SEBI GARUDA Framework Shortens AIF Launch Path For Startup Funds
SEBI’s GARUDA mechanism can cut some AIF scheme launches to 10 working days, shifting India’s startup-fund process toward disclosure-led filings and manager accountability.

SEBI Creates A Faster AIF Launch Route
India's Securities and Exchange Board has introduced the GARUDA mechanism to shorten the path for alternative investment fund schemes that finance startups, private equity deals and other private-market strategies.
GARUDA stands for Green-Channel: AIF Rollout Upon Document Acknowledgement.
Inc42 reported that some schemes can move to launch within 10 working days, while accredited investor-focused schemes may be eligible to launch almost immediately after filing.
The new route does not remove the need for a private placement memorandum.
It changes the speed and burden around that document: the fund can move faster when filings are complete, while the manager and merchant banker carry clearer responsibility for what they certify.
The change targets a bottleneck in India's startup capital market.
AIF managers could be registered with SEBI but still face lengthy procedural steps before launching a new scheme.
Industry participants said those delays could slow capital deployment when venture capital and private equity investors were trying to move quickly on funding opportunities.
SEBI's approach shifts part of the process from repeated pre-launch scrutiny toward disclosure, certification and accountability after filing.
Fund managers gain speed, but they also carry more responsibility for the accuracy and completeness of scheme documents.
Accredited Investors Get The Fastest Path
GARUDA does not divide schemes by Category I, Category II or Category III AIF status.
Instead, it creates approval pathways based on the sophistication of investors in the scheme.
Schemes that accept only accredited investors can launch on the intimation date after filing the private placement memorandum through a merchant banker.
Other schemes that include non-accredited investors can launch after SEBI acknowledges the filing, with Inc42 reporting a timeline of around 10 working days when documents are complete.
The private placement memorandum remains central.
It sets out the investment strategy, fee structure, risks, governance framework and investor rights.
Under GARUDA, fund managers and merchant bankers must certify that the documents comply with SEBI rules.
Fund Managers Gain Speed And More Liability
For venture capital and private equity managers, the main operational change is the shorter gap between fundraising and deployment.
Faster scheme launches can help funds act on startup investments before market windows close or deal terms change.
Pranav Pai, managing partner at 3one4 Capital, said GARUDA could move Indian AIFs closer to global practice by relying more on disclosures and the accountability of regulated fund managers after registration.
Anil Joshi, managing partner at Unicorn India Ventures, said the framework eases scheme launches but does not remove the wider compliance burden on fund managers.
His comment keeps the policy change in perspective: faster approvals reduce one friction point, while smaller funds still face ongoing regulatory costs.
Faster Capital Still Depends On Clean Filings
GARUDA gives India's private-market funds a clearer route to launch new schemes, and it could help startup investors deploy committed capital faster.
The reform also raises the cost of weak paperwork because misstatements or lapses in scheme documents can attract regulatory action.
For startups waiting on VC or PE cheques, the practical impact will depend on whether fund managers use the faster route with clean filings, accredited investor bases and enough compliance capacity to avoid delays after SEBI's acknowledgement.
The remaining constraint is not the headline launch window alone, but whether managers can keep disclosure quality high while moving capital faster.
















