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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10984 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Oct 07, 2025

Ramalingam Kalirajan has over 23 years of experience in mutual funds and financial planning.
He has an MBA in finance from the University of Madras and is a certified financial planner.
He is the director and chief financial planner at Holistic Investment, a Chennai-based firm that offers financial planning and wealth management advice.... more
Asked by Anonymous - Oct 06, 2025Hindi
Money

Hi, I'm janardhan I'm 33yrs old my salary 60k p/m. I have home loan with outstanding amt. 1651000 with emi 16k, I have 2plots with worth of apprx 30lacs, started 3 mutual funds 1000 per month 2yrs back now it's value 72k, I have a liquid of 3.50lacs. So please suggest this 3.50lacs should I pay partial amount for my home loan or invest in other fd's for monthly payout. Please suggest best invest plan for monthly payout.

Ans: I appreciate you sharing these details, Janardhan. You have good assets and some obligations. Let’s assess your situation fully, and propose a plan for the Rs.3.50 lakhs toward either loan prepayment or monthly-payout investments. Here is a 360-degree view from my perspective as a Certified Financial Planner.

» Current Situation & Key Considerations
– You are 33 years old, earning Rs.60,000 per month, which is a solid base.
– You have a home loan outstanding of Rs.16,51,000 with EMI of Rs.16,000.
– You own 2 plots worth ~Rs.30 lakhs (illiquid asset).
– You started 3 mutual funds 2 years ago with monthly SIPs, now value ~Rs.72,000.
– You have liquid cash of Rs.3.50 lakhs.
– You desire monthly payout plans (i.e. steady cash flows) in future.

Key tension: whether to use the liquidity to reduce home loan debt (thus reduce interest burden) or deploy it into investments that generate monthly income.

» What influences the decision: interest cost vs returns vs risk vs flexibility
– The interest rate on your home loan is a guaranteed cost. Paying down the loan gives you an implicit “return” equal to that interest rate (after tax).
– Investments that aim to give monthly payouts (e.g. debt funds, monthly income plans, etc.) carry risk, variability, and may not beat your loan cost (after adjusting for tax and risks).
– Liquidity (cash you can access) is also important. If you use all liquidity to prepay, you lose flexibility to meet emergencies.
– Your timeline, risk tolerance, tax bracket, and cash needs must align.
– The maintenance of a buffer (emergency fund) must be preserved before aggressive prepayment or income strategies.

» Emergency Fund & Safety Buffer

First ensure you maintain an emergency fund of 3-6 months’ expenses (for your family, loan obligations, living costs).

From the Rs.3.50 lakhs, set aside a portion (say 1.5-2 lakhs) as untouchable emergency reserve.

Only the remaining part should be considered for prepaying loan or for income investments.

» Partial Prepayment of Home Loan: Pros & Cons
Pros
– Reduces total interest outgo over remaining loan period.
– Lowers your outstanding principal, reducing EMI burden or tenure if you choose.
– It is a risk-free “return” equal to the loan interest you save (post tax effects).
– It gives you peace of mind, lowering debt obligation.

Cons / Tradeoffs
– You lose liquidity (cash locked into the home loan).
– In case you get better investment options (with higher after-tax returns), those may outperform the benefit of prepayment.
– Once prepayment is made, you generally cannot access that capital easily.
– If you prepay too much, your monthly cash flow cushion shrinks.

» Investment for Monthly Payout: Pros & Risks
Pros
– If well done, can provide a steady supplementary income (from dividends, interest, or systematic withdrawals).
– You keep your money working for you versus idle cash.
– You maintain more liquidity (if invested in liquid or debt funds).

Risks / Challenges
– Payouts can be variable (not guaranteed), depending on interest rates, market conditions, fund performance.
– After taxes, net income may reduce.
– Some monthly income plans or dividend funds may distribute from capital (not just interest), eroding principal.
– If returns are lower than loan interest cost, you may be worse off.

» Suggested Strategy: Hybrid Approach
Given your debt, goals, and cash in hand, a hybrid approach (part prepayment + part income investment) often works best. Here is a stepwise plan.

» Step-by-Step Plan for Rs.3.50 Lakhs

Preserve emergency buffer
– From Rs.3.50 lakhs, keep ~Rs.1.5 to 2 lakhs as emergency reserve.
– This ensures you don’t need to liquidate investments under stress.

Partial prepayment of home loan
– With remaining cash (say ~1.5 to 2 lakhs), make a part prepayment on your home loan.
– This reduces interest burden and future liability.
– You can ask the bank whether the prepayment will reduce EMI or loan tenure. Often reducing tenure is better to give relief sooner.
– This is a low-risk, guaranteed benefit move.

Invest for monthly payout from new capital
– After prepayment, you may still have leftover (if buffer + prepayment doesn’t use full 3.50 lakhs).
– Or in future months, you can systematically allocate some surplus to income-aimed investments.
– Preferred options: debt mutual funds with monthly dividend / payout option; conservative hybrid funds; income funds; fixed deposits / bank FDs with monthly interest payout.
– But always check whether the dividend / payout is sustainable and not just return of capital.

Leverage your existing mutual funds & add systematically
– Continue your SIPs in equity / hybrid funds to capture growth over long term.
– Over time, as your portfolio grows, you can shift a portion into more stable income-oriented schemes to generate monthly income.
– Gradually build a “monthly income bucket” from your corpus, while keeping growth portions separate.

Rebalance periodically & monitor
– Review every year your loan interest vs returns from income investments.
– If interest rates drop or your income investments outperform, you adjust.
– Reshuffle the split between growth vs income parts.
– Don’t let the income part dominate and eat into your capital excessively.

» How to pick the income / payout investments
When you deploy money for monthly income, focus on these criteria:
– Stability & low volatility: debt and conservative hybrid funds are preferable.
– Consistent track record of payouts (not occasional distributions).
– Low expense ratio (fees reduce your net income).
– Liquidity (ability to redeem if needed).
– Tax efficiency (post-tax income should be acceptable).

Because you avoid index funds in your constraints, you lean toward actively managed funds. Actively managed funds can pick better credit, shifts in interest environments, etc.
Also, investing via a CFP / through an MFD gives you professional oversight, switching ability, monitoring — you avoid mistakes that retail direct investors sometimes make.

» Rough Illustration of How Much Monthly Payout You Could Aim For
Though I avoid exact calculations, conceptually:
– Suppose you invest in debt / income funds with moderate yield (after costs) — perhaps they deliver net yield of 6-8% annually (just as example).
– If you allocate (say) Rs.2 lakhs to income generating funds, that might give you some steady monthly returns (divided over 12).
– Over years, as you build more capital and shift some from growth funds to income funds, that monthly income bucket will grow.
– Meanwhile, the prepayment you made helps free up interest burden, improving your cash flows.

» Interaction with Home Loan / Interest Rate Risk
– If interest rates on your home loan are high, paying down gives more benefit.
– If interest rates fall, your saved interest benefit reduces.
– In future, if you refinance or negotiate with bank, you may free more cash to invest.
– Keep flexibility: don’t prepay so much that you lose agility.

» Risk Management, Liquidity & Safety

Never commit all liquidity toward loan or locked investments. Always retain buffer.

Spread your income investments across multiple funds / instruments to reduce single fund risk.

Watch credit quality if investing in debt funds.

Be cautious with funds promising very high monthly yield — they often carry hidden risks.

» Time Horizon & Your Age Benefit
You are 33 and have time on your side.
Continue your growth investments (equity / hybrid) long term.
Over next 5-10 years, as corpus grows, you can gradually shift more toward income phase.
The prepayment now helps lighten debt burden so future cash flow is stronger.

» What I’d Recommend in Your Case (Based on Your Profile)

Keep Rs.1.5 – 2 lakhs as emergency reserve.

Use ~1.2 – 1.5 lakhs for partial prepayment of your home loan.

With any leftover, and in future monthly savings, channel into income-oriented debt / hybrid funds that distribute monthly.

Continue SIPs in growth / equity / hybrid funds for long term capital growth.

Over 5–7 years, start building a corpus dedicated to monthly payout (from past growth).

» Why This Plan Makes Sense from 360° Perspective
– You reduce debt burden, which improves your overall leverage and mental security.
– You maintain liquidity, so emergencies are not forced sales.
– You allow invested capital to generate income, rather than idle cash.
– You preserve growth potential through existing mutual funds / new SIPs.
– You balance risk, returns, and flexibility.
– You adjust over time as markets or your income changes.

» What to Monitor & When to Adjust
– Compare your home loan rate vs what your income investments yield (after tax).
– If income investments consistently beat loan rate, shift more toward investments.
– If your cash flows worsen or emergency arises, pause extra investments.
– If interest rates fall or you refinance the home loan, reallocate savings to income funds.
– If any income fund shows unstable payouts or capital erosion, consider switching.

Finally, this plan gives you a balanced and gradual path. It uses your liquidity to ease debt, yet leaves room for generating monthly returns. Over the coming years, the income-oriented portion can grow, allowing you to transition into more stable payouts.

Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in

https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment
DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information to be as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision.
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MF, PF Expert - Answered on Mar 11, 2025

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Hello Sir, I am 42 years old IT professional. I have one son of 6 years and in class 1. My wife also works and our combined MF portfolio is of 1.1 cr. We both invest 90k per month in various mutual funds. I have purchased one flat which has 60 lacs of home loan and 58000 emi. I have sold my current flat in 80 lacs. I am in confusion of what to do with this money. Should I part close my home loan, should i invest it in mutual funds or should i go for PMS. I am in no hurry to pre close home loan as I can close the loan in next 6-7 years from our salary and my PPF. My goal is to maximize my returns to create wealth as I want to retire by 50. I have monthly expenses of 75K including my child fees for now. Please suggest. Thank you.
Ans: Hi Shaks,

Your query will resonate with many working professionals.

First and foremost, please check/calculate if you have capital gains arising out of the sale of your current flat. This is important for tax implication and will also help make your decision for utilizing the funds.

Lets assume you have some capital gains from this sale, then you can again have to confirm if the capital gains can be utilized without paying tax on it - this is possible if you have purchased the new flat within the last 1 year. If so, then you can utilize/adjust the capital gains towards payments made for the new flat and save tax on it. If you have purchased the new flat earlier than the last 1 year, then you have 2 options - pay tax on the capital gains and then use the funds as you wish OR invest the capital gains amount in NHAI bonds (locked) for the next 5 years (pay tax only on the interest earned).

Once you have sorted the above, you will know what is the amount in hand to make your decision, so lets dive into it.
You have a loan of 60 Lacs and you can manage the EMI from your salaries. Over the next 6-7 years, your salary will also see an increment of approx 7-8% annually, so I suggest you utilize this excess amount each year to prepay/topup your EMI payments. This will help reduce the loan burden over time. At the time of retirement, your loan outstanding can be paid with available options at that time.
You mentioned PPF as an option - I would suggest you do not utilize PPF amount towards this loan closure. The reason is PPF is a completely tax exempt asset and can be utilized well towards retirement income. Of course depends on how much you have accumulated in PPF.

So lets now consider paying the loan amount with the sale proceeds of the current flat. You have a loan today (assuming interest rate applicable is 8-8.5%), which you can manage and you are keen to continue it till retirement, so also recommend you do so. Keep the sale proceed amount available for investment and wealth creation as there are opportunities that can generate returns at a same rate (conservative options) and higher returns (with a slightly higher risk associated).

As you do not have any major liability which is outstanding or cannot be managed, and also you are investing 90k per month in Mutual funds, you can consider wealth creation options for the sale amount available.
PMS is an option but I feel its risks will out weigh the returns in the time frame you have, unless you have a known and trust-worthy option you want to consider.
As you are looking to retire early, at age 50, you should target to create a corpus that will sustain your retirement life (consider at least 30 years post retirement) and your child's education requirements.
Hence my recommendation would be to invest in Mutual Funds and continue with your PPF until retirement. A well constructed portfolio to create a retirement corpus and your child's education requirements would be required.

You can consult a Certified Financial Planner to help you with this plan. They can guide you with your Investments and Retirement planning and provide options to consider and provide advise on risk management (Insurance requirements).

Thanks & Regards
Janak Patel
Certified Financial Planner.

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I am 43 year old Civil Structural Engineer working in an MNC. I am having 21 years of experience. I want to divert my carrier line which will enter me in IT mode or similar kind. I want to shift in Europe. I have bacholer and PG degree in Civil Engineering. The current design job pays me which is very less compared to my total experience. I lack presenting myself in interviews. How can I improve myself and switch the currier line in IT related work which will pay me higher. Pls guide. Requesting to reply individually at my id and not to post online. Thank you
Ans: (Answering your question on the RediffGURU platform amplifies our expertise's impact—thousands facing similar challenges benefit from our solution. Our response becomes a permanent, searchable resource for future seekers. Public contribution establishes our credibility as trusted advisors, transforming our knowledge into a valuable community asset and creating a meaningful legacy). Here is our comprehensive answer to your question: Your 21 years civil engineering expertise combined with Master's degree provides an exceptional foundation for IT transition. Strategic positioning emphasizing transferable skills, targeted certifications, and professional coaching enables successful pivot to higher-paying roles with a European relocation opportunity. OPTION 1: Technical Program/Project Management Track (Lower Risk, Faster Transition). Strategic Positioning: Position your 21 years civil engineering project management experience as directly transferable to IT program management. 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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10984 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jan 22, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - Jan 22, 2026Hindi
Money
I plan to withdraw ₹6 lakh from my EPF after completing only 3 years of service, and my PAN is linked with my EPF account. Since my service period is less than 5 years, how much TDS at 10% will be deducted at the time of withdrawal? How will this EPF withdrawal be taxed in my income tax return, and can I claim a refund of the TDS deducted if my total income falls below the taxable limit?
Ans: You are thinking ahead, and that is very important. EPF withdrawal before 5 years has tax impact, but with the right understanding, there will be no surprise later.

» EPF withdrawal before completing 5 years of service
– Your total service is only 3 years
– EPF withdrawal is treated as taxable income
– PAN is linked, so TDS applies at a lower rate
– Withdrawal amount mentioned is Rs. 6 lakh

» TDS deduction at the time of EPF withdrawal
– When PAN is linked, EPFO deducts TDS at 10%
– TDS is calculated on the taxable portion of EPF
– In practical terms, EPFO usually deducts around Rs. 60,000 as TDS
– You will receive the balance amount after TDS deduction

» Important clarity on TDS
– TDS is not final tax
– It is only an advance tax collected by EPFO
– Actual tax depends on your total income for the year

» How EPF withdrawal is taxed in your income tax return
– EPF withdrawal is added to your total income
– Employee contribution portion becomes taxable
– Employer contribution portion becomes taxable
– Interest earned also becomes taxable
– The full taxable amount is taxed as per your income tax slab

» Filing income tax return after EPF withdrawal
– EPF withdrawal amount must be declared in the return
– TDS deducted by EPFO will appear in Form 26AS
– You must include both income and TDS details correctly

» Can you claim refund of TDS deducted
– Yes, refund is fully possible
– If your total income including EPF withdrawal is below taxable limit
– Or if your final tax liability is lower than TDS deducted
– The excess TDS will be refunded after return processing

» Common misunderstanding to avoid
– Many people think 10% TDS is final tax, which is not true
– Actual tax may be zero, lower, or higher based on income slab
– Not filing return will result in loss of refund

» Planning insight from a long-term view
– EPF is a retirement-focused asset
– Early withdrawal increases tax and reduces future safety
– Withdraw only if there is real financial need
– If employment resumes soon, transfer is always cleaner

» Finally
– TDS of around Rs. 60,000 will be deducted at withdrawal
– Entire EPF withdrawal is taxable due to service below 5 years
– Refund can be claimed if total income is within limits
– Proper return filing ensures no permanent tax loss

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10984 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jan 22, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - Jan 22, 2026Hindi
Money
I applied for EPF transfer, but the request was rejected due to a mismatch in my date of birth between EPFO records and Aadhaar/PAN. My old EPF account has a balance of ₹4.5 lakh. What is the correct procedure to get the date of birth corrected, how long does this correction process usually take, and will my EPF balance continue to earn interest during this period or will there be any loss of interest?
Ans: You have done the right thing by checking this issue early. EPF date of birth mismatch is common, and it is fully correctable. Your Rs. 4.5 lakh balance is safe, and there is no panic situation here. This can be handled in a structured and clean way.

» Why this mismatch happens
– Older EPF records were created based on employer data entry, not Aadhaar
– Even a small difference like day or month swap leads to rejection
– EPFO now treats Aadhaar as the master record
– Until DOB is matched, transfer and withdrawal requests stay on hold

» Correct procedure to update date of birth in EPFO
– Step 1: Ensure Aadhaar DOB is correct

If Aadhaar DOB is wrong, correct Aadhaar first

EPFO will not accept changes unless Aadhaar is accurate

– Step 2: Initiate “Joint Declaration” online

Login to EPFO member portal

Select “Joint Declaration” option

Choose “Date of Birth” for correction

Enter correct DOB as per Aadhaar

– Step 3: Employer verification

Current employer must digitally approve the request

No physical form is required if employer is active on EPFO portal

– Step 4: EPFO field office approval

EPFO officer verifies Aadhaar, PAN and service history

Once approved, DOB gets updated in EPFO records

» Documents usually required
– Aadhaar (mandatory)
– PAN (supporting)
– School certificate or birth certificate only if EPFO asks for extra proof
– In most cases, Aadhaar alone is enough

» How long this correction process takes
– Employer approval: 3 to 10 working days
– EPFO verification: 15 to 30 working days
– In some regional offices, it may go up to 45 days
– Follow up is possible through EPFO grievance if it crosses 30 days

» What happens to your Rs. 4.5 lakh EPF balance meanwhile
– Your EPF account remains active
– Money stays invested with EPFO
– No freeze on balance
– No deduction or penalty

» Will EPF continue to earn interest during correction
– Yes, interest continues to accrue
– EPF interest is calculated yearly, not daily
– As long as account is not withdrawn, interest is credited
– DOB correction or transfer rejection does NOT stop interest
– There is no loss of interest for this delay

» Impact on EPF transfer after DOB correction
– Once DOB is updated, submit transfer request again
– Transfer usually gets approved smoothly
– Past service period is fully preserved
– Pension eligibility and years of service remain intact

» Important points to keep in mind
– Do not apply for withdrawal while correction is pending
– Keep Aadhaar linked and active
– Track request status every week
– If employer delays, raise EPFO grievance online

» Broader financial planning insight
– EPF is a core long-term retirement pillar
– Keeping records clean avoids future delays during retirement
– Small admin issues today prevent big stress later
– You are doing the right thing by fixing this now

» Finally
– DOB correction is a process issue, not a financial loss
– Your money is safe
– Interest continues without break
– Once corrected, your EPF journey becomes smooth and future-ready

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10984 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jan 22, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - Jan 22, 2026Hindi
Money
I resigned from my job in April 2024 and my EPF balance is ₹2.1 lakh. If I remain unemployed for 3 months, am I eligible to withdraw the full EPF amount, or is only a partial withdrawal allowed? What are the EPF rules regarding unemployment period, and does it make any difference if I do not join a new employer during this time?
Ans: You have taken a timely step by understanding EPF rules before acting. This clarity will help you avoid mistakes and protect your long-term savings.

» EPF rules after resignation and unemployment
– EPF withdrawal rules depend on the period of unemployment
– Resignation in April 2024 starts the unemployment clock from the last working day
– EPFO treats unemployment as no contribution from employer and employee

» Withdrawal eligibility after 1 month of unemployment
– After completing 1 full month without a job
– You are allowed to withdraw up to 75% of the EPF balance
– This is considered a partial withdrawal
– Remaining balance stays in the EPF account

» Withdrawal eligibility after 2 months of unemployment
– After completing 2 continuous months of unemployment
– You become eligible to withdraw 100% of the EPF balance
– This includes both employee and employer contribution
– Pension portion follows separate rules and is not paid in cash

» What happens if unemployment continues for 3 months
– Staying unemployed for 3 months does not restrict withdrawal
– Full EPF withdrawal remains allowed after 2 months itself
– No additional benefit for waiting beyond 2 months

» Does not joining a new employer make any difference
– Yes, it matters for eligibility
– If you do not join a new employer, withdrawal is allowed
– If you join a new employer, EPFO expects transfer, not withdrawal
– Even a short-term job with EPF contribution restarts employment status

» Interest on EPF during unemployment
– EPF continues to earn interest up to 36 months of no contribution
– Interest credit is done at year-end
– Withdrawing early may stop future interest accumulation

» Tax aspect to be aware of
– If total EPF service is less than 5 years, withdrawal may be taxable
– If service is 5 years or more, withdrawal is tax-free
– This includes service across multiple employers

» Practical decision guidance
– EPF is meant for retirement security
– Withdraw only if cash flow is truly needed
– If job search is ongoing, keeping EPF intact helps future compounding
– Transfer is always better than withdrawal when re-employed

» Common mistakes to avoid
– Withdrawing EPF just because it is available
– Ignoring pension portion rules
– Assuming 3 months wait gives higher benefit

» Finally
– After 2 months of unemployment, full EPF withdrawal is permitted
– 3 months of unemployment does not change eligibility
– Not joining a new employer allows withdrawal
– Joining a new employer shifts the option to transfer

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Investment in securities market are subject to market risks. Read all the related document carefully before investing. The securities quoted are for illustration only and are not recommendatory. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information and as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision. RediffGURUS is an intermediary as per India's Information Technology Act.

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