₹1000/Month SIP for 5 Years
₹1000/Month for 5 Years SIP Calculator
In today's rupees
Your projected ₹82,486 in 5 years has roughly the same purchasing power as ₹61,638 today.
At 6% inflation, ₹1 in 5 years is worth about ₹0.75 in today's money. The big number above is nominal — real money, but tomorrow's rupees.
Projected Value
₹82,486
+₹22,486 returns over 5 years
Invested
₹60,000
Returns
₹22,486
Total
₹82,486
Scenarios at different return rates
Year-by-year projection · 5 years @ 12% expected return
Year | Total Investment (₹) | Expected Returns (₹) | Total Value (₹) |
|---|---|---|---|
2027 | 12,000 | 809 | 12,809 |
2028 | 24,000 | 3,243 | 27,243 |
2029 | 36,000 | 7,508 | 43,508 |
2030 | 48,000 | 13,835 | 61,835 |
2031 | 60,000 | 22,486 | 82,486 |
What is a Systematic Investment Plan (SIP)?
A Systematic Investment Plan is a way of investing in mutual funds in regular instalments instead of all at once. You pick a monthly amount — say ₹5,000 or ₹25,000 — choose a date, and the money is debited from your bank account on that date every month and used to buy units of the mutual fund scheme you selected.
Two things make SIPs popular with first-time investors:
- You don't need to time the market. Because you invest every month regardless of price, you automatically buy more units when prices are low and fewer when they're high. Your average purchase cost smooths out over time — this is called rupee-cost averaging.
- Compounding does the heavy lifting. The returns on your earlier instalments themselves earn returns over the years. The longer you stay invested, the larger the share of your final corpus that comes from compounding rather than from your own contributions.
How this calculator estimates your future corpus
You enter three things: the monthly SIP amount, the duration in years, and the annual return you expect the fund to deliver. The calculator runs the standard SIP future-value formula:
FV = P × ((1 + i)n − 1) / i × (1 + i)Where:
- FV — the projected future value of your investment
- P — your monthly SIP amount
- i — monthly rate of return (annual rate ÷ 12, in decimal)
- n — total number of monthly instalments (years × 12)
Every time you move a slider, the calculator re-runs this formula and updates the chart, the year-by-year table, and the scenario comparison so you can see the effect immediately.
A worked example
Suppose you invest ₹10,000 every month for 15 years, and the fund delivers an average annual return of 12% (a common long-term planning assumption for Indian equity mutual funds, though not a guarantee).
- Total amount you put in over 15 years: ₹10,000 × 180 months = ₹18,00,000
- Projected corpus at the end: approximately ₹50,45,000
- Wealth gained purely from compounding: approximately ₹32,45,000 — almost 1.8× your contributions
Try the same numbers in the calculator above to see the year-by-year breakdown. Then change the duration from 15 to 25 years and watch how dramatically the gap between invested and final-value widens — that's what people mean by "long-term compounding."
When a SIP makes sense for you
SIPs work best when at least one of the following is true:
- Your income is regular and monthly — a salaried job, a recurring retainer, a monthly rent income.
- You're investing for a goal at least 5 years away — retirement, a child's education, a long-horizon wealth target. Equity SIPs need time to smooth out volatility.
- You'd rather not try to time the market. Most retail investors who attempt to wait for "the right moment" end up under-invested for years.
- You want a habit. Auto-debits force consistency in a way that manual investing rarely does.
A SIP is generally not the best fit when you have a large idle amount already, your goal is less than 12–18 months away, or you need full liquidity at all times. The Lumpsum calculator is a better starting point for the first case.
What this calculator can't tell you
The projection is a useful planning estimate, not a forecast. It assumes a constant annual return for the entire duration, which real markets never deliver. Specifically, the calculator does not account for:
- Market volatility — actual yearly returns swing between negative and well above average. The long-term average smooths this out only if you stay invested through both.
- Expense ratio — actively managed equity schemes typically charge 0.5–2.0% a year. Subtract this from the return you enter to get a more realistic projection.
- Exit load and taxes — short-term redemptions often carry a 1% exit load, and gains are taxable (see the tax section below).
- Inflation — ₹50 lakh today buys substantially more than ₹50 lakh will in 15 years. Some planners discount projected corpus by an assumed inflation rate to think in "today's rupees."
The calculator's strength is in comparison, not prediction — it lets you see how a 2% change in expected return, or a 5-year change in duration, would shift the outcome.
Tax on SIP returns
Each SIP instalment is treated as a separate purchase for tax purposes, with its own holding period starting from the date of that instalment. As per current Indian tax law:
- Equity-oriented mutual funds — long-term capital gains (units held over 12 months) are taxed at 12.5% on gains above ₹1.25 lakh per financial year. Short-term gains (held 12 months or less) are taxed at 20%.
- Debt-oriented mutual funds bought after April 2023 are taxed at your income-tax slab rate, regardless of holding period.
This calculator shows pre-tax projections. For a realistic post-tax view, especially in the redemption year, you'll need to apply the rate applicable to your scheme type and instalment dates.
SIP vs Lumpsum vs Step-Up — which is right for you?
The three calculators on PaisaMath cover the three most common ways to put money into mutual funds:
- SIP — a fixed amount every month. Best for steady monthly income and long horizons.
- Lumpsum — a one-time investment of a larger amount. Best when you have an idle corpus and a long horizon.
- Step-Up SIP — a SIP whose monthly amount grows by a fixed percentage each year. Best when you expect your income to rise and want your savings to keep pace.
Run the same goal through each calculator to see how the corpus and the total invested differ — the comparison is often more useful than picking a strategy in the abstract.
FAQs
A Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) is a way of investing in mutual funds where you put in a fixed amount — say ₹5,000 or ₹25,000 — every month on a date you choose. Your bank account is debited automatically and the money buys units of the mutual fund you've selected. Over time, regular contributions plus market growth build a corpus.
It estimates how much your SIP could grow into, given a monthly amount, a duration, and an expected annual return. The calculator uses the standard compound-growth formula to project the total invested, the expected returns, and the final corpus. The output is an estimate, not a guarantee.
Three: how much you plan to invest every month, the number of years you plan to keep the SIP running, and your assumed annual return. For Indian equity mutual funds, long-term annual returns have historically been in the 10–14% range, and 12% is a commonly used planning assumption — but past returns don't guarantee future ones.
The calculator assumes a constant return rate. It does not model market volatility, inflation, taxes, expense ratios, or exit loads. Treat the output as a planning estimate that's useful for side-by-side comparisons and goal sizing, not as a forecast of your exact future amount.
Most Indian mutual fund schemes accept SIPs starting at ₹500 per month, and many at ₹100. The exact minimum depends on the scheme — the scheme information document (SID) or your investment platform will list it.
Yes. Most schemes let you increase, decrease, pause, or stop a SIP without penalty. You'll typically give 10–30 days' notice through the platform you started the SIP on. Note that redeeming the units themselves (not the SIP instruction) may trigger an exit load if done within the load period — usually a year.
Yes. As per current Indian tax law: for equity-oriented mutual funds, long-term capital gains (units held over 12 months) are taxed at 12.5% on gains beyond ₹1.25 lakh per financial year, and short-term gains (held 12 months or less) are taxed at 20%. Debt-oriented mutual funds bought after April 2023 are taxed at your income-tax slab rate regardless of holding period. Each SIP installment has its own holding period.
Because a SIP buys units at the prevailing price every month, you automatically end up buying more units when the NAV is low and fewer when it's high. Over a long horizon this tends to smooth your average purchase cost, which is why SIPs are particularly suited to volatile markets.
Yes — across different schemes, different fund houses, or even within the same scheme on different dates. This calculator estimates a single SIP. To plan a multi-fund portfolio, run the calculator once per scheme and add the results.
A regular SIP keeps the monthly amount constant for the entire duration. A Step-Up SIP increases the monthly amount at a fixed rate (commonly 10% a year) so contributions keep pace with your income growth. Over long horizons the Step-Up corpus is usually meaningfully larger — use the Step-Up SIP calculator to compare.
Use a SIP when your income arrives monthly and you want to start investing without trying to time the market. Use a lump sum investment when you already have a large idle amount and a long horizon. In strongly rising markets a lump sum tends to outperform an equivalent SIP; in volatile or sideways markets the SIP benefits from rupee-cost averaging. Use the Lumpsum calculator to put a number on each side.
Yes. Mutual fund units bought through a SIP are redeemable like any other units, subject to any applicable exit load — typically 1% if redeemed within one year of purchase. Redemption proceeds usually settle to your bank account in 1–3 working days for equity schemes.