I am 35, a teacher working in Coaching industry, earning 80k per month. I have an sip of 5k per month, life insurance 50lakh term plan hdfc , 10 lakh health cover for me and wife, lic cover 4.5 lakh yearly premium 21k approximately. Monthly expense is 20k, 5k sip , 5k ppf and rest i put in FDs.
Tell me is the right path on finacial stability or i have to change anything
Ans: You have taken some positive steps already. Still, there’s scope to strengthen your financial plan. Let’s go through every aspect step by step with clarity.
Your Current Financial Standing
You earn Rs 80,000 per month.
Monthly expense is only Rs 20,000.
You invest Rs 5,000 in SIP.
You also contribute Rs 5,000 to PPF monthly.
The rest goes into fixed deposits (FDs).
You have term insurance of Rs 50 lakh.
You hold health cover of Rs 10 lakh for you and spouse.
You have LIC cover of approximately Rs 4.5 lakh per year.
Your discipline in saving, low expense, and holding core insurance are strengths.
Evaluate Your Insurance Cover
Term plan of Rs 50 lakh may be insufficient.
This covers income loss until retirement.
-Consider increasing term cover to at least six to eight times annual income.
As a Certified Financial Planner, I suggest aligning cover with financial dependents and debt.
Health insurance of Rs 10 lakh for both of you is good for routine health events.
Ensure it includes your spouse continuously.
Periodically check co-pay, exclusions, and sub-limits.
Evaluate adding maternity cover or critical illness riders if needed later.
LIC traditional plan costing Rs 21,000 yearly:
Traditional plans often return less than 4–5% after tax.
These act more like savings than pure protection.
Consider surrendering and reinvesting in mutual funds via MFD for higher returns.
Regular fund investment gives you advice, rebalancing, and personalised planning.
Emergency Fund and Liquidity
Current FDs hold your surplus.
FDs offer liquidity and safety but lower returns post tax.
A solid emergency fund of 6–9 months’ living expense is essential.
For you, that’s Rs 1.2 lakh–1.5 lakh.
Maintain that in a liquid fund or ultra-short duration debt fund.
Excess FDs beyond this can be shifted to other goals.
Benefits: better post-tax return than FDs.
Keep FD laddering minimal—only for stable returns when needed.
SIP and Asset Allocation Review
SIP amount is modest compared to your income.
Currently investing Rs 5,000 monthly.
Goal: gradually increase SIP to match future needs.
Shift investment style from direct plans to regular plans.
Direct funds lack expert guidance and periodic review.
MFD through a CFP adds goal alignment, sector checks, and rebalancing help.
Behavioural coaching during market volatility is a plus.
You haven’t mentioned using index funds. That’s okay—actively managed funds are better for risk-adjusted long-term return.
Long-Term Goals and Investment Strategy
At age 35, retirement is a long-term goal (20–25 years).
Equity funds are suitable for long horizon.
Only a modest PPF investment may not beat inflation fully.
Set clear financial goals:
Retirement corpus estimate needed (e.g., 1.5–2 crore).
Other goals: children’s education, home, health emergencies, travel.
Create separate SIP buckets:
Goal-based SIP for retirement.
Another SIP for other future needs.
Automate annual increase in SIP.
Raise by Rs 1,000–2,000 every year or with income hikes.
Helps keep pace with inflation and growth needs.
Asset Allocation: Equity vs Debt
With low expenses and stable income, you can allocate 60–70% to equity.
Remaining 30–40% in debt or secure instruments for stability.
Recommended Portfolio Structure:
Equity (mutual funds via regular plans) – 60–70%
Debt – 20–30% (FD, PPF, liquid funds)
Emergency/liquid – 10%
This balance gives growth and safety aligned with your timeline.
PPF Evaluation
PPF contribution of Rs 5,000 per month is fine.
But PPF has long lock-in and fixed rate.
Use it as a safety net and retirement top-up.
Invest more via equity funds for long-term inflation beating.
Insurance and Policy Reassessment
LIC traditional policy: consider surrender.
Gains after surrender may be low.
Switch to mutual funds via CFP for better return.
CFP will guide the timing, tax implications, and fund choices.
Increase term insurance cover gradually.
Add spousal coverage if spouse earns lesser or dependent.
Align cover to income growth or liabilities (e.g., home loan later).
Supplemental protection:
Critical illness cover can help in emergencies.
Add a top-up health insurance or critical illness rider now or later.
Retirement Planning
Retirement is 25–30 years away.
Equity should be primary tool.
Start a systematic retirement fund via SIP.
Include multi-cap or flexi-cap funds.
Review allocation every year.
Gradually reduce risk profile as you near retirement.
Children’s Education / Future Planning
Even if you don’t have children right now, future expenses need planning.
Consider starting a small goal SIP dedicated to child goals.
If you plan to have a child or education needs in 5–10 years, map early.
Tax Planning
PPF interest is tax-free.
FD interest is taxable as per slab.
Mutual fund gains:
Equity LTCG taxed at 12.5% (above Rs 1.25 lakh annual).
STCG taxed at 20%.
Debt mutual fund gains taxed per income slab.
Using MFD helps optimise redemption timing.
Expense Behaviour Monitoring
Your expenses are Rs 20,000 monthly.
That gives a huge saving buffer of Rs 60,000.
Ensure expense tracking is consistent.
Reassess lifestyle expenses annually to identify saving extensions.
Avoid hidden costs like fees, insurance extras, subscription slippage.
Action Plan Summary
Build 6 months of expenses in liquid or ultra-short fund.
Surrender LIC policy and shift funds to MF via CFP.
Increase SIP to Rs 10,000 monthly structured by goal.
Change direct fund plans to regular plans with CFP.
Increase term plan cover and add spouse to health insurance.
Initiate goal-based SIP buckets (retirement, children, travel).
Maintain PPF but reduce over-commitment from income.
Stick with active equity funds—no index or ETFs.
Review asset mix and fund performance yearly.
Adjust SIPs and insurance as income grows.
Finally
You are on the right path with discipline and strong saving habit.
Still, there’s room to make your plan more efficient.
Surrendering traditional policies frees up funds for growth.
Switching to goal-based and regular plan SIPs supports clarity.
Emergency fund ensures security.
Increasing term cover strengthens protection.
Goal-tagged SIP buckets align funds to objectives.
With consistent review and CFP guidance, you can reach financial stability fast.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment