
Dear Sir, I am 40 years old presently working in a PSU Bank and my net salary is 1 lacs. I have been recently promoted and my net salary will now be 1.15 lacs. Presently i have following savings: PF: 20 lacs, NPS: 40 lacs, Mutual fund: 50 lacs, Stocks: 5 lacs along with liquid investment in Gold and Fixed Deposits of approx 10 lacs. i have a housing loan and EMI is 45000 and no other loans. Presently i have monthly SIP of Rs. 25000 across Large, MID, Small and Flexi Cap and i am investing through SIP since 2019. I have term plan of Rs. 1.50 crs. Mine and family is covered by health insurance from our Bank. I get lease accomodation and conveyance allowance from my bank. I have a son of 10 years and daughter of 2 years. I will continue the SIPs and my PF and NPS will also increase with time. Am i on the right path of financial acheivement and will my present savings able to match the requirement of child studies when they grow. Further as we are covered under NPS, we will not be getting pension and i need to manage after retiremenmt from my savings. with the present savings, what could be my total funds approximately during retirement and will i be able to get the SWP amount of Rs. 3 lacs per month post retirement.
Ans: You are on a very strong financial path. Your disciplined investing since 2019, increasing income, strong retirement accumulation through PF/NPS, and controlled liabilities show excellent long-term planning.
» Current Financial Position – Strong and Stable
PF + NPS itself is already substantial for age 40
Mutual fund corpus of Rs 50 lakh is a major positive
SIP discipline is excellent
Only one loan and manageable EMI
Term insurance is adequate
You have built a solid foundation for both retirement and children’s future.
» Child Education Planning
Son has around 8–10 years for higher studies
Daughter has long investment runway
Your current SIPs and accumulated corpus are likely to support education goals comfortably if:
SIPs continue consistently
SIP amount is increased gradually with salary hikes
Investments remain equity-oriented for long-term growth
You should ideally:
Increase SIP by 10% yearly
Keep child education investments separate mentally from retirement corpus
» Retirement Planning Without Pension
Since you are under NPS and may not receive traditional pension, your self-created corpus becomes very important.
Positives in your case:
Long investment horizon still available
Existing retirement assets already sizeable
Regular contributions from PF + NPS continue automatically
This creates a strong compounding advantage.
» Can You Achieve Rs 3 Lakh Monthly SWP?
Your target is ambitious but achievable if:
SIPs continue uninterrupted
Annual increase in investments happens
Equity allocation remains strong for next 15–20 years
Major lifestyle inflation is controlled
With your present trajectory, your retirement corpus can potentially become large enough to support a meaningful SWP post retirement.
However:
Rs 3 lakh future SWP should be viewed in inflation-adjusted terms
Future value of Rs 3 lakh after 20 years will not have same purchasing power as today
So focus should be on:
Growing corpus steadily
Maintaining inflation-beating returns
» Important Improvement Areas
Do not depend only on employer health insurance after retirement
Add a personal family floater health policy while still healthy
Maintain emergency fund separately from investments
Reduce direct stock exposure if monitoring is difficult
» Housing Loan Strategy
EMI is manageable for your income
No need for aggressive prepayment now
Continue balancing loan repayment and investments
Your equity investments over long periods may create better wealth than rushing to close low-interest home loan.
» Finally
You are already ahead of many investors in your age group
Your consistency is your biggest strength
Continue SIPs, increase yearly, and stay disciplined
Your current direction is favourable for children’s education and retirement independence
With proper asset allocation and long-term discipline, achieving a strong retirement corpus and sustainable SWP income looks realistic.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ramalingamcfp/