Contents
Definition
The exit load period is the minimum holding duration specified in a mutual fund scheme's Scheme Information Document (SID) within which a unitholder who redeems or switches out of the scheme will have a percentage deduction (the exit load) levied on the redemption proceeds. Exit loads are governed by SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 1996 — Regulation 49 and related SEBI circulars. Critically, SEBI mandates that exit load amounts must be credited back to the scheme's assets — they cannot be retained by the AMC as additional income. This ensures that existing investors (who bear the cost of redemption-driven portfolio churn) are compensated by the load charged to early exiting investors.
How Exit Load Works Day-to-Day
- Standard equity fund: Most actively managed equity funds charge 1% exit load if redeemed within 12 months of purchase. After 12 months, no exit load applies.
- Liquid and overnight funds: SEBI introduced a graded exit load for liquid funds (SEBI/HO/IMD/DF3/CIR/P/2019/094, effective October 2019): Day 1 exit = 0.0070%, Day 2 = 0.0065%, ..., Day 7 = 0.0045%, Day 7+ = Nil. This discourages very short-term arbitrage use of liquid funds.
- ELSS (Tax Saver) funds: No exit load applies, but a statutory 3-year lock-in under Section 80C of the Income Tax Act effectively prevents early redemption.
- Zero exit load funds: Index funds and ETFs typically carry nil exit load; some large-cap and flexi-cap funds also waive exit loads. Always check the SID — exit load schedules can change with AMC notice.
- Calculation: Exit load is deducted from the redemption NAV. E.g., NAV = ₹100, exit load = 1% → redemption price = ₹100 × (1 − 0.01) = ₹99. The ₹1 per unit is credited back to the scheme.
Why It Matters for Investors
- True redemption value: Exit loads reduce actual redemption proceeds below the NAV. For a ₹10 lakh redemption with 1% exit load, the investor receives ₹9,90,000 — a ₹10,000 deduction that is easy to overlook.
- NRI and tax: Exit loads are NOT eligible as a deduction for capital gains computation. The cost of acquisition (purchase NAV) and full redemption NAV (before exit load) are used; exit load is a separate reduction to net proceeds that does not reduce taxable gains.
- Portfolio rebalancing cost: Frequent rebalancing within the exit load window significantly increases transaction costs. A 1% exit load means your investment must earn at least 1% above the target scheme's return just to break even on the switch.
- SIP investors: Each SIP instalment has its own holding period and exit load window. The RTA applies FIFO for redemptions, which usually means older (exit-load-free) units are redeemed first.
Worked Example
An investor started a ₹10,000/month SIP in Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund 14 months ago. They want to redeem ₹50,000. PPFCF charges 2% exit load within 365 days. The investor's first 2 SIP instalments (months 1 and 2) are now >12 months old — those units carry no exit load. Months 3 through 14 (12 instalments) are still within the exit-load window. Under FIFO, the RTA redeems the oldest units first (months 1 and 2, exit-load free), then month 3 units (1 month 11 days old — still within 365 days, 2% exit load applies). The investor discovers that most of their ₹50,000 redemption triggers a 2% load — a ₹1,000 cost that is credited back to the scheme.
See Also
Primary Source
SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 1996 — Regulation 49 (load structure, proceeds to scheme): sebi.gov.in — MF Regulations 1996. SEBI Circular SEBI/HO/IMD/DF3/CIR/P/2019/094 (liquid fund graded exit load): sebi.gov.in — Liquid Fund Circular 2019.
Past performance is not indicative of future returns. Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks. Read all scheme-related documents carefully. ARN-314872. APMI APRN-01658. Content is informational and not investment advice.