I am 33 yr old my salary is 94000 per month I have 2 children ,younger one is studying in 1st STD and elder starts going to school, at present I m paying 9k house rent, and for the needs and all around total 30 k I spends, at present I am paying ULIP 1Lpa , and I started SIP in various in mid cap, small cap,large cap fund about of 9 k , could you pls help further for my savings plan for future
Ans: ou are doing a great job already by focusing on key financial goals. Managing a family of four, educating two children, investing via SIPs, and maintaining insurance shows your commitment. Let us now look at how you can further strengthen your financial planning from all angles.
Monthly Income and Expense Snapshot
Your monthly income is Rs. 94,000.
You are paying Rs. 9,000 as house rent.
Around Rs. 30,000 is your household and living expenses.
That leaves about Rs. 55,000 as monthly surplus.
This healthy surplus is your strength. This can help you build long-term wealth and provide for your children’s future.
Review of Existing Insurance (ULIP)
You mentioned paying Rs. 1 lakh annually for a ULIP.
ULIPs mix insurance and investment.
Returns are often low due to charges.
They do not offer the best coverage or flexibility.
Action Plan:
Surrender the ULIP only if lock-in is over.
Reinvest the amount into term insurance and mutual funds.
Buy a term insurance plan of at least 15–20 times your yearly income.
Term insurance is low-cost and provides pure risk cover.
By separating insurance and investment, you get better value and control.
Review of SIPs
You are investing Rs. 9,000 monthly in mutual fund SIPs across large cap, mid cap, and small cap funds.
That is a very good step. This builds long-term wealth in a disciplined manner.
Assessment of SIP Strategy:
Equity mutual funds are good for goals 5+ years away.
Small and mid cap funds have high growth potential.
But they also carry more risk than large cap funds.
Suggestions:
Continue SIPs in a mix of large, mid, and small cap actively managed funds.
Give higher weight to large and mid caps.
Small caps should have lesser allocation.
Review the performance every year.
Rebalance if needed with the help of a Certified Financial Planner.
Avoid index funds as they do not beat market returns. Their passive nature limits potential. Actively managed funds by experienced fund managers have better growth chances over long term.
Also, if you are investing in direct plans, consider this:
Direct plans may look cheaper but miss personal guidance.
You may not know when to switch or redeem.
Regular plans via a CFP offer personalised support, fund analysis, and monitoring.
Better to go with regular plans via a Certified Financial Planner. This keeps your investments aligned with your life goals.
Child Education Planning
You have two children. The younger one is in 1st Standard. The elder has just started school.
Children’s higher education is a major future expense. It needs early planning.
What You Should Do:
Create separate SIPs for each child’s education.
Allocate 8–10 years for building corpus for elder child.
Allocate 13–15 years for younger one.
Use a combination of large and mid cap funds.
Review progress every year.
This approach ensures you don’t break your investments midway. You can meet your children’s education costs without taking loans.
Emergency Fund and Risk Coverage
This area is often ignored but is the backbone of strong planning.
Emergency Fund:
Set aside 5–6 months of expenses in a liquid mutual fund.
This gives quick access in times of job loss, illness, or unexpected needs.
Health Insurance:
Check if you have health insurance for self and family.
Don’t depend only on employer cover.
Take a family floater plan of minimum Rs. 10 lakhs.
Add top-up cover if your budget permits.
Medical inflation is very high. A proper health cover protects your savings.
Retirement Planning
You are 33 now. You have about 25 years to retire. This is your wealth creation window.
Steps You Can Take:
Start SIP in a retirement-focused mutual fund.
Begin with even Rs. 3,000 to 5,000 per month.
Increase every year as income grows.
Stay invested for long term.
Retirement may look far. But planning now reduces stress later. Many people delay this and end up with shortfalls.
Do not depend on pension or children later. Create your own retirement fund.
Tax Planning
Let’s look at how you can save taxes smartly:
Use Section 80C fully (Rs. 1.5 lakhs per year).
Term insurance premium qualifies under this.
SIPs in ELSS mutual funds also give deduction.
ULIP was earlier taking this space. Reallocate wisely.
Invest in tax-saving mutual funds (ELSS) with 3-year lock-in.
Avoid tax-saving plans that mix insurance and investment. They give poor returns and lack flexibility.
Also, be aware of mutual fund taxation:
Equity mutual funds held for more than 1 year are taxed at 12.5% if LTCG exceeds Rs. 1.25 lakh.
Short-term gains (less than 1 year) are taxed at 20%.
Debt funds are taxed as per your income slab.
Plan your redemptions smartly to reduce tax impact.
Goal-based Investing
Divide your financial goals into 3 types:
Short-term (0–3 years):
Emergency fund
House down payment
School fees
Use liquid or ultra-short-term mutual funds.
Medium-term (3–7 years):
Car purchase
Child’s school/college expenses
Use balanced advantage funds or large cap funds.
Long-term (7+ years):
Higher education
Retirement
Wealth creation
Use a diversified mix of equity mutual funds. Rebalance once a year.
Goal-wise investing keeps you disciplined. You also get clarity and motivation.
Behavioural Discipline
Wealth creation is not about high returns alone. Behavioural habits matter more.
Practices to Follow:
Don’t stop SIPs in market correction.
Avoid frequent fund switches.
Don’t check NAVs daily.
Follow a planner-based investment approach.
The more consistent you are, the better results you get. SIPs work best with time and discipline.
Financial Progress Tracking
Just like health checkups, do financial reviews every year.
Review SIPs performance
Review goals and time left
Check insurance coverage
Check emergency fund balance
Rebalance if required
Take help from a Certified Financial Planner once a year. This gives direction and professional insights.
Lifestyle and Expense Management
You mentioned Rs. 30,000 on household and needs.
That is reasonable given your income and family size. Continue tracking and controlling discretionary spending.
Avoid lifestyle inflation as income grows. Instead, increase SIPs as income rises.
Use surplus for wealth creation. Not luxury.
Educate and Involve Spouse
If your spouse is not aware of your investments, include them.
Keep them informed about SIPs, insurance, goals, etc.
Involve your spouse in yearly reviews. This adds a second layer of financial safety for your family.
Final Insights
You are already doing well with SIPs and budgeting.
Shift from ULIP to term insurance and mutual funds.
Create specific goal-based SIPs for your children.
Build emergency fund and health insurance today.
Start retirement SIP early, even if small.
Track, review, and improve regularly.
These steps build your financial life step-by-step. You can create wealth and peace of mind over time.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment