Brookfield Infrastructure Income Fund (BII) is a $2.3 billion vehicle giving investors access to Brookfield’s global infrastructure platform.
While it offers exposure to essential service assets and stable income potential, it remains limited to accredited investors and carries the risks of illiquidity and private market volatility.
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The information in this article is for general guidance only. It does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice, and is not a recommendation or solicitation to invest. Some facts may have changed since the time of writing.
BII Fund is a closed, manager-led fund run by Brookfield Infrastructure that invests primarily in private infrastructure equity and debt to generate current income and capital growth.
BII offers monthly subscriptions, monthly distributions, and quarterly repurchase up to 5% of outstanding shares at net asset value (NAV).
The fund launched in 2022 and became available to retail or professional investors across various regions through 2023.
BII Fund Portfolio Allocation, and Sector & Geographic Exposure
Early period, Jan–Jun 2023, total returns by share class were reported around 2.75% to 4.55%.
As of June 2025, reported performance are as follows:
Class I (11276G306)
Class S (11276G405)
Class D (11276G108)
Brookfield Infrastructure Income Fund minimum investments are $1 million for class I shares, and $2,500 for both class S and class D shares.
The subsequent investment minimums for these share classes are $500.
Brookfield Infrastructure Income Fund charges a 1.25% annual management fee plus a 12.5% incentive fee on fund income.
Early redemptions, within one year, carry a 2% buyback fee. Distribution fees vary by share class: 0.85% for Class S and 0.25% for Class D.
Pros
Cons
Safe is relative. Brookfield’s platform size and track record are positives, but investors must still evaluate credit or leverage, sector concentration, and fund liquidity.
Infrastructure funds are not risk-free but have structural features that can make them lower-volatility and inflation-resistant compared with pure equities: long-duration contracts, regulated cash flows, and high entry barriers.
Safety depends on sponsor quality, asset mix, leverage, and liquidity.
It can be for investors seeking income, inflation protection, and portfolio diversification —especially if you accept longer lockups or lower liquidity.
Fit depends on your objectives, risk appetite, and whether you prefer private infrastructure or listed infrastructure securities.
Brookfield Infrastructure is broadly well positioned for long-term investing thanks to its stable, inflation-linked cash flows, diversified global infrastructure portfolio, and consistent history of dividend growth.
But risks like high leverage, rising interest rates, and regulatory exposure mean it may not outperform in volatile markets; it’s more suited for income-oriented investors with patience and tolerance for complexity.
If you’re investing for steady income, capital preservation, inflation protection, and can tolerate modest capital appreciation with lower short-term upside, Brookfield Infrastructure can be an option.
But if you want fast growth, aggressive returns, or highly liquid exposure, then you can explore alternatives, though with potentially more risks.