Both ETFs and Index Mutual Funds track the exact same index — Nifty 50, Sensex, or Nifty Bank. The difference lies in how you buy them, the costs, and practical convenience. Here's the honest comparison.
Explore ETF Directory →| FACTOR | ETF (e.g. NIFTYBEES) | Index MF (e.g. UTI Nifty 50) |
|---|---|---|
| Expense Ratio | 0.04% (NIFTYBEES) | 0.18% (UTI Direct) |
| Trading | Live on NSE — real-time price | End-of-day NAV only |
| Demat Account | Required | Not required (direct via AMC/Groww) |
| SIP Automation | Manual / broker SIP feature | Fully automatic via bank mandate |
| Minimum Investment | 1 unit (≈₹250 for NIFTYBEES) | ₹500 (most index funds) |
| Fractional Units | No — whole units only | Yes — invest exact ₹ amount |
| Exit Load | Never — zero exit load | Some have 0.10–0.25% if exited early |
| Margin Collateral | Can be used as 90% margin | Not accepted as margin |
| Intraday Trading | Yes — buy at 9:15, sell at 3:29 | No intraday possible |
| Tax Treatment | Same: STCG 20%, LTCG 12.5% | Same: STCG 20%, LTCG 12.5% |
NIFTYBEES (ETF): 0.04% expense. UTI Nifty 50 Index Fund Direct: 0.18% expense. The gap is 0.14%. On ₹10 lakh invested for 30 years at 12% gross annual return, this 0.14% difference compounds to approximately ₹8.8 lakh additional corpus with the ETF.
However, ETFs have a countervailing cost: brokerage (₹0–₹20 per trade depending on broker) + bid-ask spread (0.01–0.05% on liquid ETFs). For a single large lump-sum purchase, the ETF clearly wins. For monthly SIPs of ₹5,000, the ₹20 brokerage per trade amounts to 0.4% — more than wiping out the expense ratio advantage vs the MF.
You are investing a large lump sum (₹50,000+) where the lower expense ratio's compounding advantage dominates brokerage costs. You are an active investor who wants to trade in/out during market hours — ETFs let you exit at 10am if markets spike vs waiting till 3:30pm NAV. You want to use ETF units as collateral for F&O margin. You already have a demat account. You want Gold/Silver exposure (commodity ETFs have no MF equivalent with same NAV).
You want a fully automated monthly SIP via bank mandate with zero manual effort. You prefer investing in fractional amounts (e.g., exactly ₹10,000/month regardless of unit price). You don't have a demat account and don't want the hassle of opening one. You're a beginner nervous about exchange orders and bid-ask spreads. You invest small amounts (<₹25,000) where brokerage erodes the ETF cost advantage.
For large investors (₹5L+ lump sum), savvy users who understand limit orders, and active traders: ETF. For regular monthly SIP investors, beginners, and those without demat accounts: Index Mutual Fund. Both beat actively managed funds over the long term — and making the choice between them matters far less than simply starting to invest passively.