I am 34 years having monthly Salary 51K, My monthly Savings & Expenses details as follows. 1. Personal Loan EMI - 12961/- Closed by 2030 2. APY & PMLYM in my wife's Name - 750/- running last 4 years 3. 2 RD in my Daughter's Name - 1000/- running 2 years 4. NPS Investment - 600/- started 6 month ago 5. SIP (10 funds / 500 each) - 6000/- started 1 year ago 6. E-Gold Investment - 500/- started 1.5 years ago 7. RD (for pay Locker Rent, Term Insurance 52k, Health Insurance 15k) - 6000/- 8. Household Expenses - 20000/- (if saves, save for Emergency) 9. Unplanned Personal Expenses - 3000/- Please suggest, how to increase my wealth, that secure my family, doughter (age 2y 10M) career plan as well my retirement age.
Ans: You are showing financial discipline even with limited salary.
Let us now build a long-term wealth plan for your retirement, child’s education, and family security.
I will go step-by-step. Simple and clear.
Understanding Your Present Financial Picture
Age: 34 years
Salary: Rs 51,000 per month
Daughter’s age: 2 years 10 months
You have some structured savings.
You are investing in SIPs, NPS, RD, gold.
You have a personal loan till 2030.
Let us now build a strong plan that protects your family and your future.
Step 1: Simplify Your Mutual Fund Strategy
You invest Rs 6,000 in 10 mutual funds.
Each fund is getting only Rs 500.
This is a problem. Too many funds. Too less in each.
Problems with this approach:
Small amount in each fund won’t grow fast.
Hard to track so many schemes.
Funds may overlap in portfolio.
You may hold index funds unknowingly.
Action:
Keep only 3–4 quality funds.
Choose only actively managed equity mutual funds.
Avoid index funds. They don’t have expert guidance.
Index funds follow market blindly.
No protection during market fall.
Active funds are reviewed and managed by experts.
Regular funds come with MFD and CFP support.
Restructure your SIPs like this:
One large and mid-cap fund
One flexi-cap fund
One hybrid equity fund
Total SIP can remain Rs 6,000 per month
Choose regular plans only.
Don’t invest in direct funds.
Direct plans don’t offer goal mapping.
No expert will guide you.
Risk of emotional decisions is higher.
Regular plan offers better structure and help.
Step 2: Review Your Gold Investment Plan
You are investing Rs 500 monthly in e-gold.
Gold is useful, but not a wealth creator.
You are investing with good intention.
But gold is not ideal for child education or retirement.
Reasons:
Gold doesn’t beat inflation over long term
It gives no interest or dividend
Value can stay flat for years
No tax benefit available
Price is volatile during international crises
Action:
Stop gold investment for now
Focus more on mutual funds
You can hold a small amount of gold later
But for wealth building, use equity-based mutual funds
Step 3: Create a Goal-Based Structure
Right now, you are investing in scattered pockets.
We will now organise your savings for real goals.
Your goals are:
Child’s education (college in 15 years)
Retirement (at age 60)
Family security (emergency protection)
Let’s allocate accordingly:
Goal 1: Child Education
You have 15 years time
This is ideal for equity mutual funds
SIP of Rs 3,000 monthly for this goal
Invest only in regular mutual funds
Increase SIP by Rs 500 every year
Avoid child ULIPs or endowment plans.
Returns are poor. Lock-ins are long.
Goal 2: Retirement
You have 26 years to plan
Continue NPS Rs 600 per month
Increase it to Rs 1,000 after 1 year
Also start a second SIP for retirement
Rs 2,000 monthly in equity hybrid mutual fund
NPS alone is not enough
Goal 3: Emergency Fund
You save Rs 6,000 in RD for insurance payments.
That’s good for fixed expenses.
But you need a real emergency fund.
Emergency fund helps in:
Job loss
Family medical issue
Sudden travel or support
Start building Rs 1.5–2 lakh fund.
Use liquid mutual funds, not bank RD.
Save Rs 1,000–2,000 monthly towards this.
Step 4: Loan Repayment Strategy
Your personal loan EMI is Rs 12,961.
It will run till 2030. That’s 6 more years.
Personal loans have high interest.
So this loan eats up your cash flow.
Still, you are managing to invest. That’s good.
Action:
Use yearly bonus or extra income to prepay
Target to close 1 year early
Avoid top-up or new personal loans
Don’t increase EMI. Maintain SIPs as well
Once loan ends, shift EMI amount into SIP
This step will double your SIP strength post-2030.
Step 5: Secure Your Family Properly
You are paying for term insurance (Rs 52,000 yearly).
You are also paying Rs 15,000 yearly for health policy.
Check this carefully:
Is your term insurance a pure term plan?
Or a ULIP or return-of-premium policy?
If it is ULIP or return plan, you must replace it.
Buy pure term insurance.
It’s cheaper and gives high cover.
ULIP gives poor returns and is expensive.
Action:
If it is not pure term, surrender policy
Buy Rs 50 lakh to Rs 75 lakh term cover
Use regular plan via MFD or CFP
Also, ensure your wife is covered by health insurance.
And you both are in one floater health policy.
Step 6: RD Planning Correction
You are saving Rs 6,000 monthly in RD.
This is to pay locker, term plan, and health policy.
That’s a good idea. But RDs give low return.
Also, you can’t easily break them.
Better approach:
Use one liquid mutual fund instead of RD
Keep saving Rs 6,000 monthly there
Withdraw when premium due comes
You earn better returns
You get easy liquidity
RD is not flexible. Liquid mutual fund is better.
Step 7: Budget and Expense Management
You spend Rs 20,000 on household expenses.
And Rs 3,000 on unplanned personal use.
This is okay for your salary level.
But do these simple things:
Track expenses using a diary or app
Avoid unnecessary subscriptions or shopping
Review spending every Sunday night
Don’t use credit cards for lifestyle
Avoid small loans for gadgets
Discipline in expense will boost savings.
Step 8: Step-up Your Investment Every Year
You must grow your SIPs every year.
You are still young. Even 10 years make big impact.
Action:
Increase SIP by Rs 500 every 12 months
After loan ends in 2030, double SIP
Use term insurance premium savings for investment
Don’t stop SIP even if market falls
Review funds every 12 months with MFD
This strategy will build big wealth slowly.
Step 9: Future Income Planning
Today salary is Rs 51,000.
It may grow to Rs 80,000–90,000 in 5–6 years.
Use the future hike smartly:
Don’t increase lifestyle expenses too fast
Save 50% of any salary hike
Invest extra in mutual funds
Build emergency and retirement faster
Also, think of second income ideas:
Part-time skill courses
Online freelancing
Weekend tutoring
Renting unused things
Passive blog, YouTube channel
Multiple income gives financial security.
Step 10: Know Tax on Mutual Funds
You must know the new mutual fund tax rule:
Equity fund LTCG above Rs 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%
Short-term capital gains taxed at 20%
Debt fund gains taxed as per income slab
So, hold equity funds for long term.
Don’t redeem in short term.
Don’t panic in market dip. Stay invested.
Final Insights
You are already very focused and consistent.
Even with limited income, you are saving well.
What you must do now:
Reduce mutual funds from 10 to 3–4 only
Stop gold SIP and use money in equity mutual funds
Increase SIPs every year
Create emergency fund using liquid fund
Review insurance. Avoid ULIPs. Use pure term cover
Close personal loan before 2030 using bonus
Don’t invest in direct funds. Use regular funds
Track all spending monthly
Prepare one Excel sheet for budget, SIP, insurance
With this plan, you will build wealth slowly and safely.
Your daughter’s future and your retirement will be well protected.
Stay disciplined. Don’t stop. Keep going.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment