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Life Cycle Funds in India: How SEBI’s New Category Works for Retirement Planning

Life Cycle Funds in India: How SEBI’s New Category Works for Retirement Planning

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Kashish Manjani

Date

10 Mar 2026

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In recent weeks, many investors have started asking about Life Cycle Funds and whether they should be used for retirement planning.

The concept sounds straightforward. A fund automatically changes its asset allocation as the investor moves closer to a specific target year.

But retirement planning involves long-term money, and decisions around long-term investments deserve careful consideration.

Before evaluating whether this structure fits into a retirement portfolio, it is useful to understand how Life Cycle Funds work and what factors investors should evaluate.

Life Cycle Funds have gained attention after regulatory changes introduced by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), which replaced the earlier solution-oriented mutual fund category with this new structure.

What Are Life Cycle Funds?

Life Cycle Funds are mutual funds designed around a target year, often linked to a long-term financial goal such as retirement.

The asset allocation of the fund gradually changes depending on how far the investor is from that target year.

For example, consider a Life Cycle Fund 2050.

If the target year is 20–25 years away, the fund may allocate a large portion of its portfolio to equities, typically ranging from about 65 percent to 95 percent. The objective during this phase is long-term growth.

As the target year approaches, the fund gradually reduces equity exposure and increases allocation to debt and other relatively stable assets.

In the years closer to maturity, equity exposure may reduce significantly while debt allocation becomes dominant.

This gradual transition in asset allocation is known as a glide path.

Why SEBI Introduced Life Cycle Funds

Life Cycle Funds were introduced as part of regulatory changes by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI). Earlier, mutual funds offered solution-oriented schemes, such as retirement funds and children’s funds.

Many of these schemes functioned largely as equity or hybrid funds with a lock-in period but did not always follow a structured asset allocation framework linked to the investment horizon.

To bring greater clarity and standardisation, SEBI replaced that category with Life Cycle Funds, which follow a predefined glide path and allow multi-asset exposure within a single fund.

Understanding the Glide Path in Life Cycle Funds

The glide path is the core mechanism behind Life Cycle Funds.

It defines how the portfolio shifts from growth-oriented assets to more stable assets over time.

During the early years of the investment journey, the fund focuses on capital growth through higher equity exposure. Over time, the allocation moves toward capital stability and income generation.

Apart from equity and debt, Life Cycle Funds may also include other asset classes within the same structure, such as:

  • Gold exchange-traded funds
  • Silver ETFs
  • Infrastructure investment trusts (InvITs)

This multi-asset exposure aims to create diversification within a single fund structure while the glide path gradually adjusts the allocation.

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Key Features of Life Cycle Funds in India

Life Cycle Funds are designed as open-ended mutual funds, which means investors can enter or exit the scheme at any time.

However, there are certain structural aspects investors should be aware of.

Exit loads may apply during the early years of the investment period. In some cases, the exit load can be as high as three percent during the first year, and then gradually reduce over the next few years.

Another structural point relates to the portfolio composition closer to the target year. In the final years before maturity, the debt allocation is generally restricted to higher credit quality instruments, typically rated AA or above.

Near the maturity phase, the equity allocation in the fund is often below 65 percent, which has implications from a taxation perspective.

Taxation of Life Cycle Funds in India

The equity allocation near maturity becomes relevant for tax treatment.

If the equity exposure in the fund falls below 65 percent, the fund may be treated as a non-equity mutual fund for taxation purposes.

Under the current tax framework, gains from such funds may be taxed according to the investor’s income tax slab.

This becomes particularly important in the year of retirement.

Many investors receive multiple forms of income in the same financial year when they retire. These may include gratuity payments, leave encashment, final salary payouts, bonuses, or withdrawals from retirement accounts.

If the entire Life Cycle Fund corpus is redeemed in that same year, the combined income may result in a higher taxable income for that financial year.

This is not necessarily a limitation of the product itself. Instead, it highlights an important aspect of retirement planning.

Retirement planning is not only about accumulating a corpus. It also involves structuring withdrawals in a tax-efficient manner.

When Life Cycle Funds May Not Be Necessary

For some investors, the approach followed by Life Cycle Funds may already exist within their portfolio management strategy.

Investors who periodically review their portfolios and gradually reduce equity exposure as retirement approaches are essentially implementing a manual glide path.

In such situations, a Life Cycle Fund does not necessarily introduce a new strategy. Instead, it simply packages the asset allocation strategy into a single mutual fund.

Another consideration relates to changing personal circumstances.

The glide path adjusts allocation based on time remaining to the target year, but it does not account for changes in an investor’s financial situation. For example, income fluctuations, business events, inheritance, or early retirement decisions can significantly alter financial planning requirements.

Because the allocation path is predefined, it may not fully adapt to such changes.

Who Should Consider Life Cycle Funds

Despite these considerations, Life Cycle Funds may still be useful for certain investors.

They may be appropriate for individuals who prefer a single structured solution for a long-term goal such as retirement.

They may also suit investors who do not actively monitor or rebalance their portfolios and would prefer the asset allocation changes to happen automatically over time.

For such investors, the glide path may help maintain discipline in asset allocation across long investment horizons.

Withdrawal Planning for Life Cycle Funds

If an investor chooses to invest in a Life Cycle Fund, the withdrawal strategy becomes an important part of retirement planning.

Redeeming the entire investment corpus in a single financial year may not always be the most efficient approach.

Instead, investors may consider:

  • Staggering withdrawals over multiple years
  • Using systematic withdrawal plans
  • Evaluating tax implications across the household

These decisions can influence how efficiently the retirement corpus is used after accumulation.

Conclusion

Life Cycle Funds in India represent a structured approach to asset allocation where the portfolio gradually becomes more conservative as the target year approaches.

For investors seeking simplicity and automatic portfolio adjustments, this structure may provide convenience.

However, the decision to invest in such funds should be evaluated within the context of the overall financial plan, asset allocation strategy, and retirement income requirements.

The effectiveness of the product ultimately depends not only on the structure of the fund but also on how investment fits within the broader framework of long-term financial planning.

Picture of Written by

Written by

Kashish Manjani

Kashish blends strategic thinking with timeless financial principles — helping clients grow, protect, and align their wealth with their values. Kashish blends strategic thinking with timeless financial principles — helping clients grow, protect, and align their wealth with their values.

FAQs

Frequently Asked questions

Q1.What are Life Cycle Funds in mutual funds?

Life Cycle Funds are mutual funds that automatically change their asset allocation as the investor approaches a specified target year. Equity exposure is typically higher in the early years and gradually decreases while debt allocation increases as the target year approaches.

A glide path is the strategy used by Life Cycle Funds to gradually shift asset allocation from growth-oriented assets like equity to relatively stable assets such as debt as the target year approaches.

Life Cycle Funds may be suitable for investors who prefer automatic asset allocation adjustments for long-term goals such as retirement. However, investors who actively manage their portfolios may already be implementing a similar strategy manually.

If the equity allocation in the fund falls below 65 percent, the fund may be treated as a non-equity mutual fund for tax purposes. Gains may then be taxed according to the investor’s income tax slab.

Yes. Life Cycle Funds are open-ended mutual funds, which means investors can exit before maturity. However, exit loads may apply during the initial years of investment.

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