The 3-fund portfolio is the simplest evidence-backed investment framework that exists. It was popularised in the US by Bogleheads (followers of Vanguard founder Jack Bogle), but the logic translates perfectly to India. Three funds, covering Indian equity, international equity, and debt, give you exposure to thousands of companies across the world with minimal complexity and low costs.

Why Three Funds?

Most investors overcomplicate their portfolios. They hold 8-12 mutual funds across multiple categories, many of which overlap significantly. Studies consistently show that beyond a certain point, adding funds adds complexity and cost without meaningfully improving diversification.

Three funds can cover:

  • All major Indian listed companies (Nifty 500 or broader)
  • Global ex-India equity (US and international markets)
  • Fixed income / debt (safety buffer and rebalancing reserve)

Fund 1: Indian Equity (60-70% of equity allocation)

The goal here is broad market exposure at the lowest possible cost. A Nifty 500 index fund covers the top 500 companies on NSE and is a better representative of the Indian economy than the Nifty 50 alone.

Good options:

FundTER (Direct)Min SIP
UTI Nifty 500 Index Fund0.30-0.35%Rs 500
Motilal Oswal Nifty 500 Index Fund0.25-0.30%Rs 500
HDFC Nifty 500 Index Fund0.25-0.40%Rs 100

If you want to keep it even simpler, a Nifty 50 index fund works too (lower TER, slightly less diversification):

FundTER (Direct)Min SIP
UTI Nifty 50 Index Fund0.18-0.20%Rs 500
HDFC Index Fund - Nifty 500.20%Rs 100
Nippon India Index Fund - Nifty 500.20%Rs 100

Fund 2: International Equity (20-30% of equity allocation)

This fund provides geographic diversification. Indian equity and US equity are not perfectly correlated. Adding international exposure reduces portfolio-level volatility and gives you access to sectors and companies not well-represented in India (e.g., consumer technology, pharmaceutical innovation, semiconductors).

Good options:

FundUnderlying IndexTERNote
Motilal Oswal S&P 500 Index FundS&P 5000.49-0.57%US large cap exposure
Mirae Asset NYSE FANG+ ETF FoFFANG+ (tech concentrated)0.5-0.8%Higher volatility
ICICI Prudential US Bluechip EquityActive US fund0.7-1.2%Active with US stock picking
Edelweiss US Technology FoFInvests in Amundi US tech fund0.7-1.0%Tech concentrated

Note: International funds have faced SEBI-imposed investment pauses when the industry hits USD 7 billion overseas limit. Check current availability before investing.

A simpler alternative is Parag Parikh Flexi Cap, which provides roughly 20-22% international exposure within a domestic fund - eliminating the need for a separate international fund for investors who prefer simplicity.

Fund 3: Debt (20-40% of total portfolio, based on age/risk)

The debt fund provides stability, reduces drawdown severity, and serves as the rebalancing reserve. When equity falls sharply, you can sell some debt and buy equity at lower prices.

Good options based on investment horizon:

Fund TypeExampleUse Case
Short Duration FundHDFC Short Duration, Axis Short Duration1-3 year horizon debt
Banking & PSU FundKotak Banking & PSU DebtLow credit risk, moderate returns
Gilt Fund (Short Term)SBI Magnum Gilt FundInterest rate exposure, long horizon
Arbitrage FundICICI Prudential Arbitrage, Nippon India ArbitrageEquity taxation, near-FD returns

For the debt portion, arbitrage funds are worth considering because they are taxed as equity funds (12.5% LTCG after 1 year vs slab rate for debt funds post-2023). For investors in the 30% tax bracket, an arbitrage fund in the 7-7.5% gross return range delivers better after-tax returns than a debt fund at similar gross returns.

Sample Allocation by Age

The standard “100 minus age” rule for equity allocation is a starting point:

AgeIndian EquityInternational EquityDebt
2565%20%15%
3555%20%25%
4545%15%40%
5530%10%60%

These are illustrative. Your actual allocation depends on income stability, existing assets, and risk tolerance.

Implementation Example (Rs 20,000/month SIP)

For a 30-year-old with 25-year horizon:

FundAllocationMonthly SIP
UTI Nifty 500 Index Fund55%Rs 11,000
Motilal Oswal S&P 500 Index Fund20%Rs 4,000
ICICI Prudential Arbitrage Fund25%Rs 5,000
Total100%Rs 20,000

Rebalancing

Rebalance once per year. If equity has run up and your allocation is now 85% equity vs target 75%, sell some equity and buy debt (or stop equity SIPs temporarily). This is the mechanical version of “buy low, sell high.”

Do not rebalance more frequently than annually. Transaction costs and tax implications of frequent rebalancing eat into the benefit.

What This Portfolio Does Not Include

  • Sector funds (you do not need them - Nifty 500 has natural sector exposure)
  • Small cap funds (Nifty 500 already includes small cap; a separate small cap tilt is a separate decision)
  • Real estate (REITs can be a fourth fund if you want real estate exposure, but this is optional)
  • Gold (some allocate 5-10% to gold via Gold ETF or SGB; again optional)

Bottom Line

A 3-fund portfolio with an Indian equity index fund, an international index fund, and a debt fund covers virtually everything the average investor needs. The implementation takes less than an hour to set up and requires one annual rebalancing review. The total TER across the three funds averages 0.25-0.45% - a fraction of what most active multi-fund portfolios cost. The hardest part is not the setup; it is resisting the urge to add a fourth, fifth, and sixth fund every time a new theme or category appears in financial media.