SEBI Announced New MF Category – Life Cycle Funds

Recently, SEBI issued a comprehensive circular on 26th February 2026 (link), making several big changes to the mutual fund categorisation framework. There is actually a lot in that circular, but I wanted to focus on one thing specifically – which also caught everyone’s attention.

And that is the introduction of a brand new mutual fund category called Life Cycle Funds.

So what exactly are Life Cycle Funds?

In simple terms, these are goal-oriented mutual funds that come with a pre-defined maturity date. Like Life Cycle Fund 2045 or Life Cycle Fund 2055. The year in the name tells you when the fund is designed to “mature.”

These funds follow what is called a glide path strategy. This means:

  • When the maturity is far away (say 25-30 years), the fund can maintain high equity exposure, somewhere between 65% to 95%.
  • As the maturity date gets closer, the equity allocation is gradually and automatically reduced as per a pre-decided and set schedule (check image below)
  • In the final 1-3 years before maturity, equity may be as low as 5-20%, with the bulk shifted to debt (AA+ and above rated instruments).

Apart from equity, these funds can also invest in a mix of other assets like debt, gold ETFs, silver ETFs, InvITs, etc. So, no doubt it’s genuinely multi-asset in nature. The tenure for these funds can range from 5 years to 30 years, in multiples of five years. And each AMC can run a maximum of 6 such funds at any given time. And to discourage people from bailing out early (given these are to serve long-term goal-based investing purposes), SEBI has prescribed graded exit loads. It will be 3% exit load if you redeem in Year 1, then 2% in Year 2, and finally 1% in Year 3.

So, no doubt a very interesting idea.

But this concept isn’t unique or new globally.

It is pretty similar to target-date funds in the US (also called lifecycle funds). In the US, these have been a popular retirement planning vehicle for decades, especially for the 401(k) retirement investors who don’t want to actively manage their own asset allocation. The appeal is simple – you don’t have to do much. You pick a fund based on when you need the money, and the fund does the rebalancing for you. Set it and forget it. So the regulator is essentially trying to bring a version of this same concept now for the Indian investors.

Interestingly, this idea of a glide path-based fund isn’t entirely new, even in the Indian context. NPS (National Pension System) has had its own version of this for years. It’s called the Auto Choice or Life Cycle Fund option within NPS. If you don’t want to actively decide how much to put in equity (Tier-1 E scheme) vs. debt vs. government securities, you can simply opt for the Auto Choice. NPS then automatically reduces your equity allocation as you get older – starting from as high as 75% equity in your younger years and gradually bringing it down to 15% as you approach 60. There are actually three variants of this within NPS – Aggressive, Moderate, and Conservative Life Cycle Funds – depending on how much equity exposure you are comfortable with in the early years.

So in a way, SEBI’s proposed Life Cycle Funds for mutual funds are doing something conceptually very similar to what NPS Auto Choice has been doing quietly for years. The key difference, of course, is that NPS is locked in till retirement (with limited exit options), while mutual fund Life Cycle Funds will offer more flexibility – albeit with exit loads in the initial years to discourage premature exits. So if you’ve already been using NPS Auto Choice, the concept of a glide path won’t be new to you at all. The mutual fund version is just a more flexible (and likely more expensive) cousin of the same idea.

There are definitely a few things I like about the concept –

  • First, the discipline angle. One of the biggest problems in Indian investing is that people panic-sell equity during market falls. A glide path structure forces automatic movement to lower-risk assets as the goal nears, without requiring the investor to make any decisions under emotional pressure. That’s actually a big deal.
  • Second, the naming convention is smart. Calling it “Life Cycle Fund 2045” or “Life Cycle Fund 2050” makes the maturity year a central feature of the scheme. An investor can immediately identify whether the fund matches their timeline. Compare that to random fund names like “XYZ Dynamic Advantage Growth Fund”, which tells you almost nothing.
  • Third, automatic rebalancing means the investor doesn’t have to worry about whether to shift from equity to debt as their goal approaches. For the vast majority of investors who don’t review their portfolios regularly (and that is most people, honestly), this is a meaningful benefit.

Since this is just a But I also have some concerns, if I can call it that:

  • While the concept sounds clean on paper, when 20-30 AMCs each launch 5-6 Life Cycle Funds, you will suddenly have 100+ schemes to choose from. The investor then has to figure out – which AMC’s Life Cycle Fund 2045 is better? Which has a better glide path design? Which has lower costs? I am not sure this will be simpler than it sounds.
  • Another concern I have is how AMCs will go about it. India has already seen what happens when regulators introduce new categories. The fund houses rush to launch schemes just to grab early AUM. The quality and design of the glide path can vary significantly depending on how seriously each AMC approaches it. SEBI has prescribed a broad framework for the glide path, but individual AMC implementation matters a lot. So not all glide paths will be equal.
  • Unlike target-date funds in the US, which are often passive and index-based, the proposed concept of Indian Life Cycle Funds isn’t exactly passive and is rather like active multi-asset funds with a glide path overlay. Which means higher expense ratios are likely. They should have some passive options too.

Should you invest in Life Cycle Funds?

SEBI has just come out with the concept, and AMCs haven’t launched these yet. So the question is a bit premature. But I still like this development. I feel financial innovation is necessary as India evolves and transitions from a developing to a developed economy.

But as always with financial products, the devil is always in the details. Design, cost, and how honestly AMCs implement the glide path will determine whether Life Cycle Funds truly serve the investor’s interest or end up as just another category on the shelf. Let’s wait and watch till then.

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