Regular Plan · Growth Option · Updated 09 Jul 2026
Mutual Fund Returns — 1D to 10Y
Track how every active regular growth mutual fund in India has performed — from yesterday's session to a full decade. All categories. All AMCs. Updated daily from AMFI.
Today's top performer is shown at the top of the table by default — sorted by 1-day return. Use the filters below to find the best-returning fund within any category or AMC, or sort by 1M, 1Y or longer periods to compare wealth creation over time.
1700+Active Funds
50AMCs Covered
39Categories
11Return Periods
Showing top 25 Small Cap funds by today's return · Use filters above to explore all 1737 funds · Click any row to expand full returns, NAV levels and best/worst ever data
How are these mutual fund returns calculated and updated?
Every return on this page is calculated from AMFI's official NAV history, fetched directly from their servers three times daily. Short-period returns — 1D, 1W and 1M — are recalculated with every NAV update. Longer-period returns from 3M through 10Y are refreshed weekly by scanning the complete NAV history of each fund. The result is a single page that gives you both real-time market movement and long-run compounding data side by side.
Returns for periods beyond one year — 2Y, 3Y, 5Y, 7Y and 10Y — are expressed as CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate). A 5-year CAGR of 14% means the fund grew at the equivalent rate of 14% compounded annually for five years. This is the standard used across the industry because simple percentage returns over multi-year periods do not account for compounding and can mislead.
A dash (—) in any column means the fund does not yet have enough NAV history for that period. The age tag next to each fund name makes this clear at a glance. All data on this page is for the Regular Plan, Growth option — the plan most investors in India hold when they invest through a mutual fund distributor or MFD.
Why does the expanded row show best and worst rolling returns?
Point-to-point returns — such as a fund's 3-year return from today — only tell you how the fund performed over one specific window. A fund that happened to launch at a market peak will show a poor 3-year return even if it is a well-managed scheme. Rolling window analysis solves this by checking every possible 1-year or 3-year period in the fund's history and reporting the best and worst outcome from all of them.
The best 1-year ever figure shows the highest return any investor could have earned by holding the fund for exactly one year at the most favourable time. The worst 1-year ever shows the maximum loss any investor could have suffered in a one-year holding period. Together, these two numbers reveal the true range of outcomes a fund has historically delivered — far more useful than any single return figure for assessing whether a fund suits your risk appetite.
The date range shown below each figure tells you exactly when that best or worst period occurred, so you can cross-reference it against known market events like the 2020 Covid crash, the 2017–2018 bull run, or the 2022 rate-hike correction.
Which mutual fund gave the highest return today in India?
How is the 1-day return of a mutual fund calculated?
The 1-day return compares the fund's NAV published today with the NAV from the previous trading day, expressed as a percentage change. Since mutual fund NAVs are not published on weekends or public holidays, the comparison is always between two consecutive trading days — not two calendar days. A fund with a 1-day return of +1.2% means its NAV rose by 1.2% from the last trading session to today.
What does CAGR mean and why does it matter for mutual fund investors?
CAGR stands for Compound Annual Growth Rate. It converts a multi-year return into a single equivalent annual rate that accounts for compounding. For example, if a fund's NAV grew from ₹10 to ₹19.49 over five years, the simple return is 94.9% but the CAGR is 14.3% — meaning the fund grew at the same pace as if it had delivered exactly 14.3% every year. CAGR is used for all return periods beyond one year on this page because it is the only fair way to compare funds with different holding periods.
Why are regular plan returns lower than direct plan returns for the same fund?
Regular plans and direct plans are two options of the same underlying mutual fund scheme, investing in exactly the same portfolio. The only difference is the expense ratio. Regular plans include a trail commission paid to the mutual fund distributor, which is deducted annually from the fund's NAV. Direct plans have no such commission. Over a 10-year period, this difference — typically 0.5% to 1% per year — can compound into a meaningful gap in final corpus. CRN India tracks regular plans because the majority of retail investors in India invest through distributors and hold the regular plan.
How do I read the 52-week high and low data shown in the expanded row?
The 52-week high is the highest NAV value recorded by the fund in the past 365 days, and the 52-week low is the lowest. The "vs 52W High" figure shows by how much the current NAV is below that peak. For example, a value of −8.4% means the fund is currently trading 8.4% below its 52-week high. A fund close to its 52-week high is showing strong recent momentum; a fund near its 52-week low may be going through a correction or sector-specific stress.
Which categories of mutual funds are included on this page?
This page covers all SEBI-defined mutual fund categories without exception — Large Cap, Mid Cap, Small Cap, Flexi Cap, Multi Cap, ELSS, Sectoral and Thematic, Debt (Liquid, Ultra Short, Short Duration, Corporate Bond, Gilt and more), Hybrid, Solution-Oriented and Fund of Funds. All 1737 active regular growth plans from 50 AMCs registered with AMFI India are included.
How often is the NAV data on this page updated?
AMFI publishes NAV data for all schemes by 7:30pm IST on every trading day. CRN India fetches this data three times daily — at 5am, 11am and 8pm IST — to ensure the page always reflects the most recently available figures. The "Updated" date shown at the top of the page reflects the most recent NAV date present in the database. On trading holidays, the date shown will be the last business day on which AMFI published NAV data.
Disclaimer: CRN India is a data and research platform. We do not provide investment advice. All NAV data is sourced from AMFI India and updated daily. Returns are calculated from historical NAV data for informational purposes only. Past performance does not guarantee future returns. Please consult a SEBI-registered investment adviser before making any investment decisions.