About this SIP calculator
The SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) Calculator helps you visualize how regular monthly investments grow over time through the power of compounding. Whether you're saving for retirement, children's education, or wealth creation, SIP is one of the most effective investment strategies.
Unlike lumpsum investing, SIP allows you to invest small amounts regularly, making it accessible for everyone. It also provides rupee cost averaging - you buy more units when markets are low and fewer when high, reducing timing risk.
This calculator uses compound interest formulas to project your investment growth. While past returns don't guarantee future performance, it helps you set realistic goals and track progress toward your financial objectives.
Why SIP is the best way to build wealth
SIP removes the need to time the market. By investing a fixed amount monthly, you automatically buy more units when prices are low and fewer when high. This rupee cost averaging reduces your average cost per unit over time.
The real magic of SIP is compounding. Your returns generate more returns, creating exponential growth over long periods. A ₹10,000 monthly SIP at 12% annual return grows to ₹1 crore in just 20 years, with only ₹24 lakh invested.
SIP instills financial discipline. The automatic monthly deduction ensures you invest before spending, making wealth creation a habit rather than an afterthought. It's perfect for salaried individuals who receive monthly income.
Understanding SIP returns and expectations
Equity mutual funds have historically delivered 12-15% annual returns over 15+ year periods in India. However, returns vary year to year - some years give 30% returns, others may be negative. SIP smooths out this volatility.
For conservative investors, debt funds or balanced funds offer 7-9% returns with lower risk. For aggressive wealth creation, equity funds targeting 12-15% are suitable if you can stay invested for 10+ years.
Don't chase past returns. A fund that gave 25% last year may underperform this year. Focus on consistent performers with good fund management, low expense ratios, and alignment with your risk appetite and goals.
How to choose the right SIP amount
Start with what you can afford consistently. It's better to invest ₹5,000 monthly for 20 years than ₹20,000 for 2 years and then stop. Consistency matters more than the amount when starting out.
A good rule of thumb: invest at least 20% of your monthly income. If you earn ₹50,000, aim for ₹10,000 SIP. As your income grows, increase your SIP by 10-15% annually to accelerate wealth creation.
Use this calculator to work backwards from your goal. If you need ₹1 crore in 15 years, the calculator shows you need approximately ₹20,000 monthly SIP at 12% return. Adjust the amount or timeline based on your capacity.
Common SIP mistakes to avoid
Don't stop SIP during market downturns. That's when you buy units at lower prices, which will give maximum returns when markets recover. Stopping SIP in bad times defeats the purpose of rupee cost averaging.
Don't invest in too many funds. 3-4 well-diversified funds are enough - one large cap, one mid cap, one small cap or flexi cap, and optionally one international fund. Too many funds create overlap and tracking difficulty.
Don't ignore expense ratios. A fund charging 2% vs 1% expense ratio can reduce your final corpus by lakhs over 20 years. Choose direct plans over regular plans to save 0.5-1% in commissions annually.