Investors who have built up ₹50 lakh or more often reach a decision point: continue investing through mutual funds, or move a portion of the portfolio into Portfolio Management Services (PMS)? Both are legitimate, SEBI-regulated ways to invest in equity and debt markets — but they differ meaningfully in structure, cost, taxation, and the level of customisation available. This page compares the two in depth so you can make an informed choice for your specific situation.
Structural Difference: Pooled vs Direct Ownership
A mutual fund pools money from thousands of investors into a single scheme. You own units of that pooled portfolio, and the fund’s NAV reflects the value of the underlying securities. You never directly own the individual stocks or bonds the fund holds.
PMS works differently — the portfolio manager builds a portfolio of securities that is held directly in your own demat account. You are the legal owner of every stock and bond in the portfolio at all times, even though the portfolio manager makes the buy/sell decisions on your behalf under a signed mandate.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Factor | Mutual Funds | PMS |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum Investment | ₹100 (SIP) / ₹500 (lump sum) | ₹50 lakh (SEBI-mandated) |
| Ownership Structure | Units in a pooled scheme | Direct securities in your demat account |
| Regulator | SEBI (Mutual Fund Regulations, 1996) | SEBI (Portfolio Managers Regulations, 2020) |
| Customisation | None — identical portfolio for all unit holders | High — mandate can be tailored to your preferences |
| Portfolio Concentration | Typically 40-100+ stocks | Typically 15-30 stocks |
| Costs | TER: ~0.5-1.5% (direct plans) | Fixed fee (1-2.5%) and/or performance fee (10-20% over hurdle) |
| Taxation | Taxed only on redemption of units (LTCG/STCG) | Every transaction inside the portfolio is taxed in your hands |
| Liquidity | High — redeem any business day (open-ended) | Lower — some strategies have lock-in or notice periods |
| Demat Account Required | No | Yes |
| Transparency | NAV published daily; holdings disclosed monthly | Full real-time visibility of every holding |
| Reporting | Consolidated Account Statement (CAS) | Monthly portfolio statement + quarterly performance report |
| Exit Load | Usually 1% if redeemed within 1 year | Varies by provider — check the disclosure document |
Where Mutual Funds Win
- Lower cost — index and direct equity funds are meaningfully cheaper than PMS on a total-cost basis
- Diversification at any ticket size — start with ₹500/month and get exposure to 50-100 stocks
- Simpler taxation — one redemption event to track per transaction, no need to reconcile dozens of buy/sell entries across the year
- Higher liquidity — open-ended funds can be redeemed on any business day
Where PMS Wins
- Direct ownership and full transparency — you can see every stock in your portfolio at any time, not just monthly disclosures
- Customisation — a mandate can exclude sectors or stocks you’re not comfortable with
- Concentrated, high-conviction investing — for investors who believe a focused portfolio can outperform a diversified one
- Direct engagement with the portfolio manager — larger PMS mandates often come with periodic one-on-one reviews
Tax Treatment — The Key Practical Difference
This is where most investors get surprised. In a mutual fund, you are taxed only when you redeem units — the fund manager can buy and sell securities inside the scheme without triggering any tax event for you. In PMS, because you own the securities directly, every transaction the portfolio manager executes is a taxable event for you — subject to STCG (20%) or LTCG (12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh) depending on the holding period of each security. This means PMS investors typically deal with far more entries in their capital gains statement each year. Read our detailed guide: PMS Taxation Explained.
How to Decide
Ask yourself:
- Do I have ₹50 lakh or more to commit to a single strategy? If not, PMS isn’t accessible yet — mutual funds are your only option at smaller ticket sizes.
- Do I want to see and understand every holding, or am I comfortable with a pooled, less transparent structure?
- Can I handle the additional tax reporting complexity of transaction-level taxation?
- Am I comfortable with a concentrated 15-30 stock portfolio, or do I prefer broader diversification?
Many experienced HNI investors don’t choose one over the other — they use mutual funds for the diversified core of their portfolio and PMS for a smaller, high-conviction satellite allocation. See our full comparison across all three structures: PMS vs Mutual Funds vs SIF and PMS vs AIF.
As an APMI-registered PMS Distributor (APRN01448) and AMFI-registered MFD, Meta Investment can help you evaluate both routes against your specific goals, risk profile, and tax situation. Book a Free Consultation to discuss what fits.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is PMS better than mutual funds?
Neither is universally better — they serve different investor profiles. PMS suits investors with ₹50 lakh+ who want a customised, concentrated portfolio held directly in their own demat account. Mutual funds suit investors at any ticket size who want pooled diversification, high liquidity, and lower cost. Many HNIs use both — mutual funds for the core portfolio and PMS for a satellite, higher-conviction allocation.
Why is PMS taxation different from mutual fund taxation?
In a mutual fund, the fund itself is the taxable owner of securities and gains inside the fund are not taxed to the investor until units are redeemed. In PMS, securities are held directly in your own demat account, so every buy/sell transaction the portfolio manager makes is a taxable event in your hands — you report capital gains/losses on each transaction, not just at redemption.
Can I lose more money in PMS than in a mutual fund?
PMS strategies are often more concentrated (15-30 stocks) than diversified mutual funds (50-100+ stocks), so single-stock risk is higher in PMS. This can amplify both gains and losses. PMS is suitable only for investors who understand and can tolerate this higher volatility.
Are PMS returns better than mutual fund returns?
There is no guarantee either way. Some PMS strategies have outperformed mutual fund category averages over specific periods due to concentration and active stock selection; others have underperformed. Always compare PMS track records against relevant mutual fund benchmarks over 3-5+ year periods, net of all fees, before concluding PMS returns are superior.
Which has lower costs, PMS or mutual funds?
Mutual funds are generally cheaper. Direct plan equity funds charge a Total Expense Ratio (TER) of roughly 0.5-1.5% per year. PMS typically charges a fixed fee of 1-2.5% per year and/or a performance fee of 10-20% above a hurdle rate — the effective cost of PMS is usually higher, especially in strong markets.
Do I need a demat account for PMS but not for mutual funds?
Yes. PMS requires you to open (or use an existing) demat account because securities are held directly in your name. Mutual funds do not require a demat account — units are held in an electronic folio maintained by the registrar (CAMS/KFintech), which is a simpler structure for most retail investors.