How to sell your mutual funds the right way – here's how you can save on taxes, exit load
Selling mutual funds may seem straightforward, but doing it the wrong way can eat into your returns through taxes and exit loads. With many investors tempted to exit when markets turn volatile or funds underperform, financial planners stress that timing and method matter as much as choosing the right fund.
Recently, tax advisory platform TaxBuddy shared a case where one of its clients paid Rs 1.5 lakh in taxes and Rs 30,000 in exit load charges, significantly reducing their gains. The lesson was clear: exiting without a strategy can be as damaging as picking a bad investment.
Why panic selling costs more
History shows that panic exits can destroy wealth. During the 2008 financial crisis, the Sensex plunged from 21,000 to 8,000. Many investors rushed to redeem their mutual funds. By 2013, however, markets had doubled, rewarding those who stayed invested. Exiting out of fear often results in permanent loss of capital that could have been recovered.
Right reasons to exit
Financial experts recommend selling only for valid reasons, such as:
Achieving your investment goal (e.g., child’s education fund target).
Approaching your time horizon (e.g., reducing equity exposure before retirement).
Portfolio drift (asset allocation skewed heavily toward equity).
Consistent underperformance or change in fund manager.
Exit loads and taxes
Exit loads are fees charged by fund houses when investors redeem too early. For equity funds, it typically ranges between 0.5% and 1% if redeemed within a year. For example, redeeming Rs 5,00,000 after six months with a 1% exit load costs Rs 5,000 instantly—before taxes are even applied.
Tax treatment depends on the fund type and holding period:
Equity Funds:
Sold within 12 months: Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG) taxed at 20% (15% for sales before July 23, 2024).
Sold after 12 months: Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) taxed at 12.5% on gains above ₹1.25 lakh.
Debt Funds:
Bought after April 1, 2023: Taxed as per income slab, without indexation.
Bought earlier: Held for >36 months taxed at 20% with indexation benefit.
Smarter exit strategies
Instead of redeeming in one go, investors can:
Use a Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) to withdraw gradually.
Opt for partial exits to book profits while leaving the balance invested.
Align redemptions with personal milestones like buying a house or paying for education, rather than reacting to market swings.
TaxBuddy advises investors to always calculate both tax liability and exit load before redeeming. Exiting smartly, it says, is “half the job of investing.”
How mutual fund exits differ from stocks
Unlike stocks, where trades require a willing buyer and seller, mutual fund units are sold back to the fund house at the prevailing Net Asset Value (NAV). Redemption proceeds usually reach investors within 3–4 working days.
Types of Redemption:
Unit-based: Sell a fixed number of units.
Amount-based: Redeem a specific rupee amount.
Full redemption: Withdraw the entire investment.
Ways to Redeem:
Through trading/demat accounts with brokers.
Directly via AMC websites or distributor platforms like Groww.
Using registrar and transfer agencies such as CAMS and KFin.
For investors
Exiting mutual funds is inevitable at some point, but doing so in a planned way can help investors save thousands in taxes and exit charges. Experts suggest: never panic, always check costs, and align exits with goals—not market noise.