
I am 57 years old. I have taken VRS at age 55.
I am drawing a monthly pension of 51000/-.
I receive a monthly rental income of 49000/-
I receive a monthly pension of 2000/- from a pension plan.
I have an investment of 30 lakhs in Senior citizens savings scheme
15 lakhs in post office MIS
15 lakhs in post office 5 years FD
49 laks in Debt mutual fund
28 lakhs in Arbitrage fund
90 lakhs in Shares
11 lakhs in NPS
1.5 Cr in Equity mutual funds
On going sips of 63000/- in Equity mutual funds.
No liabilities
My wife is working with an monthly salary of 1.3 lakhs.
She is having an investment of 2.25 cr in shares and mutual funds with an monthly SIP of 40000/- in equity mutual fund.
We live in our own house.
Son is working in UK and not dependant on us.
Next year he will marry
Will need around 50 laks for marriage.
Wife is having 5 years of job still left.
Monthly outgoing is around 50000/-
Taken care jointly.
Wish to go on international and national vacation every year.
Can we do it?
Also having mediclaim of 5 laks plus top up of 16 laks
. Also covered under wife's office mediclaim.
Ans: At 57, you’ve built a strong, diverse portfolio.
You retired at 55 through VRS.
You have no loans or EMIs.
You’re earning monthly income from different sources.
This includes your pension of Rs. 51,000, rental income of Rs. 49,000, and another Rs. 2,000 from a pension plan.
That totals Rs. 1.02 lakhs per month.
Your wife is still working.
She earns Rs. 1.3 lakhs monthly and has five more years of job left.
This makes your combined monthly income Rs. 2.32 lakhs.
Your monthly household spending is just around Rs. 50,000, which you both manage jointly.
This leaves a healthy surplus of Rs. 1.82 lakhs every month.
This cash flow is more than enough to meet your lifestyle, SIPs, and other goals.
Investment Summary and Risk Distribution
You’ve distributed your wealth across safe and growth-oriented assets.
You’ve not kept all eggs in one basket.
This helps reduce risk and ensure stability.
Let’s first look at the safer, fixed-return investments.
You have Rs. 30 lakhs in Senior Citizen Savings Scheme.
Another Rs. 15 lakhs in Post Office Monthly Income Scheme.
And Rs. 15 lakhs in Post Office 5-year Fixed Deposit.
These total Rs. 60 lakhs and offer safety and regular income.
They are taxable as per your income tax slab, but the capital remains safe.
Next, you hold Rs. 49 lakhs in debt mutual funds and Rs. 28 lakhs in arbitrage funds.
This totals Rs. 77 lakhs and is kept in low to medium-risk options.
These give better post-tax returns than FDs when planned properly.
However, from this year, they are taxed at your slab rate.
So, tax planning becomes more important now.
In the high-growth category, you have Rs. 90 lakhs in direct equity shares.
You also have Rs. 1.5 crores in equity mutual funds.
On top of that, you have Rs. 11 lakhs in the NPS.
You are investing Rs. 63,000 monthly through SIPs in equity mutual funds.
Your wife has invested Rs. 2.25 crores in shares and equity mutual funds.
She contributes Rs. 40,000 monthly through SIPs.
This reflects a solid long-term growth plan.
Even after retirement, you’re actively building wealth.
This is possible only when there is discipline and strong financial grounding.
Marriage Expense Planning
Your son is working in the UK and is financially independent.
You’re planning to spend Rs. 50 lakhs on his marriage next year.
This is a one-time, high-priority family goal.
You should plan this amount from safer and liquid sources.
There is no need to touch equity funds or direct equity.
Instead, draw from your debt mutual funds, arbitrage funds, and possibly from your post office FDs.
You can plan a phased withdrawal strategy over the next six to twelve months.
This way, you can avoid sudden redemption and tax impact.
This approach will protect your long-term growth portfolio from being disturbed.
Travel Goals Every Year
You’ve expressed a desire to travel every year.
Both domestic and international holidays are on your mind.
Assuming an annual vacation budget of around Rs. 8–10 lakhs, this is well within your financial capacity.
You already have a monthly surplus of Rs. 1.82 lakhs.
Out of that, you can easily set aside Rs. 80,000 to Rs. 1 lakh each month.
This can be put in a short-term mutual fund or kept in a sweep-in FD account.
This dedicated travel fund will allow you to plan holidays without disturbing your investments or SIPs.
This also removes guilt or confusion when spending for pleasure.
The key is to pre-fund your travel, not rely on ad-hoc redemptions.
Your Health Insurance Preparedness
You have a base mediclaim of Rs. 5 lakhs and a top-up of Rs. 16 lakhs.
In addition, you’re covered under your wife’s employer-provided health insurance.
This gives you a total health coverage of Rs. 21 lakhs or more.
This is adequate for now.
But you need to prepare for the time after your wife retires in five years.
The corporate cover will cease after her job ends.
You should then convert the group health policy into an individual or floater policy.
Also ensure your base policy and top-up are renewed without breaks.
Pay attention to room rent limits, exclusions, and network hospitals.
Don’t wait until after age 62 to upgrade or shift policies.
Health premiums rise sharply with age and health conditions.
Ongoing SIP Commitments and Strategy
You are investing Rs. 63,000 monthly through SIPs.
Your wife is doing Rs. 40,000 monthly.
Total SIPs are over Rs. 1 lakh per month.
Given your surplus of Rs. 1.82 lakhs monthly, this is easily manageable now.
You may continue this pace for the next five years until your wife retires.
After that, you can reduce the SIPs to Rs. 50,000 combined if needed.
The accumulated corpus by then will be very strong.
Make sure your equity mutual funds are actively managed funds.
Avoid direct funds even if they appear cheaper.
They don’t come with monitoring, guidance, or behavioural support.
Investing through a qualified Mutual Fund Distributor who is also a Certified Financial Planner gives you strategic advantages.
These include portfolio rebalancing, emotional support in volatile markets, and goal alignment reviews.
Emergency Fund Readiness
It is important to maintain an emergency fund.
Keep Rs. 10 to 15 lakhs in a liquid mutual fund or bank FD with sweep-in facility.
This should not be invested in equity or long-term debt.
This is your buffer for medical emergencies or unplanned family requirements.
It will help avoid panic selling of long-term assets.
It also protects your peace of mind.
Tax Planning Awareness
Understand the new tax rules clearly.
For equity mutual funds, long-term capital gains above Rs. 1.25 lakhs are taxed at 12.5 percent.
Short-term capital gains are taxed at 20 percent.
For debt mutual funds and arbitrage funds, all gains are now taxed as per your income slab.
There is no indexation benefit anymore.
This means that careful timing and smart redemption planning are needed.
Discuss with your Certified Financial Planner and tax advisor before redeeming.
Also do loss harvesting if any stock or fund is in short-term loss.
Use capital loss to reduce your overall tax.
Important Action Steps for Now
You are already in a financially strong position.
But some actions will make it even stronger:
Keep SIPs running till wife’s retirement
Create a separate marriage fund now
Start a monthly travel fund
Maintain Rs. 10–15 lakhs as emergency fund
Don’t redeem equity for short-term needs
Ensure health insurance transition after wife’s retirement
Work with a CFP and MFD for investment review and tax planning
Consolidate stock holdings and track them regularly
Avoid direct mutual funds and switch to regular plans with guidance
Plan your will and nomination updates in all investments
Finally
You and your wife have done excellent planning.
There is no financial strain.
You are living in your own house.
You have no debt burden.
Your monthly income is more than your needs.
You are still investing and growing your wealth.
Your son is independent and you are planning for his wedding.
You wish to travel and enjoy life.
And yes — you absolutely can do it.
This is a picture of financial freedom.
Now is the time to enjoy what you’ve built.
Be consistent, be cautious, and keep reviewing your plan every year.
Work with a Certified Financial Planner and avoid trying to do it all alone.
You have created not just wealth, but a lifestyle.
Protect it with structure, discipline, and a little expert help.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment