In a move aimed at boosting participation in India’s growing real estate investment market, SEBI (Securities and Exchange Bureau of India) has reclassified Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) as equity-related instruments for mutual funds and Specialized Investment Funds (SIFs).

The change follows a gazette notification issued on October 31, 2025, and will come into effect from January 1, 2026.

The market regulator said the step is designed to make it easier for funds to invest in REITs at a time when investor appetite for real estate-backed securities is rising. Earlier, REITs were not classified as equity instruments, limiting their inclusion in certain fund categories.

What changes for mutual funds and investors?

With the reclassification, any investment made by mutual funds and SIFs in REITs from 2026 onwards will now be treated like an equity investment. This could potentially increase exposure to real estate assets across equity-oriented schemes.

However, InvITs (Infrastructure Investment Trusts) will continue to remain classified as hybrid instruments, meaning only REITs get the upgraded equity status.

Existing REIT holdings lying inside debt schemes as of December 31, 2025, will be grandfathered—they won’t need to be immediately sold. Even so, SEBI has nudged mutual fund houses (AMCs) to gradually divest these REIT units from debt schemes, keeping investor interest, liquidity and market conditions in mind.

The industry body AMFI has also been asked to update its scrip classification list to include REITs according to their market capitalisation.

Scheme documents to be updated; no fundamental change

AMCs will issue addendums to reflect the new classification in scheme documents. SEBI has clarified that this will not be treated as a “fundamental attribute” change, meaning investors won’t face any mandatory exit window or consent requirements.

Additionally, SEBI has specified that REITs can be added to equity indices only after July 1, 2026—a six-month buffer to let the market adjust to the new framework.

Regulatory fine-tuning

The amendment also tweaks certain thresholds:

Mutual funds can now hold up to 15% of REIT units issued by a single issuer, aligning with existing limits on equity ownership.

Corresponding limits for SIFs have been adjusted to ensure that combined holdings of mutual funds and SIFs in a single REIT stay within defined boundaries.

The regulator said the changes were made to protect investor interest and promote the orderly development of the securities market.

Read Next