The most comprehensive free resource for mutual fund industry data in India. Month-by-month AUM, net inflows and outflows, SIP contribution trends, category-wise fund flows, market movement analysis and new scheme launches — all sourced directly from official AMFI monthly reports. No login. No paywall. Built for serious research.
This is a free, interactive dashboard that tracks the entire Indian mutual fund industry month by month — from April 2021 to the latest available month. It covers every major fund category including Large Cap Funds, Mid Cap Funds, Small Cap Funds, Flexi Cap Funds, Multi Cap Funds, Large & Mid Cap Funds, Sectoral and Thematic Funds, ELSS (Tax Saving) Funds, Focused Funds, Value and Contra Funds, Balanced Advantage Funds (BAF), Arbitrage Funds, Multi Asset Allocation Funds, Index Funds, Gold ETFs, Other ETFs, Liquid Funds, Corporate Bond Funds, Credit Risk Funds, Banking & PSU Funds, Gilt Funds, Overnight Funds and more.
All data comes directly from AMFI (Association of Mutual Funds in India) official monthly reports. This is the same data used by SEBI, fund houses, institutional investors and financial regulators. We simply organise it into a clean, interactive format that makes research fast and accessible — without requiring any login, subscription or payment.
If you have ever searched for mutual fund industry AUM data, monthly SIP data India, category wise mutual fund inflows, AMFI monthly statistics, net flow data mutual funds or similar research queries — this dashboard is built exactly for that purpose.
The dashboard covers six major research areas, each answering a specific question about the Indian mutual fund industry:
Monthly AUM and net flow cards for the entire industry. See how total industry assets under management moved each month across open ended, close ended and interval schemes.
Month-by-month AUM for every fund category — debt, equity, hybrid and passive. Sortable by any month. Compare how large cap AUM moved versus small cap, or index funds versus active equity.
Where is money actually going? Net inflows (green) and outflows (red) for every category. See which funds are gaining investor money and which are losing it month by month.
Our own calculation derived from AMFI data — how much of each month's AUM change was due to fresh investor money versus market price movement on existing holdings. Formula: AUM change minus Net Flow.
10+ years of monthly SIP contribution data — amounts, outstanding accounts, new registrations, discontinuations and SIP AUM. Track the growth of systematic investing in India.
Every new mutual fund scheme launched each month with amounts mobilised during NFO. Track which categories saw new launches and how much investor appetite they received.
The dashboard currently covers April 2021 to April 2026 — over five financial years of data. This covers three complete market cycles including the post-COVID recovery bull market of FY22, the rate hike correction year of FY23, the election rally year of FY24, and the volatile FY25 and FY26 markets.
Having five years of data allows researchers to answer questions that single-year data cannot — questions like:
Which fund categories received consistent inflows across all five years? (Answer: Index Funds and Mid Cap Funds — both received positive flows in nearly every month from April 2021 to April 2026.)
Which categories are in structural decline? (Answer: ELSS has seen net outflows in most months since FY23 as the new tax regime reduced its 80C benefit. This is a multi-year pattern now clearly visible in the data.)
How does market correction affect different categories? (Answer: The Market Movement section shows that in correction months, small and mid cap categories lose significantly more value on existing holdings compared to large cap — the volatility difference is quantifiable in the data.)
AMFI publishes its monthly data as PDF reports and Excel files. Reading those files, extracting category-wise data, comparing it across months and financial years requires significant manual effort. This dashboard does all of that automatically — giving researchers, students, advisors and investors instant access to five years of organised, comparable, interactive data. No downloading, no formatting, no Excel work needed.
AUM is the total market value of all assets managed by a mutual fund category at the end of a month. When you see Equity Fund AUM ₹35 Lakh Crore, it means all equity mutual fund schemes in India together manage ₹35 lakh crore of investor money. AUM changes for two reasons — fresh money coming in or leaving (net flow), and market price changes on existing holdings (market movement).
Net Flow = Total money investors put in (gross purchases) minus total money investors withdrew (redemptions) during that month. A positive net flow means more money came in than went out — the category attracted net new investment. A negative net flow means more was redeemed than invested — investors were pulling money out. Net flow data tells you where investor sentiment is actually going, independent of market price movements.
This is calculated as: AUM this month minus AUM last month minus Net Flow. The result tells you how much the existing holdings in a category gained or lost purely due to market price changes — independent of whether investors were putting money in or taking it out. In a bull market, market movement is strongly positive even with moderate flows. In corrections, it turns sharply negative even when SIP inflows continue.
A SIP is a method of investing a fixed amount in a mutual fund at regular intervals — monthly, weekly or daily. The monthly SIP data shows how much total money flowed into mutual funds through SIPs in each month. India's monthly SIP contribution has grown from ₹3,122 crore in April 2016 to ₹31,115 crore in April 2026 — one of the most significant structural shifts in Indian retail finance. The SIP section tracks this growth with outstanding accounts, new registrations and discontinuation data.
An NFO is when a mutual fund house launches a new scheme and raises money from investors for the first time. The New Fund Launches section shows every NFO that opened and closed each month, which category it belonged to, and how much money it raised. NFO activity is a good indicator of where AMCs see investor demand and which themes are currently popular.
One of the clearest trends in five years of data is the relentless growth of passive investing. Index fund AUM grew from ₹20,426 crore in April 2021 to over ₹3.31 lakh crore by April 2026 — a 15x increase in five years. Positive inflows every single month across all five years. Other ETF AUM grew similarly from ₹2.77 lakh crore to over ₹9.65 lakh crore. Investors and advisors are increasingly choosing low-cost index funds over active large cap funds — a structural shift that the data makes unmistakably clear.
Monthly SIP contributions have grown from ₹8,596 crore (April 2021) to ₹32,087 crore (March 2026 — all-time high). April 2026 came in at ₹31,115 crore. Outstanding SIP accounts crossed 100 lakh (10 crore) during this period. This data tells the story of how Indian retail investors embraced disciplined monthly investing at a scale never seen before. The SIP section provides complete month-by-month data on contributions, accounts, new registrations and discontinuations.
Gold ETF AUM grew from ₹15,629 crore (April 2021) to ₹1,78,110 crore (April 2026) — a 997% increase in five years. The acceleration was particularly sharp in FY26 when global gold prices rallied strongly. This category went from a niche institutional product to a mainstream retail investment, with AUM nearly tripling in just the last 12 months of the data.
ELSS (Equity Linked Savings Scheme) funds show a pattern of consistent net outflows from FY23 onwards. As the new income tax regime made Section 80C deductions irrelevant for most salaried taxpayers, the primary reason to invest in ELSS — the ₹1.5 lakh tax deduction — disappeared for a large segment of investors. This is not a temporary trend but a structural permanent shift visible clearly in the five-year flow data.
Debt funds — particularly liquid funds and overnight funds — show a highly predictable quarterly pattern that repeats every year. Quarter-end months (June, September, December, March) see massive institutional outflows, followed by equally large inflows in the quarter-start months. This is not retail panic — it is mechanical corporate treasury behaviour. Companies park surplus cash in liquid funds during the quarter and pull it out at quarter end for balance sheet management. This pattern is visible with striking clarity across all five years of data.
Multi Asset Allocation funds received positive net inflows in every single month across the entire five-year period covered by this dashboard. AUM grew from ₹14,711 crore (April 2021) to ₹1,87,071 crore (April 2026) — a 12x increase. This reflects a growing preference among investors and financial advisors for all-weather funds that automatically balance equity, debt and gold — removing the need for manual rebalancing.
Understand where money is flowing in the industry. Identify which categories are gaining or losing favour. Make more informed decisions about category allocation.
Access five years of category flow data to support client recommendations. Show clients the SIP growth story and structural category trends with real data.
Complete industry data for academic research, thesis work, CFA/CFP exam preparation and competitive exam questions on mutual fund industry structure.
Quick access to verified industry data for articles, reports and analysis. Monthly breakdowns make it easy to identify trends and data points for stories.
Track competitive category trends. Monitor where industry flows are going. Understand how your category is performing relative to the broader industry.
If you want to understand how Indian investors actually behave — where they put money, when they panic, what they trust — this is the data that tells that story.
As of April 2026, Other ETFs (which includes equity ETFs, sectoral ETFs and debt ETFs) has the highest AUM among individual categories at approximately ₹9.65 lakh crore. Among active equity categories, Flexi Cap funds lead with over ₹5.59 lakh crore AUM. Among debt categories, Liquid funds are the largest. The AUM section of the dashboard lets you compare all categories and sort by any month.
Total industry net flows vary significantly by month — from strongly positive to strongly negative — primarily driven by debt fund institutional behaviour. Equity fund flows have been consistently positive every month for several years. The Industry Snapshot section shows total inflows, outflows and net position for each month of each financial year.
Monthly SIP contributions crossed ₹31,000 crore in FY26. April 2026 (FY27 start) came in at ₹31,115 crore. The SIP section provides the exact monthly figure along with year-on-year comparisons going back to FY17 — giving a complete picture of SIP growth in India over the last decade.
The Net Flows section answers this precisely for any month you select. Switch between financial years to see which categories have consistently attracted money and which have been consistently losing it. ELSS, for example, has shown net outflows in most months since FY23 — a trend clearly visible across multiple years of data.
The New Fund Launches section shows every new scheme (NFO) launched each month across all financial years. The number varies from a handful to over 30 schemes in busy months. In FY26, several months saw 20+ new scheme launches. FY27 started with 11 new schemes in April 2026, primarily in sectoral/thematic and passive categories.
Every number in this dashboard comes from AMFI (Association of Mutual Funds in India) official monthly reports — the primary source of mutual fund industry data in India. AMFI publishes these reports every month covering all registered mutual fund schemes. The data is the same that SEBI, fund houses, stock exchanges and institutional research desks use.
We do not estimate, interpolate or derive data. The AUM, net flow and category subtotals are taken directly from AMFI publications. The only derived calculation is Market Movement Effect — which we compute as AUM this month minus AUM last month minus Net Flow. This is not published by AMFI directly but is a straightforward arithmetic derivation from two official AMFI numbers. It shows how much of a category's AUM change was driven by market price movements versus actual investor flows.
The dashboard is updated once a month when AMFI releases its monthly report — typically in the first two weeks of the following month. For example, April 2026 data is now available. Data is updated monthly when AMFI releases its monthly report.
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The full interactive dashboard — sortable tables, month-by-month comparisons, five financial years, market movement analysis and SIP trends — is one click away. Completely free. No login required.
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