Offer Document — SID, SAI & KIM Explained
The Offer Document of a mutual fund scheme is the comprehensive legal document that provides all material information a prospective investor needs to make an in...
Offer Document — SID, SAI & KIM Explained
The Offer Document of a mutual fund scheme is the comprehensive legal document that provides all material information a prospective investor needs to make an informed investment decision. It consists of two parts: the Scheme Information Document (SID), which contains scheme-specific details like investment objective, asset allocation, risk factors, and fee structure; and the Statement of Additional Information (SAI), which contains AMC-level information like financial statements, key personnel details, and legal disclosures. Together, SID and SAI form the complete Offer Document. A shorter version called the Key Information Memorandum (KIM) is also prepared for quick reference.
The Offer Document functions like a comprehensive product manual. The SID is the operational handbook — it describes everything about the specific scheme: what it invests in, how risky it is, what fees apply, when investors can exit, and what benchmark it tracks. The SAI is the organizational manual — it covers the AMC, the sponsor, the trustees, and the financial history. Together, they provide the complete picture. In practice, relatively few retail investors read the entire Offer Document cover to cover. However, distributors are professionally and legally obligated to read it. SEBI and AMFI hold distributors responsible for understanding the products they recommend. If a client complains that they were not informed about exit loads or risks, and the information was clearly mentioned in the SID, the regulatory burden falls on the distributor. Under the SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 2026, the new TER framework now separates Base Expense Ratio (BER), Brokerage, and Regulatory/Statutory levies — all of which must be disclosed in the SID. The Offer Document must be filed with SEBI at least 21 days before the NFO (New Fund Offer) opens — this gives SEBI time to review and raise objections. After launch, the SID and SAI must be updated at least once a year.
A Practical Example
Consider Priya, a new MFD in Hyderabad, preparing to recommend a large-cap equity fund to her client Venkat. Before doing so, she downloads the SID from the AMC website and reviews the key details: Investment Objective — long-term capital appreciation by investing in large-cap stocks. Asset Allocation — 80-100% in equity of large-cap companies, 0-20% in debt and money market instruments. Benchmark — Nifty 100 TRI. Exit Load — 1% if redeemed within 1 year. Expense Ratio — disclosed under the new BER + Brokerage + Levies framework. Risk-o-meter — Very High. She then checks the SAI and notes the AMC's net worth, sponsor credentials, and the fund manager's experience. Armed with this information, Priya explains to Venkat the fund's investment mandate, risk level, exit load implications, and fee structure. This is exactly how a professional distributor should use offer documents — as a foundation for transparent client communication.
What Makes This Important
Frequently Asked Questions
SID is scheme-specific — it covers one particular scheme (its objective, risks, fees, benchmark). SAI is AMC-specific — it covers the AMC managing that scheme (sponsor details, trustee board, AMC financials, legal information). One AMC has one SAI but multiple SIDs — one for each scheme it manages. Together they form the Offer Document.
🧠 Quick Quiz
4 questions to check your understanding
