I recently received Rs 12 lakh from a matured FD. I have a Rs 62 lakh home loan with 15 years pending, and a 25,000 SIP portfolio that has been running for 5 years. Which option makes more sense financially: loan prepayment or investing the full amount into mutual funds?
Ans: You have a well-established SIP of Rs. 25,000 running for 5 years, and you have received Rs. 12 lakh from a matured FD. Your home loan is Rs. 62 lakh, with 15 years still pending. You are now trying to decide whether to use this Rs. 12 lakh to prepay your home loan or invest it in mutual funds.
Understanding Your Current Financial Position
You are 35 years old, with stable income and responsibilities.
You have a 3-year-old child and a big home loan running.
You already invest Rs. 25,000 every month via SIP in mutual funds.
You have a 15-year home loan of Rs. 62 lakh still pending.
Now you have received Rs. 12 lakh in hand from a matured fixed deposit.
This Rs. 12 lakh gives you a good opportunity to either reduce your loan or boost investments. Let us now evaluate both options.
Option 1: Prepay the Home Loan Fully with Rs. 12 Lakh
Benefits:
Your loan principal reduces immediately, bringing down interest burden.
You will be debt-free faster if you do this regularly.
If EMI stays the same, your loan term shortens.
Emotional stress reduces when your loan amount becomes smaller.
If your EMI is more than 40% of your income, this helps reduce pressure.
If loan interest rates go up in future, this prepayment gives you safety.
No prepayment penalty for most home loans with floating interest rate.
Disadvantages:
You lose the power of compounding if this full money is not invested.
Home loan gives tax deduction. Section 24(b) allows Rs. 2 lakh deduction on interest.
If you reduce the loan too fast, your tax benefit also reduces.
You lock the full Rs. 12 lakh in the loan. You lose liquidity.
In any emergency, you cannot take back this money.
You may miss the higher returns equity mutual funds can offer in 10+ years.
This means while prepayment feels safe and peaceful, it may reduce long-term wealth potential and tax benefits. Let us now see the other side.
Option 2: Invest Entire Rs. 12 Lakh into Mutual Funds
Benefits:
Equity mutual funds help beat inflation and create wealth in the long run.
If held for more than 1 year, gains up to Rs. 1.25 lakh are tax-free.
Gains above that are taxed at 12.5%, which is still reasonable.
If SIP is already running, lump sum can go into the same fund category.
You can build a goal-based fund for child’s education or your retirement.
Mutual funds give liquidity. You can withdraw in parts if needed.
You are still getting Section 24(b) benefit by keeping the home loan.
Disadvantages:
There is no guaranteed return.
Equity mutual funds need at least 7–10 years to show full power.
In the short term, the market can fall.
If you are not patient, this can create stress.
Without proper guidance from a Certified Financial Planner, wrong funds can reduce your gains.
If you invest in direct plans or index funds, you may miss expert help.
Index funds don’t have downside protection and are not actively managed. Direct plans don’t come with the advice of a Certified Financial Planner. Investing through a regular plan with an MFD + CFP helps you get timely rebalancing and personalized advice.
A Balanced and Smarter Strategy for You
Instead of using the full Rs. 12 lakh for only one option, use a mix.
Use Rs. 6–7 lakh for home loan part prepayment.
This reduces your loan principal and interest burden.
It may reduce your loan tenure by a few years, keeping EMI unchanged.
Use the remaining Rs. 5–6 lakh to invest in mutual funds.
You already have a SIP portfolio. Add this as a lump sum.
Prefer multicap or large-and-midcap funds for lump sum.
Continue your Rs. 25,000 SIP without stopping.
This strategy allows both debt reduction and wealth creation.
Emergency and Risk Cover Comes First
Before you invest the lump sum, check if you have:
Emergency fund for at least 3 to 6 months of expenses.
Term insurance of Rs. 1 crore or more.
Health insurance of at least Rs. 10–25 lakh for the family.
These must be ready before investing more.
Mutual Fund Taxation Rules (New)
For equity mutual funds, if you sell after 1 year, gains above Rs. 1.25 lakh are taxed at 12.5%.
If sold before 1 year, short-term capital gains are taxed at 20%.
For debt mutual funds, both STCG and LTCG are taxed as per your income slab.
This is important if you plan to use the fund in short-term.
So, keep this money invested for at least 5–10 years for best results.
Avoid These Common Mistakes
Do not invest the Rs. 12 lakh in ULIPs, endowment or insurance-linked products.
These are expensive and give poor returns.
If you already hold such investment-linked insurance policies, surrender them.
Use the proceeds to invest in mutual funds instead.
Do not invest in real estate, gold, crypto or high-risk ideas.
Do not stop your SIPs to fund the loan.
Do not use direct mutual funds or index funds without guidance.
Actively managed regular funds give you expert review and ongoing help from a Certified Financial Planner.
What You Can Do Every Year
Try to do a part-prepayment of the home loan once a year.
Use your annual bonus or surplus cash for this.
This will help you finish loan earlier without losing MF growth.
At the same time, increase your SIP amount by 10% every year.
With growing income, this step will keep your investment goals on track.
Over 15 years, this will help you build a retirement corpus.
Child Education Planning
Your child is 3 years old now.
In 15 years, college cost may go up a lot.
Estimate the amount needed after 15 years.
Start a separate SIP today for this future need.
Even Rs. 5,000 monthly can grow into a good fund over 15 years.
Keep this investment goal-based and do not disturb it.
Loan Prepayment Tips
Even if you part-prepay now, repeat it yearly.
It will reduce interest and free up your EMI commitment faster.
This way, you can be free from home loan by your mid-40s.
And you can enjoy a peaceful financial life later.
Finally
Using the full Rs. 12 lakh only for home loan prepayment will reduce your burden but may limit your long-term wealth. Using the entire amount only for mutual fund investment may give higher returns, but can keep your debt high and reduce peace of mind.
So, the right answer is to split. Prepay part of the loan, and invest the rest in mutual funds. Keep your SIPs running. Review your insurance and emergency fund. Increase your SIP every year. Do part prepayment yearly using bonuses. Plan separately for child’s future.
Take help from a Certified Financial Planner to make sure your mutual funds are well-selected, regularly reviewed, and goal-focused. That will help you enjoy long-term wealth, tax benefits, and emotional peace at the same time.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment