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ESOP in India: Benefits, Taxation, Strategy and the Concentration Risk Nobody Warns You About

“The stock market is filled with individuals who know the price of everything but the value of nothing.” – Philip Fisher

I was reviewing a financial plan last year with a 48-year-old VP at a large IT company in Bangalore. Smart, well-read, diligent saver. We went through his portfolio systematically – mutual funds, PPF, NPS, FDs.

Then he mentioned, almost casually, that he had ESOPs.

When we ran the numbers, the ESOPs were worth Rs 2.2 crore at current market price. His entire rest-of-portfolio was Rs 1.8 crore. He had unknowingly put 55% of his net worth in a single stock – his employer’s. The same company that paid his salary, determined his career, and controlled his professional future.

Nobody had ever helped him see this clearly. That is what this article is for.

⚡ Quick Answer

ESOPs (Employee Stock Option Plans) give you the right to buy company shares at a predetermined price after a vesting period. They can create significant wealth – but also dangerous concentration risk. When exercised, the gain is taxed as a perquisite (30%+ slab rate). On sale, capital gains tax applies. Most senior executives underestimate both the opportunity and the risk. A planned exercise-and-diversify strategy is almost always better than holding indefinitely.

What Are ESOPs – The Clear Definition

ESOP stands for Employee Stock Option Plan. When your company grants you ESOPs, you get the right – not the obligation – to buy a specified number of company shares at a predetermined price (the exercise price or strike price), after a certain period (the vesting period).

The structure typically looks like this: you are granted 3,000 shares today, vesting 1,000 per year over 3 years. After Year 1, you can buy 1,000 shares at the exercise price – say Rs 100. If the market price is Rs 250, you buy at Rs 100 and immediately hold shares worth Rs 250. The Rs 150 difference is your gain.

You do not have to exercise. If the market price falls below the exercise price, the options are “underwater” and you simply do not exercise. Your risk is zero on the option itself – though there is an opportunity cost if you held other assets instead.

✅ ESOP vs ESPS vs RSU – Key Differences

ESOP: Right to buy at a fixed price. You pay the exercise price when you buy.
ESPS (Employee Stock Purchase Scheme): Buy shares at a discount to market price via salary deductions.
RSU (Restricted Stock Unit): Company gives you shares free – no payment needed – when vesting conditions are met. Increasingly common in MNCs and startups.

ESOP Taxation in India – Step by Step

Tax on ESOPs has two stages. Most employees understand neither stage fully.

Stage 1: At Exercise (Perquisite Tax)

When you exercise your options and buy shares at the exercise price, the difference between the market value on the exercise date and the exercise price is treated as a perquisite – i.e., part of your salary income. It is taxed at your slab rate. For most senior executives, this means 30% + surcharge + cess. Effectively 35-42% depending on your income level.

Your employer deducts this as TDS. No choice there.

Stage 2: At Sale (Capital Gains Tax)

When you eventually sell the shares, capital gains tax applies on the profit from the exercise date market value (your cost basis) to the sale price.

Scenario Tax Treatment
Listed Indian shares sold within 12 months STCG at 20%
Listed Indian shares sold after 12 months LTCG at 12.5% above Rs 1.25 lakh
Unlisted shares (startups) sold within 24 months STCG at slab rate
Unlisted shares sold after 24 months LTCG at 12.5% without indexation
Foreign listed shares (MNC employees) STCG at slab / LTCG at 12.5% (24 month threshold)

Note: Tax rates updated for FY 2024-25 Budget changes. Always verify with your CA before exercising.

ESOPs are a significant part of your net worth. Are they in your retirement plan?

At RetireWise, we integrate ESOP exercise strategy into your retirement blueprint – timing, tax efficiency, and diversification. SEBI Registered. Fee-only.

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The ESOP Concentration Trap – The Problem Nobody Tells You About

Here is the insight that most ESOP articles skip entirely.

Senior executives who receive ESOPs over many years tend to accumulate a large position in their employer’s stock. This happens gradually – 1,000 shares this year, 1,500 next year, a special grant after a promotion. Each grant feels like a bonus. Nobody steps back to look at the total picture.

The result, for many senior executives I have worked with, is that 40-60% of their investable net worth sits in a single stock – the one company they work for.

Ask yourself three questions about this company:


  • Is this the single best stock in the Indian or global market right now?

  • If the company goes through a bad patch, what happens to both your job and your portfolio simultaneously?

  • Would you voluntarily invest 50% of your savings in this one stock if you did not work there?

The answer to all three is almost certainly no. Yet that is exactly the position many ESOP recipients find themselves in – not by design, but by drift.

THE RULE OF THUMB I USE WITH CLIENTS

No single stock should exceed 10% of your total investable net worth.

For employer stock specifically: 5% maximum, given the dual risk (income + wealth).

If your employer stock exceeds this: exercise, sell, diversify. Do it systematically to manage the tax impact. But do it.

Satyam employees learned this the hard way. Enron employees lost both their jobs and their retirement savings in the same week. These are extreme cases – but the principle is real. Double exposure (income + equity) to one entity is concentrated risk of the highest order.

“ESOPs are one of the most powerful wealth-creation tools available to senior executives. They are also one of the most dangerous – not because the options are risky, but because of what people do with them after vesting.”

– Hemant Beniwal, CFP, CTEP | Founder, RetireWise

A Practical ESOP Exercise Strategy

The zero-risk strategy: exercise as soon as the market price exceeds the exercise price significantly, sell immediately, and reinvest in a diversified portfolio. You lose potential upside but eliminate the double risk.

A more nuanced approach, which I use with clients:

Exercise and sell enough to bring employer stock below 10% of total net worth. Keep the rest vested – benefit from any further appreciation. Review after each new grant vests. This gives you participation in the upside while managing the concentration risk systematically.

On tax timing: if you have flexibility, spread exercises across financial years to avoid pushing your perquisite income into higher surcharge brackets. A CA familiar with ESOP taxation is worth their fee here.

Read next: 15 Types of Risk in Investment – Including Concentration Risk

Your ESOPs need a strategy, not just a tax calculator.

At RetireWise, we build ESOP exercise plans into your retirement blueprint – timed for tax efficiency and integrated with your full financial picture. SEBI Registered. Fee-only.

See the RetireWise Service

For every Infosys millionaire there are ten executives who held their employer stock too long, diversified too late, and watched concentrated wealth evaporate in a bad quarter. The ESOP itself is not the risk. The strategy – or the absence of one – is.

Exercise with a plan. Diversify with intent. Never let a tax bill stop you from doing the right thing.

💬 Your Turn

What percentage of your net worth sits in your employer’s stock right now? Have you run the concentration number? Share your experience with ESOPs below – I read every comment.

10 Financial Planning Principles Every Advisor Should Know (And Every Client Should Demand)

“Money can fund a purpose but cannot find a purpose.” – Mitch Anthony

I attend a lot of financial planning conferences and read extensively from the global advisory community. Most of the content is technical. But occasionally a phrase or an idea cuts through with unusual clarity – the kind of clarity that changes how you explain something to a client or how you think about your own financial plan.

Over the years, I have collected these principles. They come from financial planners, psychologists, portfolio researchers, and life planning practitioners. They are not complex. Most are not even original. But they are consistently the insights that matter most when clients are anxious, or overconfident, or frozen by indecision.

⚡ Quick Answer

The most important financial planning principles are not about picking the right fund or optimising returns. They are about clarifying purpose, managing behaviour, maintaining discipline under pressure, and building systems that run without relying on constant motivation. The gap between knowing these principles and applying them is where most financial plans fail.

Financial planning principles from global advisors

Principle 1: Money Can Fund a Purpose, But Cannot Find One

This is Mitch Anthony’s formulation and it remains the most important thing I know about financial planning. Most people approach financial planning as a numbers problem: how much do I need, what should I invest in, how do I maximise returns. These are real questions. But they are secondary questions.

The primary question – what is the money for? – is the one most financial conversations never reach. Retirement planning without a clear picture of what you want retirement to look like produces a number target with no meaning. A meaningful retirement plan requires knowing what you want to do with your time, what it will cost, and what tradeoffs you are willing to make to fund it.

Ask yourself this before your next review: if money were not a constraint, what would a good day look like at age 65? The answer to that question drives every financial decision that follows.

Principle 2: Busy Is Not the Same as Productive

Greg McKeown’s insight from Essentialism is directly applicable to financial life: most investors are very busy doing things with their money that produce little or no result. Trading too frequently. Reviewing the portfolio daily. Switching funds based on short-term performance. Buying new products without examining the existing portfolio.

The financially successful approach is almost boringly simple: clear goals, automated SIPs, annual review, no unnecessary transactions. The busyness of active management does not produce better returns for most investors. It produces costs, tax events, and behavioural errors.

Principle 3: Do Not Coach Clients to Rely on Past Performance

Vanguard’s research was blunt on this: past performance, when used as the primary criterion for investment selection, consistently leads to poor outcomes. Investors who selected funds based on the previous 3-year return history underperformed investors who selected based on process, cost, and category fit.

The same applies to any financial decision. The sector that performed best last year is unlikely to be the best-performing sector next year. The fund manager who delivered extraordinary returns in the last bull market may have been benefiting from concentrated positioning that will be painful in the next correction.

Good financial advice starts with your goals, not with last year’s returns.

RetireWise builds portfolios based on your goals, timeline, and risk capacity – not on which fund or sector performed best recently.

See How RetireWise Selects Investments

Principle 4: Change Is the Precondition of Relevance

The advisory community globally faces the same challenge: clients who have not revisited their financial plans in years are operating on assumptions that were set in a different economic and personal context. Tax laws change. Regulations change. Investment products evolve. Personal circumstances shift – new dependants, changed income, different goals.

The financial plan that was optimal in 2015 is not optimal in 2026. The investor who learned to invest in 2012 and has not updated their framework is navigating 2026 with outdated tools. Annual review is not bureaucracy – it is the mechanism that keeps the plan relevant.

Principle 5: Exercise and Connection Are Investments Too

Research from behavioral finance and positive psychology consistently shows that investor behaviour under stress is the single largest determinant of long-term returns. Investors who sell during corrections, chase performance, or make impulsive decisions destroy more value than the best-performing fund can create.

Managing the emotional state that drives those decisions – through physical activity, strong social connections, reduced news consumption, and a sense of life satisfaction outside of financial outcomes – is genuine investment return. The well-rested, socially connected, physically healthy investor makes better financial decisions under stress than the exhausted, isolated, anxious one.

Principle 6: Loss Is Remembered More Vividly Than Gain

The psychological research is clear: the pain of losing Rs 1 lakh feels approximately twice as intense as the pleasure of gaining Rs 1 lakh. This asymmetry drives investors to sell during corrections (to escape the pain of ongoing losses) and buy during bull markets (chasing the pleasure of rising portfolios) – precisely the opposite of what produces long-term wealth.

Knowing this bias does not make you immune to it. What helps is pre-committed rules: a written investment policy that specifies what to do in specific market situations, established before the emotion is present. When the policy says “do nothing during a correction, review at the annual rebalance,” it removes the moment-of-pain decision that the loss aversion bias would otherwise dominate.

Principle 7: You Need Purpose to Wake Up and Money to Sleep

Mitch Anthony again – and this is particularly relevant for retirement planning in India. The financial industry focuses almost entirely on the money side of this equation: how to build a corpus, how to withdraw sustainably, how to allocate between assets. These are necessary but not sufficient.

Many people who retire with adequate financial resources discover that the absence of purpose – the loss of professional identity, daily structure, and a reason to get out of bed – is more painful than any portfolio volatility. A retirement plan that includes only financial goals is incomplete. The non-financial planning – what you will do, what community you will build, what meaning you will find – is at least equally important to financial wellbeing in retirement.

Principle 8: Markets Care Less About Leadership Than Investors Think

Market returns across election cycles, government changes, and political events show remarkably weak correlation with who is in power. The companies in the Sensex and Nifty earn their revenues from customers, not from governments. Long-term equity returns are driven by earnings growth, which is driven by economic activity, which has its own multi-decade trajectory that governments influence but do not control.

Every election cycle, investors make portfolio changes based on expected policy outcomes. Most of those changes underperform a simple “stay invested” strategy. Political events are real; their impact on long-term portfolio returns is routinely overstated.

Principle 9: The More You Practice a Thought, the More Likely You Are to Follow Through

Behavioral science research shows that the mental rehearsal of a planned behaviour – visualising yourself completing the SIP top-up in January, visualising yourself not reacting to the next market correction, visualising yourself having the retirement income conversation with your spouse – significantly increases the probability of actually doing it.

This is the financial planning equivalent of an athlete’s pre-game mental preparation. The intention, made explicit and rehearsed, produces better execution than the intention left vague.

Principle 10: Simplicity Is Underrated

The best financial plans I have seen are simple. They have 5-7 funds, not 25. They have 2-3 insurance policies, not 10. They have a clear written goal for each investment, a known review date, and an understood emergency plan. They are not boring – they are efficient.

Complexity in a financial plan is usually a sign that the plan was assembled from multiple unrelated recommendations rather than built from a clear central design. The complexity creates maintenance costs, monitoring burden, and decision fatigue. Simplicity is not a compromise – it is the goal.

Read: The Importance of Financial Planning in Your Life

Good financial advice is not primarily about products or returns. It is about purpose, behaviour, discipline, and simplicity. These ten principles will serve you better over a 30-year investing career than any fund selection framework.

It is not a numbers game. It is a mind game.

Which of these ten principles is most absent from your current financial plan?

A RetireWise engagement starts with purpose, not products. We build plans that integrate all ten principles from the first conversation.

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Your Turn

Which of these ten principles resonates most with where you are in your financial journey right now? Share in the comments.

Mutual Fund Pollution: Why Too Many Schemes Is Costing You Money

A client came to me last year with a spreadsheet of his investments. He had been investing for eleven years. The spreadsheet had 23 mutual fund schemes across 7 AMCs.

When I asked him to explain the difference between his three large-cap funds, he could not. When I asked why he had both a flexicap and a multicap, he said his previous distributor had recommended both at different times. When I asked about the small-cap fund he had bought in January 2024 – right after small-caps had delivered 60% returns in 2023 – he went quiet.

This is mutual fund pollution. Not a systemic problem with mutual funds as an asset class. A behavioural problem with how retail investors accumulate schemes over time – usually through a combination of poor advice, recency bias, and the industry’s relentless output of new fund offers.

Quick Answer

Mutual fund pollution is what happens when an investor accumulates too many schemes with overlapping mandates – usually through years of piecemeal advice, NFO chasing, or recency-driven switches. In 2026, India has over 44 AMCs managing more than 2,500 mutual fund schemes with a total AUM of Rs. 67+ lakh crore. Most retail investors need 4 to 6 schemes at most for a well-diversified portfolio. If you own more than 8 to 10 schemes, you almost certainly have a khichdi portfolio that needs cleaning up.

Mutual Fund Pollution - Too Many Schemes in Portfolio India

Table of Contents

What Is Mutual Fund Pollution?

The term “mutual fund pollution” captures the problem of too much choice creating worse outcomes. India’s mutual fund industry has grown dramatically – from Rs. 14 lakh crore in AUM in 2016 to over Rs. 67 lakh crore in 2026. The number of schemes has grown alongside it.

Over 2,500 active schemes across 44+ AMCs means the average investor faces a genuinely bewildering menu. The problem is compounded by three forces working against rational portfolio construction.

First, AMCs have commercial incentives to keep launching new schemes. A new NFO generates fresh commission income, gets media coverage, and gives distributors a reason to call clients. The fund house that launches a new thematic fund just as that theme is peaking can gather significant AUM before the inevitable underperformance arrives.

Second, the recency bias is powerful in investing. Whatever delivered strong returns last year attracts money this year, even when the conditions that drove those returns no longer exist. Small-cap funds in 2024. PSU funds in 2023. International funds in 2021. Each cycle mints a new category of trend-chasing investors.

Third, most retail investors never consolidate. They add new funds but rarely remove old ones. The portfolio that started with 3 good funds in 2015 has grown to 18 schemes by 2026 with no clear strategy connecting any of them.

“Psychologists have already proven that too many choices lead to worse decisions or no decision at all. The mutual fund investor with 23 schemes is not more diversified than the one with 6 well-chosen schemes. He is more confused, more costly, and almost certainly underperforming the simpler portfolio.”

How Investors End Up With Too Many Schemes

The accumulation usually happens gradually, through predictable patterns.

Multiple advisors or distributors over time. Each relationship produces its own set of recommendations. The portfolio becomes a graveyard of advice from people who are no longer involved. The investor keeps paying expense ratios on schemes they barely remember buying.

NFO chasing. New Fund Offers are aggressively marketed, often with the incorrect claim that a Rs. 10 NAV is “cheaper” than a Rs. 100 NAV. NAV is not a price – it reflects accumulated returns on the original investment. A fund with Rs. 100 NAV that has delivered 15% CAGR is better than a new fund at Rs. 10 NAV with no track record. NFOs exist to gather assets for the AMC, not to deliver superior returns to investors.

Performance chasing. When a category delivers exceptional returns, inflows surge. By the time most retail money arrives, the easy returns have been made. The investor who bought 3 different small-cap funds in 2024 after 60% returns in 2023 now holds identical, overlapping positions bought at elevated valuations.

Theme funds for every cycle. Infrastructure, defence, consumption, digital, healthcare, green energy. Every cycle produces its own themed NFOs. An investor who bought one theme fund in each of the last five years now has concentrated, correlated bets across five different “diversified” positions.

What SEBI Did About It in 2017 – and What It Did Not Fix

In 2017, SEBI recognized the proliferation problem and introduced a comprehensive scheme categorization and rationalization framework. AMCs were required to merge or close overlapping schemes and maintain only one fund per defined category. Large-cap, mid-cap, small-cap, flexi-cap, multi-cap, value, contra – each category was precisely defined, and AMCs could offer only one scheme in each.

This helped significantly. The number of schemes dropped, category definitions became standardized, and investors could at least compare like with like. AMFI’s data on category returns became meaningful.

What SEBI’s framework did not fix: the proliferation of thematic and sectoral funds, which remain largely unregulated in terms of category limits. It also did not address hybrid and solution-oriented funds, which have continued to multiply. And it did nothing about investor behaviour – the tendency to add new schemes without consolidating old ones.

The industry’s response was creative: AMCs that could no longer launch duplicate large-cap funds launched “focused” large-cap funds, “value” large-cap funds, and “ESG” large-cap funds instead. The spirit of rationalization was partially fulfilled. The commercial incentive to keep multiplying products was not.

Signs You Have a Khichdi Portfolio

A khichdi portfolio – named for the mixed grain dish that combines everything into an undifferentiated mass – has recognizable symptoms.

You own more than 3 large-cap or index funds. You have multiple flexi-cap or multi-cap schemes from different AMCs. You have funds from every category that performed well in the last five years, but no clear strategy connecting them. You cannot explain in one sentence what role each fund plays in your portfolio. Your total SIP across 15 funds is Rs. 25,000 per month – meaning each scheme gets less than Rs. 2,000, too small to matter. You have held an NFO from 2018 that has returned 3% annualized, and you have not touched it because “it might recover.”

The Over-Diversification Trap

Owning 20 mutual fund schemes does not reduce risk more than owning 6. Each diversified equity fund already holds 50 to 150 stocks. Two large-cap funds typically own 80% of the same stocks. Three of them gives you essentially one large-cap position with three sets of expense ratios. True diversification comes from asset class diversification – equity, debt, gold – not from multiplying equity schemes within the same category.

How Many Funds Do You Actually Need?

A well-constructed portfolio for most Indian investors needs 4 to 6 schemes, not 15 to 20. Here is a reasonable structure for a long-term equity-oriented investor:

One large-cap index fund (Nifty 50 or Sensex) as the core equity position. One flexi-cap or multi-cap fund for active mid and small-cap exposure. One mid-cap or small-cap fund if you have a 10+ year horizon and high risk tolerance. One international equity fund for geographic diversification (optional, capped at 10 to 15% of equity). One liquid fund for emergency corpus. One short-duration debt fund for medium-term goals.

That is six schemes covering the full spectrum of what most investors need. Any scheme beyond these six should justify its presence by doing something none of the six can do. If it cannot, it is pollution.

How to Clean Up a Polluted Portfolio

Portfolio consolidation requires methodical analysis, not hasty selling. A few principles to follow.

Categorize before you cut. List every scheme with its SEBI category (large-cap, mid-cap, etc.), the current value, the XIRR since purchase, and the exit load status. This gives you the full picture before making any decisions.

Identify duplicates within categories. If you have three large-cap funds, you almost certainly need at most one. If you have two flexi-cap funds, one should go. Keep the one with the better long-term track record relative to its category benchmark, better fund management consistency, and lower expense ratio.

Handle tax implications thoughtfully. Redemptions trigger capital gains tax. For equity funds held more than a year, LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%. For funds held less than a year, STCG is 20%. Do not redeem everything at once – spread redemptions across financial years to manage the tax impact. For ELSS funds, ensure the 3-year lock-in has been satisfied before redeeming.

Do not move SIPs from old schemes to new ones without reason. The most common mistake in consolidation is selling an underperforming fund to buy a recently outperforming one. That is the same recency bias that created the polluted portfolio in the first place. Only consolidate into schemes you would buy if you were starting fresh today.

For more on portfolio construction, see our article on 10 investment mistakes that cost Indian investors lakhs.

The One-Sentence Test

For every fund in your portfolio, write one sentence explaining what role it plays and why you own it. If you cannot write that sentence, the fund does not belong in your portfolio. This single exercise, done honestly, will identify most of the pollution.

Is Your Portfolio a Strategy or a Collection?

RetireWise helps executives build retirement portfolios where every holding serves a specific purpose tied to a specific goal. If you are sitting on a cluttered mix of schemes with no clear structure, explore how we approach portfolio planning.

See Our Services

Frequently Asked Questions

How many mutual fund schemes should I have in my portfolio?
For most investors, 4 to 6 schemes across different asset classes and sub-categories is sufficient for genuine diversification. Beyond 8 to 10 schemes, each additional fund adds administrative complexity and overlapping holdings without meaningfully reducing risk. The goal is a purposeful portfolio where each scheme has a clear role, not a large collection of schemes.

Is it bad to have too many mutual funds?
Yes, for several reasons. Overlapping holdings mean you are paying multiple expense ratios for essentially the same underlying stocks. Tracking and reviewing a large portfolio is harder, leading to less active oversight. Behavioural complexity increases – more schemes means more emotional attachment to individual positions, making rational rebalancing harder. And the dilution effect means no individual holding has meaningful impact on overall performance.

Should I stop my SIPs in underperforming funds?
It depends on the reason for underperformance. If a fund has consistently underperformed its category peers over 3 to 5 years and the underperformance is structural (not just a bad recent quarter), stopping the SIP and redirecting to a better fund in the same category is reasonable. But switching between top-performing funds every 1 to 2 years based on recent performance is exactly the behaviour that destroys returns. Evaluate relative to category benchmark, not absolute returns.

Are NFOs worth investing in?
Rarely. An NFO is a new mutual fund with no track record, no existing portfolio, and a marketing budget. The Rs. 10 NAV is not a price advantage – it is just a starting point. An established fund with a 10-year track record in the same category, a consistent fund manager, and a demonstrated investment process is almost always a better choice than a new fund in the same space. The exception: if an NFO introduces a genuinely new category or investment mandate that nothing in the market covers. That is rare.

Before You Go

Related reading: 10 Investment Mistakes That Cost Indian Investors Lakhs and Why You Should Be Sceptical of Investment Gurus.

How many mutual fund schemes do you currently hold – and do you know the role each one plays? Share in the comments below.

One question for you: If you applied the one-sentence test to every scheme in your portfolio today, how many would survive it?

Greater Fool Theory & Indian Real Estate — Why “Someone Will Buy It Higher” is a Trap

A client of mine — Ravi (name changed), a Bangalore CTO — called me in 2015 wanting to buy his fourth flat. “Hemant, prices are only going up. Land is finite. I’ll sell it in 5 years for double.” I asked him one question: “Who will pay double?” He paused. “Someone will. Someone always does.”

That’s the Greater Fool Theory in one sentence. You buy something overpriced because you believe a bigger fool will eventually pay even more. It works — until it doesn’t. And when it stops working, the person holding the parcel when the music stops is the biggest fool in the room.

Ravi bought that fourth flat in a Whitefield high-rise. Eleven years later, in 2026, its price is 12% below what he paid. Not 12% up per year — 12% below purchase price, in total. That’s the Greater Fool Theory meeting Indian real estate reality.

⚡ Quick Answer

The Greater Fool Theory says you can buy any overpriced asset because someone will pay more for it later. It works in rising markets and catastrophically fails in bubbles. Indian real estate has been in a flat-to-down phase in many markets since 2014 — price appreciation has averaged just 2-4% per year in most cities, often below inflation. The “greater fool” didn’t show up. For most Indian families in 2026, residential real estate has been a disappointing wealth-building tool compared to equity mutual funds.

What is the Greater Fool Theory?

The Greater Fool Theory is a belief — a hope, really — that there will always be another investor willing to buy an asset from you at a higher price, no matter how overpriced it already is. You’re not buying based on fundamentals. You’re buying based on the assumption that someone else will buy from you later.

This is how bubbles form. In real estate, equities, gold, crypto — anywhere the theory operates, prices can disconnect from intrinsic value for years. A house that should cost Rs 50 lakh ends up selling at Rs 1.5 crore, not because it’s worth 1.5 crore, but because someone expects to sell it at 2 crore next year.

When the music stops, there’s no “greater fool” to take it off your hands. You are the greater fool.

The US Housing Bubble — The Textbook Example

Between 2000 and 2006, US housing prices went vertical. People bought second and third homes purely because prices were rising. Lenders handed out mortgages to buyers who couldn’t afford them, because “house prices always go up.” By 2007-08, interest rates rose, demand collapsed, and prices crashed 30-40% nationally.

The result? 10 million Americans lost their homes. Trillions in household wealth evaporated. A generation of Americans who had treated real estate as a sure-thing investment learned that “sure things” don’t exist in markets.

“The four most dangerous words in investing are: This time it’s different. Every bubble is driven by people who believe their market is exempt from the laws of finance. Every bubble proves them wrong.”

Indian Real Estate — What Actually Happened (2012-2026)

The Indian real estate story is more complex than the US crash. We didn’t have a sudden collapse. We had something worse — a slow, grinding decade of stagnation that quietly destroyed wealth without anyone noticing.

Period Indian Real Estate Story
2004-2012 Boom years. Prices doubled and tripled in metro cities. Easy black money. Speculative investors dominant.
2013-2016 Stagnation begins. New launches fall sharply. RBI tightens real estate lending.
2016 (Nov) Demonetisation hits real estate harder than any other asset class. Unsold inventory peaks.
2017 RERA (Real Estate Regulatory Authority) enacted. GST on under-construction property.
2018-2020 IL&FS crisis, NBFC crisis, COVID. Multiple headwinds hit the sector.
2021-2023 Partial recovery in top-tier cities. Mumbai, Bangalore, Pune see 6-10% price growth. But older inventory still stuck.
2024-2026 Premium segment (Rs 2+ crore) sees strong demand. Affordable housing (under Rs 50 lakh) remains soft. Tier-2 cities mixed.

Real Estate vs Equity Mutual Funds — 15 Years Later

Here’s the uncomfortable comparison my clients hate to see. If you had invested Rs 50 lakh in a Mumbai flat in 2010, and another Rs 50 lakh in a Nifty 50 index fund, here’s roughly where you’d be in 2026:

Investment Value in 2026 (approx.) Annualised Return
Rs 50 lakh in Mumbai flat (2010) Rs 90 lakh – 1.1 crore ~4-5% CAGR
Rs 50 lakh in Nifty 50 Index Fund Rs 2.2 – 2.8 crore ~10-11% CAGR

Note: Real estate returns are before factoring maintenance, property tax, society charges, and transaction costs — which typically reduce net returns by 1-2%. Mutual fund returns are post expense ratio.

And here’s the kicker — the mutual fund is liquid. You can sell it in two days. The flat? It might take 6-18 months to find a genuine buyer. Sometimes longer. And you’ll pay 1-2% brokerage on sale.

Stuck with an underperforming property investment?

A fresh set of eyes can help you decide — hold, sell, or restructure. Unbiased advice, no real estate agent commissions involved.

Talk to a SEBI-Registered Advisor

Why the “Greater Fool” Stops Showing Up

Every asset class eventually runs out of greater fools. Here’s why it happened to Indian real estate:

1. Affordability broke. By 2013, home prices in metro India had crossed 15-20x the annual household income. Historically, anything above 5-7x is unsustainable. People simply couldn’t buy at those prices.

2. Black money tightened. Demonetisation (2016) and stricter tax enforcement after 2017 cut off the unaccounted money that fuelled the boom. RERA brought transparency. Investors with white money started asking hard questions.

3. Rental yields stayed pathetic. Indian residential real estate yields 2-3% gross rental. After maintenance, it’s often 1-2% net. A fixed deposit gives you more — without the tenant headaches.

4. Alternative investments opened up. Mutual funds, NPS, and equity broker accounts democratised. Young Indians in their 30s discovered they didn’t need to buy a flat to build wealth. Renting + SIPing became a legitimate strategy.

When is Real Estate Still Worth Buying?

Let me be balanced. Real estate is not always a bad investment. Here’s when it makes sense:

1 You’re buying a home to live in

Self-occupied housing is not an investment — it’s a lifestyle choice. The utility of having your own home, the emotional stability, the freedom from landlord issues — these have non-monetary value. Just don’t confuse your home with an investment.

2 You have significant idle cash and want diversification

If your portfolio is heavily skewed to equities, adding some real estate (including REITs) can provide diversification. But this is asset allocation, not speculation.

3 Commercial real estate with a proven rental income

Commercial properties in established business districts can yield 6-9% rental income, which is better than residential. But this requires expertise and capital most individual investors don’t have.

The Endowment Effect — Why We Can’t Sell

Back to Ravi, my client with the four flats. When I suggested he sell two of them, he resisted. “I’ve held these for years, Hemant. I can’t sell at a loss.” That’s the Endowment Effect — we value things more just because we own them. Even if selling is the rational move, emotionally we feel we’re being robbed.

I had another client with two plots in Bangalore. He was building a house on one, and the other was sitting idle. Selling the second plot would have cleared his home loan and saved him Rs 15 lakh in interest. But he “felt” he could make more by holding. Eight years later, the plot is worth almost exactly what he paid — while the home loan interest he kept paying crossed Rs 28 lakh.

The math was clear. The emotion wasn’t. Emotion won.

What Should You Actually Do?

If you’re sitting on overpriced real estate, here’s my practitioner advice:

Stop waiting for the “right price.” If the market is flat or declining, waiting just means opportunity cost mounts. Money locked in a non-performing asset is money not compounding elsewhere.

Cut one property if you own many. If you have 3+ residential properties beyond your own home, ask honestly: are they earning what a mutual fund SIP would have earned? Usually not. Sell the weakest, redeploy to equity.

Clear debt before holding idle plots. A home loan at 9% is a guaranteed 9% return on any money used to close it. A vacant plot is a hope. Pick certainty over hope.

Don’t buy a new property for capital appreciation. In 2026 India, that’s a losing bet for most locations. Buy for use. Invest for growth. Keep them separate.

Not sure if you should hold or sell that investment property?

A structured portfolio review can clarify the opportunity cost and tax implications of holding vs selling.

Get a Portfolio Review

Every bubble is built on the same belief: someone else will pay more. Every bubble is broken by the same reality: eventually, they don’t.

Don’t be the last fool at the table.

💬 Your Turn

Did you buy real estate between 2010-2014 hoping prices would keep doubling? What’s your investment actually worth today? Share honestly in the comments — you’ll be surprised how many others are in the same boat.

Don’t Blame Brand Ambassadors for Your Bad Financial Decisions

A celebrity endorses a product. You buy it. It turns out to be a terrible investment. You lose money.

Who is responsible?

In India, the answer has historically been: the celebrity. Social media storms follow. Court notices are sent. News anchors demand accountability from film stars and cricketers who, until last week, were just promoting a brand.

This happens with some regularity in financial products — housing companies, chit funds, deposits schemes. The celebrity is blamed. The investor is portrayed as the victim of deception.

But there is an uncomfortable truth in all of this that nobody wants to say out loud.

⚡ Quick Answer

Brand ambassadors are paid to improve brand recognition — not to verify product quality, financial soundness, or regulatory compliance. The responsibility for evaluating a financial product before investing lies entirely with the investor. Using a celebrity’s face as a reason to invest is a behavioural bias, not due diligence. This post explains why — and what actual due diligence looks like for financial products.

Don't Blame Brand Ambassadors for Your Wrong Buying Decisions

What a Brand Ambassador Actually Does

A brand ambassador is hired for one purpose: to attach positive associations to a product. The celebrity’s fame, trustworthiness, and aspirational appeal transfer — in the viewer’s mind — to the brand.

This is a marketing function. It has nothing to do with product quality, financial soundness, or regulatory compliance.

When Sachin Tendulkar appeared in an advertisement for a financial product, he was paid to appear in an advertisement. He was not hired to audit the company’s books, verify its regulatory filings, or certify that your money would be safe. The same is true for every celebrity endorsement of every financial product in India.

SEBI recognised this distinction long ago. That is why, since 2012, SEBI has prohibited celebrity endorsements of mutual funds. The regulator’s logic was sound: investment products are not consumer goods. The endorsement of a cricketer cannot substitute for a SEBI registration, a regulated structure, and transparent disclosures.

For insurance products, the rules are different — and more permissive. IRDAI allows celebrity endorsements of insurance products. Which is why, if you watch television, you see well-known faces endorsing life and health insurance regularly.

The Real Question: Why Did You Invest?

When I sit with clients who have lost money in poorly chosen financial products, I always ask: what made you invest in this?

The answers are revealing. Very rarely does someone say: “I reviewed the company’s financials, checked their regulatory status with SEBI or MCA, verified their past track record, and concluded it was a sound investment.”

Far more often, the answer is some version of: “Someone I trusted recommended it,” “The returns sounded good,” “A famous person was associated with it,” or “Everyone in my office was investing.”

None of these are investment rationale. They are social proof and authority bias — two of the most powerful cognitive shortcuts that lead to bad financial decisions. Behavioural finance has documented extensively how these biases drive poor investment choices.

The celebrity’s face on a hoarding is designed specifically to trigger authority bias. “If this person I admire trusts this company, I can too.” The marketing team knows exactly what they are doing when they select an ambassador. The question is whether you know what they are doing.

Are you investing based on logic or on social proof?

A fee-only advisor reviews your existing investments for financial soundness — without being influenced by celebrity associations or marketing.

Talk to a RetireWise Advisor

What Due Diligence Actually Looks Like

For any financial product — a deposit scheme, an investment plan, a housing pre-launch — before committing money, ask these questions:

Is the entity regulated? Banks are regulated by RBI. Mutual funds and brokers by SEBI. Insurance companies by IRDAI. NBFCs by RBI. If someone is taking deposits or investments outside these regulated frameworks, that is a red flag regardless of who endorses them.

Is SEBI/RBI registration verifiable? Every regulated entity has a registration number. You can verify it on the SEBI website, the RBI website, or the MCA portal in minutes. If you cannot find the registration, do not invest.

What is the track record? How long has this company been operating? What do their audited financials show? Has there been any regulatory action against them? News searches and ROC filings are publicly available.

What is the actual product structure? A “guaranteed return” scheme that is not an FD from a scheduled bank is not actually guaranteed. Understand exactly what you are investing in, what risk you are taking, and what recourse you have if things go wrong.

Who else has verified this? Not a friend, not a celebrity — a SEBI-registered advisor who has no commission interest in whether you buy or don’t buy.

Celebrities Who Chose Responsibly

To be fair to celebrities: some have drawn their own lines. Amitabh Bachchan stopped endorsing a cola brand after a schoolgirl challenged him publicly about promoting an unhealthy product. Several sportspeople decline tobacco and alcohol endorsements on principle.

In financial products, the same principle applies. A celebrity who declines to endorse an unregulated deposit scheme — even for a large fee — is exercising exactly the kind of responsibility critics demand. And there are some who do make those calls.

But even the most responsible celebrity cannot be your financial research department. Their decision to endorse a product is an economic and personal choice — not a certification of the product’s soundness.

The Accountability That Actually Matters

SEBI and IRDAI are steadily tightening rules around celebrity endorsements of financial products — requiring disclaimers, restricting certain categories, and holding promoters accountable for misleading advertisements. These regulatory improvements are genuinely useful.

But regulatory protection has limits. The most robust protection is your own judgement. Mis-selling is far harder to execute on an informed investor than on one who makes decisions based on trust and social proof.

The celebrity on the hoarding is doing their job. Are you doing yours?

Frequently Asked Questions

Are celebrities legally liable if a financial product they endorse turns out to be a fraud?

Under SEBI’s 2023 advertisement regulations and consumer protection laws, celebrities can be held liable if they endorsed a product with false claims and had reasonable means to verify those claims. SEBI can impose penalties on brand ambassadors for misleading financial advertisements. However, criminal liability is typically reserved for promoters and directors who perpetuated the fraud — celebrities are usually pursued civilly for damages or through SEBI enforcement rather than criminal prosecution. The regulatory framework is tightening, but enforcement remains inconsistent.

Why does SEBI ban celebrity endorsements of mutual funds but IRDAI allows them for insurance?

SEBI’s position is that investment products require investors to make risk-based decisions — and celebrity associations can impair that rational assessment by creating false authority. Insurance is regulated by IRDAI which has a different philosophy: insurance is a protection product and brand awareness is considered a legitimate marketing goal. The inconsistency is real and has been debated. Critics argue that insurance products — particularly ULIPs — have as much complexity and investment risk as mutual funds, and deserve equally strict endorsement rules.

How do I verify if a financial company is genuinely registered with SEBI or RBI before investing?

SEBI-registered entities (mutual funds, stockbrokers, investment advisors, portfolio managers): check sebi.gov.in under the “Intermediaries/Market Infrastructure Institutions” section. RBI-regulated entities (banks, NBFCs): check rbi.org.in under “Financial Education” or the NBFC list. MCA/ROC for company registration: check mcaportal.gov.in. Any investment scheme that does not appear in these registries — regardless of who endorses it — should not receive your money.

What is authority bias in investing and how do I avoid it?

Authority bias is the tendency to trust information or endorsements from people perceived as having high status — celebrities, successful businesspeople, prominent public figures. In investing, it causes people to mistake fame for financial expertise. The defence is simple: separate the celebrity’s fame from the product’s fundamentals. Ask: would I invest in this product if no famous person had endorsed it? If the answer is no, the celebrity is doing work that your analysis should be doing. Never let an endorsement substitute for a regulatory check, a financial review, or advice from a fee-only advisor.

No one is responsible for your money except you. Not the celebrity. Not the agent who sold you the product. Not the friend who recommended it. You. And the only way to exercise that responsibility is to ask the right questions before you invest — not after you’ve lost.

DIY = Destroy It Yourself. But so does investing without asking the right questions.

💬 Your Turn

Have you ever made an investment decision influenced by a celebrity endorsement? And looking back — what was the actual reason you invested, and what should you have checked first? Share below.

The Art of Thinking Clearly in Personal Finance

“Until you can manage your emotions, don’t expect to manage your money.”
– Warren Buffett

A few years ago, I sat across from a client who had been holding a ULIP for eleven years. The returns were poor. The charges had eaten a significant chunk of his corpus. He knew it wasn’t working. And yet he couldn’t bring himself to exit.

“I’ve already put in so much,” he said. “If I leave now, I’ll have wasted everything.”

I asked him one question: “If you hadn’t bought this ULIP, and someone offered it to you today at its current value, would you buy it?” He went quiet. Then he said no.

That silence is where most financial mistakes live. Not in lack of knowledge – in the gap between what we know and what we do.

Rolf Dobelli, in his book The Art of Thinking Clearly, catalogued 99 cognitive errors that systematically distort human decision-making. In personal finance, six of these show up again and again – in my clients, in myself, and in the data. The SEBI Investor Survey 2025, covering over 90,000 households across India, confirmed that behavioural biases remain the single biggest barrier to good financial outcomes – not products, not markets, not advisors.

⚡ Quick Answer

Six cognitive biases consistently destroy financial decisions in India: sunk cost fallacy, herd mentality, confirmation bias, scarcity error, endowment effect, and loss aversion. Each one has a signature symptom. Recognising the symptom in yourself – before you act – is the entire skill.

Cognitive biases that affect financial decisions in India

Why Smart People Make Terrible Financial Decisions

Here is something that still surprises even experienced investors: intelligence does not protect you from cognitive biases. In fact, in some ways it makes you more vulnerable. A smarter person constructs more sophisticated arguments for why their bias is actually rational thinking.

NSE’s own data shows that over 89% of retail derivatives traders in India incur net losses year after year. These are not uninformed people. Many are engineers, doctors, CAs. They have spreadsheets. They have strategies. And they lose money consistently – because a strategy built on a cognitive bias is just an elaborate version of the same mistake.

The six biases below are not abstract theory. Each one has a specific signature. Once you know what it looks like in your own life, you start catching it before it costs you.

1. The Sunk Cost Fallacy – Paying Twice for a Bad Decision

You bought a ticket to a concert. On the day, you’re feeling unwell and have no real desire to go. But you go anyway – because you paid Rs 2,000 for the ticket. You sit through it miserably, leave early, and feel worse than if you’d just stayed home.

The Rs 2,000 is gone whether you go or not. You cannot recover it by attending. And yet we attend.

In investments, this plays out with ULIPs, endowment plans, bad stocks, and underperforming properties that clients hold for years past the point where any rational analysis would say exit. The mental framing is: “I’ve already put in so much.” But the correct question is always the one I asked my client: “Knowing what I know now, would I buy this today?”

Past money spent has zero relevance to future decisions. The only thing that matters is what this investment will do from here.

2. Herd Mentality – The Most Expensive Social Activity

In April 2021, when markets were near all-time highs, SIP registrations hit record levels. By January 2025, after months of corrections, SIP stoppage ratios crossed 100% – more SIPs stopped than were started. Investors poured in at highs. They exited at lows.

This is herd mentality in its purest form. When prices are rising, fear of missing out overrides judgement. When prices are falling, fear overrides judgement in the other direction. In both cases, the crowd is moving, and the individual follows – not because they have analysed the situation, but because everyone else seems to know something they don’t.

The uncomfortable truth is that markets at their most euphoric are the most dangerous – and markets at their most panicked are often the most attractive. Warren Buffett’s instruction to be fearful when others are greedy is not a slogan. It is a description of how money actually moves from impatient hands to patient ones.

3. Confirmation Bias – Only Hearing What You Want to Hear

You’ve decided to buy a particular stock. You search for analysis – and you read everything that confirms your view. Articles suggesting caution get dismissed. Expert opinions disagreeing with you feel “biased.”

I wrote about this in 2011, when gold was at its peak and investors were flooding into gold funds. The comment sections on gold posts at that time are a masterclass in confirmation bias at work. Anyone suggesting caution was challenged aggressively. Anyone predicting higher prices was treated as authoritative. The crowd had decided, and they were hunting for endorsement, not analysis.

The antidote is deliberate discomfort. Before any major financial decision, actively seek out the strongest argument against what you are planning to do. Not to be talked out of it – but to test whether your reasoning holds up. If you cannot articulate why the opposing view might be right, you haven’t thought clearly enough.

The Pre-Mortem Technique

Before any significant financial decision, I ask clients to do a “pre-mortem.” Imagine it is three years from now and this decision turned out badly. What went wrong? Working backwards from an imagined failure forces you to examine the weaknesses in your own thesis – weaknesses that confirmation bias would otherwise keep you from seeing. It is one of the most useful five minutes you can spend before committing to a major investment.

This is not pessimism. It is intellectual honesty – the precondition for any good decision.

4. The Scarcity Error – Urgency That Isn’t Real

You’ve seen the messages. “Only 3 seats left in this webinar.” “NFO closes Friday.” “Last 2 units at this price.” “Offer valid only until midnight.”

Online platforms have perfected the scarcity trigger. A countdown timer creates urgency where none actually exists. The psychology is straightforward: scarcity signals value. If something is running out, it must be worth having.

In investing, this creates FOMO-driven decisions: NFO subscriptions because “everyone is rushing in”, real estate bookings “before prices go up next month”, and insurance policies bought before the “special premium lock-in expires.”

A real investment opportunity does not evaporate because you took two weeks to think about it. If an advisor or distributor is pressuring you with scarcity language, that pressure is itself a warning signal. Good investment decisions are made from calm analysis, not from urgency manufactured by someone with a sales target.

5. The Endowment Effect – Overvaluing What You Already Own

There is a classic experiment in behavioural economics: people are given a coffee mug and then asked to sell it. On average, they demand roughly twice what they would have been willing to pay for the same mug before owning it. The act of ownership inflates perceived value.

In Indian financial life, this shows up most visibly with inherited property. A family that inherited land in Pune in 1980 will value it far above what any rational analysis of rental yield and opportunity cost would justify. They are not holding it because of the numbers. They are holding it because it is theirs – and that ownership has an emotional premium attached to it.

The same applies to stocks bought at Rs 400 that an investor refuses to sell at Rs 490 because “it should reach Rs 500.” The stock does not know what you paid for it. The market will price it at what it is worth – not at what you feel it should be worth because you own it.

The test is simple: if you did not currently own this asset, would you buy it at today’s price? If the answer is no, the endowment effect may be the only reason you’re still holding.

6. Loss Aversion – Why Losing Hurts More Than Winning Feels Good

Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky’s research showed that losses feel roughly twice as painful as equivalent gains feel pleasurable. This asymmetry drives one of the most destructive patterns in investing: selling winners too early and holding losers too long.

A client sells a mutual fund that has given 28% in a year because “I should lock in profits before something goes wrong.” The same client holds a stock down 40% because “I’ll wait for it to come back to my cost price.” The winners leave the portfolio. The losers accumulate.

Over a 10-15 year period, this pattern alone – not market crashes, not bad fund choices – is what separates investors who build wealth from those who don’t. Letting go of a loss feels like admitting failure. But the alternative is paying with years of opportunity cost for the privilege of not admitting it.

The rational framework is the same as with the endowment effect: evaluate every holding on its future prospects, not its history in your portfolio. What it cost you is not a variable. What it will do from here is.

Why Knowing This Is Not Enough

Here is the part that most behavioural finance articles skip: knowing about cognitive biases does not make you immune to them. Kahneman himself, who spent decades studying loss aversion, admitted that knowing about it did not stop him from feeling it.

What actually helps is structure – decisions made in advance, when you are calm, that govern your behaviour when you are not. A written investment policy: “I will rebalance when equity crosses 65% of portfolio.” “I will not react to any market movement within 48 hours of it happening.” “Before exiting any investment, I will run the pre-mortem.”

And the other thing that helps is a trusted advisor who has no emotional stake in your portfolio’s current value – someone who can ask you the question I ask clients: “If you did not already own this, would you buy it today?” That question cuts through every bias listed above. It restores rational framing in a single sentence.

The market rewards clarity of thinking over intensity of research.

A retirement plan that accounts for your behaviour is more valuable than one built only on expected returns.

See How RetireWise Works

Rolf Dobelli’s book catalogues 99 errors. In 25 years of practice, these six have cost my clients more money than all market crashes combined. Not because the crashes aren’t real. But because the biases determined how people responded to them.

The market will always provide opportunities to think clearly. It will also always provide opportunities to do the opposite.

Investing is not a numbers game. It is a mind game. And the opponent is always yourself.

The investor who understands their own biases has already won half the battle.

Your retirement plan needs to survive not just market cycles – but your own reactions to them.

That’s what we build at RetireWise. A plan designed around who you are, not just what you own.

Book a Free 30-Min Call

Your Turn

Which of these six biases has cost you the most – and looking back, what was the moment you first noticed it was operating? Share in the comments below.

How to Make Sure Your Health Insurance Claim Is Not Rejected

“The time to repair the roof is when the sun is shining.”
– John F. Kennedy

A few years ago I went through minor surgery and was hospitalised for a couple of days. Lying there with nothing much to do, I found my mind drifting not to the surgery but to the claim process. Would this be covered? Had I notified the TPA in time? Were all the pre-hospitalisation bills properly receipted?

I am a financial planner. I have been advising on health insurance for 25 years. And I was still anxious about whether my claim would go through smoothly.

That anxiety is avoidable – entirely – if you have done a few things right before the hospitalisation. Most claim rejections in India are not because the policy doesn’t cover the condition. They are because of things the policyholder could have controlled: wrong information at the time of buying, missed timelines, lost documents, staying in the wrong room category.

This post is everything I know about keeping claims from getting rejected.

⚡ Quick Answer

Health insurance claims are most often rejected for: non-disclosure of pre-existing conditions at the time of purchase; staying in a room that exceeds the policy’s room rent cap; filing outside the permitted timeline; missing or incorrect documentation; and claiming for conditions during the waiting period. Avoiding all five is straightforward if you know what to watch for before any hospitalisation happens.

How to ensure your health insurance claim is not rejected India

What Changed: IRDAI’s 2024 Health Insurance Reforms

Before getting into the claim protection checklist, there is important good news. IRDAI issued a landmark Master Circular on Health Insurance in 2024, effective from April 1, 2024. Several changes directly improve your position as a policyholder.

Cashless authorisation is now mandatory to be processed within one hour of receiving the request. Final discharge authorisation must be granted within three hours. If the insurer delays beyond this, any additional hospital charges from that delay must be paid by the insurer – not you. Previously, patients often waited hours past their discharge time because the insurer was slow to respond. That is now the insurer’s problem, not yours.

The age limit for buying health insurance has been removed. Previously, many insurers capped entry age at 65. Now anyone can buy a policy regardless of age. For senior citizens looking to upgrade or port their policy, this matters significantly.

Pre-existing disease waiting periods are now capped at a maximum of 36 months (3 years). Some policies still offer shorter waiting periods – check your document. But no insurer can impose a waiting period longer than 3 years for any pre-existing condition.

Lifetime renewability is now mandatory. An insurer cannot refuse to renew your policy simply because you have had a claim or because you have grown older. Renewal can only be denied for proven fraud.

These are real improvements. But they do not protect you from your own mistakes at the time of purchase or during a claim. That is what the rest of this post covers.

1. Read the Policy Document Before You Need It

This sounds obvious. Almost nobody does it.

The policy document is the contract. The brochure is marketing. The two are not the same. Agents are motivated to sell and may not walk you through exclusions, sub-limits, waiting periods, and room rent caps. You have to read those yourself.

Three things to check immediately after buying:

Room rent cap – many policies cap reimbursement at a percentage of sum insured per day (commonly 1%). If your policy has a sum insured of Rs 5 lakhs and a 1% room rent cap, you are covered for a Rs 5,000 per day room. If you stay in a Rs 10,000 room, not only is the room excess your problem – the insurer can proportionately reduce all associated expenses (surgeon fees, ICU charges, medicine) because you exceeded the room cap. This is the single most misunderstood clause in Indian health insurance.

Pre-existing disease waiting period – what conditions are excluded for the first 1, 2, or 3 years of the policy. Know this before you need hospitalisation for anything related to your existing health conditions.

List of network hospitals – if you go to a non-network hospital, cashless is not available and you will need to file for reimbursement. In an emergency this may be unavoidable, but for elective procedures you should know your network.

The 23-Hour Hospitalisation Trap

Most health insurance policies require a minimum 24-hour hospitalisation for the claim to be valid. I have personally come across a case where a hospital discharged a patient after 23 hours – one hour short of the requirement – and the claim was denied. This was not a technicality the insurer invented; it was written clearly in the policy. Before any planned hospitalisation, confirm the minimum stay requirement and ensure the hospital admission records reflect the correct admission time.

Day-care procedures (cataract surgery, dialysis, chemotherapy, etc.) are exceptions – they are covered even without 24-hour stay. Check your policy for the complete list of covered day-care procedures.

2. Disclose Everything at the Time of Purchase

The single biggest cause of claim rejection in India is non-disclosure or incorrect disclosure of pre-existing medical conditions when the policy is bought.

I understand the temptation. You worry that disclosing diabetes or hypertension will make the premium higher or the application rejected. But the consequences of non-disclosure at the time of claim are far worse: the insurer can repudiate the claim entirely on grounds of material misrepresentation, and they will.

Disclose everything: current medical conditions, past surgeries, medications you are currently taking, family medical history if asked. Fill the application form yourself rather than letting the agent fill it – and read it before signing. You are the one who will bear the consequences of errors.

The rule is simple: when in doubt, disclose. The worst case scenario at the time of purchase is a loading on the premium or exclusion of a specific condition. The worst case scenario at the time of claim is the entire claim being denied.

3. Renew on Time – Every Year Without Exception

Health insurance is a continuous cover built on the history of the policy. If you let it lapse and then renew, the new policy is treated as a fresh purchase in most respects – waiting periods reset, no-claim bonus is lost, and continuous coverage benefits disappear.

Set a calendar reminder 30 days before renewal. Pay before the due date. If you are travelling or cash-strapped in that month, pre-pay the premium even earlier. The disruption of a lapsed policy far outweighs any short-term savings from missing a renewal.

Under IRDAI’s 2024 regulations, you also have a 30-day free look period for new policies. If you receive the policy document and find something materially different from what you were sold, you can return it for a refund within 30 days.

4. Cashless vs Reimbursement: Prefer Cashless

With cashless claims, the hospital settles directly with the insurer or TPA. You pay only the non-covered portions at discharge. With reimbursement, you pay the full bill upfront and then claim it back – which can take weeks and sometimes results in partial settlement disputes.

Under IRDAI’s 2024 mandate, insurers must aim for 100% cashless settlement. Reimbursement should now be the exception (genuinely unavailable network) rather than a default.

For cashless to work: inform the TPA or insurer at admission (pre-authorisation), not after. For planned hospitalisations, inform them 3-5 days in advance. For emergencies, notify them within 24 hours of admission. Keep the TPA helpline number saved in your phone – not on paper that might not be with you in an emergency.

When I had my appendix operation some years ago, I lost a prescription slip for a pre-hospitalisation expense. That single document meant one bill was denied on reimbursement. Now I photograph every bill and prescription on my phone the moment I receive it. Pre-hospitalisation expenses (typically 30 days before admission) and post-hospitalisation expenses (typically 60-90 days after discharge) are covered by most policies. Keep every receipt.

5. Know What Cannot Be Claimed

Most health insurance policies in India exclude: cosmetic or aesthetic procedures; self-inflicted injuries; dental treatment (unless from an accident); spectacles and hearing aids; treatment for alcohol or drug abuse; and infertility treatment. Maternity coverage is typically available as a rider with its own waiting period (usually 2-4 years).

Do not claim for excluded conditions. A rejected claim for an excluded procedure goes on your claims history and can complicate future renewals or portability. Read the exclusions list once when you buy the policy and again before any planned procedure.

6. If Your Claim Is Rejected, Do Not Accept It Silently

Rejection is not the end. If you believe the rejection is unjustified, you have a clear escalation path.

Step 1: File a written complaint with the insurer’s grievance cell. The insurer must respond within 30 days.

Step 2: If unsatisfied, approach the IRDAI Bima Bharosa portal (bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in) or call 155255. IRDAI has significantly strengthened its grievance redressal mechanism in recent years.

Step 3: Approach the Insurance Ombudsman in your region within one year of the claim rejection. The Ombudsman hearing is free, and the decision is binding on the insurer for claims up to Rs 30 lakhs.

Step 4: Consumer court, if the Ombudsman decision is also unsatisfactory.

A close friend of mine had a significant claim rejected. He went to consumer court and received the full amount. The insurer knew the rejection was technical rather than substantive – but they counted on him not pursuing it. He did. You should too.

The Retirement Dimension

Medical inflation in India runs at 11-14% annually – roughly 3 times general inflation. A hospitalisation that costs Rs 5 lakhs today will cost Rs 15-20 lakhs in 15 years. The sum insured that felt adequate when you bought your policy at 40 will be dangerously insufficient at 60 unless you have been actively increasing it.

For anyone approaching retirement, health insurance is not just a nice-to-have. It is one of the most critical components of retirement financial planning. A single major hospitalisation without adequate cover can wipe out years of savings. With adequate cover, the same event is financially contained.

If you are on an employer group health insurance plan, you must have an individual policy running in parallel. The day you retire, the group cover disappears. Buying a fresh individual policy at 60 as a first-time buyer means starting new waiting periods for all pre-existing conditions. Buying it at 45 as a continuous policyholder means those waiting periods are already served.

A health insurance claim rejection at the worst moment – when someone is seriously ill – is not just a financial problem.

It is a family crisis. The five steps above prevent it. They take 30 minutes to implement. Do them today.

See How RetireWise Structures Health Cover

You buy health insurance hoping you will never need it. Make sure that when you do, it actually works.

The time to read the policy is before the hospital bed. Not from it.

Health cover is one of the four pillars of retirement planning we address at RetireWise.

If you are within 10 years of retirement and still on your employer’s group plan, this conversation cannot wait.

Book a Free 30-Min Call

Your Turn

Have you ever had a health insurance claim rejected or partially settled? What was the reason – and looking back, was it avoidable? Share your experience below so others can learn from it.

What Should Women Know About Retirement — A Letter to My Daughter

Dear Daughter,

You’re in your twenties now, and retirement probably feels like it belongs to a different lifetime. I get it. When I was your age, I didn’t think about it either.

But I’ve spent 18+ years sitting across the table from people who are retiring — or trying to — and I need to tell you something that nobody told me when I was young, and that nobody will tell you unless I do.

Retirement is harder for women. Not a little harder. Significantly harder. And the reasons are so deeply woven into how our society works that most women don’t see them until it’s too late.

Cover image for article on what women should know about retirement - women face unique challenges including longer lifespan and career gaps

This isn’t a lecture. It’s a letter. And I’m writing it because I love you enough to say the uncomfortable things.

You Will Probably Live Longer Than Your Husband

I know that sounds strange to write. But it’s one of the most important financial facts a woman can know.

India’s life expectancy is projected to reach 72 years for men and 75.7 years for women by 2030. That’s the average. For an educated, urban woman with access to healthcare — someone like you — the real number could be 82-88. That means if you retire at 58-60, you could spend 25-30 years in retirement. And for several of those years, you may be alone.

Women typically marry men who are a few years older. Women live longer. This means Indian women spend an average of 7-10 years as widows. Those are years when you need financial independence the most — and they’re the exact years when most women discover they don’t have it.

That’s why I’m writing this now. Not when you’re 55.

The Career Breaks Will Cost You More Than You Think

I’ve watched this pattern with dozens of clients. A woman in her early 30s — talented, earning well — takes a break for children. Sometimes two years. Sometimes five. Sometimes she doesn’t go back at all.

Every year you’re not working is a year without EPF contributions, without NPS accumulation, without salary growth. The World Bank estimates that women retire with 25-30% less pension income than men. In India, where women account for less than one-third of all NPS accounts, the gap is likely worse.

But here’s what nobody tells you: the career break doesn’t just cost you those 3-5 years of income. It costs you the compounding on those years for the next 25 years. A ₹30,000 monthly SIP that you pause for 5 years between age 30-35 doesn’t cost you ₹18 lakh (the missed contributions). It costs you ₹1.2 crore+ by the time you’re 60. That’s the invisible price of a career gap on retirement.

I’m not saying don’t take the break. Your mother took hers, and our family is richer for it. I’m saying: know the cost, plan for it, and compensate.

“Your grandmother never had a bank account. Your mother has one but rarely checks it. You — you need to own your money. Not just earn it. Own it. Know where it is, how it’s growing, and what it’s doing for your future.”

— Hemant Beniwal, to his daughter

Never Outsource Your Financial Life

This is the one that worries me most.

I see it in my practice all the time. A couple comes in. The husband knows every fund, every policy, every return percentage. The wife nods. When I ask her a direct question about their finances, she looks at him.

Priya (name changed) lost her husband at 52. He was the “financial person” in the family. She came to me with a drawer full of papers — insurance policies, fixed deposit receipts, mutual fund statements, a property file. She didn’t know the passwords to his accounts. She didn’t know which policies were term and which were investment. She didn’t know whether the house had a loan on it.

It took us three months to just understand what they owned.

Don’t be Priya. Even if your partner manages the finances — and that’s fine — you must know where every rupee is. Know the passwords. Know the nominee structures. Know the difference between term insurance and endowment. Not because your husband is unreliable. Because life is unpredictable.

Financial independence isn’t about earning more. It’s about knowing what you have.

Whether you’re 25 or 55, a retirement plan built specifically for a woman’s longer life, career gaps, and unique risks changes everything.

Plan Your Financial Future

The Things I Want You To Do — Starting Now

I’m not going to give you a textbook list. I’m going to tell you what I’d tell a client I care about deeply — which is exactly what you are.

Start your own retirement account today. Not a joint one. Yours. Open an NPS account in your name. Start an SIP in your name. Even if it’s ₹5,000 a month. The amount matters less than the habit. What matters is that there’s an account in this world that has your name on it and is growing, quietly, for the day you’ll need it.

Get your own health insurance. Not as an add-on to someone else’s policy. Your own. Because the day you’re 60 and need a knee replacement, you shouldn’t have to ask anyone’s permission to get it.

Understand tax. Section 80C, 80CCD, 80D — these aren’t just for your husband’s salary. If you earn, claim your own deductions. Senior citizens now get up to ₹1 lakh deduction on interest income under 80TTB. Build tax efficiency into your plan from the start.

If you take a career break, don’t take a savings break. Keep the SIPs running. Switch to a lower amount if you need to, but don’t stop. The compounding clock doesn’t pause when your career does, and neither should your investments.

Talk to a planner — not the internet, not your relatives. A proper retirement plan accounts for your specific life expectancy, your specific career trajectory, your specific risk of being alone in old age. Generic advice doesn’t. And well-meaning relatives who say “invest in property” are not financial planners.

The Real Reason I’m Writing This

I don’t want you to be dependent. Not on me. Not on a husband. Not on your children. Not on anyone.

Independence isn’t just about money. But without money, independence is just a word. I’ve watched too many women — brilliant, strong, capable women — lose their independence in their 60s because nobody told them what I’m telling you now.

The gender pension gap is real. Women retire with 25-30% less than men. That’s not because women are bad with money. It’s because the system — career breaks, caregiving expectations, lower pay for similar work — quietly steals from their future selves.

Saving for retirement isn’t a boring financial chore. For a woman, it’s an act of self-respect. It’s saying: “I will not be a burden. I will not lose my choices. I will not spend my last years asking someone else whether I can afford a doctor’s visit.”

“The best gift a father can give his daughter isn’t money. It’s the knowledge that she’ll never need to depend on someone else for it.”

— Hemant Beniwal

Women face a longer retirement, more career breaks, and a 25-30% pension gap.

Your retirement plan needs to account for all of it. Let’s build one that does.

Talk to a Retirement Specialist

I wrote this as a letter to my daughter. But if you’re reading this — whether you’re 25, 35, 45, or 55 — consider it addressed to you too. Every woman deserves to retire on her own terms.

Your future self is counting on the choices you make today. Don’t let her down.

With love and a little worry,
Hemant

💬 Your Turn

If you could write one financial lesson to your daughter — or your younger self — what would it be? And are you managing your own retirement savings, or has that been left to someone else? Let’s talk in the comments.