Investing & Wealth Building

Index Funds in India 2026: Best Nifty 50 / Sensex Index Funds + How to Invest

An index fund is a mutual fund designed to track the performance of a specific market index — such as the Nifty 50, Sensex, Nifty Next 50, or Nifty 500 — at the lowest possible cost. Instead of paying a fund manager to pick stocks, an index fund simply buys all the stocks in its target index in the same proportion as the index.

Lily, Richify's Financial Teacher
By Lily, Richify's Financial Teacher
2 min read · Updated June 2026

In India, the most popular index funds track the Nifty 50 (top 50 companies on NSE) and the Sensex (top 30 companies on BSE). These indices include companies like Reliance, HDFC Bank, TCS, ICICI Bank, Infosys, ITC, L&T, Bharti Airtel, Bajaj Finance — giving you instant exposure to India's largest and most profitable businesses through a single SIP. Broader options include the Nifty Next 50 (companies ranked 51-100, the 'aspiring large caps'), Nifty 100, Nifty 200, Nifty 500 (top 500 companies, ~94% of NSE market cap), and Nifty Midcap 150.

The case for index investing in India is increasingly clear: SPIVA India Scorecard (2024) shows that over a 10-year window, approximately 65-80% of actively managed large-cap funds underperform the Nifty 50 / S&P BSE 100 index after fees. Active large-cap funds charge 1-2% annually; index funds charge as little as 0.05-0.20%. That fee difference, compounded over 20-30 years, represents many lakhs in lost wealth. Active midcap and smallcap funds still beat their indices more often (~50-60%) because Indian small-caps are less efficiently priced — index funds dominate large-caps, active funds compete more credibly in midcap and below.

Best Nifty 50 index funds in India (2026)

Every Nifty 50 index fund holds the same 50 stocks, so the only things that separate them are the expense ratio (TER), tracking error (how closely the fund mirrors the index — a good target is under 0.20% a year) and AUM (larger funds tend to track more tightly and are more liquid). The rule of thumb: pick the lowest TER with at least ₹500 crore in AUM.

Fund (Direct Plan)Expense ratio (TER)Notes
UTI Nifty 50 Index Fund~0.20%Oldest; AUM ₹15,000+ crore
ICICI Prudential Nifty 50 Index Fund~0.17%Among the lowest direct-plan TER
Nippon India Index Fund Nifty 50 Plan~0.18%Large and liquid
HDFC Index Fund Nifty 50 Plan~0.20%Large AUM
SBI Nifty Index Fund~0.20%Widely held
Motilal Oswal Nifty 50 Index Fund~0.20%Low tracking error
Mirae Asset Nifty 50 ETF FoF~0.05%Among the cheapest (fund-of-fund route)
Direct-plan expense ratios, approximate as of June 2026 — always confirm the current TER on the AMC factsheet before investing. All funds track the NSE Nifty 50 Total Returns Index.

Beyond the Nifty 50: Next 50, Nifty 500 & international

For exposure past the top 50: Nifty Next 50 options include the UTI, Motilal Oswal and ICICI Prudential Nifty Next 50 Index Funds (TER 0.30-0.45%). Broader still, the Motilal Oswal Nifty 500 Index Fund (~0.40%) and HDFC Nifty 500 Index Fund track 500 stocks across large, mid and small caps. For global diversification within LRS limits, Indian investors use the Motilal Oswal Nasdaq 100 Fund of Fund, ICICI Prudential US Bluechip Equity Fund (active US exposure) or the Mirae Asset NYSE FANG+ ETF FoF.

How to start a Nifty 50 SIP (step by step)

Start in seven steps: (1) Choose a direct-plan platform (Groww, Zerodha Coin, Kuvera, MFCentral, ETMoney, Paytm Money — all free, all direct plans). (2) Complete KYC (PAN + Aadhaar + bank — usually 10 minutes online). (3) Select 'UTI Nifty 50 Index Fund — Direct Growth' (or any equivalent from the table above). (4) Set the SIP amount (minimum ₹100-500 on most platforms). (5) Pick a SIP date (1st, 5th, 10th, 15th — first working day if it falls on a weekend). (6) Set up an e-mandate (NACH) for auto-debit. (7) Done — the SIP runs every month until you cancel it. For a step-up SIP, also set the annual increase percentage (5-10% is typical).

Historical Nifty 50 returns

Long-run Nifty 50 returns have been strong but volatile. The figures below are point-to-point price-return CAGRs — add roughly 1-2% for dividends reinvested (the Total Returns Index):

Holding periodApprox CAGR (price return)
5 years~14%
10 years~12-14%
15 years~11-13%
20 years~13-15%
Approximate price-return CAGR; varies materially with the start date. SIP returns are typically 1-2% lower than lump-sum because of rupee-cost averaging through volatility (~22% annual standard deviation vs ~16% for the S&P 500). 30-50% drawdowns occurred in 2008, 2020 and 2022 — long-term holders recovered fully within 1-3 years.

Index fund vs ETF — which to choose

Index funds are bought via the AMC website or mutual-fund apps without a demat account and support true automated SIP through an e-mandate. ETFs trade on the NSE/BSE through a demat account at live prices and carry lower expense ratios (Nifty BeES ~0.05% vs UTI Nifty Index Fund ~0.20%) but require manual buying each month. For most SIP investors, index funds win on convenience; for lump-sum investors or those already trading, ETFs win on cost. The expense-ratio gap (~0.15-0.20%) is meaningful over 20-30 years (~5-10% of the final corpus), so both routes involve a real trade-off.

Tax on equity index funds (FY 2026-27)

Equity index funds are taxed identically to all other equity mutual funds: LTCG at 12.5% on gains above ₹1.25 lakh per FY (holding > 12 months) and STCG at 20% on gains held < 12 months (STT-paid trades only). Use the ₹1.25 lakh exemption for tax harvesting — book up to ₹1.25 lakh of equity LTCG every FY and rebuy the same fund to step up your cost base tax-free. International index funds (Nasdaq 100, S&P 500 FoFs) are taxed as DEBT funds because they hold <65% Indian equity — gains are taxed at your slab rate per the Finance Act 2023, a real disadvantage versus domestic Nifty 50 funds.

Common index fund myths

Four myths worth dispelling: (1) 'Index funds give only average returns' — false; they match the index, which beats 70%+ of active funds, so 'average' is the winning strategy. (2) 'I need to time the market for index funds' — false; a SIP through bull and bear markets statistically beats timing attempts. (3) 'Active funds beat the Nifty because India is inefficient' — partially true for small/midcap, demonstrably false for large-cap over 10+ years per SPIVA. (4) 'Direct plans are risky' — false; a direct plan is the SAME fund without distributor commission, and always beats the regular plan by the difference in TER.

Richify Tip

For most Indian investors building wealth long-term: a single Nifty 50 index fund (UTI, HDFC, or any with TER under 0.20%) covers 65-75% of NSE market cap and matches what most active large-cap funds fail to deliver. Add a Nifty Next 50 fund for the 'aspiring large caps' tier, and optionally a Nasdaq 100 FoF for global tech exposure. Three funds, ₹500-2000 SIPs each, step up 10% yearly. Richify's AI agents help you compare expense ratios, tracking errors, and historical returns across the major Nifty 50 / Sensex / Next 50 / Nifty 500 / international options and surface the lowest-cost, highest-AUM choice for your goals.

Related terms

ETF (Exchange-Traded Fund)Expense RatioDiversificationSIP / Rupee Cost AveragingAsset AllocationNifty 50 (NSE Nifty)Sensex (BSE Sensex)
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