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LIC Jeevan Akshay VII Review: Is This Annuity Plan Worth Your Retirement Money?

“It is the more obligation to honor the right of the citizen to live with dignity even in the retired life.” — Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1935

Ramesh was 62. He’d just received Rs 80 lakh in gratuity after 35 years at a PSU bank.

His relationship manager called the same week. “Sir, LIC Jeevan Akshay. Guaranteed income for life. Safest option for you.”

Ramesh invested Rs 60 lakh. All of it.

When he came to me six months later, there was nothing left to do. The decision was permanent. The money was gone. The income was fixed forever. No exit. No flexibility. No inflation adjustment beyond 3% — in a country where healthcare costs rise at 12 to 15% annually.

He hadn’t bought safety. He’d bought a trap with a guaranteed income label on it.

This post is for anyone who’s been told the same thing — or is about to be.

⚡ Quick Answer

LIC Jeevan Akshay VII (Plan 857) is a single premium immediate annuity plan. You pay a lumpsum once, LIC pays you guaranteed income for life. For a 60-year-old investing Rs 10 lakh under Option A, the annual payout is approximately Rs 1,82,200 — but this includes a return of your own capital, not purely a yield. Annuity income is fully taxable. The plan offers 10 options. The two biggest problems: the decision is irreversible, and the income doesn’t beat inflation. Best used as one income layer in a retirement plan of Rs 3 crore or more — never as your only source.

LIC Jeevan Akshay VII immediate annuity plan review India

What Is an Immediate Annuity — and Why Most People Buy It Wrong

An immediate annuity is simple on paper. You give a lumpsum to an insurance company. They pay you a fixed income every month for the rest of your life. That’s the entire product.

The income starts immediately — typically one month after purchase. The rate is locked at the time of buying and never changes. Not even if interest rates double. Not even if inflation doubles.

This is where most people make the mistake.

They hear “guaranteed income for life” and they think “safe.” But there’s a critical difference between guaranteed and adequate. Jeevan Akshay guarantees you’ll receive income. It doesn’t guarantee that income will keep up with your life.

The other thing people miss: with an FD or SCSS, your principal is still yours. With an immediate annuity, your lumpsum is gone permanently. You’re exchanging capital for income — forever.

🌾 Think of it like buying a cow that produces milk every day for life. You pay once. The cow never stops giving milk. But you can never sell the cow back. The milk amount is fixed — it never increases, unless you specifically bought the cow that gives 3% more milk each year. And that cow costs more upfront.

LIC Jeevan Akshay VII: What the Current Plan Actually Offers

LIC Jeevan Akshay VII (Plan 857, UIN 512N337V04) is the current version. The older Jeevan Akshay VI has been discontinued. If someone’s showing you Jeevan Akshay VI brochures, walk away — that plan no longer exists.

Plan 857 is non-participating and non-linked — meaning no market exposure, no bonuses, no upside. What you see at purchase is what you get for life.

  • Minimum purchase: Rs 1 lakh (age 30+) or Rs 10 lakh (age 25–29)
  • No maximum limit
  • Available online and offline — online purchase gives a 2% higher annuity rate
  • GST of 1.8% is payable on the purchase price at the time of investment
  • Annuity can be paid monthly, quarterly, half-yearly, or annually

The 10 Annuity Options — and the One Decision You Cannot Undo

One significant upgrade in Plan 857 over the old Jeevan Akshay VI is the expansion from 7 to 10 annuity options. Choose carefully. Once you choose, it’s permanent.

Option What You Get What Happens After Death Best For
A Life annuity — highest payout Payments stop. Nothing to nominee. Maximum income, no inheritance goals
B, C, D, E Life + guaranteed period (5/10/15/20 years) Nominee gets remaining payments if death within guaranteed period Some death benefit protection
F Life + return of purchase price on death Full purchase price returned to nominee Corpus preservation for heirs
G Life + 3% annual increase Payments stop on death Inflation-conscious (partial protection only)
H, I Joint life — 50% or 100% to surviving spouse Reduced annuity continues to surviving spouse Couples wanting spouse protection
J Joint life + 100% to spouse + return of purchase price Full purchase price to nominee after both pass Couples wanting full corpus preservation

Critical note: Loan facility and surrender are available only under Options F and J. For every other option — A, B, C, D, E, G, H, I — there’s no exit and no loan. Ever.

What Are the Actual Payouts? (And the Number That Misleads You)

Rates vary by age, option, and purchase price. Online purchase adds ~2%. Here are illustrative figures for a 60-year-old male:

Purchase Price Option A — Annual Payout Approximate Monthly Note
Rs 10 lakh Rs 1,82,200/year ~Rs 15,183/month Includes your own capital being returned
Rs 50 lakh ~Rs 9,11,000/year ~Rs 75,917/month Includes your own capital being returned
Rs 50 lakh (Joint, Option J) Rs 3,34,500/year + corpus back ~Rs 27,875/month Real yield ~6 to 6.5% since corpus is returned

Illustrative rates based on liccalculator.in (2026). Actual rates vary by age, gender, and policy date. Verify at licindia.in before purchase.

🚨 The number that misleads everyone: The Rs 1,82,200 payout on Rs 10 lakh isn’t an 18.2% interest rate. It’s a payout ratio that blends yield plus a gradual return of your own capital over your expected lifespan. Strip out the capital return, and the actual yield is approximately 5.5 to 6.5% per annum for a 60-year-old. After 30% tax, that drops to 3.8 to 4.5%. Against India’s 6 to 7% consumer inflation, you’re effectively earning negative real returns on money that’s permanently gone. Meanwhile, SCSS at 8.2% keeps your full principal intact and delivers 5.7% post-tax.

The Private Insurers Are Now Worth Comparing

When the original version of this post was written, LIC held over 95% of India’s annuity market. That’s changed. ICICI Prudential Life, HDFC Life, SBI Life, and Bajaj Allianz all offer immediate annuity products worth evaluating.

Rates differ meaningfully by age and option. Don’t default to LIC because of brand name. Run a comparison before committing.

That said, the two structural limitations of annuity products remain the same regardless of insurer. First, annuity income is fully taxable at your slab rate — no special treatment. Second, most high-payout options leave nothing for your heirs. The money goes to the insurer when you die.

The 3% annual increase option (Option G) offers some inflation cover. But India’s consumer inflation averages 6 to 7% and healthcare runs at 12 to 15%. 3% annual increase isn’t inflation protection. It’s inflation delay.

For a deeper look at structuring retirement income beyond annuities, read our post on NPS and the annuity problem in Indian retirement planning.

Annuity vs SCSS vs FD: The Honest Head-to-Head

Factor LIC Jeevan Akshay VII SCSS Bank FD (Senior Citizen)
Income guarantee For life — never runs out 5 years (extendable) Fixed term
Your principal Gone permanently (except F, J) Fully intact Fully intact
Taxation Fully taxable Fully taxable Fully taxable
Inflation protection 3% option only — not enough None Can reinvest at new rates
Longevity protection Pays for life regardless Stops after term Stops after term
Can you get money back? No (except F/J options) Yes — good liquidity Yes (with penalty)

The annuity wins on exactly one thing: it can’t run out. If your family has longevity history and you genuinely fear outliving a Rs 3 to 4 crore corpus, that one feature is worth paying for. For everyone else, SCSS plus FD plus debt SWP gives you similar income, complete flexibility, and your principal intact.

The Real Disadvantages Nobody Tells You

The yield problem is first. For a 60-year-old on Option A, the payout includes both a yield component and your own capital being returned gradually. Strip out the capital return, and the real yield is approximately 5.5 to 6.5% — not the headline payout ratio. After 30% tax, you’re looking at 3.8 to 4.5%. Against 6 to 7% inflation, that’s effectively negative in real terms. And it never improves.

The permanence problem is second. Once signed, there’s no going back for most options. Health changes. Tax laws change. Your needs change. The annuity doesn’t. The same Rs 50 lakh kept in a mix of SCSS, FDs, and a debt mutual fund SWP gives you income, flexibility, and emergency access — all three. The annuity gives you income alone.

The inheritance problem is third. Options A, G, H, and I leave nothing to your heirs. The money goes to LIC when you die. Options F and J return the original purchase price to nominees — but not inflation-adjusted. Rs 50 lakh in 2026 becomes Rs 50 lakh for your heirs in 2046. In real terms, that’s roughly Rs 15 to 18 lakh today.

💡 How to think about this product correctly: An annuity isn’t an investment. It’s longevity insurance. You’re paying a premium to protect against the single risk of outliving your money. If that risk is real for you — and your corpus is large enough — a small annuity allocation makes sense. If your entire retirement plan sits in an annuity, you haven’t planned for retirement. You’ve paid for the illusion of planning.

For a complete picture of retirement income layering — bucket strategy, SWP, SCSS, and when annuity fits in — read our article on the best investment options for senior citizens in India.

Should You Buy LIC Jeevan Akshay VII? The Honest Verdict

This product makes sense for a specific, narrow profile. You’re 60 or above. You’ve already built a retirement corpus of Rs 3 crore or more through equity, PPF, and EPF. You have a spouse to protect. And you fear one or both of you will live into your 80s or 90s.

In that case, allocating 10 to 15% of your corpus — roughly Rs 30 to 45 lakh on a Rs 3 crore base — to a joint life annuity under Option J creates a guaranteed income floor that no market crash can touch. It’s not your entire retirement. It’s your floor.

What this isn’t suitable for: being your primary retirement income. Ramesh’s mistake was putting Rs 60 lakh into an annuity when that was most of what he had. A floor needs walls. An annuity needs the rest of your plan to be working alongside it.

Always buy online — the 2% rebate is real money over a lifetime. Always compare HDFC Life, ICICI Prudential Life, and SBI Life rates alongside LIC before committing. Don’t assume LIC is cheapest or best simply because of name recognition.

The RetireWise Verdict on LIC Jeevan Akshay VII

Use only if: retirement corpus is Rs 3 crore or more, longevity risk is real, and a guaranteed income floor is genuinely needed. Allocate Rs 30 to 60 lakh maximum — never your entire corpus. Choose Option J for couples who want corpus returned to heirs. Buy online. Compare competing insurers first. Don’t buy this because a bank RM called you. Buy it because it solves a specific problem in a plan that already works.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the annuity income from LIC Jeevan Akshay VII taxable?

Yes, fully. Annuity income is added to your total income and taxed at your applicable slab rate. No special exemption. If you’re in the 30% bracket, your post-tax real yield is close to or below inflation. Always calculate post-tax returns before comparing with other instruments.

What is the difference between LIC Jeevan Akshay VI and VII?

Jeevan Akshay VI has been discontinued. Jeevan Akshay VII (Plan 857) is the current plan, launched in 2020. Key changes: expanded from 7 to 10 annuity options, added joint life flexibility, introduced loan facility under Options F and J, and raised minimum purchase price for ages 25–29 to Rs 10 lakh.

Can I surrender LIC Jeevan Akshay VII?

Only under Options F and J — and only after 3 months from policy issuance or after the free-look period, whichever is later. For all other options, there’s no exit. Once purchased, it’s permanent.

Which annuity option is best in LIC Jeevan Akshay VII?

No single answer — it depends on your goals. Option A gives maximum income but nothing to heirs. Option J gives joint life protection with full corpus return to nominees — the best choice for most RetireWise clients. Option G offers 3% annual increase but it’s still below actual inflation rates in India.

Is there a tax benefit on buying LIC Jeevan Akshay VII?

The purchase price qualifies for deduction under Section 80CCC, within the Rs 1.5 lakh Section 80C limit. Under the new tax regime, this deduction isn’t available. GST at 1.8% is payable on the purchase price at the time of investment.

Is LIC Jeevan Akshay better than a bank FD for retirement income?

For one specific purpose, yes — it pays for life regardless of how long you live. An FD can’t do that. But an FD keeps your principal, gives you liquidity, and allows reinvestment at better rates when terms end. For most retirees, SCSS plus senior citizen FDs plus a debt SWP is a more flexible and wealth-preserving combination than an annuity alone.

Thinking about where annuity fits in your retirement plan?

At RetireWise, we build layered retirement income plans for senior executives — annuity, SWP, SCSS, and equity working together. Every client situation is different. Let us show you how yours fits together.

Talk to a Retirement Specialist

An annuity guarantees you’ll never run out of income. It doesn’t guarantee the income will be enough.

Use it as a floor. Never as a ceiling.

💬 Your Turn

Have you bought an annuity — or consciously decided against it? What made the difference? Share below, it helps other readers make a more informed decision.

Originally reviewed by Jitendra PS Solanki, CFP. Updated and significantly expanded by Hemant Beniwal, SEBI-registered RIA, to reflect LIC Jeevan Akshay VII (Plan 857) and 2026 market conditions.

5 Financial Steps to Complete Before You Start Your Own Business

Every year around appraisal season, I get a surge of enquiries from professionals in their 30s and 40s who are seriously considering leaving their jobs to start something of their own.

The increment disappointed. The promotion did not come. The politics became unbearable. And the business idea that has been sitting in the back of their mind for three years suddenly feels very compelling.

I am not against entrepreneurship. Some of my most financially successful clients built their own businesses. But I have also seen professionals ruin their financial lives by jumping into entrepreneurship without adequate preparation — burning through their retirement savings, damaging their credit, and returning to employment three years later with nothing to show for it.

The difference between the two groups is almost always how well they prepared before they quit.

⚡ Quick Answer

Before starting a business, you need: 18-24 months of personal expenses in a separate emergency fund, zero high-interest personal debt, adequate insurance independent of your employer, a validated business model with some paying customers, and a clear understanding of your monthly business runway. Most people underestimate the financial preparation needed and overestimate how quickly the business will generate income.

Step 1: Build a Personal Financial Cushion — Separate from Business Capital

This is the step most aspiring entrepreneurs skip or underestimate. They calculate how much capital the business needs and raise or save that amount. Then they quit. What they forget is that the business capital and their personal living expenses are two completely separate requirements.

You need 18-24 months of your full household expenses in a liquid account that is completely separate from the business. Not 6 months. Not 12 months. 18-24.

Why? Because most businesses take 12-18 months to generate enough revenue to pay the founder a salary. During that period, your household keeps running — rent, school fees, EMIs, groceries, health insurance. If the personal cushion is inadequate, you will be forced to pull money from the business at exactly the time it needs capital most. Or worse, you will be psychologically distressed and make bad decisions under financial pressure.

A business started from a position of personal financial security has a fundamentally different psychology than one started from desperation.

Step 2: Clear High-Interest Personal Debt

Do not start a business with credit card debt or personal loan outstanding. These are the most expensive liabilities you can carry — and they will eat into your mental bandwidth as much as your finances.

A home loan is different. It is secured debt with a tax benefit, and you cannot realistically clear it before starting a business without selling the house. But unsecured high-interest debt should be eliminated before you quit employment.

Planning to start a business? First plan your personal finances.

A fee-only advisor helps you understand your financial readiness before you make the leap — no products, no conflict of interest.

Talk to a RetireWise Advisor

Step 3: Sort Your Insurance Before You Quit

Your employer provides health insurance and sometimes life insurance. The day you resign, both end. This is not a theoretical concern — a hospitalisation in month three of your entrepreneurship journey, without insurance, can wipe out your entire runway.

Before you quit: buy a personal family floater health insurance policy (not linked to employment). Buy term insurance if you have dependents. Buy a personal accident cover. These take 30-60 days to activate and require medical underwriting — do not leave this for after you quit. Calculate how much health insurance your family actually needs.

Step 4: Validate the Business Model Before Quitting

The most valuable thing you can do while still employed is validate your business idea with real customers and real money. Not surveys. Not interest expressions. Actual paying customers.

Even one paying customer changes everything — it proves that someone will exchange money for what you are offering. Without this validation, you are betting 18-24 months of personal runway on a hypothesis.

This validation can often happen on weekends and evenings while you are still employed. Yes, it is hard. Yes, your employer’s time cannot be used for this. But the alternative — quitting and then discovering that nobody wants to pay for your product or service — is far more expensive.

Step 5: Understand Your Real Monthly Burn

Calculate two numbers before you quit. First, your personal monthly burn — every expense your household has, including ones that seem irregular (annual insurance premiums, school fees, car maintenance, medical). Most people underestimate this by 20-30%.

Second, your business monthly burn — salaries (including your own, eventually), office costs, technology, marketing, professional fees, and a 20% buffer for surprises. Most first-time entrepreneurs underestimate this by 40-50%.

Add these two numbers. This is how much you need available before day one. If you have less, either build more runway or start the business part-time before quitting.

What About Retirement Savings?

One of the most common mistakes I see: professionals liquidating their EPF or mutual funds to fund their business or personal expenses during the early months.

Do not do this. These savings took years to accumulate and have compounding working in their favour. Once disrupted, the compounding cannot be restarted from where it left off. Your business should be funded by business capital — ideally from savings built specifically for this purpose, not from retirement funds.

If you are seriously considering entrepreneurship in the next 2-3 years, start building a separate “entrepreneurship fund” alongside your retirement savings. Treat it as a separate goal. Goal-based financial planning is the only framework that handles multiple simultaneous financial goals correctly.

The Honest Assessment

Ask yourself these questions before you quit: Can my family manage on zero income from me for 18 months without any financial stress? Have I tested this business with real paying customers? Do I have health and life insurance independent of my employer? Have I separated business capital from personal emergency funds?

If the answer to any of these is no, you are not ready yet. That is not a permanent verdict — it is a checklist. Complete it first.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much savings should I have before quitting my job to start a business in India?

You need two separate pools: a personal runway of 18-24 months of full household expenses in a liquid account, plus your business capital separately. Most people calculate only business capital and forget personal expenses. If your household costs Rs 1.5 lakh per month, your personal runway alone should be Rs 27-36 lakh in a liquid fund or savings account — completely separate from the business. Many failed entrepreneurship stories trace back to a personal runway of 6-9 months that ran out before the business reached break-even.

Should I withdraw my EPF or mutual funds to fund my startup?

No. Liquidating retirement savings to fund a business is one of the most common and most costly financial mistakes in entrepreneurship. EPF and long-term equity SIPs carry compounding that has been building for years — once you break it, you cannot restart from where you left off. Your business should be funded by business capital built specifically for this purpose. If you lack dedicated business capital, consider starting the business part-time while still employed and building the entrepreneurship fund before making the leap.

What insurance do I need before I quit my salaried job?

Three policies before you quit: a personal family floater health insurance policy (not employer-linked, at least Rs 10-15 lakh for urban families), pure term insurance if you have dependents (at least 10x annual income), and a personal accident policy. These take 30-60 days to activate, require medical underwriting, and cannot be rushed after a health event. Health insurance is the most urgent — a hospitalisation in the first year without coverage can wipe out your entire personal runway and destroy the business before it starts.

How do I validate a business idea before leaving my job?

The minimum bar for validation is at least one paying customer — someone who exchanged actual money for your product or service. Not a friend who said “I would buy this.” Not a survey respondent who said it sounded interesting. A paying transaction. This can often happen on weekends and evenings while still employed. Freelancing, consulting, selling a prototype, or landing a pilot client before quitting removes the biggest risk: discovering there is no market after burning through your runway.

Entrepreneurship is one of the most rewarding paths available to an Indian professional. It is also one of the most financially demanding. The people who succeed are almost never the most talented — they are the most prepared. Prepare thoroughly. Then leap.

A business started from financial security builds on solid ground. A business started from financial desperation is built on sand.

💬 Your Turn

Are you considering starting a business? Which of these steps is your biggest gap right now? Or if you have made the leap — what financial preparation do you wish you had done differently? Share below.

Your Annual Bonus Is a Retirement Accelerator. Are You Using It Right?

“Most people treat their annual bonus the way they treat a windfall – as found money to spend, not as a decision to make.”

Here is a calculation I run with clients who are in their 40s and wondering why their retirement corpus is smaller than it should be.

Take a senior executive earning Rs 20 lakh a year who has received an average bonus of Rs 2 lakh annually since age 35. He has spent every bonus – on vacations, upgrading the car, home renovation, a new phone every two years. That is not unusual. That is normal.

Now consider what would have happened if he had invested Rs 1 lakh of that bonus every year – just half – into a diversified equity mutual fund at 12% CAGR.

At 55, after 20 years: approximately Rs 80 lakh. From Rs 1 lakh a year.

He did not lose Rs 80 lakh to bad investments. He lost it to not making a decision. The bonus arrived every April. He spent it. The opportunity compounded away silently.

⚡ Quick Answer

Your annual bonus is not extra money. It is a retirement accelerator that most people accidentally spend. The discipline of allocating 50% of every bonus to your retirement corpus – before lifestyle decisions are made – is one of the highest-leverage financial habits available to a senior executive. Done consistently from 40 to 58, it can add 5-8 crore to a retirement corpus that regular SIPs alone cannot reach.

How to use your annual bonus to accelerate retirement corpus - financial planning for senior executives

Why Bonuses Get Spent: The Psychology of Windfall Money

There is a well-documented behavioural pattern called mental accounting. People treat money differently depending on how it arrived. Regular salary feels like it belongs to the budget – committed to EMIs, household expenses, SIPs. But a bonus feels different. It feels like extra. Like permission to spend.

This is the windfall effect. The money arrives in a lump sum, it is not mentally committed to anything yet, and the brain processes it as surplus rather than as income. So the vacation gets booked, the kitchen gets renovated, the car gets upgraded – and by June, the bonus is gone.

The problem is not the spending itself. A vacation is not a financial crime. The problem is the absence of a pre-committed allocation. When the bonus arrives with no prior decision made about where it goes, it gets consumed by lifestyle almost automatically.

The fix is simple in theory and surprisingly hard in practice: decide before the bonus arrives what percentage goes where. Then execute that decision on Day 1 of receiving it, before the mental accounting kicks in.

“I have seen clients who saved diligently through SIPs for 15 years, and yet their retirement corpus was 30-40% smaller than it should have been. The gap, almost always, was the bonus. Spent every year. Never invested.”

– Hemant Beniwal, CFP, CTEP | Founder, RetireWise

The 50/30/20 Framework for Your Bonus

Not every rupee of the bonus needs to go to retirement. The goal is a pre-committed structure that serves both present enjoyment and future security.

50% to retirement corpus: This goes to the long-term portfolio immediately – either as a lump sum addition to existing equity mutual funds or as a trigger to start a new SIP. For someone receiving a Rs 3 lakh bonus, this is Rs 1.5 lakh invested at the moment the salary account is credited. Non-negotiable. Pre-committed.

30% to near-term financial goals: Home loan prepayment, children’s education fund top-up, emergency fund if it is not fully funded. These are goals with specific timelines that benefit from lump sum additions rather than monthly SIPs.

20% to discretionary spending: The vacation, the upgrade, the celebration. This is guilt-free spending – because the 80% decision has already been made. The 20% is the reward for the discipline of the 80%.

The exact percentages can vary with individual circumstances. What cannot vary is the principle: allocate before you spend, not after.

Do you have a written allocation plan for this year’s bonus?

A RetireWise retirement plan includes a windfall allocation framework so every bonus, inheritance, or lump sum receipt has a pre-committed home.

Book a Free 30-Min Call

The Salary Increment Trap: Lifestyle Inflation vs Retirement Acceleration

The bonus conversation is incomplete without the salary increment conversation. These arrive together every April for most salaried executives.

Here is the pattern I see most often: a Rs 2 lakh increment in April becomes a Rs 20,000 per month lifestyle upgrade by July. New dining out budget. Upgraded home loan EMI for a larger flat. An additional streaming subscription. Another school fee hike absorbed without friction. The increment disappears into existing life before anyone consciously decided to spend it.

The alternative: when the increment lands, immediately increase your SIP by 50% of the net increment. If your salary increases by Rs 20,000 per month net, your SIP increases by Rs 10,000 per month from the same date. The remaining Rs 10,000 flows into lifestyle – which still grows every year, just not at the full rate of the increment.

Over a 15-year career, this discipline of capturing 50% of every increment into investments is worth significantly more than the bonus discipline alone. Combined, they represent the two biggest financial levers available to a salaried executive – and both require the same thing: a pre-committed rule that executes automatically.

The Compounding Math That Should Change How You Think About April

Let us be specific. A senior executive aged 42, receiving a Rs 3 lakh annual bonus, investing Rs 1.5 lakh of it every April into equity mutual funds at 12% CAGR:

By age 55 (13 years): approximately Rs 41 lakh. By age 60 (18 years): approximately Rs 83 lakh. By age 62 (20 years): approximately Rs 1.08 crore.

This is from one discipline alone – the bonus allocation. The SIPs are separate. The EPF is separate. The other investments are separate. Just the bonus, invested at half, produces a crore-plus corpus by itself over 20 years.

The question is not whether this is possible. The arithmetic is straightforward. The question is whether this April – when the bonus lands – the Rs 1.5 lakh goes to equity mutual funds before the vacation is booked.

Read – Why Investing Regularly Beats Trying to Time the Market

Read – The Law of the Farm: Why Patient Investors Always Win

What to Do With the Bonus If You Have Outstanding Debt

The framework above assumes no high-cost debt. If you are carrying a personal loan, credit card outstanding, or a home loan at above 8.5%, the allocation changes.

High-cost debt (personal loans at 12-16%, credit card at 24-36%): clear this entirely before any investment allocation. A guaranteed 15% cost is mathematically superior to a probable 12% investment return. Eliminating high-cost debt with the bonus is the highest-return use of that capital.

Home loan at 8.5-9%: prepay a portion. The arithmetic here is close – expected equity returns of 10-12% versus guaranteed savings of 8.5-9% on the prepayment. For someone within 10 years of retirement who wants to ensure the home loan is cleared by retirement, dedicating 30-40% of the bonus to prepayment is rational. For someone 20+ years from retirement, equity investment is likely the better call.

No high-cost debt: the 50/30/20 framework applies directly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I invest my bonus as a lump sum or spread it over the year via SIP?

Lump sum at the time of receipt is generally better for a long-term equity investment horizon. Research consistently shows that lump sum investment outperforms staged entry over periods of 10+ years because equity markets trend upward over time, and waiting to invest means time out of the market. The main exception: if you are emotionally uncomfortable with a lump sum investment near a market high, a 3-6 month systematic transfer plan into equity is an acceptable compromise.

I have multiple financial goals – education, retirement, home loan. How do I prioritise the bonus?

Prioritise in this order: eliminate high-cost debt first, then build or top up your emergency fund to 6 months of expenses, then split the remainder between retirement corpus (largest allocation) and specific near-term goals. Education funding for a child who starts college in 2-3 years should be in debt instruments, not equity – so that tranche goes to short-duration funds or SCSS, not the retirement SIP.

What if my bonus varies significantly year to year?

Use a fixed percentage rule rather than a fixed amount. Decide that 50% of whatever bonus arrives goes to the retirement corpus – whether it is Rs 50,000 or Rs 5 lakh. The percentage rule removes the annual decision and makes the discipline automatic regardless of bonus size.

Your bonus is not a reward for last year. It is a decision about the next twenty years. The executives who retire with genuine financial freedom are not the ones who earned the most. They are the ones who, year after year, made that decision correctly – before the vacation was booked and the kitchen was renovated.

Invest first. Celebrate second. That is the only order that builds a retirement corpus worth having.

Want a retirement plan that tells you exactly how to deploy every windfall?

RetireWise builds plans for senior executives that account for bonuses, increments, and lump sum events – not just monthly SIPs.

See Our Retirement Planning Service

💬 Your Turn

What did you do with last year’s bonus – and what are you planning for this one? Share in the comments. The answers here are always more honest than people expect.

Warren Buffett’s Investing Principles: The Ones That Actually Matter

“The most important investment you can make is in yourself.” – Warren Buffett

There is a question Warren Buffett has posed to investors for decades – and it exposes exactly how most people think about markets incorrectly.

“If you expect to be a net buyer of groceries for the next ten years, should you prefer higher or lower grocery prices?” The answer is obvious: lower. You want to buy more of what you need at cheaper prices.

Now apply this to investing. If you expect to be a net buyer of stocks for the next ten years, should you prefer higher or lower stock prices? Most investors say higher. This is the contradiction at the heart of most retail investing behaviour – and it is why most people underperform markets even when they are invested in them.

⚡ Quick Answer

Warren Buffett’s core investment philosophy is deceptively simple: own good businesses for long periods, stay rational when others are emotional, never pay more than a business is worth, and resist the instinct to be busy. His approach is accessible to any investor through index funds or diversified equity mutual funds. The principles are not complex. The challenge is psychological – staying patient when every instinct says to act.

Warren Buffett investing principles for Indian investors

The Principles That Actually Matter

Never depend on a single source of income. Buffett has always emphasised multiple income streams – but not in the “side hustle” sense. His point is about building investment income that works independently of your employment income. When you invest consistently, the compounding of returns creates a second income source that grows without additional work. This is the foundation of financial independence.

Don’t save what is left after spending; spend what is left after saving. This reversal of the typical savings behaviour is the single most powerful personal finance habit. Most Indians save whatever is left at the end of the month – which is often zero. Automated SIPs on salary date flip this: the investment happens first, and you live on what remains. Over a 20-year working career, this single habit change can mean the difference between retiring comfortably and retiring dependent.

If you buy things you don’t need, you will soon sell things you need. Consumption creep – the tendency to increase spending with every income increase – is the most common wealth destroyer in the Indian middle class. Each lifestyle upgrade feels deserved and reasonable at the time. The cumulative effect is a family that earns well but cannot retire on time because they spent everything they earned.

Beware of little expenses; a small leak can sink a large ship. Buffett’s framing of this was about small recurring costs – subscription fees, unused memberships, the premium coffee that is now Rs 250 daily. Rs 250 per day is Rs 7,500 per month or Rs 90,000 per year. Invested at 12% for 20 years: Rs 90 lakh. The small leak is not so small when you calculate its compounded cost.

Buffett’s principles are not about picking stocks. They are about thinking correctly about money.

RetireWise builds financial plans grounded in these principles – automated savings, goal-linked investing, expense discipline, and patience over performance-chasing.

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On Risk and Uncertainty

Never test the depth of the river with both feet. This is Buffett’s principle on concentration risk. Your first investment should not be your entire savings. Your first business should not be funded with everything you have. Risk what you can afford to lose while learning, not everything you have accumulated.

In investment terms: never put all your money into a single stock, a single sector, or a single asset class. Diversification is not a hedge against good decisions – it is a hedge against the inevitable moments when even good decisions produce bad short-term outcomes.

Risk comes from not knowing what you’re doing. This is perhaps Buffett’s most misunderstood statement. Investors interpret it as permission to concentrate – “if I know a company well, I can put all my money in it.” Buffett’s deeper point is about the danger of investing in things you genuinely do not understand. If you cannot explain how a business makes money, how it competes, and why it will be worth more in ten years, you do not know enough to invest.

For most retail investors, this is an argument for index funds or diversified equity mutual funds managed by professionals – not for concentrated stock picking based on tips or trends.

On Patience and Behaviour

We simply attempt to be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful. This is the most quoted Buffett line and the least followed. During market corrections – when fear is at its peak – most retail investors sell. During bull markets – when greed is at its peak – they buy. This is the opposite of rational behaviour, and it is why investors consistently underperform the indices they are invested in.

The structure that allows you to be “greedy when others are fearful” is not courage in the moment. It is preparation before the moment: adequate emergency fund so you are not forced to sell, no margin loans, a written investment policy, and understanding of what you own and why you own it.

In the business world, the rearview mirror is always clearer than the windshield. Every market crash in history looks obvious in hindsight. The 2008 crisis, the March 2020 crash, the 2022 correction – after each one, experts explain precisely why it was predictable. Before each one, almost nobody predicted it correctly and consistently. This is the basis for avoiding market timing: the future is not as visible as the past. Stay invested, stay diversified, stay patient.

Read: The 4 Most Dangerous Words in Investing

Buffett’s investment success is not just about stock-picking genius. It is about 70+ years of applying the same rational principles consistently – saving first, owning good businesses, ignoring short-term noise, and letting compounding do the work. These principles are available to every investor.

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

Which of Buffett’s principles are you currently applying – and which ones are you struggling with?

RetireWise builds financial plans that embed these principles structurally – not as aspirations, but as automated systems that run without requiring willpower.

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Your Turn

Which of these principles has had the most impact on how you think about money? Or which one do you find hardest to follow in practice? Share in the comments.

Online vs Offline Term Insurance in India 2026: What Has Changed and What Still Matters

When online term insurance plans launched in India around 2010-2012, the price difference between online and offline plans of the same insurer was often 30 to 50%. The product was the same. The premium was dramatically lower. The advice from most financial planners – including me – was straightforward: buy online.

In 2026, the online vs offline question for term insurance has evolved. The premium gap has narrowed. The digital processes have improved significantly. And the considerations that matter have shifted from “how do I apply” to “what happens when a claim is filed.”

Quick Answer (2026)

For most buyers, online term insurance is the right choice in 2026. The claim settlement ratios of major private insurers (HDFC Life 99.5%, Max Life 99.5%, ICICI Prudential 97.9%) are now comparable to or better than LIC (98.7%). The premium advantage of online plans over offline plans of the same insurer typically ranges from 10 to 25%. The most important decision is not online vs offline, but which insurer to choose based on claim settlement ratio, financial strength, and the specific policy terms – particularly the cancer definition and critical illness coverage if applicable.

Online Term Insurance Plans India 2026 - Guide

What Has Changed Since Online Term Plans Launched

The early years of online term insurance in India (2010-2014) were genuinely difficult. Insurers were not operationally ready for fully digital processes. Application rejections without explanation were common. Document submission loops happened. The claim settlement experience for nominees of online policies was untested and uncertain.

By 2026, most of these operational issues have been resolved. DigiLocker integration means policy documents are accessible digitally. IRDAI’s standardised claim settlement timelines (30 days for straightforward claims) are enforced. Video medical examinations have reduced the friction of medical underwriting. Online claim filing portals are functional and increasingly self-service.

The legitimate concern that remains is not process quality but service recovery – what happens when something does go wrong, such as a nominee who is unfamiliar with insurance processes, a claim with an investigation component, or a policy with unusual exclusions. In these cases, having a knowledgeable intermediary can matter.

The Premium Advantage of Online Plans in 2026

For a 35-year-old non-smoker male seeking Rs. 1 crore term cover for 30 years, indicative annual premiums in 2026:

Online plans from HDFC Life Click2Protect, ICICI Prudential iProtect Smart, and Max Life Smart Secure Plus range from approximately Rs. 9,000 to Rs. 11,000 per year. The same insurers’ offline plans through agents or bank branches typically cost Rs. 12,000 to Rs. 15,000 per year for the same cover – a 20 to 35% premium. Over a 30-year policy, this cumulative premium difference is significant.

The premium gap between online and offline versions of the same product exists because online sales eliminate the agent’s commission, which is built into offline premiums. The underlying product – the coverage, terms, and claim process – is identical.

What Actually Matters: The Claim Settlement Ratio

The single most important metric in term insurance selection is the claim settlement ratio – the percentage of death claims paid out of all death claims received. IRDAI publishes this annually for all insurers.

For FY 2023-24, individual death claim settlement ratios for the major insurers are: HDFC Life 99.5%, Max Life 99.5%, Tata AIA 99.1%, SBI Life 97.1%, ICICI Prudential 97.9%, Bajaj Allianz 99.0%, LIC 98.7%. The gap between LIC and major private insurers that existed a decade ago has effectively closed. All major private insurers now settle above 97% of individual death claims.

The relevant follow-up question is not just the overall ratio but the reasons claims are rejected. The most common reasons for claim rejection across all insurers are non-disclosure of material facts (existing medical conditions not declared at policy inception), death by suicide within the first year, and disputes about policy exclusions. None of these are unique to online plans.

The One Concern That Remains Valid

The concern raised during the early years of online term insurance – that a nominee who is unfamiliar with insurance processes may struggle to file a claim independently – is still worth addressing. It is not unique to online plans (a physical policy document stored in a drawer can be equally inaccessible if the nominee does not know where to look), but it is real.

The practical solutions: store the policy in DigiLocker and ensure the nominee has access credentials. Register the nominee’s mobile number and email with the insurer so claim-related communications go directly to them. Brief the nominee on the existence, insurer name, and policy number of the term policy. Keep a simple document with insurance policy details alongside the Will.

A term policy that the nominee cannot locate or claim is functionally worthless regardless of how good the insurer’s claim settlement ratio is.

Online or Offline: The Framework for Deciding

Choose online if: you are comfortable with digital processes, the premium saving is meaningful to you, and you are prepared to ensure your nominee is briefed on claim filing. For most urban professionals under 45, this describes the right choice.

Consider offline (or through a SEBI-registered advisor rather than a commission-based agent) if: you want a single relationship point for multiple policies, your nominee is unlikely to navigate a digital claim process independently, or you have a complex health history that benefits from guided underwriting support. In this case, the premium premium for offline may be worth paying for the assistance it provides.

In either case: compare across at least 3 insurers on premium, claim settlement ratio, cancer and critical illness definition quality, and exclusion clarity before deciding. Do not select based on premium alone.

Insurance Review as Part of Retirement Planning

RetireWise reviews insurance adequacy – term, health, and critical illness – as part of the retirement planning process. Explore our approach.

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One question for you: Did you buy your term plan online or offline – and if you have a nominee, do they know the policy details well enough to file a claim without assistance?

Why You Must Involve Your Spouse in Financial Planning

“The strength of a family, like the strength of an army, is in its loyalty to each other.” – Mario Puzo

I have been reviewing financial plans for 25 years. The plans I have seen fail most consistently are not the ones with wrong investment choices. They are the ones built entirely by one spouse, for goals that only one spouse defined.

The story I remember most clearly: Pravin, a business owner, came to me for a financial plan without involving his wife Jaya, a qualified lawyer who had stepped away from her career to raise their son. “We discuss everything,” he said. “She knows what I want.”

We made the plan, implemented it, and reviewed it a year later – this time with Jaya present. When we walked her through the goals, she nodded politely. Then I asked her a simple question: “What do you want?”

She cried.

Not because anything was wrong. But because in years of managing the household and the family, nobody had ever asked her that question about money.

⚡ Quick Answer

A financial plan built without your spouse’s input is incomplete by definition. Retirement is a shared journey – two people, one corpus, shared decisions about when to retire, where to live, how to spend. A plan that reflects only one person’s goals and assumptions will require painful renegotiation later. Involve your spouse from the beginning – not as a formality, but as a genuine co-architect of the plan.

Why involving your spouse in financial planning makes retirement planning better

What Happens When the Plan is Built by One

When Jaya finally shared her perspective, the plan changed entirely. Not the amount being saved – but what it was being saved for.

She had grown up in a village, close to nature, and quietly longed for a retirement home away from the city – something Pravin had never thought about. She wanted their son’s wedding conducted with their family’s customs and traditions preserved, not just efficiently budgeted. She wanted to work part-time with an NGO for abused women after retirement, using her legal skills. And she wanted to settle wherever their son settled – not necessarily in the same house, but in the same city.

None of these were exotic or unreasonable goals. None were expensive. But none were in the original plan, because none had been asked for.

The plan had to be substantially rebuilt. Not because the numbers were wrong – because the goals were incomplete.

“A financial plan built for one spouse’s goals and reviewed only by one spouse is not a family financial plan. It is one person’s financial plan that the other person is expected to live by. That rarely ends well.”

– Hemant Beniwal, CFP, CTEP | Founder, RetireWise

Why Spouses Drift Apart on Financial Goals

In most Indian families, financial management defaults to one spouse – typically the primary earner. This is practical in daily execution but dangerous in long-term planning.

Over time, the financially less-involved spouse develops their own set of assumptions about the future: where they will live in retirement, what lifestyle they expect, what they want to leave for children, what experiences matter to them. These assumptions are never explicitly discussed because money conversations are assumed to be the domain of the other partner.

The gap between these unstated assumptions and the actual plan widens silently over years. It surfaces at retirement – or worse, at a medical crisis, a death, or a divorce – when both partners must suddenly navigate decisions that should have been made together long ago.

The involved spouse also faces a practical risk: if they become incapacitated or die, the less-involved spouse is left managing a complex financial situation they were never part of building. They do not know which funds are held where, what the SIPs are, what the insurance policies cover, or what the overall financial position is.

Is your retirement plan built for both of you – or just one?

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What to Actually Discuss Together

Financial planning conversations with your spouse do not need to be technical. They need to be honest. A practical set of questions to start with:

At what age do each of you want to stop full-time work? This is often different – and the difference has major financial implications. A partner who wants to retire at 55 while the other plans to work until 62 creates a 7-year funding gap that must be planned for explicitly.

Where do you want to live after retirement? City or smaller town? Near children or independently? In your current home or a different one? These are not trivial questions – they determine housing costs, which can be the largest single expense in retirement.

What does a good month in retirement look like? Travel? Time with grandchildren? Learning something new? Social activities? The cost of a retirement filled with travel is very different from one centred on the grandchildren and a home garden.

What do you want to leave for your children? For causes you care about? These questions surface values that are often held individually but never made explicit.

Who manages what if one of you is incapacitated? Does the less financially-involved spouse know where everything is, what the portfolio looks like, and who the advisors are? This is a practical emergency preparedness question, not a morbid one.

Making It a Regular Practice

A single conversation is not enough. Financial planning with your spouse should happen at least twice a year – not just at review time with an advisor, but as a regular household conversation. What has changed in our goals? What are we worried about? What surprised us this year?

These conversations do not have to be long. An hour twice a year of genuine alignment on financial goals produces better outcomes than monthly spreadsheet reviews conducted by one person alone.

Read – 7 Financial Planning Mistakes That Are Costing You Retirement Security

Read – Retirement Expectations vs Reality: What Actually Changes After You Stop Working

Frequently Asked Questions

My spouse has no interest in finance. How do I involve them?

The goal is not to make them interested in finance. It is to make them interested in the goals that finance serves. Start with the life questions – where do we live, what do we do, what experiences matter – not the financial questions. Once goals are shared, the financial conversation becomes naturally relevant. A good financial advisor can facilitate this conversation in a way that makes both partners feel heard and avoids the technical overwhelm that shuts down the less financially-inclined partner.

My spouse and I disagree on financial goals. What now?

This is actually a better situation than never having had the conversation. Disagreement that is identified can be resolved. Disagreement that is never surfaced becomes a retirement crisis. The resolution usually requires explicit tradeoffs – perhaps a smaller corpus target in exchange for earlier retirement, or different allocations for different goals. A financial advisor’s role here is to translate values disagreements into numbers and help the couple find a plan they can both commit to.

What financial basics should every spouse know, regardless of their involvement in day-to-day management?

Every partner should know: where all accounts and investments are held (bank, demat, mutual fund folios); what life and health insurance policies exist and who to contact for claims; what the approximate total financial position is (assets minus liabilities); who the financial advisor, accountant, and estate lawyer are and how to reach them; where the original documents are kept (insurance policies, property papers, investment statements, will). This is a minimum financial literacy that protects both partners against emergencies – it does not require daily involvement in portfolio management.

Jaya’s goals were not expensive. They were not unreasonable. They were simply never asked for. In 25 years of practice, I have seen this pattern more times than I can count. The most complete retirement plans are built by couples who treat the planning process as a shared project – not a handoff from the managing partner to the passive one.

Your retirement is not yours alone. Make the plan together.

Want a retirement plan that reflects both partners’ goals?

RetireWise conducts goal-setting conversations with both partners – ensuring the plan is built on shared vision, not assumed consensus.

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💬 Your Turn

Is your spouse actively involved in your financial planning, or does one of you handle it primarily? Have you had an explicit conversation about retirement goals recently? Share in the comments.

What to Do When Your Mutual Fund AMC Is Acquired or Merged

“It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.” – Charles Darwin

A client called me in 2020 in a mild panic. Franklin Templeton had announced the winding up of six debt mutual funds – schemes with over ₹25,000 crore of investor money. His question was direct: “Hemant, should I exit all my Franklin holdings immediately?”

His instinct was to do something. Anything. To get out before things got worse.

We talked it through. Not all his funds were affected. The wound-up schemes were specific debt funds. His equity holdings with Franklin were separate and untouched. We reviewed each holding individually, checked the specific circumstances, and made calm decisions based on facts – not panic.

He stayed in the equity funds. He received his wound-up debt fund money back in full, over time, as SEBI’s liquidation process ran its course. No permanent loss. No crisis.

This is what happens when an AMC goes through a major change – and it happens more often than most investors realise.

⚡ Quick Answer

When your AMC is acquired, merged, or exits India, SEBI mandates a 30-day exit window with no exit load. Your money is safe because it is held by an independent trustee, not the AMC. The right response is to evaluate each fund individually – not exit everything in panic. The key questions: Has the fund manager changed? Has the fund’s objective changed? Is the new AMC reputable? Only then decide whether to stay or exit.

What investors should do when their mutual fund AMC is acquired or merged

AMC Changes Are More Common Than You Think

India’s mutual fund industry has seen a steady stream of acquisitions, mergers, and exits over the past decade. A quick list of notable changes:

Fidelity India was acquired by L&T Finance in 2012, then L&T Mutual Fund was subsequently acquired by HSBC. IDFC Mutual Fund became Bandhan Mutual Fund after the Bandhan Consortium acquisition. Escorts Mutual Fund was acquired by Quant. Franklin Templeton wound down six debt schemes in 2020 due to liquidity issues in the underlying bonds. DBS Cholamandalam AMC was absorbed by L&T. Principal Mutual Fund was acquired by Sundaram.

SEBI has also approved in-principle licences for several new AMCs as of 2025 – Jio BlackRock among them – which means more competition and potentially more consolidation ahead.

If you invest in mutual funds for 20-30 years, the probability of at least one of your AMCs undergoing a major change is very high. Knowing how to respond is not an edge case skill. It is essential financial literacy.

“The single most expensive mistake in mutual fund investing is making permanent decisions based on temporary anxiety. AMC changes create anxiety. They rarely create permanent harm – unless you panic.”

– Hemant Beniwal, CFP, CTEP | Founder, RetireWise

First: Your Money Is Safe Regardless of What Happens to the AMC

This is the most important thing to understand, and most investors do not know it.

Mutual fund money is not held by the AMC. It is held by an independent trustee and custodian, registered with SEBI. If the AMC goes bankrupt tomorrow, your units do not disappear. The assets – the actual stocks and bonds in the portfolio – belong to the fund’s unitholders, not the AMC. The AMC only manages those assets on your behalf.

This structural separation is by design. SEBI mandated it specifically to protect investors from AMC-level failures. Even in the Franklin Templeton case – where six funds were wound down – investors received their money back as the underlying bonds were liquidated over time. The process was slow and frustrating, but no investor permanently lost their capital due to the AMC’s failure.

This means that when your AMC announces an acquisition or merger, the first reaction should not be panic. It should be curiosity. What specifically is changing, and how does that affect my particular fund?

The Five Questions to Ask When Your AMC Changes

1. Has the fund manager changed? This is the most important question for equity funds. If you invested in a fund specifically because of a particular fund manager’s track record, and that manager is leaving, that is a legitimate reason to reconsider the investment. If the fund manager is staying, the portfolio continuity is likely intact.

2. Has the fund’s investment objective changed? SEBI requires AMCs to give you a 30-day exit window without exit load if the fund’s fundamental attributes change. Read the notice carefully. If the fund is shifting from large-cap to mid-cap, or from short duration to long duration debt, that is a material change. If only the name or the AMC parent is changing, it may not affect you at all.

3. Has the expense ratio changed? Acquisitions sometimes lead to expense ratio adjustments. A higher expense ratio is a legitimate reason to switch to a comparable fund with lower costs, especially for long-term holdings.

4. Is the acquiring AMC reputable? SEBI scrutinises all AMC acquisitions and requires the acquiring sponsor to meet “fit and proper” standards. A well-established AMC taking over generally means better processes, stronger research teams, and improved investor servicing. A smaller or less-experienced acquirer warrants more scrutiny.

5. Is this an isolated fund issue or an AMC-wide issue? Franklin Templeton’s wind-up affected only six specific debt funds, not the equity funds. Many investors panicked and exited Franklin equity funds unnecessarily – exiting at depressed valuations, triggering capital gains, and missing subsequent recoveries. Evaluate each fund individually.

Unsure what to do with a fund in your portfolio after an AMC change?

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When to Stay and When to Exit

Usually stay when: Only the corporate ownership has changed, the fund manager is the same, the fund’s investment objective is unchanged, and the acquiring AMC has a solid track record. Many Fidelity fund investors who stayed through the L&T acquisition and continued with HSBC have had perfectly satisfactory outcomes. The portfolio management team and process often outlast the ownership changes.

Consider exiting when: The fund manager with a strong track record is departing and no clear successor is identified. The fund’s mandate is changing to something that no longer fits your portfolio. The expense ratio is increasing significantly. Or the acquiring AMC has a weak track record that makes you question future performance.

One practical consideration: Exiting a fund triggers capital gains tax. Short-term gains (held under 12 months) are taxed at 20%. Long-term gains above ₹1.25 lakh in a year are taxed at 12.5%. If your fund has been running well for years, the tax cost of exiting may be substantial. Do not exit purely out of discomfort with change – factor in the actual tax cost of switching.

The Right Way to Hold a Fund

You should not be so attached to any single fund or AMC that a change creates a crisis. A well-constructed portfolio holds funds across multiple AMCs – so that any single AMC-level event affects only a portion of your holdings. If you have ₹50 lakh in equity mutual funds and 80% is with one AMC, that is a concentration risk. Spread it across 3-4 reputable AMCs. The specific funds matter less than the underlying asset class exposure and the total portfolio construction. Over long horizons, the performance differences between well-run equity funds from different AMCs are much smaller than people think – and certainly smaller than the damage caused by panic-exiting during a transition.

The fund is a vehicle. The destination is your financial goal. Do not abandon the vehicle every time it changes lanes.

What SEBI’s Framework Requires – Your Rights

When an AMC merger or fundamental attribute change occurs, SEBI mandates the following investor protections:

A minimum 30-day notice period before the change takes effect, during which you can exit without any exit load. The acquiring AMC must meet SEBI’s “fit and proper” criteria. If the fund is being wound up (not just transferred), the assets are liquidated and proceeds returned proportionally to all unitholders. All changes must be communicated directly to investors via email and the AMC website.

Use that 30-day window thoughtfully. It is not a deadline for panic – it is an opportunity for a considered decision.

Read – Mutual Funds or Direct Equity: What a New Investor Really Needs to Know

Read – Types of Mutual Funds in India: A Complete Guide

Frequently Asked Questions

Is my money safe if my mutual fund AMC is acquired?

Yes. Mutual fund assets are held by an independent trustee, not the AMC. The AMC only manages the assets on your behalf. Even if the AMC goes bankrupt, your units represent ownership in the underlying portfolio of stocks and bonds – which belong to the unitholders. SEBI’s framework ensures that fund assets are protected from AMC-level failures.

Do I have to exit if my fund’s AMC changes?

No. SEBI gives you a 30-day no-exit-load window to decide. If the fund manager, investment objective, and expense ratio are unchanged, there is often no compelling reason to exit. Evaluate each fund individually based on the five questions above. Factor in capital gains tax before deciding to switch.

What happened to Fidelity India mutual fund investors?

Fidelity India’s mutual fund business was acquired by L&T Finance in 2012, which subsequently became HSBC Mutual Fund. Investors who stayed invested continued to hold their units in the same funds, now managed under new ownership. Most Fidelity equity funds – which had strong performance records – continued to perform reasonably well through the transition. Investors who panicked and exited unnecessarily missed subsequent market recoveries.

What happened to Franklin Templeton investors in India?

In April 2020, Franklin Templeton wound up six specific debt funds due to liquidity issues in the underlying bonds. Equity funds were not affected. Investors in the wound-up funds received their money back as the bonds matured or were sold, over a period of roughly two years. The situation was painful but investors ultimately recovered their principal.

Mutual funds are built to outlast the companies that manage them. The structure protects you. What destroys value is not the AMC change – it is the panic that the change triggers. Stay informed, stay calm, and make decisions based on facts, not anxiety.

Do the Right Thing and Sit Tight.

Want a second opinion on your mutual fund portfolio?

A portfolio review from a SEBI-registered advisor can tell you where you are concentrated, where you are well-diversified, and what to actually do when changes occur.

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💬 Your Turn

Have you ever been through an AMC change, merger, or wind-up? Did you stay or exit – and what happened afterward? Share your experience in the comments. Real stories from investors are more useful than any theoretical advice.

Free Look Period in Insurance: The 2026 Guide (Now 30 Days for Online Policies)

A client called me last month, genuinely distressed. His bank relationship manager had sold him a single-premium insurance policy when he had walked in to renew a fixed deposit. He had signed the form without reading it carefully. The premium was Rs.3 lakh. He called me four days after receiving the policy documents.

My first words: “You still have time. Use the free look period.”

He got his Rs.3 lakh back. Minus a small deduction for stamp duty and the risk period – but the bulk of the money came back.

Free look period is one of the most important and most underused rights an insurance policyholder has in India. And in 2024, IRDAI significantly expanded this right – a change most people still do not know about.

Quick Answer: Free Look Period in 2026

15 days for policies sold through agents in person. 30 days for policies sold online, by telephone, or through any distance marketing channel (IRDAI 2024 update). The window starts from the date you receive the policy documents – not the date of purchase. You can return any life or health insurance policy within this window and get most of your premium back.

What is the free look period?

The free look period is a legally mandated window during which a policyholder can return an insurance policy to the insurer, cancel it, and receive a full refund of the premium paid – minus certain minor deductions.

Think of it as a right to reconsider. Insurance is a complex, long-term commitment. The free look period recognises that many people sign on the dotted line before fully understanding what they have bought. It gives you time to read the policy document carefully, compare it to what you were told, and exit if there is a mismatch.

It applies to life insurance policies and health insurance policies. It does not apply to general insurance policies such as motor insurance or travel insurance.

The 2024 IRDAI update: 30 days for online and distance marketing

This is the change most people are unaware of. IRDAI’s 2024 guidelines extended the free look period to 30 days for policies sold through distance marketing channels. This includes policies sold online (directly through the insurer’s website or aggregator), sold via telephone, or sold through any channel where the policyholder and the agent are not physically present at the time of sale.

The original 15-day window continues to apply for policies sold face-to-face through an agent or through a branch office visit.

In practical terms: if you bought your term plan from PolicyBazaar or directly on HDFC Life’s website, you have 30 days to return it. If your LIC agent came home and sold you an endowment plan, you have 15 days.

What is deducted when you use the free look period?

The full premium is not always returned. The insurer can deduct the following:

  • Medical examination charges – if you underwent tests as part of the underwriting process
  • Stamp duty – the cost of stamping the policy document
  • Risk premium for the period the policy was in force – mortality cost for the days between policy commencement and your cancellation request
  • For ULIPs only – the impact of NAV movement during the period

For most term plans, the deductions are minimal – often less than Rs.500 to Rs.1,000. For ULIPs, the deduction can be larger if markets moved against you during the period. The bulk of your premium is returned in either case.

Mis-sold an insurance policy? Here is your next step.

If you are unsure whether what you were sold is appropriate for your needs, a 30-minute review can save you years of paying for the wrong product. Most mis-selling becomes obvious within minutes when examined with a fresh lens.

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How to use the free look period: step by step

Step 1: As soon as you decide to cancel, call the insurer’s customer care number. Ask specifically about their free look cancellation process. Get a reference number for the call.

Step 2: Do not rely on the agent. Contact the insurer directly – by phone, email, or by visiting the branch. The agent has no role in processing a free look cancellation and has every incentive to delay you past the deadline.

Step 3: Submit the written cancellation request through the insurer’s online portal, by email to their customer care address, or physically at a branch. Attach a copy of the policy document and the filled cancellation form (the insurer will provide the format).

Step 4: Get an acknowledgement. Whether you submit online or in person, ensure you receive written confirmation that your cancellation request has been received – and the date it was received. Keep this permanently.

Step 5: Follow up within 10 days if you have not received refund confirmation. The insurer is required to process the refund within 15 days of receiving the cancellation request.

Four things that can go wrong – and how to prevent them

The agent delays delivery of the policy document. Some agents hold on to the policy document so the free look window passes. Counter this by following up directly with the insurer’s customer care after a week of purchase to confirm when documents will be dispatched. Note the date of receipt yourself.

The agent promises to “fix the problem” to buy time. If you have decided to cancel, do not wait for explanations or promises. Go directly to the insurer. Every day of delay is a day of your window used up.

Different insurers have different procedures. Some require a physical cancellation form, others accept email. Call customer care first to understand the exact procedure for your specific insurer.

Postal delays eat into the window. If you submit physically by post, send by speed post and keep the tracking receipt. The date the insurer receives your request matters – send it with several days of buffer before the deadline.

What if you missed the free look period?

You still have options. If you were mis-sold a policy, you can file a formal complaint with the insurer even after the free look window has closed. If the insurer does not resolve it satisfactorily, escalate to the Insurance Ombudsman for your region. IRDAI’s Bima Bharosa portal also allows online complaint registration.

The success rate outside the free look period is lower and the process takes longer – but it is not impossible. The sooner you act after discovering the mis-selling, the stronger your case.

Also read: How to Spot Mis-Selling in Mutual Funds and Insurance Before It Costs You

Frequently asked questions

Is the free look period 15 days or 30 days in India?

As of 2024, the free look period is 15 days for policies sold through agents in person (face-to-face), and 30 days for policies sold online or through distance marketing channels (telephone, internet, or any channel with no physical meeting). This expansion to 30 days was introduced by IRDAI’s 2024 guidelines. The window starts from the date you receive the policy documents – not the date of purchase.

What is deducted when I cancel a policy during the free look period?

The insurer can deduct: cost of medical examinations if any were conducted, stamp duty on the policy document, and mortality risk premium for the period the policy was in force. For ULIPs, NAV movement during the period may also be factored in. For most term plans, deductions are minimal – often a few hundred rupees. The bulk of the premium is returned.

Can I use the free look period if my bank mis-sold me a policy?

Yes. The free look period applies regardless of the channel through which the policy was sold – agent, bank, or online. Contact the insurer directly rather than going through the bank, as they have an interest in preventing the cancellation.

What if the insurer refuses to process my free look cancellation?

File a formal complaint with IRDAI through the Bima Bharosa online portal or through the Insurance Ombudsman for your region. The Ombudsman can adjudicate disputes up to Rs.50 lakh and the process is free. Always keep a copy of your cancellation request with date proof to support your complaint.

Have you ever used the free look period? Did the process work smoothly, or did you face resistance? Share your experience in the comments – it helps others know what to expect.