On June 3, Zerodha co-founder Nithin Kamath announced a major decision regarding demat transfer costs. India’s largest stockbroker, Zerodha, will now refund the charges investors incur when transferring their holdings to the platform.
Kamath shared the announcement on X on Wednesday. “The average investor typically has 2–3 demat accounts with holdings spread across them,” Kamath wrote. “The problem with this is that it makes tracking one’s investments and filing taxes a nightmare.”
As part of an effort to address the difficulties and costs investors face when transferring their holdings, Kamath said Zerodha will refund these transfer charges.

“To make it easy for people to move their holdings to their @zerodha account, we’ll now refund all depository charges (DP charges) that you incur to move your holdings to Zerodha. With this charge gone, pretty much everything at Zerodha is free, including investing in stocks, ETFs, direct mutual funds, and bonds,” he wrote.
Simply put, Zerodha will bear the cost that investors would otherwise have to pay to their existing broker. For example, if an investor holds stock in Groww and wants to transfer those holdings to Zerodha, they may be required to pay DP charges. Under the new policy, Zerodha will refund those charges.
This move could have two major implications. One for investors and another for Zerodha’s customer acquisition efforts.
First, the DP charge refund removes a key hurdle that may discourage investors from transferring their holdings. It could also make portfolio tracking easier, streamline tax filing, and provide investors with a clearer view of their overall wealth.
Second, the policy could help Zerodha attract a significant volume of customer assets and holdings from competing platforms.
That is why Kamath described the move as a way to make it easier for people to consolidate their portfolios.


