Specialised Investment Funds (SIFs)
A SIF is a SEBI-regulated pooled fund with a wider toolkit than a mutual fund: within set limits, it can hedge and take short positions as well as buy and hold. The category is effective from April 2025, with a ₹10 lakh minimum investment.
Educational page, not investment advice. A relationship manager calls you back, usually within one working day.

What is a SIFs
A Specialised Investment Fund (SIF) is a SEBI-regulated investment vehicle that pools money from multiple investors and is managed by professional fund managers at established fund houses under a separate SIF brand. It follows a mutual fund-like structure but offers a wider range of investment tools. Unlike traditional mutual funds, which primarily buy and hold securities, SIFs can also use hedging strategies and take limited short positions to help manage risk or generate returns in different market conditions, all within SEBI’s regulatory framework and disclosure requirements.
SEBI introduced the SIF category, effective April 2025, to bridge the gap between conventional mutual funds and high-entry Portfolio Management Services (PMS) and Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs). The objective is to provide experienced investors with access to more sophisticated investment strategies through a transparent and well-regulated structure.
As investors gain experience, investment products typically offer greater flexibility while requiring higher minimum investments. The progression generally moves from Mutual Funds to Specialised Investment Funds (SIFs), then Portfolio Management Services (PMS), and finally Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs).
In short, a SIF is designed for experienced investors who want more flexibility than a traditional mutual fund offers but do not yet require a fully customised portfolio through PMS.
The minimum investment requirement is ₹10 lakh, calculated at the PAN level for each fund house, not per individual scheme. While this threshold is higher than that of mutual funds, it is significantly lower than the minimum investment for PMS (₹50 lakh) or AIFs (₹1 crore). This requirement helps ensure that SIFs remain suitable for investors who understand the associated strategies and can stay invested through market fluctuations.
Investors are generally expected to maintain a balance of at least ₹10 lakh. If the value falls below this level due to market movements, you may continue holding the investment, but small top-up investments are not permitted. If you choose to redeem and your holding falls below the minimum requirement, a notice period may apply before the account is closed. The exact terms are specified by the respective fund house.
Taxation of a SIF depends on the underlying investment strategy, similar to mutual funds. Equity-oriented, hybrid, and debt-oriented strategies each follow the tax rules applicable to their respective categories, with the applicable tax depending on both the investment category and the holding period. Switching from one strategy to another is treated as a redemption and is therefore a taxable event. Since tax regulations may change over time, investors should verify the latest tax implications with a qualified tax adviser before investing.
A Specialised Investment Fund (SIF) is a SEBI-regulated investment vehicle that pools money from multiple investors. It is managed by professional fund managers at established fund houses under a separate SIF brand name.
It follows a traditional mutual fund framework but unlocks a much wider range of advanced investment tools for experienced investors.
Unlike conventional mutual funds that only buy and hold, SIFs can use hedging strategies and take limited short positions to manage risk or optimize returns in different market cycles.
As investors gain market experience, products offer higher strategy flexibility alongside higher minimum thresholds. SIF acts as the perfect middle ground.
Low entry barrier • Basic buy-and-hold strategies
₹10 Lakh Minimum • Advanced hedging & shorting tools
₹50 Lakh Minimum • Fully customized individual portfolios
₹1 Crore Minimum • Institutional complex trading strategies
The entry threshold is strategically designed to ensure SIF remains suitable for investors who understand advanced market dynamics.
The minimum investment is calculated at the PAN level per fund house, meaning it is not restricted to just a single individual scheme.
Investors are expected to maintain a ₹10 lakh balance. If your value drops below this due to market movements, you can continue holding seamlessly, but further small top-up investments will not be permitted.
Important Notice on Redemptions:
If you choose to redeem your funds and the total holding drops below the ₹10 lakh limit, a predefined notice period may apply before the account is closed by the fund house.
Tax treatment for SIFs mirrors the standard rules applied to mutual funds, depending strictly on your choice of allocation.
Equity-oriented, hybrid, and debt-oriented strategies inside a SIF will follow the specific tax mandates of their respective categories, heavily influenced by your holding period.
Moving your capital from one investment strategy to another within the SIF framework is treated legally as a redemption. Hence, capital gains tax rules will apply immediately during the switch.
Invests mainly in shares to grow your money, and can also benefit when selected shares are expected to fall, within set limits.
Focuses on mid- and small-sized companies outside the 100 largest, aiming for higher growth, with hedging tools available.
Backs a focused set of promising sectors at a time and shifts between them as conditions change. Concentrated by design.
Blends shares and bonds with hedging, aiming for steadier returns with smaller ups and downs than pure equity.
Spreads money across shares, bonds and other assets such as gold, adjusting the mix actively as markets change.
You want to protect capital and earn steady returns above a savings account. The hybrid long-short category is where investors like you typically start reading; note that many of these funds allow exit only in set windows.
You want a balance of growth and stability. Hybrid and multi-asset categories, including the active asset allocator style, are typically the starting point for reading.
You want to maximise growth and accept larger swings. Equity long-short and ex-top-100 categories are the growth-focused end of the SIF family, with a three-year-plus horizon.
Liquidity risk
Your money may not be available instantly, especially in funds that allow exit only in set windows.
Interval windows
Many hybrid SIFs let you redeem only at certain times. Do not use them for money you may need suddenly.
Market risk
Share and bond prices move. SIFs can fall in value, and returns are never guaranteed.
Derivative complexity
The hedging tools SIFs use add complexity; if the manager’s calls are wrong, they can add to losses.
Concentration risk
Focused strategies, like sector or mid- and small-cap funds, can swing more than diversified ones.
Limited track record
SIFs are new, with short histories; judge the strategy and the manager, not just recent returns.
A SIF is a SEBI-regulated investment fund that pools money from many investors and is professionally managed, just like a mutual fund, but with a wider toolkit: within set limits, it can hedge and take short positions on securities the manager expects to fall. The category was introduced by SEBI and is effective from April 2025.
The minimum is ₹10 lakh, and it applies in total at your PAN level for each fund house, not per scheme. If your balance later falls below ₹10 lakh because of market movement, you can continue to hold or redeem the full amount; special rules apply below the minimum, and your fund will explain the exact terms.
A mutual fund starts from small amounts, follows buy-and-hold strategies and offers daily liquidity. A SIF asks for ₹10 lakh, can also hedge and take limited short positions, and offers either daily liquidity or exits only in defined windows. Both are SEBI-regulated; SIFs sit under a separate framework and are offered under a distinct SIF brand of the fund house.
Some SIFs are open-ended and let you exit on any business day. Others, including many hybrid long-short strategies, allow redemption only during defined windows. That structure suits money you will not need suddenly; always check the redemption rules in the scheme document before you invest.
It depends on your risk profile, your goal and how long you can stay invested. As a distributor, we can walk you through the categories and the scheme documents; we do not give investment advice. A good starting point is our free risk profiler, followed by a conversation with us and, where appropriate, with a SEBI-registered investment adviser.