Input type
Mutual Fund Planner
SIP calculator for monthly investing
Enter your monthly SIP amount, expected annual return, and investment duration to estimate your total corpus, invested amount, and wealth gained.
Best for
Mutual fund planning
Output
Invested + corpus
Enter SIP details
Fill in your monthly investment, expected return and tenure.
Before you calculate
- Monthly SIP amount is invested at the start of each month.
- Expected return is annualised — typically 10–14% for equity funds.
- Returns are compounded monthly.
SIP Calculator India – Detailed Guide
A SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) is one of the simplest ways to build long-term wealth in Indian mutual funds. Instead of investing a large amount at once, you contribute a fixed sum every month. This SIP calculator helps you translate that monthly commitment into a clear estimate of total corpus, total invested amount, and wealth gained at the end of the chosen tenure.
By experimenting with different SIP amounts, expected rates of return, and durations, you can see how early investing and staying consistent significantly influence final outcomes. The tool is especially useful when you are choosing between multiple SIP options, comparing SIP versus lumpsum investing, or trying to understand how much to invest each month to reach a specific goal.
How SIP Returns are Calculated
SIP returns are based on the idea that each monthly instalment is invested for a different length of time. The first instalment remains invested for the entire tenure, while the last instalment is invested for just one month. The calculator treats each contribution as growing at the assumed rate of return for the remaining period.
In practice, the key inputs that drive your SIP result are:
- Monthly SIP amount – the fixed sum you invest at regular intervals, usually every month.
- Expected annual return (CAGR) – the average rate you expect over the full investment horizon.
- Investment duration – the number of years or months for which you plan to keep the SIP running.
- Compounding frequency – for estimation, returns are generally assumed to compound monthly.
Mutual funds do not provide guaranteed interest in the same way as FDs or RDs. Instead, the value of your units fluctuates with market movement. The SIP calculator therefore uses a constant annualised return assumption to simplify projections. Real-life returns will be bumpier and will vary around this assumption.
Choosing SIP Return Assumptions in India
Historical returns of Indian equity mutual funds have differed by category. Broadly, large-cap funds have delivered lower but more stable long-term returns compared to mid- or small-cap funds, while debt funds have provided lower but relatively steadier outcomes. When selecting an expected return for this calculator, it is safer to err on the conservative side.
A few thumb rules used by many planners:
- Equity-oriented SIPs: plan with 10–12% annualised return for long horizons of 10+ years.
- Balanced or hybrid SIPs: plan with 8–10% annualised return.
- Debt-oriented SIPs: plan with 6–8% annualised return depending on interest-rate environment.
These are not promises; they are planning anchors. Markets can generate periods of much higher or lower performance than these averages. The SIP calculator is best used to test different return assumptions and see how sensitive your goal is to changes in CAGR.
SIP vs Lumpsum vs FD
When deciding how to invest, many Indian investors compare SIP with a one-time lumpsum and with traditional fixed deposits. Each method has its own strengths, risks, and ideal use cases.
- SIP in mutual funds spreads your investments across many market levels. This reduces timing risk and can smooth out the impact of short-term volatility through rupee-cost averaging.
- Lumpsum investing puts a large amount to work immediately. If markets perform well after your entry, lumpsum can deliver higher returns than SIP. However, it also concentrates timing risk if markets correct soon after you invest.
- FDs and RDs offer capital protection and predictable returns, but may struggle to beat inflation over the long run after tax is considered.
In practice, many investors combine these approaches. For long-term goals like retirement or children’s education, equity SIPs often form the core, while FDs and RDs handle short-term safety needs. This SIP calculator can be used together with FD, RD, and lumpsum calculators on the site to create a blended plan.
SIP Maturity Formula (Conceptual)
A simplified way to express the future value of a SIP is to think of it as a series of equal payments made at regular intervals, each growing at a constant rate. If P is the monthly SIP amount, r is the monthly return rate (annual rate divided by 12), and n is the total number of months, then the future value FV can be represented conceptually as:
FV = P × [((1 + r)n - 1) / r] × (1 + r)
This expression assumes contributions are made at the beginning of each period and that returns compound at a constant rate. Actual mutual fund NAVs move daily and are impacted by market conditions, so your real corpus will deviate from this smooth curve. The calculator uses this framework to give you a practical, easy-to-interpret estimate.
Practical SIP Planning Tips
To get the most value from this SIP calculator, treat it as a planning companion rather than a prediction engine. Consider the following practical checks as you build your investment plan:
- Start with a realistic monthly amount that you can sustain even when expenses rise, instead of an overly aggressive figure that leads to frequent SIP breaks.
- Align your SIP tenure with specific goals such as retirement, education, or buying a house, rather than investing with no horizon at all.
- Revisit your SIP annually to adjust for income growth and inflation. Gradually increasing SIPs can significantly boost your end corpus.
- Maintain an emergency fund in liquid or low-volatility options so that you are not forced to stop SIPs or redeem investments during market corrections.
- Remember that past performance is not a guarantee of future returns. Use the calculator’s projections as a range, not as a promise.
Finally, always cross-check fund selection, risk suitability, and tax impact with a qualified advisor or through your own due diligence. This SIP calculator India page is designed to make the number-crunching easier, so that you can focus more on your long-term investing discipline.
SIP Calculator India – FAQs
What is SIP investing?
SIP is a method of investing a fixed amount in a mutual fund at regular intervals, typically monthly. It helps you benefit from rupee-cost averaging and the power of compounding without needing to time the market precisely.
How are SIP returns calculated in this tool?
The calculator uses a standard SIP future value formula with a constant expected rate of return and monthly compounding. It aggregates the future value of each monthly contribution to estimate total corpus, invested amount, and wealth gained.
What return rate should I assume for SIP planning?
For equity mutual funds, many investors use 10–12% annual return for long-term planning. Conservative investors or those in hybrid or debt funds may prefer lower assumptions in the 6–10% range. It is safer to plan conservatively than to rely on very high return expectations.