This article was first written in July 2011. The most common question then: “Which is the best mutual fund for SIP?”
The most common question now, in 2026: “Which is the best mutual fund for SIP?”
Fifteen years. 1,500+ schemes. Entirely new SEBI categorisation. Several market cycles. Same question.
And my honest answer in 2026 is the same as it was in 2011: That question doesn’t have a useful answer.
⚡ Quick Answer
There is no universally “best” mutual fund for SIP. The right fund depends on your goal, timeline, and risk tolerance — not on last year’s return rankings. For most investors with a 10+ year retirement horizon, a Flexi-cap fund as the core SIP holding, with a mid-cap fund as a satellite, is a reasonable starting structure. This guide explains the process for choosing — not a list that will be outdated by the time you finish reading.
Why “Best” Is the Wrong Question
Here’s the fundamental problem with “best fund for SIP” rankings.
The fund that topped the Flexi-cap category in 2022 was not the top fund in 2023. The fund that topped in 2018 had mediocre performance in 2021. Every return ranking you read is backward-looking. Every SIP you start is forward-looking. These two things are not the same.
More specifically: a fund’s 1-year or 3-year return tells you what happened when markets were doing what they were doing in that period. It tells you almost nothing about what that fund will do in the next market cycle — which will be different.
In 25 years of advising, I’ve seen investors chase top-performing funds every year, switching from “hot” fund to “hot” fund, and ending up with below-average returns. Not because they picked bad funds. Because they picked yesterday’s winners and paid the switching cost — financial and psychological.
The Right Framework: Process Over Rankings
Instead of asking “which fund is best?”, ask these questions in sequence:
1. What is this SIP for? Retirement in 15 years? Child’s education in 10 years? Emergency corpus in 2 years? The goal determines the category — equity for long-term growth, hybrid for medium-term, debt for short-term. Starting with category selection before fund selection saves most people from their worst mistakes.
2. How long can I leave this untouched? Equity mutual funds need at least 5-7 years to reliably demonstrate their risk-return profile. If you’re starting an SIP that you might stop in 2 years, equity is likely the wrong category regardless of which fund you choose.
3. Can I hold through a 30-40% drawdown? An honest answer to this question determines whether you belong in large-cap equity, balanced advantage, or conservative hybrid. The fund that earns 16% CAGR but drops 40% in crashes will produce worse investor returns than a fund earning 13% CAGR that drops only 25% — because most investors will stop the first SIP and not the second.
Category First: A Practical Guide for 2026
Which Category for Your SIP? — A Simple Guide
HORIZON
10+ Years
Category: Flexi-cap or Large-cap
Add-on: Mid-cap (optional)
For: Retirement, long-term wealth
HORIZON
5-10 Years
Category: Balanced Advantage or Aggressive Hybrid
For: Education goal, medium-term wealth
HORIZON
Under 5 Years
Category: Short Duration Debt or Conservative Hybrid
For: Near-term goals, capital preservation
Within Category: What to Actually Look For
Once you’ve chosen the right category, here’s what matters when comparing funds within it:
Consistency across market cycles — not peak performance. Look at how the fund performed in 2020 (COVID crash and recovery), in 2022 (inflation-driven correction), and across the 5-year period. A fund that’s consistently in the top half of its category across both bull and bear markets is more valuable than one that’s first in a bull market and last in a crash.
Expense ratio. The lower the annual fund expense, the more of the fund’s return stays with you. This compounds meaningfully over a 20-year retirement SIP. Expense ratio is one of the few factors that predicts better net returns reliably — always factor it in.
Fund house stability. A fund is only as good as the team managing it. Check: has the fund house seen major fund manager departures recently? Have they had compliance or SEBI investigation issues? Are they a well-established AMC with a long track record? Exposure to 3-4 different fund houses reduces fund manager risk.
Fit with your overall portfolio. The right fund isn’t just the best fund in its category — it’s the one that complements what you already hold. A fund your advisor selects after reviewing your full picture will almost always serve you better than one you pick from a magazine ranking.
💡 The Core + Satellite Structure
Core (60-70% of equity SIP): One Flexi-cap fund. Stable, diversified, low-maintenance.
Satellite (30-40%): One mid-cap fund for higher growth potential over long horizons.
Tax saving add-on: ELSS fund for Section 80C benefit — same equity exposure with a lock-in that enforces discipline.
Total funds: 2-3 maximum. Beyond this, you’re creating complexity without diversification benefit.
The Active vs Passive Debate — Where It Stands in 2026
In the large-cap category, the data has become harder to ignore. Since SEBI’s 2017 categorisation required large-cap funds to hold minimum 80% in the top 100 stocks, most large-cap active funds have found it increasingly difficult to justify their cost over index funds after expenses. This makes expense ratio and fund consistency even more critical selection criteria in the large-cap space.
In the mid-cap and small-cap categories, the case for active management remains stronger — less analyst coverage, more pricing inefficiency, more scope for a skilled manager to add value. The same logic that makes cost efficiency critical in large-caps makes skilled active management more valuable in smaller caps.
A practical 2026 approach: a well-selected large-cap or Flexi-cap fund as the core, an active mid-cap fund for the satellite. Your advisor can help identify the specific funds within each category that fit your risk profile and existing portfolio.
How Many Funds Is Too Many?
Most investors I review have 8-12 mutual funds. When we map them against SEBI categories, they often have 3 Flexi-cap funds from different houses, 2 large-cap funds, and a few others. Effectively, they have one diversified equity portfolio held through 8 wrappers — paying 8 expense ratios for one unit of diversification.
The optimal number for most retirement investors is 2-4 funds across different categories and different fund houses. Beyond this, you’re adding administrative complexity without meaningful risk reduction.
⚠️ The Portfolio Review That Reveals the Truth
Log into MFCentral and pull your Consolidated Account Statement. Map each fund to its SEBI category. Count how many categories you actually have. Most people discover they hold 10 funds in 3 effective categories. Consolidation almost always improves outcomes.
One Principle That Overrides Fund Selection
Whatever fund you choose, the single most important variable in your SIP outcome is not which fund you chose. It’s whether you continued investing when markets fell 30-40%.
The investors I’ve seen build the most wealth from SIPs are not the ones who found the optimal fund in 2010. They’re the ones who kept investing through 2011, 2013, 2015, 2018, 2020, and 2022. A decent fund held through every downturn beats an excellent fund stopped at the first major correction.
Do the Right Thing and Sit Tight.
Not sure which SIP structure fits your retirement plan?
A 30-minute portfolio review maps your existing SIPs against your retirement date and shows what to keep, what to consolidate, and what to change.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which is the best mutual fund for SIP in India in 2026?
There is no universally best fund — it depends on your timeline, risk tolerance, and existing portfolio. For a 10+ year retirement horizon, a Flexi-cap fund as core SIP + a mid-cap fund as satellite is a robust starting structure. Specific fund selection within these categories should be based on consistency, expense ratio, and fund house stability — not last year’s returns.
How do I choose a mutual fund for SIP?
Step 1: Define goal and timeline. Step 2: Choose category based on timeline (equity for 10+ years, hybrid for 5-10, debt for under 5). Step 3: Within category, filter for consistency across multiple market cycles. Step 4: Choose 2-3 funds from different fund houses. Working with an advisor ensures the selected funds fit your complete financial picture — not just isolated rankings.
How many funds should I hold in my SIP portfolio?
2-4 funds is optimal for most retail investors. More than 4-5 funds in overlapping categories creates pseudo-diversification — you pay multiple expense ratios for essentially the same exposure. One core equity fund + one mid-cap + ELSS for tax saving is a complete structure for most people.
Is a Nifty 50 index fund better than an active large-cap fund for SIP?
Post SEBI’s 2017 categorisation, large-cap active funds face a tougher benchmark — making expense ratio and fund consistency more important than ever in this category. The right choice for your portfolio depends on your overall structure and what your advisor recommends after reviewing your full picture. In mid-cap and small-cap, skilled active management still has a stronger case for adding value.
The best mutual fund for SIP is the one you’ll keep running through a 30% market crash without stopping. Start there — and then worry about which specific fund to put in that discipline.
It’s not a Numbers Game. It’s a Mind Game.
💬 Your Turn
How many funds are in your current SIP portfolio — and do you know which SEBI categories they fall into? Share below. The most common pattern: 8-12 funds that effectively behave like 2-3 categories.

