Home > Money > Question
विशेषज्ञ की सलाह चाहिए?हमारे गुरु मदद कर सकते हैं

क्या आयकर विभाग गलत कर गणना को सही करेगा?

T S Khurana

T S Khurana   |477 Answers  |Ask -

Tax Expert - Answered on Feb 04, 2025

A certified management accountant since 1993, T S Khurana is a fellow member of The Institute of Cost Accountants of India. His areas of expertise are income tax, specifically litigation cases, and GST.

Since the last 21 years, he has also been providing expert advice on financial matters, including investments and diversification of funds, and wealth building in the long term to his clients.
He believes that investment in real estate is the safest way for better returns and wealth generation over a period of time.

A former chairman of the Chandigarh Chapter of Institute of Cost Accountants of India, T S Khurana has also served as member of its technical committee.... more
SUJAY Question by SUJAY on Feb 02, 2025English
Listen
Money

मैंने एक कर मांग का जवाब असहमति के साथ दिया है क्योंकि 234बी के तहत गणना गलत प्रतीत होती है..क्या आयकर विभाग को इसे सही करना चाहिए अगर यह वास्तव में गलत है..अगर मुझे उनसे कोई जवाब नहीं मिलता है..तो मुझे कर मांग को हटाने के लिए क्या करना चाहिए..कृपया सलाह दें

Ans: आयकर अधिनियम की धारा 234बी अग्रिम कर के भुगतान में देरी के लिए ब्याज के भुगतान से संबंधित है, यदि लागू हो। कृपया यह पुष्टि करने के लिए अपने आईटीआर की जांच करें कि क्या आपने समय पर कर और अग्रिम कर का भुगतान किया है। यदि नहीं, तो आपको इस पर ब्याज का भुगतान करना होगा। यदि विभाग ने सही तरीके से मांग उठाई है, तो बेहतर है कि उसी का भुगतान करें और मामले को सुलझा लें। यदि यह सही नहीं है, तो अपने उत्तर के जवाब की प्रतीक्षा करें और फिर कार्रवाई करें। किसी भी अन्य स्पष्टीकरण के लिए आपका स्वागत है। धन्यवाद।
DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information to be as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision.
Money

आप नीचे ऐसेही प्रश्न और उत्तर देखना पसंद कर सकते हैं

Mihir

Mihir Tanna  |1054 Answers  |Ask -

Tax Expert - Answered on May 08, 2024

Listen
Money
सर मैं सरकारी कर्मचारी हूँ। मेरी आय आयकर सीमा के अंतर्गत आती है और मैं पिछले 20 वर्षों से अपने नियोक्ता के माध्यम से टीडीएस के रूप में आयकर का भुगतान कर रहा हूँ। हाल ही में मुझे वित्त वर्ष 2011-12 के लिए बकाया कर मांग के बारे में आयकर विभाग से एक मेल प्राप्त हुआ। TRACES से डाउनलोड किए गए फॉर्म 26AS के सत्यापन पर, यह पाया गया कि मेरी टीडीएस राशि शून्य है जबकि मेरे फॉर्म 16 में स्पष्ट रूप से दिखाया गया है कि टीडीएस राशि वेतन से डेबिट की गई है। रिटर्न दाखिल करने वाले सलाहकार ने सलाह दी कि मुझे मांग का भुगतान करना होगा। क्योंकि अगर वह 2011-12 में डेटा सुधार के लिए आगे बढ़ता है, तो नियोक्ता को समस्या होगी क्योंकि कई सुधार होंगे। मैं उसका रुख नहीं समझ पा रहा हूँ। यह केवल मेरी समस्या नहीं है। मुझे पता चला कि कई अन्य कर्मचारियों को 2008 से 2012 की अवधि के लिए इसी तरह की मांग मिली है। कृपया सलाह दें
Ans: आप ITR और फॉर्म 16 की प्रति के साथ अधिकार क्षेत्र अधिकारी के पास आवेदन दाखिल कर सकते हैं।

यदि आपके लिए अधिकारी के पास आवेदन दाखिल करना संभव नहीं है, तो आप आयकर पोर्टल पर शिकायत दर्ज कर सकते हैं, जिसमें यह तथ्य शामिल हो कि TDS काटा गया है और आपके पास फॉर्म 16 है। वे नियोक्ता (TDS कटौतीकर्ता) से संपर्क करेंगे और एक बार कटौतीकर्ता सही पैन, आपकी आय की राशि और TDS (लागू करों के साथ) के साथ सुधार विवरण दाखिल कर देता है; आपको TDS का क्रेडिट मिल जाएगा। हालाँकि, नियोक्ता ब्याज और जुर्माना, यदि कोई हो, का भुगतान करने के लिए उत्तरदायी होगा।

यदि प्रतिक्रिया प्राप्त नहीं होती है, तो आप सहायक दस्तावेजों के साथ cpc.incometax.gov.in पर taxdemand पर मेल भेज सकते हैं।

..Read more

T S Khurana

T S Khurana   |477 Answers  |Ask -

Tax Expert - Answered on Nov 05, 2024

Listen
Money
नमस्कार, आकलन वर्ष 2022-23 के लिए दाखिल आयकर रिटर्न के संबंध में धारा 234बी के भुगतान की मांग सूचना के संबंध में धारा 143(1) के तहत आयकर सूचना प्राप्त हुई। वित्त वर्ष 2021-22 की उल्लिखित अवधि के लिए कोई अग्रिम कर का भुगतान नहीं किया गया था, और आईटीआर 31-12-2023 को दाखिल किया गया था। इस प्रकार 234B की गणना के लिए, 1 अप्रैल 2022 से महीनों की संख्या 21 के रूप में गणना की गई और निर्धारित कर 103600 पर भुगतान की जाने वाली राशि की गणना (103600*1%)*21 के रूप में की गई, जिसे 21,756 के रूप में दाखिल किया गया, लेकिन मांग नोटिस में राशि 32,116 बताई गई है (जो 31 महीने के रूप में गणना की गई लगती है) क्या 21 महीने (01-04-2022 -> 31-12-2023) को ध्यान में रखते हुए 234B की मेरी गणना सही थी, किस मामले में मुझे पुनर्प्रसंस्करण के लिए सुधार के लिए पूछना चाहिए? कृपया सलाह दें। धन्यवाद वेर्की
Ans: 01. कृपया ध्यान दें कि आपके मामले में अग्रिम कर के प्रावधान भी लागू हैं। इन प्रावधानों के तहत, आपको वित्तीय वर्ष के दौरान तिमाही आधार पर कर का भुगतान करना होता है। ऐसा लगता है कि आपने उन प्रावधानों को अनदेखा कर दिया है। उठाई गई मांग देय अग्रिम कर से संबंधित प्रतीत होती है। किसी भी अन्य स्पष्टीकरण के लिए आपका स्वागत है। धन्यवाद।

..Read more

T S Khurana

T S Khurana   |477 Answers  |Ask -

Tax Expert - Answered on Feb 26, 2025

Listen
Money
नमस्कार, आकलन वर्ष 2022-23 के लिए दाखिल आयकर रिटर्न के संबंध में धारा 234बी के भुगतान की मांग सूचना के संबंध में धारा 143(1) के तहत आयकर सूचना प्राप्त हुई। वित्त वर्ष 2021-22 की उल्लिखित अवधि के लिए कोई अग्रिम कर का भुगतान नहीं किया गया था, और आईटीआर 31-12-2023 को दाखिल किया गया था। इस प्रकार 234B की गणना के लिए, 1 अप्रैल 2022 से महीनों की संख्या 21 के रूप में गणना की गई और निर्धारित कर 103600 पर भुगतान की जाने वाली राशि की गणना (103600*1%)*21 के रूप में की गई, जिसे 21,756/- के रूप में दाखिल किया गया, लेकिन डिमांड नोटिस में राशि 32,116 बताई गई है (जो 31 महीने के रूप में गणना की गई लगती है) क्या 21 महीने (01-04-2022 -> 31-12-2023) को ध्यान में रखते हुए 234B की मेरी गणना सही थी, किस मामले में मुझे पुनर्प्रसंस्करण के लिए सुधार के लिए पूछना चाहिए? कृपया सलाह दें। धन्यवाद वेर्की
Ans: अग्रिम कर भुगतान चार किस्तों में किया जाता है। आपके मामले में यह जुलाई-2021 (15%), सितंबर-2021 (30%), दिसंबर-2021 (30%) और मार्च-2022 (25%) में देय था। चूंकि आपने कोई किस्त नहीं चुकाई है, इसलिए ब्याज की गणना ऊपर बताई गई तारीखों से की जाएगी। आप अपनी संतुष्टि के लिए उपरोक्त आधार पर देय ब्याज की जांच कर सकते हैं। आशा है कि ITD की गणना सही है, आप मांग का भुगतान कर सकते हैं। किसी भी अन्य स्पष्टीकरण के लिए आपका स्वागत है। धन्यवाद

..Read more

T S Khurana

T S Khurana   |477 Answers  |Ask -

Tax Expert - Answered on Feb 06, 2025

Listen
Money
मैंने AY2023-24 के लिए 31 जुलाई 2023 के बजाय 29 जनवरी 2024 को अपडेट रिटर्न दाखिल किया है। 584707 रुपये की कुल कर देयता के लिए, 234B ब्याज गणना 56000 के आसपास आ रही है, लेकिन IT विभाग ने इसे लगभग 107000 रुपये के रूप में गणना करके मुझे अतिरिक्त बकाया कर मांग भेजी है। कृपया ध्यान दें कि मैंने AY2023-24 के लिए कोई अग्रिम कर नहीं चुकाया है। क्या आप मुझे बता सकते हैं कि 584707 रुपये के लिए 234B गणना कितनी होनी चाहिए और किसकी गणना सही है?
Ans: आपके मामले में, आपकी कर देयता अग्रिम कर के अधीन है। कृपया अपने कर देयता की गणना तदनुसार करें और फिर विभाग की गणनाओं से उसका मिलान करें। मुझे उम्मीद है कि इन आंकड़ों में बहुत अधिक अंतर नहीं होना चाहिए। किसी भी अन्य स्पष्टीकरण के लिए आपका स्वागत है। धन्यवाद।

..Read more

नवीनतम प्रश्न
Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8556 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 29, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - May 19, 2025
Money
Hello Sir, I am 42 and earning 2 lakh per month in hand. I invested 4lakhs in small caps fund and have an investment in axis max life smart wealth where i am paying 2.26 lakh per year for 10 years. At present no emi currenly is ongoing. I have 1cr in saving account and have no idea on where to invest as I am not a risk taker when it comes to investment. I have to buy a flat that's the short term goal i have. The long term not sure but retirement pkan i am looking for. Any fhrther advise on where to invest will be grateful to you. I am unmarried. Kindly Could you suggest where i should invest amount i have?
Ans: You have a strong income and significant savings. Let's assess your current financial situation and provide a comprehensive plan to help you achieve your short-term and long-term goals.

Current Financial Snapshot
Age: 42 years

Monthly Net Income: Rs. 2,00,000

Savings: Rs. 1 crore in a savings account

Investments:

Rs. 4 lakhs in small-cap mutual funds

Axis Max Life Smart Wealth policy with an annual premium of Rs. 2.26 lakhs for 10 years

Liabilities: None

Marital Status: Unmarried

Short-Term Goal: Purchase a flat

Long-Term Goal: Retirement planning

Assessment of Current Investments
Axis Max Life Smart Wealth Policy:

This is an investment-cum-insurance plan with a 10-year premium payment term.

The policy acquires a surrender value after paying premiums for the first two years.

The surrender value is the higher of the Guaranteed Surrender Value (GSV) or the Special Surrender Value (SSV).

GSV is typically 30% of the total premiums paid, excluding the first-year premium and any additional premiums.

SSV depends on various factors, including the total sum assured, total premiums paid, policy term, and applicable bonuses.

Given the low returns and high premium, it may not be the most efficient investment vehicle.

Small-Cap Mutual Funds:

Small-cap funds are high-risk, high-reward investments.

They can be volatile and may not align with your low-risk appetite.

It's important to diversify your portfolio to mitigate risks.

Recommendations
1. Reallocate Savings from the Savings Account:

Keeping Rs. 1 crore in a savings account yields minimal returns.

Consider allocating funds to a mix of investment options based on your risk tolerance and goals.

2. Diversify Your Investment Portfolio:

Allocate funds to a combination of debt and equity mutual funds.

For debt funds, consider short-duration or corporate bond funds for stability.

For equity exposure, opt for large-cap or balanced advantage funds, which are less volatile than small-cap funds.

Avoid direct investments in mutual funds; instead, invest through a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) to receive personalized advice and support.

3. Review and Possibly Surrender the Axis Max Life Policy:

Evaluate the surrender value of the policy.

If the surrender value is reasonable and the policy does not align with your financial goals, consider surrendering it.

Redirect the funds into more efficient investment vehicles.

4. Plan for the Flat Purchase:

Determine the budget for your flat purchase.

Allocate funds accordingly, ensuring you maintain sufficient liquidity for the down payment and associated costs.

Avoid using high-risk investments for short-term goals.

5. Retirement Planning:

Start a systematic investment plan (SIP) in retirement-focused mutual funds.

The earlier you start, the more you benefit from compounding.

Regularly review and adjust your retirement plan based on changes in income, expenses, and goals.

6. Emergency Fund:

Maintain an emergency fund equivalent to 6-12 months of expenses in a liquid or ultra-short-term debt fund.

This ensures financial stability in case of unforeseen circumstances.

Final Insights
Your financial position is strong, with a high income and substantial savings. However, optimizing your investments is crucial to achieving your financial goals efficiently. By reallocating funds from low-yield savings accounts to a diversified investment portfolio, reviewing existing policies, and planning for both short-term and long-term objectives, you can enhance your financial well-being.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP

Chief Financial Planner

www.holisticinvestment.in

https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8556 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 29, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - May 19, 2025
Money
I am 23 years old, have income of around 1.5 lacs per month. Current expenses are around 30k per month which includes house rent and other expenses. Where should I save and invest rest of the money and build a good corpus to secure future.
Ans: Your Income and Expense Balance

You earn Rs.1.5 lakhs per month. That is a strong start at your age.

You spend only Rs.30,000 per month. That shows good control.

You save Rs.1.2 lakhs per month. This is truly impressive.

Most people at 23 cannot do this. Appreciate your financial discipline.

You now need a proper system to use this surplus well.

This will help build long-term wealth, peace, and security.

Build a Strong Emergency Fund First

Keep 6 months of expenses as emergency money.

Your monthly expense is Rs.30,000. So keep Rs.1.8 lakhs aside.

Don’t keep this in savings account.

Use liquid mutual funds or sweep-in FD for safety.

This is not an investment. This is protection.

Use it only for job loss or health need.

Once you build this, never touch it casually.

Take the Right Health Insurance Policy

One hospital visit can damage your savings.

Buy a good health insurance plan for self.

Prefer a base policy with Rs.5 to Rs.10 lakhs cover.

Later add top-up if needed.

Even if your company gives cover, buy one personally.

This protects you if you change jobs.

Premium is low at 23. Benefit is high.

Pay this from your monthly savings.

It’s a smart protection step, not waste.

Start SIPs in Actively Managed Mutual Funds

You are young. You can take more equity exposure.

Start SIPs in actively managed mutual funds only.

Avoid index funds. They give average returns only.

Index funds follow the market blindly. No expert guidance.

You need better growth than average.

Actively managed funds have skilled fund managers.

They pick better stocks based on research.

They adjust portfolio based on market cycles.

This improves your long-term returns.

Also gives more peace during market fall.

This is why we suggest active funds only.

Invest Through a Certified Financial Planner in Regular Plan

Don’t use direct mutual funds on your own.

Direct funds may save small commission.

But they give no guidance or support.

You may choose wrong fund by mistake.

You miss review, rebalancing and personalised advice.

Regular plan through Certified Financial Planner is safer.

You get proper risk profiling and goal-based plan.

They help you invest with discipline for the long term.

You don’t need to track markets every day.

Your focus can remain on your career.

Create Clear Short-Term, Mid-Term and Long-Term Goals

You must divide your goals into three buckets.

Short-term goals: in 1-2 years like travel or laptop.

Mid-term goals: 3-5 years like car or marriage.

Long-term goals: 7+ years like house or retirement.

Use different funds for each bucket.

Short-term money should be safe and low-risk.

Mid-term can have balanced risk.

Long-term can have higher equity exposure.

This will give balance and peace of mind.

Track All Investments Regularly

Start a simple spreadsheet or use an app.

Record each SIP and investment.

Update values once in a while.

Track how much goes into each goal.

Don’t invest blindly without checking progress.

Also avoid switching too often. Stay long term.

Patience gives better results in mutual funds.

Don’t Keep Too Much in Bank Account

If you keep too much idle in bank, you lose value.

Inflation eats into bank interest returns.

FD interest is taxable as per your slab.

So, after keeping emergency fund, invest surplus wisely.

Keep only 1 month expense in savings account.

Rest should be earning better returns for future goals.

Avoid Fancy Investments or Hype Products

People may suggest crypto or quick money ideas.

These are risky and volatile.

You are young, but don’t gamble with money.

Stick to tested products with long-term proof.

You don’t need thrills. You need peace and wealth.

Always trust expert guidance, not WhatsApp tips.

Avoid Real Estate as Investment at This Age

Don’t buy property as investment now.

It blocks too much money at early age.

Loan EMI can reduce savings drastically.

Also gives less liquidity and high maintenance cost.

You are better off with flexible and growth-oriented mutual funds.

Start small and scale up slowly. No pressure needed.

Stay Disciplined with Lifestyle Spending

Your expenses are under control now. Keep it like that.

As your income grows, lifestyle can grow too.

This is called lifestyle inflation. It eats savings fast.

Don’t increase expenses just because salary increased.

Use income growth to increase SIP amount instead.

Buy needs, not show-off items.

Save before you spend, not the reverse.

This habit builds strong financial base for future.

Use Annual Bonus or Hike Wisely

When you get bonus, don’t use it fully for shopping.

Use part of it to invest more in SIPs.

You can also top-up existing funds.

Use bonus to prepay loans if you ever have one.

Or use it to grow your emergency fund.

These steps give long-term strength and control.

Understand Taxation on Mutual Funds

Long-term capital gains (LTCG) on equity mutual funds is taxed.

Above Rs.1.25 lakh gain, tax is 12.5%.

Short-term capital gains are taxed at 20%.

So stay invested for long term. Don’t redeem often.

Debt mutual funds are taxed as per your slab.

Choose funds carefully based on duration and goals.

A Certified Financial Planner can guide you better here.

Review Insurance If You Buy Any Policy

If someone sold you an insurance-cum-investment plan, check details.

ULIPs and endowment plans give low return and lock money.

If you already hold, consider surrender if no heavy penalty.

Take term insurance separately later when you have dependents.

For now, focus only on health insurance.

Don’t Buy ULIPs or Traditional Plans Now

These policies look safe but give poor growth.

They lock your money for many years.

Returns may not beat inflation even.

Also have high charges and no flexibility.

Better to invest in mutual funds for growth.

Buy term insurance separately later if needed.

Add SIP Step-Up Every Year

Increase your SIP every year with income growth.

Start with Rs.30,000 per month. Next year make it Rs.36,000.

This helps build wealth faster without effort.

Your savings ratio improves without any pain.

It’s called SIP step-up or top-up SIP.

This is a simple but powerful strategy.

Think Long-Term Always

You are just 23 now.

You have 35+ years of earning life.

This is a big advantage.

If you invest Rs.30,000 monthly for 30 years, it becomes huge.

That’s the power of compounding.

But only if you stay patient and consistent.

Don’t chase short-term returns. Think 10, 20, 30 years ahead.

Build a Retirement Corpus from Now

Most people start retirement planning very late.

You start now, you win big.

Even small monthly SIP grows huge by age 60.

Start one mutual fund just for retirement goal.

Let it run quietly without disturbance.

This will become your biggest strength later.

You’ll never depend on others for retirement.

Consult a Certified Financial Planner for 360-Degree Plan

You have good income and low expenses. That’s rare at 23.

But now you need a 360-degree financial plan.

Certified Financial Planner will help with goal planning, SIP setup, review, tax help.

They can guide you better than friends or online tips.

They bring experience, structure, and peace.

You don’t need to manage everything alone.

Get guidance and grow smartly.

Finally

You have a golden opportunity at this young age.

Your savings potential is amazing. Use it wisely.

Start small, stay regular, and think long term.

Don’t rush. Don’t copy others. Make your own plan.

Use SIPs in actively managed funds through Certified Financial Planner.

Keep insurance and emergency fund ready.

Control expenses. Increase SIPs yearly.

Track goals and stay disciplined.

You will achieve big things by age 40.

Your financial freedom journey begins today.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8556 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 29, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - May 19, 2025
Money
Dear sir,My age is 29 and have a monthly income of 50000 per month and will get married in 1 year.I have a home loan of Rs.25,00,000/- for 20 years and my home loan monthly emi amount is Rs.23,500/- .I have monthly sip of 3000 in a small cap fund from the last one year.How can I get debt free early.Also how can I start building funds .Should I Focus on loan prepayments or focus on investing.
Ans: You are young. You are just 29. You are already investing. You are also repaying a home loan. That’s a disciplined start.

Let’s understand your current situation. Then, we will give step-by-step guidance. You will get a full 360-degree view.

Let us now begin.

Assessing Your Financial Snapshot
Your income is Rs. 50,000 per month.

Home loan EMI is Rs. 23,500. This is around 47% of your income.

You invest Rs. 3,000 monthly through SIP in a small-cap fund.

You are getting married in a year. So future expenses may rise.

You want to become debt-free early. Also, build your wealth over time.

You have not mentioned other investments or emergency funds. That is a key area to review.

You are on the right path by thinking ahead. That is appreciable.

Step-by-Step Financial Strategy
Let’s work step by step. You need a mix of safety, discipline and growth.

1. Create an Emergency Fund
First, build a 4-6 months emergency fund.

This fund should cover EMI, basic expenses, and medical costs.

It protects you during job loss or medical emergencies.

Use a simple savings account or liquid fund.

You can do it slowly in 6 to 8 months.

Start saving Rs. 5,000 monthly. Pause SIP if needed.

2. Prepare for Your Marriage Expenses
Estimate marriage-related expenses early.

Keep money ready in recurring deposit or liquid fund.

Avoid loans or credit card usage for marriage.

You may start saving Rs. 5,000 monthly.

Avoid touching SIP for marriage purpose.

Marriage is once in life. Plan well without debt stress.

3. Review the Loan Situation
Rs. 23,500 EMI on Rs. 50,000 salary is very high.

Ideally, EMI should be under 30-35% of income.

Your EMI takes 47%. It reduces flexibility.

Check with bank if part-prepayment has any penalty.

Aim to prepay Rs. 50,000 to Rs. 1 lakh every year.

Even one-time prepayments make a big impact on interest.

Reducing tenure is better than reducing EMI.

4. Evaluate SIP Strategy
SIP of Rs. 3,000 in small-cap is good.

But 100% in small cap is risky for long term.

Diversify into multi-cap and flexi-cap category.

Keep small-cap to 25% of total SIP.

Increase SIP to Rs. 5,000 gradually when income rises.

Long-term investing is key. Do not stop SIP for loan.

5. Start a Monthly Budget System
Create monthly budget to control lifestyle expenses.

Write down rent, EMI, groceries, utilities, SIP, transport, etc.

Check where you can reduce Rs. 2,000 to Rs. 3,000 per month.

Use this savings either for prepayment or emergency fund.

Apps like Money Manager or Excel can help.

6. Should You Prepay or Invest
In early years of loan, more portion is interest.

So prepayment now saves more money than later.

If returns from SIP are higher than loan interest, SIP wins.

But SIP is not guaranteed.

Prepayment gives emotional peace.

Best approach is to split.

Use extra Rs. 10,000 like this:

Rs. 5,000 for prepayment

Rs. 5,000 for SIP

Once EMI comes below 35% of income, increase SIP.

7. Don’t Make These Mistakes
Don’t stop SIP during volatility. Market rewards patience.

Don’t invest lump sum in small-cap. Always go monthly.

Don’t take personal loan for marriage.

Don’t buy ULIPs or traditional insurance plans.

Don’t follow tips. Choose funds with CFP guidance.

8. Increase Income Sources
Think of skill-based side income.

Use weekends or 1 hour daily for freelancing.

Extra income can go into prepayment or SIP.

Learning online skills is also a good investment.

Financial freedom needs growing income also.

9. Invest Through Certified Professionals
Always invest through a certified mutual fund distributor.

A distributor with CFP qualification gives better handholding.

Regular plans offer better services.

Direct plans do not give guidance.

Choosing wrong fund in direct plan can hurt more.

Regular plans with expert help make sure your SIP is on track.

10. Tax Benefit Understanding
You get tax benefit under Section 80C on home loan principal.

Interest gives benefit under Section 24(b).

Also, SIP in ELSS gives Section 80C benefit.

Do not mix tax saving and long-term wealth goal.

Use benefits, but decide based on needs.

11. Review Once a Year
Review home loan status yearly.

Check how much principal is reducing.

Also check fund performance yearly.

Shift only if a fund underperforms for 2 years.

Do not churn SIP frequently.

12. Life and Health Insurance Must
After marriage, take term insurance.

Minimum cover of 15 times annual income.

Take health insurance for both.

Family floater is cost-effective.

Medical costs are rising fast.

One illness can wipe out savings.

Finally
You have made a solid start. Be proud of that.

Home loan can be closed early with small yearly efforts.

SIP will give wealth in long run. Stay consistent.

Marriage will change your cash flows. Plan now.

Don’t rush. Don’t pause SIP unless needed.

Avoid products without clarity.

Follow a disciplined approach with a calm mind.

Prepay loan slowly and grow investments together.

Avoid direct plans. Stick to regular plans with CFP help.

No need to take aggressive risks.

Build step by step. Financial freedom will come.

You’re young. Time is your best friend.

Right planning in 20s gives total peace in 40s.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8556 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 29, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - May 25, 2025
Money
Hi I am having 30 lakhs of debts , all are unsecured loans and I am unable to manage with 70k/ month salary . Can anyone guide me. Is there any debt consolidation agencies are there or debt settlement agencies? Currently I have cibil of 650-700 and please guide me on a emergency note. I am having many pressures to pay it
Ans: You are facing a serious financial challenge. But with a structured and practical approach, it is manageable. You can turn it around with right steps. Let me guide you professionally, step by step.

Current Debt Situation Assessment
Your total debt is Rs. 30 lakhs.

These are all unsecured loans. No collateral involved.

You earn Rs. 70,000 per month.

This means your EMI commitments are likely more than 60% of your income.

This is financially unsustainable.

Your credit score is between 650 and 700.

This shows some payment delays or defaults may have happened.

You are also under mental and emotional pressure. This is understandable.

Debt Management Priority Planning
First, stop borrowing more to pay existing loans.

Do not use credit cards or instant apps now.

Your first focus should be to regain cash flow stability.

List all your loans in one place: amount, EMI, interest, lender name.

Note down which loan is the costliest. Also note which one is defaulted.

Prioritise loans with higher interest and legal impact.

If you are already defaulting EMIs, speak to your lenders.

Ask for temporary moratorium or restructuring.

Keep all communications documented. Send follow-ups by email also.

Try to avoid legal escalation. That brings long-term damage.

Debt Consolidation Evaluation
Yes, there are agencies who help in loan consolidation.

These are not regulated fully. Be careful in choosing them.

You can also talk to banks or NBFCs directly.

Some banks give top-up personal loans to close other loans.

But your credit score may be a hurdle for such loans.

If you have a trustworthy family member with better credit, consider loan on their name.

That loan can be used to pay off your high-cost debts.

Try to convert high-interest loans to lower-interest ones.

For example, a credit card interest of 36% can be replaced with 14% loan.

But take new loan only if it reduces your monthly EMI burden.

And don’t use new loans for spending. Use it only to close earlier loans.

Debt Settlement Possibilities
Debt settlement is an option when repayment is not possible.

You can offer a lump sum to close the loan at lower amount.

But this impacts your credit score severely.

It is shown as “settled” in your CIBIL for 7 years.

Use this option only when you are completely out of options.

Speak to the bank’s collection team for settlement negotiation.

Some agencies also help in negotiation. But they charge high fees.

Be cautious of frauds. Don’t pay upfront fees to unknown agents.

If you use settlement, start rebuilding credit immediately.

Budget Optimisation and Expense Control
Next, create a monthly spending plan. Every rupee should have a purpose.

Eliminate all unnecessary expenses. Focus only on needs.

Cut down lifestyle and avoid non-essential EMI purchases.

Avoid eating out, entertainment, shopping, and weekend trips.

Don’t use BNPL or UPI credit services.

Try to live on Rs. 30,000 per month.

Use balance Rs. 40,000 for minimum EMIs and emergency.

Avoid using credit card to meet shortfall.

Emergency Support Actions
If you have gold jewellery, consider gold loan. Not gold sale.

Gold loan can be taken at 8%–10% rate. This is much cheaper than credit cards.

Use gold loan only to repay high interest unsecured loans.

You can repay the gold loan slowly and safely.

Avoid pawn brokers. Go to banks or approved NBFCs.

Income Enhancement Actions
Explore freelance or part-time work options. Even Rs. 5,000 helps.

Sell any unused items: electronics, gadgets, appliances.

Use online resale platforms. Small amounts add up.

If family members can contribute income, include that temporarily.

Try to improve your job skill and aim for salary hike in 6 months.

Long term recovery needs higher income, not just lower expenses.

Mental Health and Family Communication
You are under pressure. Please talk to someone close.

Mental stress can harm both money and health.

Share your situation with family members if possible.

Get emotional and moral support. It makes a big difference.

Don’t isolate yourself. Speak to one person daily.

Credit Score Repair Strategy
Once EMI payments are stable, credit score will start improving.

Make minimum payments on time every month.

Don’t close old credit cards if they are not overdue.

Avoid new credit applications for next 12 months.

Keep one secured credit line open. Eg: fixed deposit backed credit card.

Keep credit utilisation low. Below 30% of the limit.

Check CIBIL report once every quarter. Correct any errors.

Avoid These Common Mistakes
Don’t take advice from agents or YouTube without checking background.

Don’t share PAN, OTP, or bank details with any unknown party.

Don’t trust anyone who promises “loan wipe off” or “instant CIBIL fix.”

Avoid investing in unknown schemes now. Focus only on reducing debt.

Don’t take LIC policy loans unless policy is close to maturity.

Future Plan Once Loans Are Settled
Once your cash flow is clear, create emergency fund of 6 months income.

Start SIP in actively managed mutual funds through MFD with CFP certification.

Regular funds give guidance and support when markets are volatile.

Direct funds look cheaper, but they lack professional guidance.

Wrong direct fund choices may cost more than regular fund commissions.

Focus on wealth building only after clearing liabilities.

Insurance must be separate. Buy term plan only.

Don’t mix insurance and investment. ULIPs and endowment are not suitable.

Finally
Your situation is hard. But not impossible.

You need a clear plan, daily focus, and patience.

You can turn around your life in 24 to 36 months.

Many have done this before. You can do it too.

Take one action per day. Progress will follow.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP

Chief Financial Planner

www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8556 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 29, 2025

Money
Hello Sir I have Debt on me of 70 Lakhs Rupees with 25 lakhs of NBFC loan and others are from personal financers at High Rate 4%PM. I have salary income of 50000 Rs. Kindly help and suggest me the source which would me out from this debt chakra.
Ans: You have a debt of Rs.70 lakhs. This is very high.

Rs.25 lakhs is from NBFC. Remaining is from private lenders.

You are paying 4% interest per month. That is 48% yearly.

This is extremely high and dangerous.

Your income is Rs.50,000 per month. This is not enough for this debt.

We need to find a practical and disciplined way out.

You need to act with care and full commitment.

Assessing Your Current Financial Health

You need to understand your cash flow.

Your income is fixed. But your debt repayment is variable.

Right now, your income is not matching your expenses.

You are under financial stress. It can affect health and peace.

You need a structured plan to escape this debt cycle.

We will now explore steps to reduce this burden.

Let us move step by step with full clarity.

Identify All Debts Clearly

Write down each loan you owe.

Note the lender name, loan amount, and interest rate.

Also write down EMI or monthly payment.

Sort loans from highest interest rate to lowest.

Private loans at 4% per month are the most dangerous.

This step will give you complete control.

It helps to know where to focus first.

Stop Taking New Loans Immediately

Do not take more loans to pay current loans.

This will create a dangerous loop.

You will never come out of debt with this method.

Even small personal loans or credit card loans must stop.

Focus on reducing your loan count, not increasing it.

Talk to Private Financers for Interest Reduction

Try to negotiate with private lenders.

Request them to reduce the rate of interest.

Try to increase the repayment term if possible.

Explain your genuine situation to them.

Some lenders may listen if you assure payment slowly.

Build trust with honest communication.

Consider Debt Consolidation Options

Approach banks for a consolidation loan.

This means one big loan to repay all others.

This big loan should be at a lower rate.

Avoid NBFCs and private lenders for this.

Only choose reputed banks with lower interest rates.

You can use your salary account bank to enquire first.

If you get this, pay all high-cost private loans immediately.

Explore Loan Against Assets – Only If Needed

Do you have gold or any assets? You can consider a loan against them.

Loan against gold is much cheaper than 4% per month.

If gold is unused at home, it is better to use it smartly.

Avoid selling gold for less value under stress.

Only take such loans if they reduce high-interest debt.

Always repay this loan on time to avoid losing asset.

Generate Additional Monthly Income

Think of any small extra income source.

Even Rs.5,000 to Rs.10,000 extra can help.

You can try weekend freelance work or part-time jobs.

Family members can also help to bring extra income.

Each rupee counts when escaping a debt trap.

Use all income only for debt payments.

Avoid lifestyle expenses or unnecessary spending.

Cut Down Unnecessary Expenses Immediately

Review your monthly spending strictly.

Stop luxury spending completely for now.

Avoid hotel food, OTT subscriptions, mobile upgrades, etc.

Use only public transport for some months.

This sacrifice is temporary but powerful.

It can help you save Rs.5,000 to Rs.10,000 easily.

That money will help in loan repayment.

Create a Simple and Focused Budget

Make a monthly budget with fixed limits.

Keep separate money for needs and debt repayment.

Set strict limits for food, transport, and utilities.

Track all expenses daily in a small diary.

You will be shocked to see small wastes.

Control them with full discipline.

Seek Support from Family or Friends

Speak to close family members if possible.

Be honest and seek small help.

Even Rs.50,000 or Rs.1 lakh can help reduce burden.

But ensure you repay them slowly without hurting relations.

Never hide your debt from family.

Hiding can lead to more financial stress later.

Start with the Highest Interest Loan

Always repay the highest interest loan first.

This is called the avalanche method.

Private loans at 4% per month must be cleared first.

Even small repayment helps reduce interest burden.

Avoid paying only NBFC loan. Focus on private ones.

Pay small amount every week if possible.

This reduces principal faster.

No Need to Invest Anywhere Right Now

Right now, you must not invest anywhere.

Do not look for mutual funds, FD, PPF, or gold.

This is not the right time for investments.

First clear your debt fully.

Then only start investing for future goals.

Right now, your return is by saving interest.

If You Have LIC or ULIP Policies

Do you have LIC, ULIP, or similar investment-cum-insurance?

Then you must evaluate them properly now.

These plans offer very low returns.

At this point, you need liquidity, not low returns.

You can consider surrendering them carefully.

Use the money to repay private loans first.

After debt is cleared, you can restart SIPs in mutual funds.

Avoid Index Funds or ETFs

These are passive investment options.

They follow the market and don’t beat it.

They lack expert fund management.

They don’t suit your situation right now.

You need active returns in future, not just average.

Actively managed mutual funds are more personalised.

They have expert fund managers to guide.

After debt clearance, you can consider these via SIP.

Direct Funds Are Risky – Prefer Regular Plans via Certified Financial Planner

Direct funds have no guidance.

They save small commissions but carry big risks.

Wrong selection can damage your goals badly.

You also miss human support in market changes.

Better to invest through Certified Financial Planner.

You get regular plan, but expert handholding.

They can customise based on your risk and goals.

You need 360-degree planning, not DIY attempts.

Use Systematic Repayment Plan (SRP)

Just like SIP for investments, use SRP for loans.

Fix an amount every month.

Repay this consistently to the same lender.

Finish one loan at a time fully.

This gives mental relief as well.

It’s better than scattered small payments to many lenders.

Avoid Personal Loans or Credit Cards for Now

Personal loans may look easy, but they are costly.

Their interest is 14% to 24%.

Also avoid credit card debt fully.

Credit card interest can cross 36% annually.

If you have any existing card dues, stop using the card.

Try to convert the dues into EMI.

Then close the card after full payment.

Regularly Review Your Progress

Every month, check your loan balance.

Celebrate small reductions in debt.

This gives confidence to continue.

Also keep a repayment tracker on your phone.

It motivates you to stay focused.

Stay Away from Risky Investment Advice

Some people may tell you to invest in fast-return ideas.

They may offer chit funds or crypto.

These are very risky and not for your situation.

You are already under high financial pressure.

Avoid all high-risk and quick-money plans.

Safety and discipline are your biggest allies now.

Build an Emergency Fund Slowly After Debt Repayment

Once your loans are fully cleared, start saving Rs.1,000 monthly.

This becomes your emergency fund slowly.

Emergency fund protects you from taking fresh loans again.

This is your safety net after the debt journey.

Plan Your Financial Goals Step-by-Step

After clearing debt, set goals.

Plan for retirement, children’s education, and buying a car or bike.

Use mutual funds for these, but via a Certified Financial Planner.

They will guide you with proper plan.

This helps you achieve goals safely and wisely.

Take Help from a Professional Financial Planning Service

You may feel lost or stuck.

Take expert help from a Certified Financial Planner.

They will study your loan situation clearly.

They will make a customised step-by-step repayment plan.

This guidance is key for your 360-degree financial stability.

You don’t need to do everything alone.

Professional support adds long-term value.

Finally

Your situation is serious, but it’s not impossible.

Many people have come out of similar struggles.

The only need is discipline and right steps.

Cut waste, increase income, and repay debt first.

Avoid wrong financial products now.

Don’t delay your action anymore.

Take the first small step today.

You will see change with consistency.

Your future is still full of hope.

We are with you for long-term wealth and peace.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8556 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 29, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - May 25, 2025
Money
Hello Sir. Could you please help me to evaluate on to Surrender LIC policy is a wise decision now. Plan details below. Plan - Lic Jeevan Anand 815 Sum insured - 8lakhs Premium - 36 Annualy Policy in force from - 2015 Maturity year - 2040 Premium paid - 10 years Premium remaining - 15 years Please help me to understand if I surrender this policy will be beneficial to reduce by debts or to invest in MF via SIP. Also please advise how much I get if I surrender the policy now. Thank you Thank you.
Ans: You have clearly outlined your concern. Evaluating whether to surrender your LIC Jeevan Anand Plan 815 is a valid question, especially in a debt crisis. Let's assess this from a 360-degree financial planning perspective.

Policy Summary and Present Status
Policy Name: LIC Jeevan Anand (Plan 815)

Sum Assured: Rs. 8 lakhs

Annual Premium: Rs. 36,000

Policy Start Year: 2015

Maturity Year: 2040

Premiums Paid: 10 years completed

Premiums Remaining: 15 more years to go

You have paid Rs. 3.6 lakhs till date (Rs. 36,000 × 10 years)

Surrender Value Possibility at This Stage
After 10 years, policy acquires good surrender value.

You are eligible for a Guaranteed Surrender Value plus bonus value.

Usually, you can get 30% to 50% of total premiums paid.

That means, you may receive around Rs. 1.2 lakhs to Rs. 1.8 lakhs.

Bonus accumulated may add another Rs. 20,000 to Rs. 50,000

So, expected surrender value = Rs. 1.5 lakhs to Rs. 2.3 lakhs.

You must confirm exact amount from the LIC branch or online portal.

LIC agents may not give accurate surrender value details. Go to branch directly.

Is Surrendering Beneficial During Debt Pressure?
You are currently under heavy debt of Rs. 30 lakhs.

Every rupee counts in managing your debt pressure.

Rs. 2 lakhs recovery from this LIC policy can ease your situation slightly.

Also, you will stop paying Rs. 36,000 annually going forward.

That means extra Rs. 3,000 every month saved.

This saving can be used to clear smaller EMIs.

Stopping premium outflow will ease your monthly budget.

Also, LIC policies give very low returns – around 4% to 5% per year.

That’s not good enough when your loans are charging 18% or more interest.

Holding this policy makes no sense when you are paying 2x or 3x in interest.

Insurance and Investment Are Different
LIC Jeevan Anand is an investment cum insurance plan.

Such plans offer low insurance cover and low returns.

You must separate insurance and investment always.

Buy term insurance only for pure life cover.

Invest separately in instruments with better returns.

Do not mix the two goals. It creates confusion and underperformance.

Once Debts Are Cleared – Start Fresh Investment
When your loan burden is reduced, start SIPs in mutual funds.

But don’t choose direct funds on your own. They look cheaper but are risky.

Direct plans don’t guide you when market falls.

Regular plans via MFD with CFP support are more reliable.

Professional help matters more than 0.5% savings in cost.

Actively managed funds give consistent performance over time.

Index funds don’t adapt to market changes. They lack flexibility.

Actively managed funds are better in Indian markets due to volatility.

Invest in regular mutual funds through a Certified Financial Planner.

What If You Don’t Surrender the Policy?
You’ll continue paying Rs. 36,000 every year for 15 more years.

Total outflow will be Rs. 5.4 lakhs more in future.

On maturity in 2040, expected return will be around Rs. 12 to 14 lakhs.

That gives you less than 5% return yearly.

Against that, your credit cards or personal loans are eating 18% to 36%.

You are borrowing at 36% and investing at 5%. It is a huge mismatch.

It is not wise to keep such a policy when under high debt pressure.

Also, keeping it does not help in your credit score recovery.

It only blocks your cash flow for the next 15 years.

If You Are Emotionally Attached to the Policy
Some people feel emotional about LIC policies.

They may feel security or trust due to LIC brand.

But emotional decisions don’t work well in money matters.

Make decision based on logic, not emotions.

You can always restart investment later with better options.

But your debt needs urgent solution today.

Steps to Surrender the Policy
Visit the LIC branch where the policy was issued.

Carry original bond, ID proof, cancelled cheque, and surrender request form.

Request surrender value statement. Ask for exact amount.

Submit the request in writing and get acknowledgement.

You will get amount by NEFT in 7–10 working days.

Once received, use it immediately to reduce your highest-interest loan.

What to Do with the Surrender Proceeds
Don’t spend the amount. Use it only for loan repayment.

Target the most painful loan first – credit card or loan app.

Next, use the freed-up monthly Rs. 3,000 for loan EMIs.

Recalculate your EMI burden after that.

This will reduce your stress and improve CIBIL score.

Don’t reinvest this money now.

Focus only on debt elimination till your income becomes stable.

Final Insights
Your decision to question this policy is smart.

Most people don’t review old policies. You have taken a right step.

Surrendering this LIC policy now is a wise choice.

It gives cash today and saves money in future.

It helps you reduce debt faster and gain control over money.

Once your situation improves, you can start better investments.

Don’t feel guilty for surrendering. It is a practical step, not failure.

Financial planning is about making right choices at right time.

And this is the right time for that decision.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP

Chief Financial Planner

www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |5472 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on May 29, 2025

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8556 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 29, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - May 28, 2025
Money
Hi sir. I have 50 lakhs to invest and require inputs on where/how to. I currently have 1.2 Cr in Mutual funds (63% in large cap, 25% in midcap, 11% in small cap, rest 1-2% in gold funds). Monthly SIP of 50k ongoing in ICICI Pru Bluechip, Quant Mid Cap, PP Flexi cap, Quant Small Cap, Invesco India Contra, SBI Gold Fund. I have an under-constrution home loan for 1.3 Cr with current EMI of 80k which will increase to 1.2 lakh pm in 2 yrs when the project is completed. Could you suggest if I should reduce the loan requirement or invest the 50 lakh in add-on mutual funds/other investment products such as land (given current market scenario)?
Ans: Your current investments reflect clarity and structure.

It’s good to see your Rs. 1.2 crore mutual fund portfolio is well spread.

The Rs. 50,000 monthly SIP also shows strong financial discipline.

The Rs. 1.3 crore home loan with an increasing EMI in 2 years needs attention.

Your Rs. 50 lakh surplus gives you both flexibility and opportunity.

Let’s look at your options from a 360-degree financial planning lens.

We will explore four important areas:

– Debt management
– Investment suitability
– Portfolio structure
– Contingency planning

Let’s begin.

Loan Management – Reduce or Retain?
Your current EMI of Rs. 80,000 will go up to Rs. 1.2 lakh in two years.

Home loan rates may not go down significantly in short term.

You still have time to reduce the loan burden if needed.

Prepaying some loan amount now can reduce future EMI pressure.

You may also negotiate with the bank to restructure or reduce interest.

But don’t use full Rs. 50 lakh for loan prepayment.

Keeping liquidity is more important than full loan clearance.

Best strategy: Use 20–25 lakh for part prepayment.

This brings interest outgo under control.

It also brings mental peace before EMI rises.

Balance Rs. 25–30 lakh should be retained for investing purpose.

Investment Route – Where to Use Rs. 25–30 Lakh?
You already have Rs. 1.2 crore in mutual funds.

SIP of Rs. 50,000 per month is already active.

Your portfolio shows good mix: large, mid, small cap and gold.

No need to add more mutual fund categories now.

Instead, strengthen exposure in same structure.

Fresh lump sum must be staggered in tranches.

Use STP (Systematic Transfer Plan) for this.

Park Rs. 25–30 lakh in a good ultra-short duration fund.

Then transfer Rs. 1.5–2 lakh monthly into your current equity funds.

This way, you reduce market risk while entering.

Don’t go for direct funds even if expense ratio is less.

Regular funds through Certified Financial Planner give better guidance.

You gain personalised help, behavioural correction and fund review.

Direct plan investors often miss these, and returns suffer.

You should continue all your current SIPs.

Don’t introduce new schemes without specific purpose.

Also avoid exotic themes like international, thematic, sectoral funds.

They carry concentration risk and timing risk.

Asset Allocation Review – Balance Equity with Safety
98% of your mutual fund portfolio is in equity.

This is aggressive, and suitable only for long-term goals.

But now with large home loan and rising EMI, safety is key.

Allocate a part of your Rs. 50 lakh to safe products.

This ensures peace of mind and emergency coverage.

Choose short-term debt funds with high-quality papers.

Fixed deposits are fine for very short-term needs.

Avoid NCDs and corporate bonds without credit rating comfort.

Don't chase high returns from unlisted or private bonds.

Your core portfolio should balance return with stability.

Aim for 80:20 ratio between equity and safety instruments now.

Avoid Real Estate as Investment Route
You already have an under-construction property.

Real estate is illiquid and needs high maintenance.

Buying land or more property locks capital without regular returns.

Rental yield is also low. Liquidity during crisis is zero.

You also face risks like legal delays, registration cost, capital gain tax.

Avoid investing your surplus Rs. 50 lakh into any land.

Let your investments remain flexible, safe and growth-oriented.

Tax Perspective – Be Aware of Capital Gains Tax
Equity mutual fund gains up to Rs. 1.25 lakh are tax-free yearly.

Beyond that, long-term gains are taxed at 12.5%.

Short-term gains are taxed at 20%.

Don’t redeem in bulk to avoid higher taxation.

Plan withdrawals during non-working years or post-retirement.

For debt funds, taxation is per your income slab.

Choose investments where taxation suits your slab.

Consult your tax expert once a year to rebalance smartly.

Contingency Planning – Emergency and Safety Check
Check if your emergency fund covers 12 months expenses.

You are already committing Rs. 80k EMI monthly.

In 2 years, it will go up by 50%.

In case of job loss or income dip, EMI stress may arise.

Always keep Rs. 8–10 lakh as emergency reserve.

Use sweep-in FDs or ultra-short debt funds for this.

Make sure health insurance and term insurance are adequate.

Any sudden illness or job risk shouldn’t break your portfolio.

Children’s Future – Start Goal-Based Planning
If you have children, plan now for education.

Use a separate SIP for child goal if not done already.

Select balanced or hybrid equity funds for child goals.

This provides growth with lower volatility.

Avoid child ULIPs or traditional insurance plans.

They are low-return and poor liquidity options.

If you hold any of them, consider surrender and reinvest into mutual funds.

Avoid Index Funds – Here’s Why
Index funds only mimic markets, not beat them.

You don’t get downside protection in falling markets.

Actively managed funds aim to outperform benchmarks.

In India, skilled fund managers can still beat index returns.

You miss expert judgement in index approach.

Also, same returns mean less room for alpha generation.

Stick to active funds under regular plans with a Certified Financial Planner.

Portfolio Monitoring – Keep Regular Reviews
Track your SIPs and lump sum investments quarterly.

See which funds are lagging beyond 2–3 years.

Don’t rush to exit due to 6-month poor return.

Use Certified Financial Planner to reallocate, not switch randomly.

Make goals-based buckets: home EMI, retirement, child education.

Link each fund to a goal. Track progress. Rebalance once a year.

Stay invested during market dips. That’s when wealth is built.

Finally – What You Should Do Now
Use Rs. 20–25 lakh to partly prepay the home loan.

Use Rs. 25–30 lakh for investment through STP into your current mutual funds.

Don’t add new fund types unless your goals demand.

Stay with regular mutual funds. Avoid direct mode and index funds.

Create safety net through short-term debt funds and FDs.

Maintain emergency fund. Avoid real estate or land purchases.

Monitor all funds quarterly. Rebalance annually with a planner’s support.

Keep discipline, avoid over-diversification, and stay goal focused.

You’re already doing well. Now, strengthen the base further.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Investment in securities market are subject to market risks. Read all the related document carefully before investing. The securities quoted are for illustration only and are not recommendatory. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information and as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision. RediffGURUS is an intermediary as per India's Information Technology Act.

Close  

You haven't logged in yet. To ask a question, Please Log in below
Login

A verification OTP will be sent to this
Mobile Number / Email

Enter OTP
A 6 digit code has been sent to

Resend OTP in120seconds

Dear User, You have not registered yet. Please register by filling the fields below to get expert answers from our Gurus
Sign up

By signing up, you agree to our
Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy

Already have an account?

Enter OTP
A 6 digit code has been sent to Mobile

Resend OTP in120seconds

x