Say goodbye to extra exit load on mutual funds: Decoding SEBI’s latest recommendations

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If you’re a mutual fund investor, SEBI’s latest consultation paper is more important than you think. If the recommendations in this paper are written into law, it could soon make your MF withdrawals a little cheaper and a lot more transparent.

The document is now online on the SEBI website and is titled the Consultation Paper on Comprehensive Review of SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 1996.

What is mutual-fund exit load?

For years, investors leaving a scheme before its minimum holding period faced a penalty called the “exit load”.

Since 2012, fund houses have also been allowed to charge an additional fee over this exit load—first Rs 0.20 for every Rs 100 withdrawn, and later Rs 0.05—which quietly added up for lakhs of savers each year (page 4 of the 25-pager consultation paper).

SEBI now wants to put an end to this extra 5 basis points charge, calling it “transitory in nature” and no longer justified. This fee was originally meant as special compensation for asset management companies (AMCs) when rules changed in 2012, forcing them to credit exit load income back to the mutual fund pool rather than retaining it.

More than a decade on, the regulator now feels AMCs are mature enough and the investor base wide enough. In short, this kind of ‘stealth fee’ has outlived its purpose.

“With an objective to rationalise cost for [the] unitholder, this expense [exit load] charged to the scheme has been removed from the draft MF Regulations. However, in order to reduce the impact of the proposed change on the operations of AMCs, first two slabs of the expense ratio of open-ended active schemes have been revised upward by 5 bps,” the paper read.

What does this mean for you?

If the proposal is implemented, you’ll pay only the regular exit load (if any) when you redeem your mutual fund units. SEBI is making up for the revenue impact by tweaking the expense ratio that AMCs can charge in the two lowest slabs, increasing it by 5 basis points.

This method is more upfront, because the expense ratio is advertised transparently and is easier for investors to track in their regular statements.

One immediate benefit for investors is fewer hidden costs. In short, the transparency alone would lead to more trust in your fund house.

No more worrying about surprise deductions, for you’ll see all charges listed clearly and can decide which scheme works best for you.

SEBI’s move should also make comparison across funds easier, as all players will be required to follow the same rules.

Beyond the exit load: Other changes

While exit loads have a more direct impact on your mutual funds, SEBI’s consultation promises even more—if they come to pass. Statutory levies like GST and stamp duty could soon be excluded from annual cost caps, meaning future tax hikes won’t shrink your returns.

The regulator is also suggesting cutting allowed brokerage rates by up to 83 per cent, ensuring investors don’t pay twice for bundled services like research. Moreover, there is also a move to replace newspaper notice requirements with instant digital updates.

Open to public feedback

This proposed shake-up, open for public feedback until November 17, 2025, aims to modernise mutual fund regulations for over 25 crore investor accounts, reflecting India’s journey from a handful of funds in 1988 to a Rs 75 lakh crore industry today.

The last couple of pages of the report detail how to provide them.

Head to the SEBI website and provide it online. However, those facing technical issues can also email eterm@sebi.gov.in or gopikaj@sebi.gov.in with the subject, “Consultation paper on Comprehensive review of SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 1996.”