I am a 55 years old man with wife and two children aged 18 years & 12 years respectively. I have a Mutual Fund Corpus having current value of approx 4.70 crores and PPF of Rs.51 Lakhs. I have my own residence (Actually 2 properties) . I want to retire in another 3-4 years. I want to know how much more corpus is required to have a monthly income of 3.5 Lakhs p.m considering that I have no liability in respect of any loan/EMI but have to settle my children. The elder child is going for Engineering starting this year and I will have to spend at least Rs.45 Lakhs on his education in 4 years starting from now and the younger one will take another 5-6 years to decide about his future for which I may require another Rs.50 Lakhs over a period of 4 years staring after 6 years from now.
My monthly expenses is about 2.5 Lakhs currently. Please Advice
Ans: Current Family and Financial Profile
Age: 55 years
Retirement planned: In 3 to 4 years (Age 58–59)
Family: Wife (homemaker/earning not mentioned), two children (aged 18 and 12)
Corpus:
Mutual Funds: Rs. 4.70 crores
PPF: Rs. 51 lakhs
Assets: Own residence (two properties)
Monthly expense: Rs. 2.5 lakhs (likely to increase with inflation)
Desired monthly income in retirement: Rs. 3.5 lakhs
No loans or EMIs
Children’s education expenses:
Elder: Rs. 45 lakhs over 4 years
Younger: Rs. 50 lakhs, to be spent over 4 years starting after 6 years
Acknowledging Your Current Strengths
You have zero liability. This gives a strong starting base.
You own two residential properties. That gives long-term housing stability.
Your current corpus size is encouraging.
You have well-structured long-term instruments like Mutual Funds and PPF.
You have a clear idea about your future cash flow needs. That’s very helpful.
Expense vs Income: Present and Future
Current monthly expense: Rs. 2.5 lakhs
Expected retirement income: Rs. 3.5 lakhs per month
This gap of Rs. 1 lakh is reasonable and achievable.
However, post-retirement expenses may rise due to inflation.
Inflation impact (very important):
In 10 years, even 6% inflation doubles monthly expenses.
So, Rs. 3.5 lakhs today will be Rs. 7 lakhs after 12 years.
Your corpus must factor in this increasing need.
Immediate Financial Commitments: Children’s Education
Elder child (Engineering)
Starting this year
Total expense: Rs. 45 lakhs in 4 years
You will withdraw Rs. 11-12 lakhs per year
This will slightly slow your corpus growth
Younger child
Education expense of Rs. 50 lakhs
Will be needed 6 years from now
Will span across next 4 years after that
Better to create a separate, moderately aggressive plan for this
Action Plan:
Ringfence Rs. 1 crore from corpus for both children’s education
Keep this portion in hybrid or balanced funds
Withdraw in tranches as required
Avoid debt funds if redemption horizon is short
Avoid direct stock exposure for this portion
Retirement Corpus Requirement Assessment
Your goal is Rs. 3.5 lakhs per month post-retirement. That’s Rs. 42 lakhs per year.
You plan to retire in 3–4 years. You’ll need inflation-adjusted income for next 30 years.
Factors considered here:
Monthly withdrawal from age 59 to 85+
Inflation-adjusted income
Healthcare costs increase after age 65
Regular expenses
Periodic travel or leisure
Major life events like marriages, gifting, home maintenance, etc.
Total corpus needed (excluding children's education):
Based on your lifestyle and inflation
You need around Rs. 12.5 crores to Rs. 13.5 crores
This includes buffer for emergencies and rising medical costs
Your Current Position: Gap Analysis
Current mutual fund corpus: Rs. 4.70 crores
PPF corpus: Rs. 51 lakhs
Total current investable corpus: Approx. Rs. 5.21 crores
From this, earmark Rs. 1 crore for both children's education
Effective available retirement corpus: Rs. 4.21 crores
Required corpus at retirement: Rs. 13 crores approx.
Additional requirement: Around Rs. 9 crores more in next 3–4 years
This may look large. But you still have time to grow the corpus.
Steps to Bridge the Gap
1. Invest Aggressively and Strategically for Next 3–4 Years
Focus on high-growth mutual fund strategies
Use actively managed diversified equity funds
Avoid index funds due to lack of flexibility and inability to beat market consistently
Index funds carry hidden risk in falling markets. They blindly follow index movement.
Instead, select active funds with quality fund managers and long-term track record
2. Avoid Direct Funds if Not Monitored Properly
Direct funds save commission, but lack professional hand-holding
Many investors underperform due to wrong timing or switching
Investing through a MFD (Mutual Fund Distributor) with CFP certification adds personalised planning
Regular funds ensure long-term behavioural discipline and portfolio reviews
You avoid emotional mistakes in volatile periods
Peace of mind and handholding is worth the trail cost
3. Regular Investments Until Retirement
Every year till retirement, invest at least Rs. 15–20 lakhs
Prefer SIP + lumpsum when market provides opportunities
Deploy idle funds wisely but avoid overexposure to small caps
Stay away from sector-specific or thematic funds
Asset Allocation: Pre and Post Retirement
Current Phase (55 to 59 years)
Equity-oriented mutual funds: 70%
Hybrid/Conservative Hybrid: 20%
PPF & Liquid assets: 10%
Post Retirement (59 years onwards)
Equity: 50% (for growth and inflation protection)
Hybrid: 25% (for stability)
Debt/Liquid: 25% (for regular withdrawals and low volatility)
Keep minimum 3 years' expenses in debt funds or liquid sources
Important:
Always follow proper SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan)
Rebalance portfolio once a year
Increase withdrawal only after reviewing portfolio health
Additional Planning Areas to Address
Medical and Health Care Costs
Buy a comprehensive health insurance (if not already covered)
Consider super top-up plans for higher medical cover
Medical inflation is higher than general inflation
Allocate Rs. 1 crore over time for health-related expenses
Emergency Fund
Maintain Rs. 20–25 lakhs in ultra short-term funds or liquid funds
Do not touch it for any planned expenses
This is only for unexpected emergencies
Estate Planning
Create a Will
Mention all investments, nominee details clearly
Appoint a trustworthy executor
Educate family about how to access financial documents
Retirement Lifestyle Planning
Think about lifestyle goals post-retirement
Leisure, travel, social goals should be part of the plan
Allocate 10% of retirement corpus for non-essential goals
Avoid These Common Mistakes
Do not invest in traditional insurance plans
Avoid ULIPs, endowments, or investment cum insurance policies
Do not lock large amounts in FDs with poor post-tax returns
Avoid real estate as a retirement asset. It's illiquid and risky.
Do not depend on annuity plans. They offer poor returns and no flexibility.
Don’t withdraw large amounts from equity when market is down
Tax Planning in Retirement
Keep equity exposure for tax efficiency
LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakhs taxed at 12.5% only
Avoid large STCG in equity mutual funds. Tax is 20%
For debt mutual funds, both LTCG and STCG are taxed as per income slab
Use SWP to reduce taxable income smartly
Use senior citizen schemes (if needed) in a limited way
Finally
You are already in a good position.
But there is a visible gap in future requirements.
Focus next 4 years on wealth building with right mutual fund strategy.
Avoid distractions like poor-performing traditional plans
Continue disciplined investing
Your goal of Rs. 3.5 lakhs per month is possible
But only with planned execution, proper asset mix and professional guidance
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment