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ITC445.003.20(0.72%)
KOTAK BANK1,780.0014.60(0.83%)
LT3,420.0045.20(1.30%)
AXIS BANK1,080.009.50(0.89%)
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ASIAN PAINTS2,850.0018.90(0.67%)
HCLTECH1,420.0016.30(1.14%)
TITAN3,250.0042.60(1.33%)
ADANI PORTS1,380.0022.40(1.60%)
POWER GRID310.004.80(1.57%)
NTPC365.006.20(1.73%)
SUNPHARMA1,680.008.50(0.50%)
NIFTY 5022,500125.30(0.56%)
SENSEX74,200412.50(0.56%)
BANK NIFTY48,300210.40(0.43%)
TATA MOTORS780.0012.45(1.62%)
INFOSYS1,520.0018.20(1.18%)
WIPRO475.005.60(1.19%)
RELIANCE2,890.0034.50(1.21%)
TCS3,650.0028.10(0.76%)
HDFC BANK1,580.0015.20(0.97%)
ICICI BANK1,120.008.90(0.80%)
SBI820.005.30(0.64%)
BHARTI AIRTEL1,650.0022.80(1.40%)
HUL2,380.0012.40(0.52%)
ITC445.003.20(0.72%)
KOTAK BANK1,780.0014.60(0.83%)
LT3,420.0045.20(1.30%)
AXIS BANK1,080.009.50(0.89%)
BAJAJ FINANCE7,200.0085.40(1.20%)
MARUTI12,400150.00(1.19%)
ASIAN PAINTS2,850.0018.90(0.67%)
HCLTECH1,420.0016.30(1.14%)
TITAN3,250.0042.60(1.33%)
ADANI PORTS1,380.0022.40(1.60%)
POWER GRID310.004.80(1.57%)
NTPC365.006.20(1.73%)
SUNPHARMA1,680.008.50(0.50%)
NIFTY 5022,500125.30(0.56%)
SENSEX74,200412.50(0.56%)
BANK NIFTY48,300210.40(0.43%)
TATA MOTORS780.0012.45(1.62%)
INFOSYS1,520.0018.20(1.18%)
WIPRO475.005.60(1.19%)
RELIANCE2,890.0034.50(1.21%)
TCS3,650.0028.10(0.76%)
HDFC BANK1,580.0015.20(0.97%)
ICICI BANK1,120.008.90(0.80%)
SBI820.005.30(0.64%)
BHARTI AIRTEL1,650.0022.80(1.40%)
HUL2,380.0012.40(0.52%)
ITC445.003.20(0.72%)
KOTAK BANK1,780.0014.60(0.83%)
LT3,420.0045.20(1.30%)
AXIS BANK1,080.009.50(0.89%)
BAJAJ FINANCE7,200.0085.40(1.20%)
MARUTI12,400150.00(1.19%)
ASIAN PAINTS2,850.0018.90(0.67%)
HCLTECH1,420.0016.30(1.14%)
TITAN3,250.0042.60(1.33%)
ADANI PORTS1,380.0022.40(1.60%)
POWER GRID310.004.80(1.57%)
NTPC365.006.20(1.73%)
SUNPHARMA1,680.008.50(0.50%)
NIFTY 5022,500125.30(0.56%)
SENSEX74,200412.50(0.56%)
BANK NIFTY48,300210.40(0.43%)
TATA MOTORS780.0012.45(1.62%)
INFOSYS1,520.0018.20(1.18%)
WIPRO475.005.60(1.19%)
RELIANCE2,890.0034.50(1.21%)
TCS3,650.0028.10(0.76%)
HDFC BANK1,580.0015.20(0.97%)
ICICI BANK1,120.008.90(0.80%)
SBI820.005.30(0.64%)
BHARTI AIRTEL1,650.0022.80(1.40%)
HUL2,380.0012.40(0.52%)
ITC445.003.20(0.72%)
KOTAK BANK1,780.0014.60(0.83%)
LT3,420.0045.20(1.30%)
AXIS BANK1,080.009.50(0.89%)
BAJAJ FINANCE7,200.0085.40(1.20%)
MARUTI12,400150.00(1.19%)
ASIAN PAINTS2,850.0018.90(0.67%)
HCLTECH1,420.0016.30(1.14%)
TITAN3,250.0042.60(1.33%)
ADANI PORTS1,380.0022.40(1.60%)
POWER GRID310.004.80(1.57%)
NTPC365.006.20(1.73%)
SUNPHARMA1,680.008.50(0.50%)
NAV, Expenses & Pricing ~5 min read

Total Expense Ratio (TER) — Direct vs Regular Plans

Total Expense Ratio (TER) is the annual percentage of a mutual fund scheme's average daily net assets that is charged to the scheme to cover all operating expen...

Definition

Total Expense Ratio (TER) — Direct vs Regular Plans

Total Expense Ratio (TER) is the annual percentage of a mutual fund scheme's average daily net assets that is charged to the scheme to cover all operating expenses. Under the SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations 2026 (effective April 1, 2026), TER has been restructured for greater transparency using the formula: TER = BER (Base Expense Ratio) + Brokerage + Regulatory Levies + Statutory Levies. The BER is the AMC's core fee for managing money — covering fund management fees, registrar and transfer agent fees, custodian fees, audit fees, legal costs, selling and marketing expenses (including distributor commission in regular plans), and other operational costs. Previously, all these components were bundled into a single TER figure; the 2026 framework now separates them. Statutory levies such as STT, GST, Stamp Duty, SEBI fees, and exchange fees are charged on actuals, over and above BER. SEBI prescribes maximum BER slabs based on the fund's AUM — larger funds must have lower BER. Performance-linked expense ratios are now also permitted. The TER is deducted from the fund's assets daily (pro-rata) and is automatically reflected in the NAV, meaning investors do not pay TER separately.

In Simple Words
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TER is the single most important cost metric for a mutual fund investor, and every distributor must understand it thoroughly. Think of TER as the annual management charge — it is the price the investor pays for professional fund management. The crucial point is that TER is not charged separately to the investor. It is deducted from the fund's assets every day (1/365th of annual TER), and the published NAV already reflects this deduction. So when a fund reports 12% annual return, that is after TER has been deducted. With the SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations 2026 (effective April 1, 2026), TER has been broken into transparent components: TER = BER + Brokerage + Regulatory Levies + Statutory Levies. The BER (Base Expense Ratio) is the AMC's core management fee — previously bundled into a single TER number. Statutory levies (STT, GST, Stamp Duty, SEBI fees, exchange fees) are now charged on actuals, over and above BER. BER caps have been reduced by 10-15 basis points across categories, and brokerage caps have also been tightened (cash market from 12bps to 6bps, derivatives from 5bps to 2bps). Additionally, SEBI now allows performance-linked expense ratios, enabling AMCs to align fees with fund performance. The biggest TER-related concept to master is the difference between Direct and Regular plans. SEBI mandated in January 2013 that every scheme must have two plans: Direct (where the investor approaches the AMC directly, no distributor involved) and Regular (where the investor comes through a distributor). The Regular plan TER is higher because it includes distributor trail commission. Typical difference: 0.50% to 1.00% per year. Over 20 years, this compounds significantly. A 1% annual TER difference on ₹10 lakhs growing at 12% means roughly ₹7-8 lakhs less in the Regular plan over 20 years. This underscores the importance of distributors adding value beyond selling — through financial planning, goal tracking, behavioural coaching, and rebalancing advice to justify the commission.

Real-Life Scenario

A Practical Example

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Case Study
Real-Life Scenario

Case Study: Deepak, a 35-year-old IT professional in Bangalore, compared two options for investing ₹20,000/month in a large-cap fund:

Option 1 — Direct Plan: TER = 0.55% (BER + statutory levies), Expected return = 12% gross, Net return after TER ≈ 11.45%
Option 2 — Regular Plan (through a distributor): TER = 1.35% (BER including trail commission + statutory levies), Expected return = 12% gross, Net return after TER ≈ 10.65%
Over 25 years (₹20,000/month SIP):
• Direct Plan corpus: approximately ₹2.85 crores
• Regular Plan corpus: approximately ₹2.48 crores
• Difference: approximately ₹37 lakhs

Deepak asked his distributor: "Why should I invest through a distributor when the Direct plan gives ₹37 lakhs more?" The distributor explained: "Because a good distributor ensures the investor stays invested during market crashes (2008, 2020), rebalances the portfolio annually, tracks multiple goals systematically, assists with capital gains tax filing, and prevents panic selling. Research shows that investors without advisors typically earn 3-4% less than the fund's actual returns due to behavioural mistakes — that costs far more than the TER difference."

Key Points to Remember

What Makes This Important

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Under SEBI 2026 regulations: TER = BER (Base Expense Ratio) + Brokerage + Regulatory Levies + Statutory Levies — BER is the AMC's core management fee, previously bundled into a single TER number
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BER components: fund management fees, registrar fees, custodian fees, audit fees, legal fees, selling/marketing expenses, investor communication costs, and GST on management fees
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Statutory levies (STT, GST, Stamp Duty, SEBI fees, exchange fees) are now charged on actuals, over and above BER — previously these were included within TER caps
⚖️
BER caps reduced by 10-15 bps across categories under 2026 regulations. Index Funds/ETFs: BER cap reduced from 1.00% to 0.90%; Fund of Funds: BER reduced from 2.25% to 2.10%; Close-ended equity: BER reduced from 1.25% to 1.00%
🎯
Brokerage caps tightened under 2026 norms: Cash market brokerage reduced from 12bps to 6bps; Derivatives brokerage reduced from 5bps to 2bps
🧠
Performance-linked expense ratios are now permitted under the 2026 framework, allowing AMCs to align fees with fund performance outcomes
⏸️
Additional TER of up to 0.30% is allowed for inflows from B30 cities (Beyond Top 30) to incentivize mutual fund penetration in smaller cities
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Direct Plan TER is always lower than Regular Plan TER because it excludes distributor commission — the difference typically ranges from 0.50% to 1.00%
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TER is deducted daily from the fund's NAV on a pro-rata basis (annual TER / 365) — investors do not pay it separately
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Index funds and ETFs have the lowest TER (often 0.05% to 0.20%) because they are passively managed — with the 2026 BER cap at 0.90% for index funds
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India's mutual fund AUM has crossed ₹82 lakh crore, making expense ratio transparency increasingly important for the growing investor base
The Formula

Mathematical Formula

Formula
TER = BER + Brokerage + Regulatory Levies + Statutory Levies (SEBI 2026 framework). BER = (Base Scheme Expenses in a Year / Average Daily Net Assets) x 100
Worked Example

Step-by-Step Calculation

// step-by-step calculation
A large-cap equity fund under the SEBI 2026 framework:
• Average daily net assets (AUM): ₹8,000 crores

BER Components:
• Fund management fees: ₹80 crores
• Registrar & transfer agent fees: ₹8 crores
• Custodian fees: ₹4 crores
• Audit & legal fees: ₹2 crores
• Selling & marketing expenses: ₹36 crores
• Other expenses: ₹10 crores
• Total BER expenses = ₹140 crores
• BER = (₹140 crores / ₹8,000 crores) x 100 = 1.75%

Additional TER Components (charged on actuals, over and above BER):
• Brokerage (cash market at max 6bps): ₹4.8 crores
• Statutory levies (STT, GST, Stamp Duty, SEBI fees, exchange fees): ₹6.2 crores
• Total additional = ₹11 crores = 0.1375%

Total TER = BER (1.75%) + Brokerage & Levies (0.1375%) = 1.8875%

Daily TER deduction = 1.8875% / 365 = 0.00517% per day
If NAV is ₹100 today, the TER deduction is ₹0.00517, and the NAV published will be after this deduction.

Direct Plan of the same fund may have BER of 1.05% (no distributor commission), meaning the BER difference of 0.70% is the trail commission paid to distributors annually. Statutory levies remain the same in both Direct and Regular plans.
FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

Not necessarily. TER reflects the cost structure, not the quality of management. Under the 2026 framework, TER is broken into BER + Brokerage + Regulatory Levies + Statutory Levies, making it easier to identify what drives costs. Actively managed small-cap funds often have higher BER (due to more research required) but may still deliver excellent returns. What matters is the return after TER (net return to investor). However, if two funds have similar gross returns, the one with lower TER will deliver better net returns. Always compare TER components within the same fund category.

Test Your Knowledge

🧠 Quick Quiz

4 questions to check your understanding

4
Questions
Question 1 of 4

Under the SEBI 2026 framework, what is the correct formula for calculating Total Expense Ratio?

Summary Notes

Key Takeaways

Under SEBI 2026 regulations, TER = BER + Brokerage + Regulatory Levies + Statutory Levies — BER is the AMC's core management fee, while statutory levies (STT, GST, Stamp Duty, etc.) are charged on actuals over and above BER
BER caps reduced by 10-15 bps across categories: Index Funds/ETFs from 1.00% to 0.90%, Fund of Funds from 2.25% to 2.10%, Close-ended equity from 1.25% to 1.00%. Brokerage caps also tightened: cash market 12bps to 6bps, derivatives 5bps to 2bps
Direct Plan TER is lower than Regular Plan TER by the amount of distributor commission (typically 0.50% to 1.00%) — this compounds significantly over long investment horizons
Additional TER of up to 0.30% is permitted on B30 (Beyond Top 30) city inflows to incentivize mutual fund penetration in smaller cities. Performance-linked expense ratios are now permitted.
For the NISM exam, understand the new BER framework (effective April 1, 2026), the Direct vs Regular difference, and that TER is reflected in NAV daily — not billed separately. India's MF AUM now exceeds ₹82 lakh crore.
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