Sir, I am 51 year old male and have dependent wife, daughter 18yrs and son 8yrs. At present I am not working and haven't done much financial plannings. I have taken 10L health insurance for family, 30L life Insurance and have assets - 3bhk house where I stay, 2bhk on rent - 30k and 60L FD. I am not sure how to start investing as I do not have any experience with MF or stock market. Kindly advice.
Ans: You are in a stage of life where careful planning is very important. At 51, with a non-earning status, and with two dependents, your focus should be on securing income, protecting capital, and planning smartly for your family’s long-term needs.
You already have some positive things in place. Let’s evaluate your position step-by-step and guide you in building a 360-degree financial roadmap.
Your Current Financial Position – An Overview
You are 51 years old and not working currently.
You have a wife, a daughter (18), and a son (8) who are financially dependent.
You have Rs. 10 lakh health insurance for your family. That’s a good beginning.
You have Rs. 30 lakh life insurance. Needs further review.
You stay in a 3BHK house and own a 2BHK property which earns Rs. 30,000 monthly rent.
You have Rs. 60 lakh in fixed deposits.
You are new to mutual funds and stock investments.
This clarity helps to assess your financial strength and gaps.
Assessing Risk and Needs at This Stage
At this stage, you have some income (from rent), stable assets, and capital. But you do not have a regular working income. Your dependents are young, and future expenses (especially education) are high. Let’s look at your current risks:
Lack of steady income from work
Long-term education needs of your children
Inflation eating into fixed deposits
No investment in mutual funds or other growth options
Life insurance may be insufficient
Let us now see how to plan each part thoughtfully.
1. Emergency Fund – Your Immediate Support System
Always maintain an emergency fund.
For your situation, keep at least Rs. 6–8 lakh in savings account or liquid mutual funds.
This is for medical, repair, or urgent family expenses.
Use a sweep-in FD or short-term debt fund.
Do not mix this with long-term investments.
This fund gives safety when income is not regular.
2. Health Insurance – Good Start, Slight Improvements Needed
You already have Rs. 10 lakh family floater. That’s a good base.
But include a super top-up plan of Rs. 15–20 lakh.
This will add extra protection at low premium.
Ensure it covers your wife and both children till at least age 60.
Focus on plans with lifetime renewability.
Hospitalisation costs are rising fast. This cover helps preserve your savings.
3. Life Insurance – Protection Gap Must Be Covered
Rs. 30 lakh life cover is low for your situation.
Aim for at least Rs. 1 crore pure term insurance.
No investment-linked policies. Only term insurance.
This should cover:
Education of both children
Living expenses of wife
Any future liabilities
Term plan premiums are affordable if taken early.
Keep your insurance and investment separate always.
4. Fixed Deposits – Low Growth, Taxable Returns
You have Rs. 60 lakh in FDs. That’s helpful now.
But FD returns are low and taxable fully.
This will not beat inflation in the long run.
Break your FD into three buckets:
Short-term needs (1–2 years) – Keep in FD
Medium-term needs (3–5 years) – Shift to debt mutual funds
Long-term growth (7+ years) – Invest in equity mutual funds
Only idle capital should stay in FD. Rest should be working for you.
5. Rental Income – Protect and Optimise
You earn Rs. 30,000 monthly from 2BHK rent.
That is Rs. 3.6 lakh annually.
It is a good source, but keep it insured and maintained well.
Set aside part of this income for maintenance or emergency repairs.
Treat this rent as part of your monthly income stream.
6. Mutual Fund Investing – Start Simple, Go Systematic
You are new to mutual funds. That is perfectly fine. Start small, but stay regular.
Begin with regular plans through a CFP-guided Mutual Fund Distributor (MFD).
They guide you with personalised planning, tax management, and emotional discipline.
Avoid direct plans. They give no guidance and no human support.
Direct plans are for experts who monitor daily. They lack behavioural coaching.
Regular plans may have commission, but they give you full service.
Your lack of time and knowledge can hurt in direct plans.
Now for fund type selection:
For long-term (7+ years): Use actively managed equity mutual funds.
Avoid index funds. They invest in all stocks, even poor ones.
Index funds do not manage risk. No active decision-making is there.
Actively managed funds are guided by experts. They select only good quality stocks.
Good fund managers help you beat market average returns.
For medium-term (3–5 years): Use balanced or hybrid mutual funds.
For short-term (1–2 years): Use short-term debt mutual funds.
Always invest based on time horizon and goal.
7. Monthly Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) – Build a Habit
From your FD and rental income, start monthly SIPs.
Begin with Rs. 20,000 per month.
Increase gradually as you get comfortable.
SIP creates financial discipline and long-term wealth.
Small steps done regularly give big results.
8. Retirement Planning – Your Own Future Must Be Secure
You are 51. You may live another 30–35 years.
Don’t ignore your own retirement.
Start allocating a portion of FD into retirement-focused funds.
These funds help in growing capital and giving monthly income later.
Plan to create Rs. 3–4 crore retirement corpus in 10–12 years.
Use mutual fund SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan) after 60.
This gives regular monthly income from mutual fund investments.
Never depend only on children. Your financial independence matters.
9. Education Planning for Children – Must Be Prioritised
Daughter is 18. Higher education is very near.
Son is 8. You have time for his goals.
Shift a part of your FD (say Rs. 20 lakh) into goal-based mutual funds.
For daughter’s education, use balanced mutual funds. Use STP to withdraw in 3 years.
For son’s education, use equity mutual funds. You have 10 years.
Allocate goal-wise. Do not mix funds.
Education is expensive. Smart early planning is needed.
10. Will Writing and Estate Planning – Protecting Your Family
You have two properties and fixed assets.
Prepare a registered Will. It prevents legal confusion later.
Mention how you wish to divide property and assets.
Also, mention nominee details in all mutual funds and bank accounts.
Nominee is not owner. Will decides final ownership.
A Will brings peace and clarity for your family.
11. Tax Planning – Keep It Simple and Smart
FD interest is taxed as per your slab. It can reduce actual return.
Equity mutual funds:
LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%
STCG taxed at 20%
Debt mutual funds: Taxed as per your slab.
Use tax-efficient funds. Keep records of investments and redemptions.
12. Do Not Mix Insurance with Investment
If you hold LIC policies or ULIPs or investment-cum-insurance policies:
Review the surrender value.
Most of them give poor return.
Exit these slowly and reinvest in mutual funds.
Keep insurance separate, as pure term cover only.
Insurance is for protection. Investment is for wealth.
13. Avoid These Common Mistakes
Avoid investing big amount at once in equity. Use STP to spread risk.
Do not chase past performance of mutual funds.
Don’t rely on tips, TV advice, or friends for investing.
Stay away from real estate investment now. It locks capital and is illiquid.
Avoid annuity products. They give low return and no flexibility.
Simple, long-term, disciplined mutual fund investing works best.
14. Engage a Certified Financial Planner
A CFP professional gives you goal-based, holistic planning.
They help in:
Asset allocation
Tax planning
Portfolio review
Risk analysis
Behavioural coaching
They bring experience, logic, and emotional balance.
Their guidance helps you avoid big mistakes.
Finally – Your Action Plan Starts Now
You have a good base with assets and no major liabilities. But planning is delayed. Act now.
Protect what you have (Health + Life + Emergency Fund)
Shift from FD to goal-based investing slowly
Begin mutual fund SIPs through regular plans
Plan for retirement and children’s education
Write your Will and ensure nominations
Track your expenses and invest monthly
You don’t need to be an expert. But you must be disciplined.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment