit Authority, Sales Tax Receipts
Revenue, Second Lien, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
12/1/45
550,000
538,779
  
Chicago, IL, Wastewater Transmission Revenue:
Second Lien, Series A
5.000%
1/1/47
300,000
300,324
  
Second Lien, Series A, AG
5.250%
1/1/58
500,000
502,481
  
Second Lien, Series B, Refunding
5.000%
1/1/36
600,000
606,949
  
Chicago, IL, Waterworks Revenue, Second Lien,
Series 2017-2, Refunding, AG
5.000%
11/1/32
630,000
648,784
  
Illinois State Finance Authority Revenue,
Southern Illinois Healthcare Enterprises Inc.,
Refunding
5.000%
3/1/34
500,000
503,081
  
See Notes to Financial Statements.

6
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Illinois — continued
Illinois State Sports Facilities Authority Revenue,
State Tax Supported, Refunding, AG
5.250%
6/15/30
$3,000,000
$3,005,119
  
Illinois State Toll Highway Authority Revenue,
Series A, Refunding
5.000%
1/1/37
500,000
544,405
  
Illinois State University, Auxiliary Facilities
System Revenue, Series A, Refunding, AG
5.000%
4/1/28
100,000
105,171
  
Illinois State, GO:
Series 2016, Refunding
5.000%
2/1/29
500,000
511,528
  
Series A
5.000%
5/1/36
770,000
787,141
  
Series A
5.000%
5/1/39
300,000
303,822
  
Series A, Refunding
5.000%
10/1/29
1,300,000
1,356,464
  
Series B
5.250%
5/1/47
1,000,000
1,007,406
  
Series B, Refunding
5.000%
9/1/27
600,000
621,141
  
Series C
5.000%
12/1/41
1,250,000
1,279,147
  
Series D
5.000%
11/1/27
300,000
312,184
  
Series D, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/34
400,000
426,576
  
Metropolitan Pier & Exposition Authority, IL,
Revenue:
McCormick Place Expansion Project, Series A,
Refunding
4.000%
12/15/42
600,000
536,125
  
McCormick Place Expansion Project, Series A,
Refunding
5.000%
6/15/50
1,200,000
1,164,971
  
McCormick Place Expansion Project, Series B,
Refunding
5.000%
12/15/31
250,000
257,265
  
McCormick Place Expansion Project, Series B,
Refunding
5.000%
6/15/42
500,000
503,533
  
McCormick Place Expansion Project, Series B,
Refunding, AG
0.000%
12/15/56
500,000
89,141
  
Sales Tax Securitization Corp., IL, Revenue,
Series A, Refunding
5.000%
1/1/28
250,000
260,856
  
Total Illinois
23,966,730
Indiana — 2.3%
Hammond, IN, Multi-School Building Corp.:
First Mortgage Bond, State Intercept Program
5.000%
7/15/34
750,000
775,314
  
First Mortgage Bond, State Intercept Program
5.000%
7/15/35
1,035,000
1,066,691
  
Indiana State Finance Authority Revenue:
Marion General Hospital, Series A
4.000%
7/1/45
250,000
219,712
  
Midwestern Disaster Relief, Ohio Valley
Electric Corp. Project, Series A
4.250%
11/1/30
200,000
202,517
  
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

7

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)
May 31, 2025
 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Indiana — continued
Valparaiso, IN, Exempt Facilities Revenue, Pratt
Paper LLC Project, Refunding
4.500%
1/1/34
$500,000
$500,862
  (c)
Total Indiana
2,765,096
Kentucky — 3.4%
Kentucky State PEA, Gas Supply Revenue:
Series A
4.000%
6/1/26
1,200,000
1,203,143
  (a)(b)
Series A, Refunding
5.250%
12/1/29
200,000
209,833
  (a)(b)
Series C
4.000%
6/1/25
1,600,000
1,600,000
  (a)(b)
Trimble County, KY, Environmental Facilities
Revenue, Louisville Gas and Electric Company
Project, Series A
4.700%
6/1/27
1,000,000
1,006,490
  (a)(b)(c)
Total Kentucky
4,019,466
Louisiana — 2.9%
Lafayette Parish, LA, School Board Sales Tax
Revenue, Series 2023
4.000%
4/1/48
500,000
436,626
  
Port New Orleans, LA, Board of Commissioners,
Revenue, Series B, Refunding, AG
5.000%
4/1/38
1,625,000
1,617,612
  (c)
St. John the Baptist Parish, LA, State Revenue:
Marathon Oil Corp. Project, Series B-2,
Refunding
2.375%
7/1/26
900,000
884,381
  (a)(b)
Marathon Oil Corp. Project, Series C,
Refunding
3.300%
7/3/28
500,000
490,194
  (a)(b)
Total Louisiana
3,428,813
Maryland — 0.6%
Maryland State EDC, Senior Student Housing
Revenue, Morgan State University Project
4.000%
7/1/40
500,000
455,085
  
Maryland State Stadium Authority, Built to Learn
Revenue, Series 2021
4.000%
6/1/46
250,000
222,507
  
Total Maryland
677,592
Massachusetts — 2.9%
Massachusetts State Department of
Transportation, Metropolitan Highway System
Revenue, Series B-1, Refunding
5.000%
1/1/35
350,000
369,427
  
Massachusetts State DFA Revenue:
Boston Medical Center, Series G, Refunding
5.250%
7/1/48
500,000
495,283
  
Partners HealthCare System, Mass General
Brigham Inc., Series S-1, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/37
250,000
254,191
  
UMass Boston Student Housing Project
5.000%
10/1/28
200,000
202,241
  
Massachusetts State Port Authority Revenue,
Series E
5.000%
7/1/51
500,000
490,983
  (c)
See Notes to Financial Statements.

8
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Massachusetts — continued
Plymouth, MA, GO, Refunding
3.500%
5/1/44
$2,000,000
$1,642,036
  
Total Massachusetts
3,454,161
Michigan — 2.9%
Great Lakes, MI, Water Authority, Water Supply
System Revenue:
Senior Lien, Series B
5.000%
7/1/42
1,000,000
1,049,120
  
Senior Lien, Series C, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/33
800,000
811,349
  
Senior Lien, Series C, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/35
350,000
354,598
  
Michigan State Finance Authority Revenue:
Hospital Revenue, Trinity Health Credit Group,
Series A, Refunding
5.000%
12/1/42
250,000
249,617
  
Local Government Loan Program, Detroit, MI,
Water & Sewer Department, Second Lien
Local Project, Series C, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/33
275,000
275,002
  
The Henry Ford Health Detroit South Campus
Central Utility Plant Project, Green Bonds,
Series 2024
4.375%
2/28/54
250,000
225,967
  
Tobacco Settlement Asset-Backed, Series A-1,
Refunding
4.000%
6/1/39
150,000
139,028
  
Michigan State Strategic Fund Ltd. Obligation
Revenue, I-75 Improvement Project
5.000%
12/31/43
300,000
299,500
  (c)
Total Michigan
3,404,181
Missouri — 1.0%
Kansas City, MO, IDA, Airport System Revenue,
Kansas City International Airport Terminal
Modernization Project, Series B
5.000%
3/1/35
750,000
768,231
  (c)
Missouri State Health Senior Living Facilities
Revenue, Lutheran Senior Services Projects,
Series A
5.000%
2/1/34
150,000
152,699
  
St. Louis County, MO, IDA, Senior Living Facilities
Revenue, Friendship Village, St. Louis Obligated
Group, Series A
5.000%
9/1/38
300,000
301,020
  
Total Missouri
1,221,950
Nebraska — 0.8%
Central Plains, NE, Energy Project, Gas Project
Revenue, Project No 3, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
9/1/37
500,000
524,804
  
Omaha, NE, Public Power District, Electric System
Revenue, Series B, Refunding
4.000%
2/1/46
500,000
448,648
  
Total Nebraska
973,452
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

9

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)
May 31, 2025
 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
New Hampshire — 1.6%
National Finance Authority, NH, Revenue:
Winston-Salem Sustainable Energy
Partners LLC, Series A
5.000%
12/1/35
$950,000
$1,024,802
  (e)
Winston-Salem Sustainable Energy
Partners LLC, Series A
5.000%
6/1/55
900,000
871,025
  (e)
Total New Hampshire
1,895,827
New Jersey — 5.8%
New Jersey State EDA Revenue, Special Facility,
Port Newark Container Terminal LLC Project,
Refunding
5.000%
10/1/37
1,000,000
996,747
  (c)
New Jersey State Transportation Trust Fund
Authority Revenue:
Transportation Program, Series AA
5.000%
6/15/36
1,000,000
1,049,237
  
Transportation Program, Series CC
5.000%
6/15/40
2,000,000
2,070,191
  
Transportation Program, Series CC
4.125%
6/15/50
400,000
344,716
  
Transportation Program, Series CC
5.250%
6/15/50
500,000
512,816
  
Transportation System, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
12/15/28
575,000
611,407
  
New Jersey State Turnpike Authority Revenue,
Series C, Refunding
5.000%
1/1/44
750,000
776,504
  
Tobacco Settlement Financing Corp., NJ,
Revenue, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
6/1/35
500,000
507,636
  
Total New Jersey
6,869,254
New Mexico — 0.4%
New Mexico State Municipal Energy Acquisition
Authority, Gas Supply Revenue, Refunding
5.000%
11/1/30
400,000
418,450
  (a)(b)
New York — 21.6%
Build NYC Resource Corp., NY, Revenue, East
Harlem Scholars Academy Charter School Project
5.750%
6/1/52
350,000
340,710
  (d)
Hudson Yards Infrastructure Corp., NY, Second
Indenture Revenue, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
2/15/35
1,000,000
1,021,792
  
Long Island, NY, Power Authority Electric System
Revenue, Series B
3.000%
9/1/29
250,000
240,419
  (a)(b)
MTA, NY, Transportation Revenue:
Green Bonds, Series E, Refunding
5.000%
11/15/28
1,000,000
1,058,082
  
Series A-2
5.000%
5/15/30
400,000
416,806
  (a)(b)
New York City, NY, GO:
Series A
5.000%
8/1/43
250,000
257,352
  
Subseries B-1
5.250%
10/1/43
1,000,000
1,045,467
  
See Notes to Financial Statements.

10
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
New York — continued
New York City, NY, TFA, Future Tax Secured
Revenue:
Subseries A-1
5.000%
5/1/44
$2,000,000
$2,059,145
  
Subseries C-1
4.000%
5/1/39
2,200,000
2,108,033
  
New York State Dormitory Authority, Sales Tax
Revenue, Bidding Group 3, Series E, Refunding
5.000%
3/15/38
1,500,000
1,534,202
  
New York State Dormitory Authority, State
Personal Income Tax Revenue:
Series A, Refunding
5.000%
3/15/40
750,000
768,101
  
Series D, Refunding
5.000%
2/15/41
750,000
771,998
  
New York State Thruway Authority General
Revenue, Junior Indebtedness Obligations, Junior
Lien, Series A
5.000%
1/1/41
1,250,000
1,253,513
  
New York State Transportation Development
Corp., Special Facilities Revenue:
Delta Air Lines Inc., LaGuardia Airport
Terminals C and D Redevelopment Project
5.000%
1/1/30
850,000
863,110
  (c)
Delta Air Lines Inc., LaGuardia Airport
Terminals C and D Redevelopment Project
5.000%
1/1/32
1,200,000
1,211,911
  (c)
Delta Air Lines Inc., LaGuardia Airport
Terminals C and D Redevelopment Project
6.000%
4/1/35
250,000
271,561
  (c)
Delta Air Lines Inc., LaGuardia Airport
Terminals C and D Redevelopment Project
5.625%
4/1/40
250,000
256,402
  (c)
John F. Kennedy International Airport New
Terminal One Project, Green Bonds
6.000%
6/30/54
2,000,000
2,098,055
  (c)
John F. Kennedy International Airport New
Terminal One Project, Green Bonds
5.375%
6/30/60
500,000
497,753
  (c)
John F. Kennedy International Airport Terminal
Four Project, Series C, Refunding
5.000%
12/1/27
500,000
519,974
  
John F. Kennedy International Airport Terminal
Six Redevelopment Project, Green Bonds,
Series A, Refunding
5.500%
12/31/54
150,000
150,301
  (c)
John F. Kennedy International Airport Terminal
Six Redevelopment Project, Green Bonds,
Series A, Refunding, AG
4.500%
12/31/54
350,000
311,639
  (c)
John F. Kennedy International Airport Terminal
Six Redevelopment Project, Green Bonds,
Series B, Refunding, AG, Step bond (0.000% to
12/31/34 then 5.000%)
0.000%
12/31/54
150,000
92,195
  (c)
LaGuardia Airport Terminal B Redevelopment
Project
5.000%
7/1/30
1,225,000
1,225,244
  (c)
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

11

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)
May 31, 2025
 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
New York — continued
New York State Urban Development Corp.,
Revenue, State Personal Income Tax, Series C,
Refunding
4.000%
3/15/45
$550,000
$489,333
  
Port Authority of New York & New Jersey
Revenue, Consolidated Series 193, Refunding
5.000%
10/15/30
1,500,000
1,503,569
  (c)
Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Authority, NY,
Revenue:
MTA Bridges & Tunnels, Senior Lien, Series
A-1, Refunding
5.000%
5/15/51
1,040,000
1,050,400
  
MTA Bridges & Tunnels, Senior Lien, Series C,
Refunding
5.000%
5/15/47
2,000,000
2,039,408
  
Total New York
25,456,475
North Dakota — 0.4%
Grand Forks, ND, Health Care System Revenue,
Altru Health System, Refunding, AG
3.000%
12/1/46
700,000
507,184
  
Ohio — 2.2%
American Municipal Power Inc., OH, Revenue,
AMP Fremont Energy Center Project, Series A,
Refunding
5.000%
2/15/29
500,000
521,428
  
Buckeye, OH, Tobacco Settlement Financing
Authority Revenue:
Senior Bonds, Series A-2, Refunding
5.000%
6/1/33
500,000
520,147
  
Senior Bonds, Series B-2, Refunding
5.000%
6/1/55
550,000
476,624
  
Ohio State Air Quality Development Authority
Revenue:
American Electric Co. Project, Series B
2.500%
10/1/29
350,000
326,342
  (a)(b)(c)
AMG Vanadium Project, Series 2019
5.000%
7/1/49
500,000
438,593
  (c)
Duke Energy Corp. Project, Series B, Refunding
4.250%
6/1/27
250,000
251,956
  (a)(b)(c)
Total Ohio
2,535,090
Oklahoma — 0.3%
Tulsa, OK, Municipal Airport Trust Revenue:
American Airlines Inc. Project, Refunding
6.250%
12/1/35
300,000
328,257
  (c)
American Airlines Inc. Project, Refunding
6.250%
12/1/40
35,000
37,622
  (c)
Total Oklahoma
365,879
Pennsylvania — 4.4%
Bucks County, PA, Water and Sewer Authority,
Sewer System Revenue, Series A, AG
4.000%
12/1/42
250,000
234,160
  
Commonwealth Financing Authority, PA, Tobacco
Master Settlement Payment Revenue
5.000%
6/1/30
200,000
207,913
  
See Notes to Financial Statements.

12
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Pennsylvania — continued
Cumberland County, PA, Municipal Authority
Revenue, Diakon Lutheran Social Ministries
Project, Unrefunded
5.000%
1/1/27
$195,000
$195,038
  
Pennsylvania State Economic Development
Financing Authority Revenue:
Exempt Facilities Bonds, PPL Energy
Supply LLC Project, Series B, Refunding
5.250%
6/1/27
600,000
600,386
  (a)(b)
Presbyterian Senior Living Project, Series B-2,
Refunding
5.000%
7/1/42
250,000
251,181
  
Tax-Exempt Private Activity, The Penndot
Major Bridges Package One Project
5.500%
6/30/41
1,500,000
1,546,619
  (c)
Tax-Exempt Private Activity, The Penndot
Major Bridges Package One Project
5.250%
6/30/53
200,000
195,387
  (c)
Pennsylvania State Turnpike Commission
Revenue:
Series B
5.000%
12/1/45
500,000
512,361
  
Series B, Refunding
5.250%
12/1/47
250,000
260,467
  
Philadelphia, PA, Authority for IDR, City Service
Agreement Revenue, Rebuild Project
5.000%
5/1/35
500,000
516,320
  
State Public School Building Authority, PA, Lease
Revenue:
Philadelphia SD Project, Series A, Refunding,
AG, State Aid Withholding
5.000%
6/1/31
150,000
152,032
  
Philadelphia SD Project, Series A, Refunding,
AG, State Aid Withholding
5.000%
6/1/33
450,000
454,793
  
Total Pennsylvania
5,126,657
Puerto Rico — 6.6%
Puerto Rico Commonwealth Aqueduct & Sewer
Authority Revenue:
Senior Lien, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/37
1,500,000
1,520,074
  (d)
Senior Lien, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/47
400,000
379,561
  (d)
Puerto Rico Commonwealth, GO:
CAB, Restructured, Series A-1
0.000%
7/1/33
14,271
9,673
  
Restructured, Series A-1
5.375%
7/1/25
6,166
6,170
  
Restructured, Series A-1
5.625%
7/1/27
12,238
12,563
  
Restructured, Series A-1
5.625%
7/1/29
12,040
12,621
  
Restructured, Series A-1
5.750%
7/1/31
11,694
12,520
  
Restructured, Series A-1
4.000%
7/1/33
11,089
10,669
  
Restructured, Series A-1
4.000%
7/1/35
229,968
217,240
  
Restructured, Series A-1
4.000%
7/1/37
740,000
683,978
  
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

13

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)
May 31, 2025
 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Puerto Rico — continued
Restructured, Series A-1
4.000%
7/1/41
$111,631
$95,714
  
Restructured, Series A-1
4.000%
7/1/46
12,097
9,950
  
Subseries CW
0.000%
11/1/43
45,761
27,514
  (b)
Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority Revenue:
Series A
5.000%
7/1/42
220,000
107,250
  *(f)
Series A
5.050%
7/1/42
75,000
36,562
  *(f)
Series DDD, Refunding
7/1/21
280,000
135,800
  *(g)
Series TT
5.000%
7/1/37
450,000
219,375
  *(f)
Series XX
5.250%
7/1/40
400,000
195,000
  *(f)
Series ZZ, Refunding
7/1/18
250,000
121,250
  *(g)
Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Sales Tax
Revenue:
CAB, Restructured, Series A-1
0.000%
7/1/27
220,000
202,487
  
Restructured, Series A-1
4.550%
7/1/40
50,000
47,701
  
Restructured, Series A-2
4.329%
7/1/40
1,490,000
1,391,384
  
Restructured, Series A-2A
4.550%
7/1/40
2,380,000
2,270,577
  
Total Puerto Rico
7,725,633
South Carolina — 0.9%
Patriots Energy Group Financing Agency, SC, Gas
Supply Revenue, Subseries B-2, Refunding (SOFR
x 0.670 + 1.900%)
4.788%
3/1/31
250,000
257,839
  (a)(b)
South Carolina State Jobs-EDA Hospital Facilities
Revenue, Bon Secours Mercy Health Inc., Series
A, Refunding
4.000%
12/1/44
500,000
444,907
  
South Carolina State Ports Authority Revenue,
Series 2018
5.000%
7/1/36
400,000
407,473
  (c)
Total South Carolina
1,110,219
Tennessee — 3.9%
Clarksville, TN, Water, Sewer & Gas Revenue,
Series A
4.000%
2/1/51
750,000
664,410
  
Metropolitan Government of Nashville &
Davidson County, TN, Water & Sewer Revenue,
Subordinated, Green Bonds, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/42
300,000
303,397
  
Tennessee State Energy Acquisition Corp.,
Natural Gas Revenue:
Series 2018
4.000%
11/1/25
500,000
500,247
  (a)(b)
Series A-1, Refunding
5.000%
5/1/28
3,000,000
3,072,483
  (a)(b)
Total Tennessee
4,540,537
See Notes to Financial Statements.

14
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Texas — 7.4%
Arlington, TX, Special Tax Revenue, Subordinated
Lien, Series C, BAM
5.000%
2/15/41
$250,000
$241,646
  
Austin, TX, Airport System Revenue:
Series 2014
5.000%
11/15/27
1,000,000
1,000,283
  (c)
Series 2022
5.000%
11/15/39
350,000
357,630
  (c)
Central Texas Regional Mobility Authority
Revenue, Senior Lien, Series E
5.000%
1/1/45
500,000
505,386
  
Central Texas Turnpike System Revenue, Second
Tier, Series C, Refunding
5.000%
8/15/40
300,000
314,960
  
Elgin, TX, ISD, GO, Unlimited Tax School Building
Bonds, PSF - GTD
4.000%
8/1/49
600,000
534,165
  
Galveston, TX, Wharves & Terminal Revenue,
First Lien, Series A
5.250%
8/1/35
750,000
789,426
  (c)
Harris County, TX, Cultural Education Facilities
Finance Corp., Hospital Revenue, Texas Children’s
Hospital, Series B, Refunding
5.000%
10/1/31
300,000
325,506
  (a)(b)
Harris County, TX, GO, Certificates of Obligation
4.000%
9/15/49
1,250,000
1,100,452
  
Hays, TX, ISD, GO, Unlimited Tax School Building
Bonds, PSF - GTD
4.000%
2/15/47
300,000
270,999
  
Houston, TX, Airport System Revenue:
Special Facilities, United Airlines Inc., Airport
Improvements Project
5.000%
7/15/28
500,000
502,229
  (c)
Special Facilities, United Airlines Inc., Terminal
Improvement Project, Series B
5.500%
7/15/38
210,000
216,050
  (c)
Special Facilities, United Airlines Inc., Terminal
Improvement Project, Series B-1
4.000%
7/15/41
500,000
433,548
  (c)
Subordinated, Series A, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/36
1,055,000
1,067,430
  (c)
Longview, TX, ISD, GO, Unlimited Tax School
Building Bonds, PSF - GTD
4.000%
2/15/49
400,000
356,618
  
Love Field, TX, Airport Modernization Corp.,
General Airport Revenue, Series 2017
5.000%
11/1/31
90,000
91,127
  (c)
Mission, TX, EDC, Solid Waste Disposal Revenue,
Graphic Packaging International, LLC Project,
Green Bonds
5.000%
6/1/30
150,000
153,300
  (a)(b)(c)
Newark, TX, Higher Education Finance Corp.,
Education Revenue, TLC Academy, Series A
4.000%
8/15/31
205,000
198,923
  
Texas State Private Activity Bond Surface
Transportation Corp. Revenue, Senior Lien, NTE
Mobility Partners Segments 3 LLC, Refunding
5.500%
6/30/41
300,000
307,267
  (c)
Total Texas
8,766,945
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

15

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)
May 31, 2025
 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Utah — 0.7%
Utah State Charter School Finance Authority,
Charter School Revenue, Syracuse Arts Academy
Project, UT CSCE
5.000%
4/15/37
$250,000
$251,346
  
Utah State Infrastructure Agency,
Telecommunications Revenue:
Series 2019
5.000%
10/15/25
470,000
471,989
  
Series 2021
4.000%
10/15/36
100,000
93,954
  
Total Utah
817,289
Virginia — 3.2%
Arlington County, VA, IDA, Hospital Revenue,
Virginia Hospital Center, Refunding
5.000%
7/1/35
200,000
210,940
  
Isle of Wight County, VA, EDA Revenue, Riverside
Health System, Series 2023, AG
5.250%
7/1/48
250,000
257,229
  
Virginia Beach, VA, Development Authority,
Residential Care Facility Revenue, Westminster-
Canterbury on Chesapeake Bay, Refunding
5.000%
9/1/40
1,250,000
1,226,651
  
Virginia State Small Business Financing Authority
Revenue:
Senior Lien, 95 Express Lanes LLC Project,
Refunding
5.000%
1/1/38
1,250,000
1,270,279
  (c)
Senior Lien, I-495 HOT Lanes Project,
Refunding
5.000%
12/31/47
500,000
501,657
  (c)
The Obligated Group of National Senior
Campuses Inc., Series A, Refunding
5.000%
1/1/31
250,000
262,387
  
Total Virginia
3,729,143
Washington — 0.9%
Port of Seattle, WA, Intermediate Lien Revenue,
Series B, Refunding
5.000%
8/1/37
1,000,000
1,037,432
  (c)
West Virginia — 0.3%
West Virginia State EDA Revenue:
Solid Waste Disposal Facility, Commercial
Metals Co. Project
4.625%
5/15/32
150,000
149,230
  (a)(b)(c)
Solid Waste Disposal Facility, Core Natural
Resources Inc. Project, Refunding
5.450%
3/27/35
170,000
169,109
  (a)(b)(c)
Total West Virginia
318,339
Wisconsin — 1.0%
Public Finance Authority, WI, Revenue, The
Carmelite System Inc. Obligated Group,
Refunding
5.000%
1/1/45
150,000
141,893
  
Village of Mount Pleasant, WI, Tax Increment
Revenue, Series A, Moral Obligations
5.000%
4/1/43
500,000
507,050
  
See Notes to Financial Statements.

16
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
Wisconsin — continued
Wisconsin State HEFA Revenue, Bellin Memorial
Hospital, Inc., Series A
5.000%
12/1/43
$500,000
$509,005
  
Total Wisconsin
1,157,948
 
Total Municipal Bonds (Cost — $163,113,202)
159,998,986
Municipal Bonds Deposited in Tender Option Bond Trusts(h) — 4.5%
New York — 4.5%
New York City, NY, Municipal Water Finance
Authority, Water & Sewer System Revenue,
Second General Resolution Fiscal 2023,
Subseries AA-3, Refunding
5.000%
6/15/47
1,625,000
1,654,786
  
New York State Dormitory Authority, State
Personal Income Tax Revenue, Series A
4.000%
3/15/45
1,925,000
1,714,176
  
New York State Urban Development Corp., State
Sales Tax Revenue, Series A
5.000%
3/15/49
1,900,000
1,938,255
  
 
Total Municipal Bonds Deposited in Tender Option Bond Trusts
(Cost — $5,526,148)
5,307,217
Total Investments before Short-Term Investments (Cost — $168,639,350)
165,306,203
 
Short-Term Investments — 3.0%
Municipal Bonds — 3.0%
Colorado — 0.2%
Colorado State Educational & Cultural Facilities
Authority Revenue, National Jewish Federation
Bond Program, Series F-2, LOC - TD Bank N.A.
3.000%
7/1/41
200,000
200,000
  (i)(j)
Connecticut — 0.1%
Connecticut State Housing Finance Authority
Revenue, Housing Mortgage Finance, Series C,
Refunding, SPA - TD Bank N.A.
1.950%
11/15/48
100,000
100,000
  (i)(j)
Florida — 1.3%
Highlands County, FL, Health Facilities Authority
Hospital Revenue:
Adventist Health System/Sunbelt Obligated
Group, Series I-2, Refunding
1.950%
11/15/32
1,500,000
1,500,000
  (i)(j)
Adventist Health System/Sunbelt Obligated
Group, Series I-3, Refunding
1.920%
11/15/33
100,000
100,000
  (i)(j)
Total Florida
1,600,000
Massachusetts — 0.1%
Massachusetts State DFA Revenue, Partners
HealthCare System, Mass General Brigham Inc.,
Series K-1, SPA - Wells Fargo Bank N.A.
1.350%
7/1/46
100,000
100,000
  (i)(j)
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

17

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)
May 31, 2025
 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
(Percentages shown based on Fund net assets)
Security
 
Rate
Maturity
Date
Face
Amount
Value
 
New York — 0.1%
New York State HFA Revenue, 10 Liberty Street
Realty LLC, Series A, LIQ - FHLMC, LOC - FHLMC
1.880%
5/1/35
$100,000
$100,000
  (i)(j)
Texas — 1.2%
Tarrant County, TX, Cultural Education Facilities
Finance Corp. Hospital Revenue, Baylor Health
Care System Project, Series C, Refunding, LOC -
TD Bank N.A.
2.800%
11/15/50
1,400,000
1,400,000
  (i)(j)
 
Total Short-Term Investments (Cost — $3,500,000)
3,500,000
Total Investments — 143.5% (Cost — $172,139,350)
168,806,203
Variable Rate Demand Preferred Stock, at Liquidation Value — (40.3)%
(47,400,000
)
TOB Floating Rate Notes — (2.6)%
(3,000,000
)
Other Liabilities in Excess of Other Assets — (0.6)%
(787,188
)
Total Net Assets Applicable to Common Shareholders — 100.0%
$117,619,015
*
Non-income producing security.
(a)
Maturity date shown represents the mandatory tender date.
(b)
Variable rate security. Interest rate disclosed is as of the most recent information available. Certain variable rate
securities are not based on a published reference rate and spread but are determined by the issuer or agent and
are based on current market conditions. These securities do not indicate a reference rate and spread in their
description above.
(c)
Income from this issue is considered a preference item for purposes of calculating the alternative minimum tax
(AMT).
(d)
Security is exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. This security may be resold in
transactions that are exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. This security has been
deemed liquid pursuant to guidelines approved by the Board of Directors.
(e)
Securities traded on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis.
(f)
The coupon payment on this security is currently in default as of May 31, 2025.
(g)
The maturity principal is currently in default as of May 31, 2025.
(h)
Represents securities deposited into a special purpose entity, referred to as a Tender Option Bond (TOB) trust
(Note 1).
(i)
Variable rate demand obligations (“VRDOs”) have a demand feature under which the Fund can tender them back to
the issuer or liquidity provider on no more than 7 days notice. The interest rate generally resets on a daily or
weekly basis and is determined on the specific interest rate reset date by the remarketing agent, pursuant to a
formula specified in official documents for the VRDO, or set at the highest rate allowable as specified in official
documents for the VRDO. VRDOs are benchmarked to the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association
(“SIFMA”) Municipal Swap Index. The SIFMA Municipal Swap Index is compiled from weekly interest rate resets
of tax-exempt VRDOs reported to the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board’s Short-term Obligation Rate
Transparency System.
(j)
Maturity date shown is the final maturity date. The security may be sold back to the issuer before final maturity.
See Notes to Financial Statements.

18
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

 Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
Abbreviation(s) used in this schedule:
AG
Assured Guaranty — Insured Bonds
BAM
Build America Mutual — Insured Bonds
CAB
Capital Appreciation Bonds
CSCE
Charter School Credit Enhancement
DFA
Development Finance Agency
EDA
Economic Development Authority
EDC
Economic Development Corporation
FHLMC
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
GO
General Obligation
GTD
Guaranteed
HEFA
Health & Educational Facilities Authority
HFA
Housing Finance Agency
IDA
Industrial Development Authority
IDR
Industrial Development Revenue
ISD
Independent School District
LIQ
Liquidity Facility
LOC
Letter of Credit
MFA
Municipal Finance Authority
MTA
Metropolitan Transportation Authority
PCFA
Pollution Control Financing Authority
PEA
Public Energy Authority
PSF
Permanent School Fund
SD
School District
SOFR
Secured Overnight Financing Rate
SPA
Standby Bond Purchase Agreement — Insured Bonds
TFA
Transitional Finance Authority
USD
Unified School District
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

19

Statement of assets and liabilities (unaudited)
May 31, 2025
Assets:
Investments, at value (Cost — $172,139,350)
$168,806,203
Cash
79,772
Interest receivable
2,459,949
Dividends receivable from affiliated investments
15
Prepaid expenses
62,697
Total Assets
171,408,636
Liabilities:
Variable Rate Demand Preferred Stock ($25,000 liquidation value per share; 1,896 shares
issued and outstanding) (net of deferred offering costs of $545,365)(Note 5)
46,854,635
Payable for securities purchased
3,139,608
TOB Floating Rate Notes(Note 1)
3,000,000
Distributions payable to Common Shareholders
591,457
Investment management fee payable
77,384
Interest expense payable
33,889
Directors’ fees payable
1,549
Accrued expenses
91,099
Total Liabilities
53,789,621
Total Net Assets Applicable to Common Shareholders
$117,619,015
Net Assets Applicable to Common Shareholders:
Common stock par value ($0.001 par value; 14,082,315 shares issued and outstanding;
100,000,000 common shares authorized)
$14,082
Paid-in capital in excess of par value
129,647,173
Total distributable earnings (loss)
(12,042,240
)
Total Net Assets Applicable to Common Shareholders
$117,619,015
Common Shares Outstanding
14,082,315
Net Asset Value Per Common Share
$8.35
See Notes to Financial Statements.

20
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

Statement of operations (unaudited)
For the Six Months Ended May 31, 2025
Investment Income:
Interest
$3,548,338
Dividends from affiliated investments
1,026
Total Investment Income
3,549,364
Expenses:
Distributions to Variable Rate Demand Preferred Stockholders(Notes 1 and 5)
718,831
Investment management fee(Note 2)
463,353
Liquidity fees(Note 5)
183,050
Interest expense (Note 1)
52,068
Rating agency fees
33,273
Legal fees
24,945
Audit and tax fees
24,684
Directors’ fees
24,566
Shareholder reports
16,591
Amortization of Variable Rate Demand Preferred Stock offering costs(Note 5)
13,766
Remarketing fees(Note 5)
11,981
Transfer agent fees 
11,918
Fund accounting fees
10,081
Stock exchange listing fees
6,239
Insurance
533
Custody fees
316
Miscellaneous expenses 
8,175
Total Expenses
1,604,370
Less: Fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements (Note 2)
(24
)
Net Expenses
1,604,346
Net Investment Income
1,945,018
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments and Futures Contracts (Notes 1, 3 and 4):
Net Realized Gain (Loss) From:
Investment transactions in unaffiliated securities
(6,186
)
Futures contracts
26,437
Net Realized Gain
20,251
Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) From:
Investments in unaffiliated securities
(6,529,643
)
Futures contracts
(139,277
)
Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)
(6,668,920
)
Net Loss on Investments and Futures Contracts
(6,648,669
)
Decrease in Net Assets Applicable to Common Shareholders From Operations
$(4,703,651
)
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

21

Statements of changes in net assets
For the Six Months Ended May 31, 2025(unaudited)
and the Year Ended November 30, 2024
2025
2024
Operations:
Net investment income
$1,945,018
$3,744,311
Net realized gain
20,251
99,162
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)
(6,668,920
)
3,997,359
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Applicable to Common
Shareholders From Operations
(4,703,651
)
7,840,832
Distributions to Common Shareholders From(Note 1):
Total distributable earnings
(3,548,743
)
(4,006,157
)
Return of capital
(2,626,613
)
Decrease in Net Assets From Distributions to Common
Shareholders
(3,548,743
)
(6,632,770
)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Applicable to Common
Shareholders
(8,252,394
)
1,208,062
Net Assets Applicable to Common Shareholders:
Beginning of period
125,871,409
124,663,347
End of period
$117,619,015
$125,871,409
See Notes to Financial Statements.

22
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

Statement of cash flows (unaudited)
For the Six Months Ended May 31, 2025
Increase (Decrease) in Cash:
Cash Flows from Operating Activities:
Net decrease in net assets applicable to common shareholders resulting from operations
$(4,703,651
)
Adjustments to reconcile net decrease in net assets resulting from operations to net cash
provided (used) by operating activities:
Purchases of portfolio securities
(7,610,226
)
Sales of portfolio securities
7,947,655
Net purchases, sales and maturities of short-term investments
(476,170
)
Net amortization of premium (accretion of discount)
412,416
Decrease in interest receivable
37,268
Increase in prepaid expenses
(58,590
)
Decrease in dividends receivable from affiliated investments
460
Decrease in receivable from brokers — net variation margin on open futures contracts
40,313
Increase in payable for securities purchased
1,485,635
Amortization of preferred stock offering costs
13,766
Decrease in investment management fee payable
(158
)
Decrease in Directors’ fees payable
(1,943
)
Decrease in interest expense payable
(518
)
Decrease in accrued expenses
(28,390
)
Net realized loss on investments
6,186
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) of investments
6,529,643
Net Cash Provided in Operating Activities*
3,593,696
Cash Flows from Financing Activities:
Distributions paid on common stock (net of distributions payable)
(3,548,743
)
Net Cash Used by Financing Activities
(3,548,743
)
Net Increase in Cash and Restricted Cash
44,953
Cash and restricted cash at beginning of period
34,819
Cash and restricted cash at end of period
$79,772
*
Included in operating expenses is $52,586 paid for interest on borrowings and $718,831 paid for distributions to
Variable Rate Demand Preferred Stockholders.
The following table provides a reconciliation of cash and restricted cash reported within the Statement of Assets
and Liabilities that sums to the total of such amounts shown on the Statement of Cash Flows.
 
May 31, 2025
Cash
$79,772
Restricted cash
Total cash and restricted cash shown in the Statement of Cash Flows
$79,772
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

23

Financial highlights
For a common share of capital stock outstanding throughout each year ended November 30,
unless otherwise noted:
 
20251,2
20241
20231
20221
20211
20201
Net asset value, beginning of
period
$8.94
$8.85
$8.90
$10.41
$10.25
$10.24
Income (loss) from operations:
Net investment income
0.14
0.27
0.19
0.25
0.30
0.29
Net realized and unrealized gain
(loss)
(0.48
)
0.29
0.04
(1.48
)
0.14
0.00
3
Distributions paid to Auction Rate
Cumulative Preferred Stockholders
from net investment income
(0.00
)3
(0.00
)3
(0.00
)3
(0.00
)3
Total income (loss) from
operations
(0.34)
0.56
0.23
(1.23)
0.44
0.29
Less distributions to common
shareholders from:
Net investment income
(0.25
)4
(0.28
)
(0.22
)
(0.28
)
(0.28
)
(0.28
)
Return of capital
(0.19
)
(0.06
)
Total distributions to
common shareholders
(0.25
)
(0.47
)
(0.28
)
(0.28
)
(0.28
)
(0.28
)
Net increase from repurchase of
Auction Rate Cumulative Preferred
Shares
0.00
3
0.00
3
Net asset value, end of period
$8.35
$8.94
$8.85
$8.90
$10.41
$10.25
Market price, end of period
$7.44
$8.16
$7.48
$7.72
$9.75
$9.07
Total return, based on NAV5,6
(3.82
)%
6.47
%7
2.65
%8,9
(11.87
)%8
4.33
%
2.96
%
Total return, based on Market
Price10
(5.81
)%
15.74
%
0.54
%
(18.08
)%
10.72
%
1.66
%
Net assets applicable to common
shareholders, end of period
(millions)
$118
$126
$125
$125
$147
$144
Ratios to average net assets:11
Gross expenses
2.65
%12
2.69
%7
3.01
%9
1.70
%
1.29
%
1.60
%
Net expenses13,14
2.65
12
2.69
7
3.01
9
1.70
1.29
1.60
Net investment income
3.21
12
2.96
7
2.19
9
2.72
2.82
2.87
Portfolio turnover rate
5
%
14
%
26
%
29
%
11
%
27
%
See Notes to Financial Statements.

24
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

For a common share of capital stock outstanding throughout each year ended November 30,
unless otherwise noted:
 
20251,2
20241
20231
20221
20211
20201
Supplemental data:
Auction Rate Cumulative Preferred
Stock at Liquidation Value, End of
Period (000s)
$500
$600
$600
Variable Rate Demand Preferred
Stock at Liquidation Value, End of
Period (000s)
$47,400
$47,400
$47,400
$47,400
$47,400
$47,400
Asset Coverage Ratio for Auction
Rate Cumulative Preferred Stock and
Variable Rate Demand Preferred
Stock15
348
%
366
%
363
%
362
%
405
%
401
%
Asset Coverage, per $25,000
Liquidation Value per Share of
Auction Rate Cumulative Preferred
Stock and Variable Rate Demand
Preferred Stock15
$87,035
$91,388
$90,751
$90,441
$101,366
$100,168
See Notes to Financial Statements.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

25

Financial highlights (cont’d)
1
Per share amounts have been calculated using the average shares method.
2
For the six months ended May 31, 2025 (unaudited).
3
Amount represents less than $0.005 or greater than $(0.005) per share.
4
The actual source of the Fund’s current fiscal year distributions may be from net investment income, return of
capital or a combination of both. Shareholders will be informed of the tax characteristics of the distributions after
the close of the fiscal year.
5
The total return calculation assumes that distributions are reinvested at NAV. Past performance is no guarantee of
future results. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized.
6
Performance figures may reflect compensating balance arrangements, fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements.
In the absence of compensating balance arrangements, fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements, the total
return would have been lower. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Total returns for periods of less
than one year are not annualized.
7
Ratios and total return for the year ended November 30, 2024, include the write-off of certain non-recurring fees
incurred by the Fund during the period. Without these items, the gross and net expense ratios and the net
investment income ratio would have been 2.81%, 2.81% and 2.84%, respectively, and total return based on NAV
would have been 6.35%.
8
The total return based on NAV reflects the impact of the repurchase by the Fund of a portion of its Auction Rate
Cumulative Preferred Shares at 95% of the per share liquidation preference. Absent this transaction, the total
return based on NAV would have been the same.
9
Ratios and total return for the year ended November 30, 2023, include certain non-recurring fees incurred by the
Fund during the period. Without these fees, the gross and net expense ratios and the net investment income ratio
would have been 2.75%, 2.75% and 2.46%, respectively, and total return based on NAV would have been 2.88%.
10
The total return calculation assumes that distributions are reinvested in accordance with the Fund’s dividend
reinvestment plan. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Total returns for periods of less than one
year are not annualized.
11
Calculated on the basis of average net assets of common stock shareholders. Ratios do not reflect the effect of
dividend payments to auction rate cumulative preferred stockholders.
12
Annualized.
13
The manager has agreed to waive the Fund’s management fee to an extent sufficient to offset the net management
fee payable in connection with any investment in an affiliated money market fund.
14
Reflects fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements.
15
Represents value of net assets plus the liquidation value of the auction rate cumulative preferred stock and
variable rate demand preferred stock, if any, at the end of the period divided by the liquidation value of the auction
rate cumulative preferred stock and variable rate demand preferred stock, if any, outstanding at the end of the
period.
See Notes to Financial Statements.

26
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

Notes to financial statements (unaudited)
1. Organization and significant accounting policies
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. (the “Fund”) was incorporated in Maryland on December 19, 1991, and is registered as a diversified, closed-end management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”). The Board of Directors (the Board) authorized 100 million shares of $0.001 par value common stock. The Fund’s investment objective is to provide common shareholders a high level of current income exempt from regular federal income taxes consistent with prudent investing. Under normal market conditions, the Fund invests at least 80% of its total assets in municipal obligations. In addition, under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest at least 80% of its total assets in debt securities that are, at the time of investment, rated investment grade by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization or, if unrated, of equivalent quality as determined by the investment manager. For credit ratings purposes, pre-refunded bonds are deemed to be unrated. The subadviser determines the credit quality of prefunded bonds based on the quality of the escrowed collateral and such other factors as the subadviser deems appropriate.
The Fund follows the accounting and reporting guidance in Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Accounting Standards Codification Topic 946, Financial Services – Investment Companies (ASC 946). The following are significant accounting policies consistently followed by the Fund and are in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”), including, but not limited to, ASC 946. Estimates and assumptions are required to be made regarding assets, liabilities and changes in net assets resulting from operations when financial statements are prepared. Changes in the economic environment, financial markets and any other parameters used in determining these estimates could cause actual results to differ. Subsequent events have been evaluated through the date the financial statements were issued.
(a) Investment valuation.The valuations for fixed income securities (which may include, but are not limited to, corporate, government, municipal, mortgage-backed, collateralized mortgage obligations and asset-backed securities) and certain derivative instruments are typically the prices supplied by independent third party pricing services, which may use market prices or broker/dealer quotations or a variety of valuation techniques and methodologies. The independent third party pricing services typically use inputs that are observable such as issuer details, interest rates, yield curves, prepayment speeds, credit risks/spreads, default rates and quoted prices for similar securities. Investments in open-end funds are valued at the closing net asset value per share of each fund on the day of valuation. Futures contracts are valued daily at the settlement price established by the board of trade or exchange on which they are traded. If independent third party pricing services are unable to supply prices for a portfolio investment, or if the prices supplied are deemed by the manager to be unreliable, the market price may be determined by the manager using quotations from one or more broker/dealers or at the transaction price if the security has recently been purchased and no value has yet been obtained from a pricing service or pricing broker. When reliable prices are not readily available, such as when the
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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)
value of a security has been significantly affected by events after the close of the exchange or market on which the security is principally traded, but before the Fund calculates its net asset value, the Fund values these securities as determined in accordance with procedures approved by the Fund’s Board.
Pursuant to policies adopted by the Board, the Fund’s manager has been designated as the valuation designee and is responsible for the oversight of the daily valuation process. The Fund’s manager is assisted by the Global Fund Valuation Committee (the Valuation Committee). The Valuation Committee is responsible for making fair value determinations, evaluating the effectiveness of the Fund’s pricing policies, and reporting to the Fund’s manager and the Board. When determining the reliability of third party pricing information for investments owned by the Fund, the Valuation Committee, among other things, conducts due diligence reviews of pricing vendors, monitors the daily change in prices and reviews transactions among market participants.
The Valuation Committee will consider pricing methodologies it deems relevant and appropriate when making fair value determinations. Examples of possible methodologies include, but are not limited to, multiple of earnings; discount from market of a similar freely traded security; discounted cash-flow analysis; book value or a multiple thereof; risk premium/yield analysis; yield to maturity; and/or fundamental investment analysis. The Valuation Committee will also consider factors it deems relevant and appropriate in light of the facts and circumstances. Examples of possible factors include, but are not limited to, the type of security; the issuer’s financial statements; the purchase price of the security; the discount from market value of unrestricted securities of the same class at the time of purchase; analysts’ research and observations from financial institutions; information regarding any transactions or offers with respect to the security; the existence of merger proposals or tender offers affecting the security; the price and extent of public trading in similar securities of the issuer or comparable companies; and the existence of a shelf registration for restricted securities.
For each portfolio security that has been fair valued pursuant to the policies adopted by the Board, the fair value price is compared against the last available and next available market quotations. The Valuation Committee reviews the results of such back testing monthly and fair valuation occurrences are reported to the Board quarterly.
The Fund uses valuation techniques to measure fair value that are consistent with the market approach and/or income approach, depending on the type of security and the particular circumstance. The market approach uses prices and other relevant information generated by market transactions involving identical or comparable securities. The income approach uses valuation techniques to discount estimated future cash flows to present value.

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Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

GAAP establishes a disclosure hierarchy that categorizes the inputs to valuation techniques used to value assets and liabilities at measurement date. These inputs are summarized in the three broad levels listed below:
Level 1 — unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical investments
Level 2 — other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar investments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.)
Level 3 — significant unobservable inputs (including the Fund’s own assumptions in determining the fair value of investments)
The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.
The following is a summary of the inputs used in valuing the Fund’s assets carried at fair value:
ASSETS
Description
Quoted Prices
(Level 1)
Other Significant
Observable Inputs
(Level 2)
Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
Total
Long-Term Investments†:
Municipal Bonds
$159,998,986
$159,998,986
Municipal Bonds Deposited in
Tender Option Bond Trusts
5,307,217
5,307,217
Total Long-Term Investments
165,306,203
165,306,203
Short-Term Investments†
3,500,000
3,500,000
Total Investments
$168,806,203
$168,806,203
See Schedule of Investments for additional detailed categorizations.
(b) Tender option bonds.The Fund may enter into tender option bond (“TOB”) transactions and may invest in inverse floating rate instruments (“Inverse Floaters”) issued in TOB transactions. The Fund may participate either in structuring an Inverse Floater or purchasing an Inverse Floater in the secondary market. When structuring an Inverse Floater, the Fund deposits securities (typically municipal bonds or other municipal securities) (the “Underlying Bonds”) into a special purpose entity, referred to as a TOB trust. The TOB trust generally issues floating rate notes (“Floaters”) to third parties and residual interest, Inverse Floaters, to the Fund. The Floaters issued by the TOB trust have interest rates which reset weekly and provide the holders of the Floaters the option to tender their notes back to the TOB trust for redemption at par at each reset date. The net proceeds of the sale of the Floaters, after expenses, are received by the Fund and may be invested in additional securities. The Inverse Floaters are inverse floating rate debt instruments, as the return on those bonds is inversely related to changes in a specified interest rate. Distributions on any Inverse Floaters paid to the Fund will be reduced or, in the extreme, eliminated as short-term
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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)
interest rates rise and will increase when such interest rates fall. Floaters issued by a TOB trust may be senior to the Inverse Floaters held by the Fund. The value and market for Inverse Floaters can be volatile, and Inverse Floaters can have limited liquidity.
An investment in an Inverse Floater structured by the Fund is accounted for as a secured borrowing. The Underlying Bonds deposited into the TOB trust are included in the Fund’s Schedule of Investments and a liability for Floaters (TOB floating rate notes) issued by the TOB trust is recognized in the Fund’s Statement of Assets and Liabilities. The carrying amount of the TOB trust’s floating rate note obligations as reported on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities approximates its fair value. Interest income, including amortization, on the Underlying Bonds is recognized in the Fund’s Statements of Operations. Interest paid to holders of the Floaters, as well as other expenses related to administration, liquidity, remarketing and trustee services of the TOB trust, are recognized in Interest expense in the Fund’s Statement of Operations. For the sixmonths ended May 31, 2025, the average daily amount of floating rate notes outstanding was $3,000,000 and weighted average interest rate was 3.41%.
(c) Net asset value.The net asset value (“NAV”) of the Fund’s common stock is determined no less frequently than the close of business on the Fund’s last business day of each week (generally Friday) and on the last business day of the month. It is determined by dividing the value of the net assets available to common shareholders by the total number of shares of common stock outstanding. For the purpose of determining the NAV per share of the common stock, the value of the Fund’s net assets shall be deemed to equal the value of the Fund’s assets less the Fund’s liabilities including the aggregate liquidation value (i.e., $25,000 per outstanding share) of the Variable Rate Demand Preferred Stock (VRDPS), net of the deferred offering costs.
(d) Futures contracts.The Fund uses futures contracts generally to gain exposure to, or hedge against, changes in interest rates or gain exposure to, or hedge against, changes in certain asset classes. A futures contract represents a commitment for the future purchase or sale of an asset at a specified price on a specified date.
Upon entering into a futures contract, the Fund is required to deposit cash or securities with a broker in an amount equal to a certain percentage of the contract amount. This is known as the ‘‘initial margin’’ and subsequent payments (‘‘variation margin’’) are made or received by the Fund each day, depending on the daily fluctuation in the value of the contract. For certain futures, including foreign denominated futures, variation margin is not settled daily, but is recorded as a net variation margin payable or receivable. The daily changes in contract value are recorded as unrealized appreciation or depreciation in the Statement of Operations and the Fund recognizes a realized gain or loss when the contract is closed.

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Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

Futures contracts involve, to varying degrees, risk of loss in excess of the amounts reflected in the financial statements. In addition, there is the risk that the Fund may not be able to enter into a closing transaction because of an illiquid secondary market.
(e) Securities traded on a when-issued and delayed delivery basis.The Fund may trade securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis. In when-issued and delayed delivery transactions, the securities are purchased or sold by the Fund with payment and delivery taking place in the future in order to secure what is considered to be an advantageous price and yield to the Fund at the time of entering into the transaction.
Purchasing such securities involves risk of loss if the value of the securities declines prior to settlement. These securities are subject to market fluctuations and their current value is determined in the same manner as for other securities.
(f) Cash flow information.The Fund invests in securities and distributes dividends from net investment income and net realized gains, which are paid in cash and may be reinvested at the discretion of shareholders. These activities are reported in the Statements of Changes in Net Assets and additional information on cash receipts and cash payments is presented in the Statement of Cash Flows.
(g) Counterparty risk and credit-risk-related contingent features of derivative instruments.The Fund may invest in certain securities or engage in other transactions where the Fund is exposed to counterparty credit risk in addition to broader market risks. The Fund may invest in securities of issuers, which may also be considered counterparties as trading partners in other transactions. This may increase the risk of loss in the event of default or bankruptcy by the counterparty or if the counterparty otherwise fails to meet its contractual obligations. The Fund’s subadviser attempts to mitigate counterparty risk by (i) periodically assessing the creditworthiness of its trading partners, (ii) monitoring and/or limiting the amount of its net exposure to each individual counterparty based on its assessment and (iii) requiring collateral from the counterparty for certain transactions. Market events and changes in overall economic conditions may impact the assessment of such counterparty risk by the subadviser. In addition, declines in the values of underlying collateral received may expose the Fund to increased risk of loss.
With exchange traded and centrally cleared derivatives, there is less counterparty risk to the Fund since the exchange or clearinghouse, as counterparty to such instruments, guarantees against a possible default. The clearinghouse stands between the buyer and the seller of the contract; therefore, the credit risk is limited to failure of the clearinghouse. While offset rights may exist under applicable law, the Fund does not have a contractual right of offset against a clearing broker or clearinghouse in the event of a default of the clearing broker or clearinghouse.
The Fund has entered into master agreements, such as an International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. Master Agreement (“ISDA Master Agreement”) or similar
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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)
agreement, with certain of its derivative counterparties that govern over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives and provide for general obligations, representations, agreements, collateral posting terms, netting provisions in the event of default or termination and credit related contingent features. The credit related contingent features include, but are not limited to, a percentage decrease in the Fund’s net assets or net asset value per share over a specified period of time. If these credit related contingent features were triggered, the derivatives counterparty could terminate the positions and demand payment or require additional collateral.
Under an ISDA Master Agreement, the Fund may, under certain circumstances, offset with the counterparty certain derivative financial instruments’ payables and/or receivables with collateral held and/or posted and create one single net payment. However, absent an event of default by the counterparty or a termination of the agreement, the terms of the ISDA Master Agreements do not result in an offset of reported amounts of financial assets and financial liabilities in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities across transactions between the Fund and the applicable counterparty. The enforceability of the right to offset may vary by jurisdiction.
Collateral requirements differ by type of derivative. Collateral or margin requirements are set by the broker or exchange clearinghouse for exchange traded derivatives while collateral terms are contract specific for OTC traded derivatives. Cash collateral that has been pledged to cover obligations of the Fund under derivative contracts, if any, will be reported separately in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Securities pledged as collateral, if any, for the same purpose are noted in the Schedule of Investments.
As of May 31, 2025, the Fund did not have any open OTC derivative transactions with credit related contingent features in a net liability position.
(h) Security transactions and investment income.Security transactions are accounted for on a trade date basis. Interest income (including interest income from payment-in-kind securities) is recorded on the accrual basis. Amortization of premiums and accretion of discounts on debt securities are recorded to interest income over the lives of the respective securities, except for premiums on certain callable debt securities, which are amortized to the earliest call date. The cost of investments sold is determined by use of the specific identification method. To the extent any issuer defaults or a credit event occurs that impacts the issuer, the Fund may halt any additional interest income accruals and consider the realizability of interest accrued up to the date of default or credit event.
(i) Distributions to shareholders.Distributions to common shareholders from net investment income of the Fund, if any, are declared quarterly and paid on a monthly basis. The actual source of the Fund’s monthly distribution may be from net investment income, return of capital or a combination of both. Shareholders will be informed of the tax characteristics of the distributions after the close of the fiscal year. The Fund intends to

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Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

satisfy conditions that will enable interest from municipal securities, which is exempt from federal and certain state income taxes, to retain such tax-exempt status when distributed to the common shareholders of the Fund. Distributions to common shareholders of net realized gains, if any, are taxable and are declared at least annually. Distributions to common shareholders of the Fund are recorded on the ex-dividend date and are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from GAAP.
Distributions to holders of VRDPS are accrued on a daily basis and paid monthly as described in Note 5 and are treated as an operating expense as required by GAAP. For tax purposes, the payments made to the holders of the Fund’s VRDPS are treated as dividends or distributions.
(j) Compensating balance arrangements.The Fund has an arrangement with its custodian bank whereby a portion of the custodian’s fees is paid indirectly by credits earned on the Fund’s cash on deposit with the bank.
(k) Federal and other taxes.It is the Fund’s policy to comply with the federal income and excise tax requirements of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the “Code”), as amended, applicable to regulated investment companies. Accordingly, the Fund intends to distribute its taxable income and net realized gains, if any, to shareholders in accordance with timing requirements imposed by the Code. Therefore, no federal or state income tax provision is required in the Fund’s financial statements.
Management has analyzed the Fund’s tax positions taken on income tax returns for all open tax years and has concluded that as of November 30, 2024, no provision for income tax is required in the Fund’s financial statements. The Fund’s federal and state income and federal excise tax returns for tax years for which the applicable statutes of limitations have not expired are subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service and state departments of revenue.
(l) Reclassification.GAAP requires that certain components of net assets be reclassifiedto reflect permanent differences between financial and tax reporting. These reclassifications have no effect on net assets or net asset value per share.
2. Investment management agreement and other transactions with affiliates
Franklin Templeton Fund Adviser, LLC (FTFA) is the Fund’s investment manager and Western Asset Management Company, LLC (“Western Asset”) is the Fund’s subadviser. FTFA and Western Asset are indirect, wholly-owned subsidiaries of Franklin Resources, Inc. (“Franklin Resources”).
FTFA provides administrative and certain oversight services to the Fund. The Fund pays FTFA an investment management fee, calculated daily and paid monthly, at an annual rate of 0.55% of the Fund’s average daily net assets. For the purposes of calculating this fee, the
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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)
aggregate liquidation value of the preferred stock is not deducted in determining the Fund’s average daily net assets.
FTFA delegates to Western Asset the day-to-day portfolio management of the Fund. For its services, FTFA pays Western Asset monthly 70% of the net management fee it receives from the Fund.
The manager has agreed to waive the Fund’s management fee to an extent sufficient to offset the net management fee payable in connection with any investment in an affiliated money market fund (the affiliated money market fund waiver).
During the sixmonths ended May 31, 2025, fees waived and/or expenses reimbursed amounted to $24, all of which was an affiliated money market fund waiver.
All officers and one Director of the Fund are employees of Franklin Resources or its affiliates and do not receive compensation from the Fund.
The Fund is permitted to purchase or sell short-term variable rate demand obligations, from or to certain other affiliated funds or portfolios under specified conditions outlined in procedures adopted by the Board. The procedures have been designed to provide assurance that any purchase or sale of securities by the Fund from or to another fund or portfolio that is, or could be considered, an affiliate by virtue of having a common investment manager or subadviser (or affiliated investment manager or subadviser), common Directors and/or common officers complies with Rule 17a-7 under the 1940 Act. Further, as defined under the procedures, each transaction is effected at the current market price. For the sixmonths ended May 31, 2025, such purchase and sale transactions (excluding accrued interest) were $11,150,000 and $7,700,000, respectively. There was no realized gain or loss recognized as a result of these transactions.
3. Investments
During the sixmonths ended May 31, 2025, the aggregate cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investments (excluding short-term investments) were as follows: 
Purchases
$7,610,226
Sales
7,947,655
At May 31, 2025, the aggregate cost of investments and the aggregate gross unrealized appreciation and depreciation of investments for federal income tax purposes were substantially as follows:
 
Cost*
Gross
Unrealized
Appreciation
Gross
Unrealized
Depreciation
Net
Unrealized
Depreciation
Securities
$169,130,871
$1,285,875
$(4,610,543)
$(3,324,668)
*
Cost of investments for federal income tax purposes includes the value of Inverse Floaters issued in TOB
transactions (Note 1).

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Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

4. Derivative instruments and hedging activities
At May 31, 2025, the Fund did not have any derivative instruments outstanding.
The following tables provide information about the effect of derivatives and hedging activities on the Fund’s Statement of Operations for the sixmonths ended May 31, 2025. The first table provides additional detail about the amounts and sources of gains (losses) realized on derivatives during the period. The second table provides additional information about the change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) resulting from the Fund’s derivatives and hedging activities during the period.
AMOUNT OF NET REALIZED GAIN (LOSS) ON DERIVATIVES RECOGNIZED
 
Interest
Rate Risk
Futures contracts
$26,437

CHANGE IN NET UNREALIZED APPRECIATION (DEPRECIATION) ON DERIVATIVES RECOGNIZED
 
Interest
Rate Risk
Futures contracts
$(139,277
)
During the sixmonths ended May 31, 2025, the volume of derivative activity for the Fund was as follows:
 
Average Market
Value*
Futures contracts (to buy)†
$3,752,902
*
Based on the average of the market values at each month-end during the period.
At May 31, 2025, there were no open positions held in this derivative.
5. Variable rate demand preferred stock
On February 25, 2015, the Fund completed a private offering of 1,896 shares of Series 1 VRDPS. Net proceeds from the offering were used by the Fund to repurchase outstanding shares of Series M Municipal Auction Rate Cumulative Preferred Stock (ARCPS) that had been accepted for payment pursuant to the tender offer (see Note 6). Offering costs incurred by the Fund in connection with the VRDPS issuance are being amortized to expense over the life of the VRDPS.
The table below summarizes the key terms of Series 1 of the VRDPS at May 31, 2025.
Series
Mandatory
Redemption Date
Shares
Liquidation
Preference
Per Share
Aggregate
Liquidation
Value
Series 1
2/25/2045
1,896
$25,000
$47,400,000
The VRDPS shares are not listed on any securities exchange or automated quotation system. For financial reporting purposes, the VRDPS shares are considered debt of the Fund;
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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)
therefore, the liquidation value, which approximates fair value of the VRDPS shares, is recorded as a liability on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
Holders of VRDPS have the right to tender their VRDPS shares for remarketing at a price equal to the liquidation preference amount plus all accumulated but unpaid dividends and at a date which is no earlier than the seventh day following delivery of the notice to the tender and paying agent. The VRDPS shares include a liquidity feature that allows VRDPS holders to have their shares purchased by the liquidity provider with whom the Fund has contracted in the event of a failed remarketing where purchase orders are not sufficient in number to be matched with the sale orders. The Fund is required to redeem the VRDPS shares owned by the liquidity provider after six months of continuous, unsuccessful remarketing. The Fund pays a monthly remarketing fee at the annual rate of 0.05% of the liquidation value of each VRDPS share outstanding on the first calendar day of the preceding calendar month. These fees are shown as remarketing fees on the Statement of Operations.
Holders of VRDPS are entitled to receive monthly cumulative cash dividends, payable on the first business day of each calendar month, at a variable rate set weekly by the remarketing agent. The dividend rate is generally based upon a spread over a base rate and cannot exceed a maximum rate. In the event of a failed remarketing, the dividend rate will reset to the maximum rate. The maximum rate is determined, in part, based upon the long-term rating assigned to the VRDPS. In the event the Fund fails to make a scheduled dividend payment, all outstanding shares of the VRDPS are subject to mandatory tender.
Subject to certain conditions, the VRDPS shares may be redeemed, in whole or in part, at any time at the option of the Fund. The redemption price per share is equal to the liquidation value per share plus any accumulated but unpaid dividends. The Fund is required to redeem its VRDPS on the mandatory redemption date, February 25, 2045. In addition, the Fund is required to redeem certain of the VRDPS shares if the Fund fails to maintain certain asset coverage and rating agency guidelines.
The Fund is a party to a fee agreement with the liquidity provider that requires monthly payment of an annual liquidity fee. These fees are shown as liquidity fees on the Statement of Operations. The fee agreement between the Fund and the liquidity provider is scheduled to terminate on June 19, 2026. The Fund has the right, which is exercisable 120 to 90 days prior to the scheduled termination date, to request that the liquidity provider extend the term of the agreement for an additional period. The Fund may also terminate the agreement early. In the event the fee agreement is not renewed or is terminated in advance, and the Fund does not enter into a fee agreement with an alternate liquidity provider, the VRDPS will be subject to mandatory purchase by the liquidity provider prior to the termination of the fee agreement. The Fund is required to redeem any VRDPS purchased by the liquidity provider six months after the purchase date.

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Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

The VRDPS ranks senior to the Fund’s outstanding common stock and on parity with any other preferred stock. The Fund may not declare dividends or make other distributions on shares of its common stock unless the Fund has declared and paid full cumulative dividends on the VRDPS, due on or prior to the date of the common stock dividend or distribution, and meets the VRDPS asset coverage and rating agency requirements.
The holders of the VRDPS have one vote per share and vote together with the holders of common stock of the Fund as a single class except on matters affecting only the holders of VRDPS or the holders of common stock. Pursuant to the 1940 Act, holders of the VRDPS have the right to elect two Directors of the Fund, voting separately as a class.
The annualized dividend rate for the VRDPS shares for the sixmonths ended May 31, 2025 was 3.041%. VRDPS shares issued and outstanding remained constant during the sixmonths ended May 31, 2025.
6. Auction rate cumulative preferred stock
As of and for the period ended May 31, 2025, the Fund had no ARCPS outstanding.
On January 28, 2002, the Fund issued 2,000 shares of Series M Municipal ARCPS.
On January 22, 2015, the Fund announced that it had commenced an issuer tender offer for up to 100% of its outstanding ARCPS at a price equal to 90% of the liquidation preference of $25,000 per share (or $22,500 per share), plus any unpaid dividends accrued through February 20, 2015, the expiration date of the tender offer.
The Fund’s tender offer was conditioned upon the Fund closing on the private offering of VRDPS with an aggregate liquidation preference at least equal to the aggregate liquidation preference of ARCPS accepted for tender.
On February 25, 2015, the Fund announced the final results for its issuer tender offer and all shares that were validly tendered and not withdrawn during the offering period were accepted for payment. The Fund accepted for payment 1,896 ARCPS, which represented 94.8% of outstanding ARCPS. The ARCPS that were not tendered remained outstanding.
On November 27, 2018, the Fund repurchased 80 Series M ARCPS in a private transaction at a price equal to 85% of the liquidation preference of $25,000 per share (or $21,250 per share), plus any unpaid dividends.
On November 16, 2022, the Fund repurchased 4 Series M ARCPS in a private transaction at a price equal to 95% of the liquidation preference of $25,000 per share (or $23,750 per share), plus any unpaid dividends.
On March 1, 2023, the Fund repurchased 20 Series M ARCPS in a private transaction at a price equal to 95% of the liquidation preference of $25,000 per share (or $23,750 per share), plus any unpaid dividends.
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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)
The difference between the liquidation preference of the ARCPS and the actual purchase price of the tendered ARCPS was recognized by the Fund in the Statement of Changes in Net Assets as an increase in net assets applicable to common shares resulting from the tender and repurchase of the ARCPS by the Fund.
The ARCPS’ dividends were cumulative at a rate determined at an auction and the dividend period was typically 7 days. The dividend rate could not exceed a certain maximum rate, including in the event of a failed auction, unless the Board of the Fund authorized an increased maximum rate. To the extent capital gains and other taxable income were allocated to holders of ARCPS for tax purposes, the Fund would have likely had to pay higher dividends to holders of ARCPS to compensate them for the increased tax liability to them resulting from such allocation. Due to failed auctions experienced by the Fund’s ARCPS starting on February 14, 2008, the Fund paid the applicable maximum rate, which was calculated using the higher of 110% of the taxable equivalent of the short-term municipal bond rate and 110% of the prevailing 30-days “AA” Composite Commercial Paper Rate. The Fund may have paid higher maximum rates if the rating of the Fund’s ARCPS were to be lowered by the rating agencies.
The holders of the ARCPS had one vote per share and voted together with the holders of common stock of the Fund as a single class except on matters that affected only the holders of preferred stock or the holders of common stock. Pursuant to the 1940 Act, holders of the preferred stock had the right to elect two Directors of the Fund, voting separately as a class.
7. Distributions to common shareholders subsequent to May 31, 2025
The following distributions to common shareholders have been declared by the Fund’s Board and are payable subsequent to the period end of this report:
Record Date
Payable Date
Amount
5/22/2025
6/2/2025
$0.0420
6/23/2025
7/1/2025
$0.0420
7/24/2025
8/1/2025
$0.0420
8/22/2025
9/2/2025
$0.0420
8. Stock repurchase program
On November 16, 2015, the Fund announced that the Fund’s Board had authorized the Fund to repurchase in the open market up to approximately 10% of the Fund’s outstanding common stock when the Fund’s shares are trading at a discount to net asset value. The Board has directed management of the Fund to repurchase shares of common stock at such times and in such amounts as management reasonably believes may enhance stockholder value. The Fund is under no obligation to purchase shares at any specific discount levels or in any specific amounts. During the six months ended May 31, 2025, and the year ended November 30, 2024, the Fund did not repurchase any shares.

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Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

9. Transactions with affiliated company
As defined by the 1940 Act, an affiliated company is one in which the Fund owns 5% or more of the outstanding voting securities, or a company which is under common ownership or control with the Fund. The following company was considered an affiliated company for all or some portion of the sixmonths ended May 31, 2025. The following transactions were effected in such company for the sixmonths ended May 31, 2025.
 
Affiliate
Value at

November 30,
2024
Purchased
Sold
Cost
Shares
Proceeds
Shares
Western Asset
Premier
Institutional
Government
Reserves, Premium
Shares
$1,011,752
$2,117,028
2,117,028
$3,128,780
3,128,780

(cont’d)
Realized
Gain (Loss)
Dividend
Income
Net Increase
(Decrease) in
Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
Affiliate
Value at
May 31,
2025
Western Asset Premier
Institutional
Government Reserves,
Premium Shares
$1,026
10. Deferred capital losses
As of November 30, 2024, the Fund had deferred capital losses of $6,403,361, which have no expiration date, that will be available to offset future taxable capital gains.
11. Operating segments
The Fund has adopted the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Accounting Standards Update (ASU) 2023-07, Segment Reporting (Topic 280) - Improvements to Reportable Segment Disclosures. The update is limited to disclosure requirements and does not impact the Fund’s financial position or results of operations.
The Fund operates as a single operating segment, which is an investment portfolio. The Fund’s Investment Manager serves as the Chief Operating Decision Maker (CODM), evaluating fund-wide results and performance under a unified investment strategy. The CODM uses these measures to assess fund performance and allocate resources effectively. Internal reporting provided to the CODM aligns with the accounting policies and measurement principles used in the financial statements.
For information regarding segment assets, segment profit or loss, and significant expenses, refer to the Statement of Assets and Liabilities and the Statement of Operations, along with the related Notes to Financial Statements. The Fund’s Schedule of Investments provides
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

39

Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)
details of the Fund’s investments that generate returns such as interest, dividends, and realized and unrealized gains or losses. Performance metrics, including portfolio turnover and expense ratios, are disclosed in the Financial Highlights.

40
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. 2025 Semi-Annual Report

Board approval of management and
subadvisory agreements (unaudited)
Background
The Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), requires that the Board of Directors (the “Board”) of Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. (the “Fund”), including a majority of its members who are not considered to be “interested persons” under the 1940 Act (the “Independent Directors”) voting separately, approve on an annual basis the continuation of the investment management agreement (the “Management Agreement”) between the Fund and the Fund’s manager, Franklin Templeton Fund Adviser, LLC (the “Manager”), and the sub-advisory agreement (the “Sub-Advisory Agreement”) between the Manager and Western Asset Management Company, LLC (the “Sub-Adviser”), an affiliate of the Manager, with respect to the Fund.
At an in-person meeting (the “Contract Renewal Meeting”) held on May 8-9, 2025, the Board, including the Independent Directors, considered and approved the continuation of each of the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement for an additional one-year period. To assist in its consideration of the renewal of each of the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement, the Board received and considered extensive information (together with the information provided at the Contract Renewal Meeting, the “Contract Renewal Information”) about the Manager and the Sub-Adviser, as well as the management and sub-advisory arrangements for the Fund and the other closed-end funds in the same complex under the Board’s purview (the “Franklin Templeton Closed-end Funds”), certain portions of which are discussed below.
A presentation made by the Manager and the Sub-Adviser to the Board at the Contract Renewal Meeting in connection with the Board’s evaluation of each of the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement encompassed the Fund and other Franklin Templeton Closed-end Funds. In addition to the Contract Renewal Information, the Board received performance and other information throughout the year related to the respective services rendered by the Manager and the Sub-Adviser to the Fund. The Board’s evaluation took into account the information received throughout the year and also reflected the knowledge and experience gained as members of the Boards of the Fund and other Franklin Templeton Closed-end Funds with respect to the services provided to the Fund by the Manager and the Sub-Adviser. The information received and considered by the Board (including its various committees) in conjunction with both the Contract Renewal Meeting and throughout the year was both written and oral. The contractual arrangements discussed below are the product of multiple years of review and negotiation and information received and considered by the Board during each of those years.
At a meeting held on April 25, 2025, the Independent Directors, in preparation for the Contract Renewal Meeting, met in a private session with their independent legal counsel to review the Contract Renewal Information regarding the Franklin Templeton Closed-end
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

41

Board approval of management and
subadvisory agreements (unaudited) (cont’d)
Funds, including the Fund, received to date. No representatives of the Manager or the Sub-Adviser participated in this meeting. Following the April 25, 2025 meeting, the Independent Directors submitted certain questions and requests for additional information to Fund management. The Independent Directors also met in private sessions with their independent legal counsel to consider the Contract Renewal Information and Fund management’s responses to the Independent Directors’ questions and requests for additional information in advance of and during the Contract Renewal Meeting. The discussion below reflects all of these reviews.
The Manager provides the Fund with investment advisory and administrative services pursuant to the Management Agreement, and the Sub-Adviser provides the Fund with investment sub-advisory services pursuant to the Sub-Advisory Agreement. The discussion below covers both the advisory and administrative functions being rendered by the Manager, each such function being encompassed by the Management Agreement, and the investment sub-advisory functions being rendered by the Sub-Adviser pursuant to the Sub-Advisory Agreement.
Board Approval of Management Agreement and Sub-Advisory Agreement
The Independent Directors were advised by separate independent legal counsel throughout the process. Prior to voting, the Independent Directors received a memorandum discussing the legal standards for their consideration of the proposed continuation of the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement. The Independent Directors considered the Management Agreement and Sub-Advisory Agreement separately during the course of their review. In doing so, they noted the respective roles of the Manager and the Sub-Adviser in providing services to the Fund.
In approving the continuation of the Management Agreement and Sub-Advisory Agreement, the Board, including the Independent Directors, considered a variety of factors, including those factors discussed below. No single factor reviewed by the Board was identified by the Board as the principal factor in determining whether to approve the continuation of the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement. Each Board member may have attributed different weight to the various factors in evaluating the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement.
After considering all relevant factors and information, the Board, exercising its reasonable business judgment, determined that the continuation of the Management Agreement and Sub-Advisory Agreement were in the best interests of the Fund’s stockholders and approved the continuation of each such agreement for an additional one-year period.

42
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

Nature, Extent and Quality of the Services under the Management Agreement and Sub-Advisory Agreement
The Board received and considered Contract Renewal Information regarding the nature, extent, and quality of services provided to the Fund by the Manager and the Sub-Adviser under the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement, respectively, during the past year. The Board noted information received at regular meetings throughout the year related to the services provided by the Manager in its management of the Fund’s affairs and the Manager’s role in coordinating the activities of the Sub-Adviser and the Fund’s other service providers. The Board observed that the scope of services provided by the Manager and the Sub-Adviser, and of the undertakings required of the Manager and Sub-Adviser in connection with those services, including maintaining and monitoring their respective compliance programs as well as the Fund’s compliance programs had expanded over time as a result of regulatory, market and other developments. The Board also noted that on a regular basis it received and reviewed information from the Manager and the Sub-Adviser regarding the Fund’s compliance policies and procedures established pursuant to Rule 38a-1 under the 1940 Act. The Board also considered the risks borne by the Manager, the Sub-Adviser and their respective affiliates on behalf of the Fund, including entrepreneurial, operational, reputational, litigation and regulatory risks, as well as the Manager’s and the Sub-Adviser’s risk management processes.
The Board reviewed the qualifications, backgrounds, and responsibilities of the Manager’s senior personnel and the Sub-Adviser’s portfolio management team primarily responsible for the day-to-day portfolio management of the Fund. The Board also considered, based on its knowledge of the Manager and its affiliates, the financial resources of Franklin Resources, Inc., the parent organization of the Manager and the Sub-Adviser. The Board recognized the importance of having a fund manager with significant resources.
The Board considered the division of responsibilities between the Manager and the Sub-Adviser under the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement, respectively, including the Manager’s coordination and oversight of the services provided to the Fund by the Sub-Adviser and the Fund’s other service providers. The Management Agreement permits the Manager to delegate certain of its responsibilities, including its investment advisory duties thereunder, provided that the Manager, in each case, will supervise the activities of the delegee.
In reaching its determinations regarding continuation of the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement, the Board took into account that Fund stockholders, in pursuing their investment goals and objectives, may have purchased their shares of the Fund based upon the reputation and the investment style, philosophy and strategy of the Manager and the Sub-Adviser, as well as the resources available to the Manager and the Sub-Adviser.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

43

Board approval of management and
subadvisory agreements (unaudited) (cont’d)
The Board concluded that, overall, the nature, extent, and quality of the management and other services provided (and expected to be provided) to the Fund, under the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement were satisfactory.
Fund Performance
The Board received and considered information regarding Fund performance, including information and analyses (the “Broadridge Performance Information”) for the Fund, as well as for a group of comparable funds (the “Performance Universe”) selected by Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. (“Broadridge”), an independent third-party provider of investment company data. The Board was provided with a description of the methodology Broadridge used to determine the similarity of the Fund with the funds included in the Performance Universe. It was noted that while the Board found the Broadridge Performance Information generally useful, they recognized its limitations, including that the data may vary depending on the end date selected, and that the results of the performance comparisons may vary depending on the selection of the peer group and its composition over time. The Board also noted that Board members had received and discussed with the Manager and the Sub-Adviser information throughout the year at periodic intervals comparing the Fund’s performance against its benchmark and against the Fund’s peers. In addition, the Board considered the Fund’s performance in view of overall financial market conditions.
The Broadridge Performance Information comparing the Fund’s performance to that of its Performance Universe, consisting of the Fund and all leveraged closed-end intermediate municipal debt funds classified by Broadridge, regardless of asset size, showed, among other data, that based on net asset value per share, the Fund’s performance was below the median for the 1-, 3-, 5- and 10-year periods ended December 31, 2024. The Board noted the explanations from the Manager and the Sub-Adviser regarding the Fund’s relative performance versus the Performance Universe for the various periods. The Board also took into account the limited size of the Performance Universe.
Based on the reviews and discussions of Fund performance and considering other relevant factors, including those noted above, the Board concluded, under the circumstances, that continuation of the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement for an additional one-year period would be consistent with the interests of the Fund and its stockholders.
Management and Sub-Advisory Fees and Expense Ratios
The Board reviewed and considered the contractual management fee (the “Contractual Management Fee”) and the actual management fee (the “Actual Management Fee”) payable by the Fund to the Manager under the Management Agreement and the sub-advisory fee (the “Sub-Advisory Fee”) payable by the Manager to the Sub-Adviser under the Sub-Advisory Agreement in view of the nature, extent and overall quality of the management, investment advisory and other services provided by the Manager and the

44
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

Sub-Adviser, respectively. The Board noted that the Sub-Advisory Fee is paid by the Manager, not the Fund, and, accordingly, that the retention of the Sub-Adviser does not increase the fees or expenses otherwise incurred by the Fund’s stockholders.
In addition, the Board received and considered information and analyses prepared by Broadridge (the “Broadridge Expense Information”) comparing the Contractual Management Fee and the Actual Management Fee and the Fund’s actual total expenses with those of funds in an expense group (the “Expense Group”), as well as a broader group of funds, each selected and provided by Broadridge. The comparison was based upon the constituent funds’ latest fiscal years. It was noted that while the Board found the Broadridge Expense Information generally useful, they recognized its limitations, including that the data may vary depending on the selection of the peer group.
The Broadridge Expense Information showed that the Fund’s Contractual Management Fee was below the median. The Broadridge Expense Information also showed that the Fund’s Actual Management Fee was below the median based on both common stock assets and leveraged assets. The Broadridge Expense Information also showed that the Fund’s actual total expenses were below the median based on both common stock and leveraged assets. The Board took into account management’s discussion of the Fund’s expenses and noted the limited size of the Expense Group.
The Board also reviewed Contract Renewal Information regarding fees charged by the Manager and/or the Sub-Adviser to other U.S. clients investing primarily in an asset class similar to that of the Fund, including, where applicable, institutional and separate accounts. The Manager reviewed with the Board the differences in services provided to these different types of accounts, noting that the Fund is provided with certain administrative services, office facilities, and Fund officers, and that the Fund is subject not only to heightened regulatory requirements relative to institutional clients but also to requirements for listing on the New York Stock Exchange, and that the Manager coordinates and oversees the provision of services to the Fund by the Fund’s other service providers. The Board considered the fee comparisons in view of the different services provided in managing these other types of clients and funds.
The Board considered the overall management fee, the fees of the Sub-Adviser and the amount of the management fee retained by the Manager after payment of the Sub-Advisory Fee in each case in view of the services rendered for those amounts. The Board also received an analysis of complex-wide management fees provided by the Manager, which, among other things, set out a framework of fees based on asset classes.
Taking all of the above into consideration, as well as the factors identified below, the Board determined that the management fee and the Sub-Advisory Fee were reasonable in view of the nature, extent and overall quality of the management, investment advisory and other
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

45

Board approval of management and
subadvisory agreements (unaudited) (cont’d)
services provided by the Manager and the Sub-Adviser to the Fund under the Management Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement, respectively.
Manager Profitability
The Board, as part of the Contract Renewal Information, received an analysis of the profitability to the Manager and its affiliates in providing services to the Fund for the Manager’s fiscal years ended September 30, 2024 and September 30, 2023. The Board also received profitability information with respect to the Franklin Templeton fund complex as a whole. In addition, the Board received Contract Renewal Information with respect to the Manager’s revenue and cost allocation methodologies used in preparing such profitability data. It was noted that the allocation methodologies had been reviewed by an outside consultant. The profitability to the Sub-Adviser was not considered to be a material factor in the Board’s considerations since the Sub-Advisory Fee is paid by the Manager, not the Fund, although the Board noted the affiliation of the Manager with the Sub-Adviser. The profitability of the Manager and its affiliates was considered by the Board to be reasonable in view of the nature, extent and quality of services provided to the Fund.
Economies of Scale
The Board received and discussed Contract Renewal Information concerning whether the Manager realizes economies of scale if the Fund’s assets grow. The Board noted that because the Fund is a closed-end fund, it has limited ability to increase its assets. The Board determined that the management fee structure was appropriate under the circumstances. For similar reasons as stated above with respect to the Sub-Adviser’s profitability and the costs of the Sub-Adviser’s provision of services, the Board did not consider the potential for economies of scale in the Sub-Adviser’s management of the Fund to be a material factor in the Board’s consideration of the Sub-Advisory Agreement.
Other Benefits to the Manager and the Sub-Adviser
The Board considered other benefits received by the Manager, the Sub-Adviser and their affiliates as a result of their relationship with the Fund, including the opportunity to offer additional products and services to the Fund’s stockholders. In view of the costs of providing investment management and other services to the Fund and the ongoing commitment of the Manager and the Sub-Adviser to the Fund, the Board considered that the ancillary benefits received by the Manager and its affiliates, including the Sub-Adviser, were reasonable.

46
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

Additional shareholder information (unaudited)
Results of annual meeting of shareholders
The Annual Meeting of Shareholders of Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. was held on April 14, 2025, for the purpose of considering and voting upon the proposals presented at the Meeting. The following table provides information concerning the matters voted upon at the Meeting:
Election of Directors
Nominees
Common
Shares
and
Preferred
Shares,
voting
together,
Voted
FOR
Election
Common
Shares and
Preferred
Shares,
voting
together,
WITHHELD
Common
Shares
and
Preferred
Shares,
voting
together,
ABSTAIN
Preferred
Shares,
Voted
FOR
Election
Preferred
Shares,
WITHHELD
Preferred
Shares,
ABSTAIN
Robert D. Agdern
11,286,554
1,009,755
104,832
 — 
 — 
 — 
Hillary A. Sale
11,286,402
1,008,904
105,835
 — 
 — 
 — 
Carol L. Colman
 — 
 — 
 — 
1,896
0
0
At the Meeting, Mses. Colman and Sale and Mr. Agdern were each duly elected by the shareholders to serve as Class II Directors of the Fund until the 2028 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, or until their successors have been duly elected and qualified or until their resignation or are otherwise removed.
At May 31, 2025, in addition to Mses. Colman and Sale and Mr. Agdern, the other Directors of the Fund were as follows:
Anthony Grillo
Eileen A. Kamerick
Nisha Kumar
Peter Mason
Jane Trust
Ratification of Selection of Independent Registered Public Accountants
To ratify the selection of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (“PwC”) as independent registered public accountants of the Fund for the fiscal year ended November 30, 2025.
FOR
AGAINST
ABSTAIN
BROKER NON-VOTES
12,142,175
189,857
69,109
N/A
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

47

Dividend reinvestment plan (unaudited)
Unless you elect to receive distributions in cash (i.e., opt-out), all dividends, including any capital gain dividends and return of capital distributions, on your Common Stock will be automatically reinvested by Computershare Trust Company, N.A., as agent for the stock- holders (the “Plan Agent”), in additional shares of Common Stock under the Fund’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the “Plan”). You may elect not to participate in the Plan by contacting the Plan Agent. If you do not participate, you will receive all cash distributions paid by check mailed directly to you by Computershare Trust Company, N.A., as dividend paying agent.
If you participate in the Plan, the number of shares of Common Stock you will receive will be determined as follows:
(1) If the market price of the Common Stock (plus $0.03 per share commission) on the payment date (or, if the payment date is not a NYSE trading day, the immediately preceding trading day) is equal to or exceeds the net asset value per share of the Common Stock at the close of trading on the NYSE on the payment date, the Fund will issue new Common Stock at a price equal to the greater of (a) the net asset value per share at the close of trading on the NYSE on the payment date or (b) 95% of the market price per share of the Common Stock on the payment date.
(2) If the net asset value per share of the Common Stock exceeds the market price of the Common Stock (plus $0.03 per share commission) at the close of trading on the NYSE on the payment date, the Plan Agent will receive the dividend or distribution in cash and will buy Common Stock in the open market, on the NYSE or elsewhere, for your account as soon as practicable commencing on the trading day following the payment date and terminating no later than the earlier of (a) 30 days after the dividend or distribution payment date, or (b) the payment date for the next succeeding dividend or distribution to be made to the stockholders; except when necessary to comply with applicable provisions of the federal securities laws. If during this period: (i) the market price (plus $0.03 per share commission) rises so that it equals or exceeds the net asset value per share of the Common Stock at the close of trading on the NYSE on the payment date before the Plan Agent has completed the open market purchases or (ii) if the Plan Agent is unable to invest the full amount eligible to be reinvested in open market purchases, the Plan Agent will cease purchasing Common Stock in the open market and the Fund shall issue the remaining Common Stock at a price per share equal to the greater of (a) the net asset value per share at the close of trading on the NYSE on the day prior to the issuance of shares for reinvestment or (b) 95% of the then current market price per share.
Common Stock in your account will be held by the Plan Agent in non-certificated form. Any proxy you receive will include all shares of Common Stock you have received under the Plan. You may withdraw from the Plan (i.e., opt-out) by notifying the Plan Agent in writing at P.O. Box 43006, Providence, RI 02940-3078 or by calling the Plan Agent at 1-888-888-0151. Such withdrawal will be effective immediately if notice is received by the Plan Agent not less than ten business days prior to any dividend or distribution record date; otherwise such withdrawal will be effective as soon as practicable after the Plan Agent’s investment of the most recently declared dividend or distribution on the Common Stock.

48
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

Plan participants who sell their shares will be charged a service charge (currently $5.00 per transaction) and the Plan Agent is authorized to deduct brokerage charges actually incurred from the proceeds (currently $0.05 per share commission). There is no service charge for reinvestment of your dividends or distributions in Common Stock. However, all participants will pay a pro rata share of brokerage commissions incurred by the Plan Agent when it makes open market purchases. Because all dividends and distributions will be automatically reinvested in additional shares of Common Stock, this allows you to add to your investment through dollar cost averaging, which may lower the average cost of your Common Stock over time. Dollar cost averaging is a technique for lowering the average cost per share over time if the Fund’s net asset value declines. While dollar cost averaging has definite advantages, it cannot assure profit or protect against loss in declining markets.
Automatically reinvesting dividends and distributions does not mean that you do not have to pay income taxes due upon receiving dividends and distributions. Investors will be subject to income tax on amounts reinvested under the Plan.
The Fund reserves the right to amend or terminate the Plan if, in the judgment of the Board of Directors, the change is warranted. The Plan may be terminated, amended or supplemented by the Fund upon notice in writing mailed to stockholders at least 30 days prior to the record date for the payment of any dividend or distribution by the Fund for which the termination or amendment is to be effective. Upon any termination, you will be sent cash for any fractional share of Common Stock in your account. You may elect to notify the Plan Agent in advance of such termination to have the Plan Agent sell part or all of your Common Stock on your behalf. Additional information about the Plan and your account may be obtained from the Plan Agent at P.O. Box 43006, Providence, RI 02940-3078 or by calling the Plan Agent at 1-888-888-0151.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

49

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Western Asset
Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
Directors
Robert D. Agdern
Carol L. Colman
Anthony Grillo
Eileen A. Kamerick
Chair
Nisha Kumar
Peter Mason
Hillary A. Sale
Jane Trust
Officers
Jane Trust
President and Chief Executive
Officer
Christopher Berarducci
Treasurer and Principal Financial
Officer
Fred Jensen
Chief Compliance Officer
Marc A. De Oliveira
Secretary and Chief Legal Officer
Thomas C. Mandia
Senior Vice President
Jeanne M. Kelly
Senior Vice President
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
One Madison Avenue
17th Floor
New York, NY 10010
Investment manager
Franklin Templeton Fund Adviser, LLC
Subadviser
Western Asset Management Company, LLC
Custodian
The Bank of New York Mellon
Transfer agent
Computershare Inc.
P.O. Box 43006
Providence, RI 02940-3078
Independent registered 
public accounting firm
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Baltimore, MD
Legal counsel
Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP
900 G Street NW
Washington, DC 20001
New York Stock
Exchange Symbol
SBI

Franklin Templeton Funds Privacy and Security Notice


Your Privacy and the Security of Your Personal Information is Very Important to Us
This Privacy and Security Notice (the “Privacy Notice”) addresses the Funds’ privacy and data protection practices with respect to nonpublic personal information the Fund receives. The Legg Mason Funds include the Western Asset Money Market Funds (Funds) sold by the Funds’ distributor, Franklin Distributors, LLC, as well as Legg Mason-sponsored closed-end funds. The provisions of this Privacy Notice apply to your information both while you are a shareholder and after you are no longer invested with the Funds.
The Type of Nonpublic Personal Information the Funds Collect About You
The Funds collect and maintain nonpublic personal information about you in connection with your shareholder account. Such information may include, but is not limited to:
Personal information included on applications or other forms;
Account balances, transactions, and mutual fund holdings and positions;
Bank account information, legal documents, and identity verification documentation; and
Online account access user IDs, passwords, security challenge question responses.
How the Funds Use Nonpublic Personal Information About You
The Funds do not sell or share your nonpublic personal information with third parties or with affiliates for their marketing purposes, unless you have authorized the Funds to do so. The Funds do not disclose any nonpublic personal information about you except as may be required to perform transactions or services you have authorized or as permitted or required by law. The Funds may disclose information about you to:
Employees, agents, and affiliates on a “need to know” basis to enable the Funds to conduct ordinary business or to comply with obligations to government regulators;
Service providers, including the Funds’ affiliates, who assist the Funds as part of the ordinary course of business (such as printing, mailing services, or processing or servicing your account with us) or otherwise perform services on the Funds’ behalf, including companies that may perform statistical analysis, market research and marketing services solely for the Funds;
Permit access to transfer, whether in the United States or countries outside of the United States to such Funds’ employees, agents and affiliates and service providers as required to enable the Funds to conduct ordinary business, or to comply with obligations to government regulators;
The Funds’ representatives such as legal counsel, accountants and auditors to enable the Funds to conduct ordinary business, or to comply with obligations to government regulators;
Fiduciaries or representatives acting on your behalf, such as an IRA custodian or trustee of a grantor trust.
Except as otherwise permitted by applicable law, companies acting on the Funds’ behalf, including those outside the United States, are contractually obligated to keep nonpublic
NOT PART OF THE SEMI-ANNUAL REPORT

Franklin Templeton Funds Privacy and Security Notice 
(cont’d)
personal information the Funds provide to them confidential and to use the information the Funds share only to provide the services the Funds ask them to perform.
The Funds may disclose nonpublic personal information about you when necessary to enforce their rights or protect against fraud, or as permitted or required by applicable law, such as in connection with a law enforcement or regulatory request, subpoena, or similar legal process. In the event of a corporate action or in the event a Fund service provider changes, the Funds may be required to disclose your nonpublic personal information to third parties. While it is the Funds’ practice to obtain protections for disclosed information in these types of transactions, the Funds cannot guarantee their privacy policy will remain unchanged.
Keeping You Informed of the Funds’ Privacy and Security Practices
The Funds will notify you annually of their privacy policy as required by federal law. While the Funds reserve the right to modify this policy at any time, they will notify you promptly if this privacy policy changes.
The Funds’ Security Practices
The Funds maintain appropriate physical, electronic and procedural safeguards designed to guard your nonpublic personal information. The Funds’ internal data security policies restrict access to your nonpublic personal information to authorized employees, who may use your nonpublic personal information for Fund business purposes only.
Although the Funds strive to protect your nonpublic personal information, they cannot ensure or warrant the security of any information you provide or transmit to them, and you do so at your own risk. In the event of a breach of the confidentiality or security of your nonpublic personal information, the Funds will attempt to notify you as necessary so you can take appropriate protective steps. If you have consented to the Funds using electronic communications or electronic delivery of statements, they may notify you under such circumstances using the most current email address you have on record with them.
In order for the Funds to provide effective service to you, keeping your account information accurate is very important. If you believe that your account information is incomplete, not accurate or not current, if you have questions about the Funds’ privacy practices, or our use of your nonpublic personal information, write the Funds using the contact information on your account statements, email the Funds by clicking on the Contact Us section of the Funds’ website at www.franklintempleton.com, or contact the Funds at 1-877-721-1926 for the Western Asset Money Market Funds or 1-888-777-0102 for the Legg Mason-sponsored closed-end funds. For additional information related to certain state privacy rights, please visit https://www.franklintempleton.com/help/privacy-policy.
Revised December 2023.
NOT PART OF THE SEMI-ANNUAL REPORT

Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.
One Madison Avenue
17th Floor
New York, NY 10010
Notice is hereby given in accordance with Section 23(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, that from time to time the Fund may purchase, at market prices, shares of its stock.
The Fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year as an exhibit to its reports on Form N-PORT. The Fund’s Forms N-PORT are available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. To obtain information on Form N-PORT, shareholders can call the Fund at 1-888-777-0102.
Information on how the Fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the prior 12-month period ended June 30th of each year and a description of the policies and procedures that the Fund uses to determine how to vote proxies related to portfolio transactions are available (1) without charge, upon request, by calling 1-888-777-0102, (2) at www.franklintempleton.com and (3) on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov.
Quarterly performance, semi-annual and annual reports, current net asset value and other information regarding the Fund may be found on Franklin Templeton’s website, which can be accessed at www.franklintempleton.com. Any reference to Franklin Templeton’s website in this report is intended to allow investors public access to information regarding the Fund and does not, and is not intended to, incorporate Franklin Templeton’s website in this report.
This report is transmitted to the shareholders of Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc. for their information. This is not a prospectus, circular or representation intended for use in the purchase of shares of the Fund or any securities mentioned in this report.
Computershare Inc.
P.O. Box 43006
Providence, RI 02940-3078
90061-S7/25

(b)Not applicable

 

ITEM 2.CODE OF ETHICS.

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 3.AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT.

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 4.PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES.

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 5.AUDIT COMMITTEE OF LISTED REGISTRANTS.

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 6.SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS.

 

(a)Please see schedule of investments contained in the Financial Statements and Financial Highlights included under Item 1 of this Form N-CSR.
(b)Not applicable.
ITEM 7.FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS FOR OPEN-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 8.CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS FOR OPEN-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 9.PROXY DISCLOSURES FOR OPEN-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 10.REMUNERATION PAID TO DIRECTORS, OFFICERS, AND OTHERS OF OPEN-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 11.STATEMENT REGARDING BASIS FOR APPROVAL OF INVESTMENT ADVISORY CONTRACT.

 

The information is disclosed as part of the Financial Statements included in Item 1 of this Form N-CSR, as applicable.

 

ITEM 12.DISCLOSURE OF PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 13.INVESTMENT PROFESSIONALS OF CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

 

Not applicable.

 

 

ITEM 14.PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES BY CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANY AND AFFILIATED PURCHASERS.

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 15.SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS.

 

There have been no changes to the procedures by which shareholders may recommend nominees to the Registrant’s Board of Trustees that would require disclosure herein.

 

ITEM 16.CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES.

 

(a)The Registrant’s principal executive officer and principal financial officer have concluded that the Registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a- 3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”)) are effective as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report that includes the disclosure required by this paragraph, based on their evaluation of the disclosure controls and procedures required by Rule 30a-3(b) under the 1940 Act and 15d-15(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

 

(b)There were no changes in the Registrant’s internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the 1940 Act) that occurred during the period covered by this report that have materially affected, or are likely to materially affect the Registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

ITEM 17.DISCLOSURE OF SECURITIES LENDING ACTIVITIES FOR CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 18.RECOVERY OF ERRONEOUSLY AWARDED COMPENSATION.

 

(a)Not applicable.

 

(b)Not applicable.

 

ITEM 19.EXHIBITS.

 

(a) (1) Not applicable.

Exhibit 99.CODE ETH

 

(a) (3) Certifications pursuant to section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 attached hereto.

Exhibit 99.CERT

 

(b) Certifications pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 attached hereto.

Exhibit 99.906CERT

 

 

SIGNATURES

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this Report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, there unto duly authorized.

 

 

Western Asset Intermediate Muni Fund Inc.

 

By: /s/ Jane Trust  
  Jane Trust  
  Chief Executive Officer  
     
Date: July 25, 2025  

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

 

By: /s/ Jane Trust  
  Jane Trust  
  Chief Executive Officer  
     
Date: July 25, 2025  

 

By: /s/ Christopher Berarducci  
  Christopher Berarducci  
  Principal Financial Officer  
     
Date: July 25, 2025  

 


ATTACHMENTS / EXHIBITS

ATTACHMENTS / EXHIBITS

CERTIFICATIONS PURSUANT TO SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

CERTIFICATIONS PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002