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Portfolio Rebalancing Explained: When & How to Do It  

Portfolio Rebalancing Explained: When & How to Do It  

Investment Strategies

12 Feb 2026

6 min read

Portfolio Rebalancing

Arunima Singh

Portfolio rebalancing is the process of realigning your investments to their original asset allocation as markets change, helping you manage risk and keep your portfolio aligned with your financial goals. 

No matter how well you design your portfolio, market conditions keep changing. Some assets perform better when the markets rally; others hold their ground during economic slowdowns or periods of uncertainty. Because of these constant shifts, investing with a “build it once and forget it” approach rarely holds up over time. 

To stay aligned with changing conditions and ensure your money continues to grow, you need to make timely adjustments to your portfolio. This process is called portfolio rebalancing.    

In this blog, we break down what portfolio rebalancing means, how it works, when you should do it, and why it plays a crucial role in building a resilient, long-term investment portfolio. 

What Is Portfolio Rebalancing?  

When you start investing, you usually begin with a fixed asset allocation. For example, you may invest 50% in equities, 25% in bonds, 15% in fixed deposits, and keep the remaining 10% in cash or cash equivalents. This allocation reflects your risk tolerance and financial goals at that point in time. 

Over time, however, your investments do not grow at the same pace. Some assets may deliver stronger returns, while others move slowly or remain stable. As a result, the original allocation starts to shift, even if you haven’t added or withdrawn any money. 

When this shift happens, your portfolio may no longer match the level of risk you are comfortable taking. To bring it back in line with your goals, you need to adjust your investments in a structured way. This process is known as portfolio rebalancing. 

It matters because every asset in your portfolio serves a specific purpose. Once the allocation moves away from its intended levels, the overall risk and return profile of the portfolio changes as well. By rebalancing, you realign your holdings with your original risk tolerance and ensure your portfolio continues to work toward your long-term objectives. 

Now that you understand what portfolio rebalancing is and why it matters, the next step is to see how this process actually works in practice. 

How Does Portfolio Rebalancing Work?  

Portfolio rebalancing works by comparing your current asset allocation with your original target allocation. The target allocation is the mix of assets, such as equity, debt, and cash, that you decided based on your risk tolerance and financial goals. 

Continuing the same example from the previous section, let’s assume you built a portfolio with a starting allocation of 50% in equity, 25% in bonds, 15% in fixed deposits, and 10% in cash. This allocation reflects your risk appetite and long-term financial goals. 

Over time, equities perform strongly and grow faster than other assets. As a result, equity now makes up 60% of your portfolio. Bonds fall to 20% and fixed deposits to 10%, while cash remains unchanged at 10%. Even without adding or withdrawing money, your portfolio has shifted away from its original structure. 

To rebalance, you will need to reduce your equity exposure and reallocate that amount to bonds and fixed deposits until the original allocation is restored. Rebalancing your portfolio will bring back your asset allocation back to 50% in equity, 25% in bonds, 15% in fixed deposits, and 10% in cash. 

While the mechanics of rebalancing remain the same, not all portfolios are rebalanced in the same way. The approach you choose depends on market behavior, portfolio size, and how actively you want to stay involved. 

Common Portfolio Rebalancing Strategies

The following are practical rebalancing strategies that give you a basic framework for realigning your portfolio.  

Time-based Rebalancing 

Time-based rebalancing refers to the act of rebalancing your portfolio regardless of the market conditions at fixed time intervals, such as annually or semi-annually. This approach is a disciplined way to lock in gains after a market rally. It also helps in removing emotion from decision-making and ensures your portfolio stays aligned with your long-term goals. 

Threshold-based Rebalancing 

A threshold-based portfolio rebalancing approach enables you to have tighter control over your portfolio. It works best when markets are moving sharply. In this approach, you have to set a predefined deviation limit, such as 5% to 10%, from your target allocation. When any asset crosses this limit, you rebalance the portfolio back to the original target.   

Cashflow-based Rebalancing 

Cashflow-based rebalancing approach works the best for bond investors or investors who receive steady income. This strategy uses the fresh contributions, dividends or interest income that you have earned to increase the allocation of underweighted assets in your portfolio. So instead of reshuffling your existing investments, you gradually restore your allocation balance while keeping transaction costs low.  

Even with the right strategy in place, rebalancing isn’t something you do constantly. Knowing the right signals to act on matters more than sticking to a rigid routine. 

When Should You Rebalance Your Portfolio?  

Rebalancing is not a task you perform on autopilot. It usually starts when something in your portfolio or your own comfort level signals that your portfolio needs your attention. 

  • Your goals or timelines have shifted 

If your financial goals change or timelines move closer, your portfolio must reflect that shift. What worked for a long-term goal may no longer suit a shorter horizon. Rebalancing helps you adjust risk, so your investments stay aligned with what you’re working toward now. 

  • Your portfolio no longer feels comfortable 

If market movements make you anxious or uneasy, it’s often a sign your risk level has increased without you realizing it. A portfolio should let you stay invested, not keep you stressed. Rebalancing helps bring your investments back to a level you can comfortably stick with. 

  • One asset has grown too dominant 

When a single asset class starts occupying a larger share of your portfolio, it can quietly increase risk. While performance is a positive, overexposure creates vulnerability. Rebalancing reduces dependence on one asset and restores diversification. 

  • You haven’t reviewed your portfolio in a long time 

If you can’t remember the last time you checked your portfolio allocation, it likely needs attention. Market movements over time can significantly alter your asset mix. A periodic review and rebalance ensures your portfolio still matches your original plan. 

Before you start rebalancing your existing portfolio, make sure you have a rigid plan of action and avoid making the mistakes listed below.   

Mistakes to Avoid During Portfolio Rebalancing  

Rebalancing sounds simple on paper, but in practice, small missteps can undo its benefits if you’re not careful. 

  • Reacting to short-term market noise 

Rebalancing is not about predicting the next market move. If you adjust your portfolio every time markets rise or fall, you turn a long-term strategy into guesswork. This often leads to buying high, selling low, and drifting away from your original plan. 

  • Ignoring taxes and transaction costs 

Every rebalance may trigger taxes, exit loads, or brokerage costs. In taxable accounts, it is often wise to combine rebalancing with Tax-Loss Harvesting to offset gains with losses. 

  • Rebalancing without a clear target 

Rebalancing without a defined asset allocation defeats the purpose. If you don’t know what you are rebalancing to, adjustments become random. A clear target allocation ensures every rebalance is intentional and aligned with your risk tolerance and goals. 

Final Thoughts 

Investing mistakes do not necessarily occur because of a lack of knowledge; they can also happen because you hesitate, overreact, or do nothing for too long. Rebalancing your portfolio creates a natural pause point for you to reflect, think, and act with intent. It forces you to stay involved in the process and make sure your portfolio is aligned with your objectives.  

Over time, the simple discipline of rebalancing your portfolio helps you stay invested with confidence, even when markets test your resolve. 

FAQs About Portfolio Rebalancing

What is the main purpose of portfolio rebalancing?

How often should an investor rebalance their portfolio?

What are the best techniques for portfolio rebalancing?

Does portfolio rebalancing improve investment returns?

Can portfolio rebalancing help reduce risk?

author

AUTHOR

Arunima

Singh

Arunima writes to make finance less intimidating and more insightful. With a strong grounding in finance, eCommerce, and digital lending, she brings a unique blend of strategy, storytelling, and subject matter expertise to the world of content. She has driven content growth at Dukaan, KreditBee, and now at Jiraaf, helping scale brand reach by up to 10X through effective full-funnel content and communication. Arunima brings an editor’s eye and a strategist’s mind to every piece she writes, specialising in simplifying complex financial topics for today’s investors, covering everything from bonds and personal finance to lending and fixed-income products. She writes at the intersection of finance, marketing, and user behavior, delivering content that’s clear, contemporary, and always relevant.


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