Sir,
I am 56 year old, Govt Servant, want to take VRS. I have my own house and only son is working in TCS. I will get 48000 as monthly pension and 90L as retirement benefit. Please tell me is this enough to survive and how to safely grow my corpus. I have a 10L health insurance for family.
Ans: ou have a strong base to work from.
You are 56 years old, planning Voluntary Retirement. Your pension is Rs. 48,000 per month. You will get a corpus of Rs. 90 lakhs. Your home is fully owned, and your son is working and independent. Your health cover is Rs. 10 lakhs for the family.
This is a good situation to begin structured retirement planning.
Let us now assess and build your plan from a 360-degree view.
?
Retirement Income Need and Lifestyle Check
You will receive Rs. 48,000 monthly pension. That’s your stable income.
?
If your regular expenses are within this amount, then your corpus need is lower.
?
But inflation will reduce the power of this pension over time.
?
You need to build an additional income source from the Rs. 90 lakh corpus.
?
Also, health expenses may rise over the next 20 to 30 years.
?
With increasing age, travel, medical, and lifestyle costs may go up gradually.
?
So, preserving your corpus and growing it slowly is the goal.
?
The Rs. 90 lakh must generate inflation-beating returns with safety.
?
The plan must avoid risk but not ignore growth.
?
And the plan must ensure liquidity for emergencies and hospital needs.
?
Step-by-Step Planning for Corpus Allocation
Let’s break your Rs. 90 lakh into useful buckets:
?
1. Emergency Fund – Liquidity First
Keep around Rs. 6 to 8 lakhs in a savings account or short-term FD.
?
This covers 6-12 months’ worth of monthly expenses.
?
Use this for medical bills, urgent repairs, or unexpected travel.
?
This money should be easy to withdraw at short notice.
?
Do not touch this for regular investment or income generation.
?
2. Health and Critical Illness Buffer
You already have Rs. 10 lakh medical insurance. That’s helpful.
?
But rising hospital bills need extra safety.
?
Keep Rs. 5 to 8 lakh separately in a liquid debt mutual fund.
?
This fund will act as a top-up to your health insurance if needed.
?
It gives slightly better return than savings account or FD.
?
It also ensures hospitalisation does not disturb long-term plans.
?
3. Short-Term Safety Allocation (3 to 5 Years)
Allocate Rs. 20 to 25 lakh to conservative hybrid mutual funds.
?
These funds combine debt and equity but focus on stability.
?
They are suitable for generating some income while keeping capital safe.
?
Use these to create a Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) later.
?
This bucket will give support if pension falls short in future.
?
4. Medium-Term Growth Allocation (5 to 10 Years)
Allocate around Rs. 30 lakh to balanced advantage or multi-asset funds.
?
These actively manage market ups and downs.
?
Their asset mix adjusts based on risk and opportunity.
?
They are better than index funds because they respond to market shifts.
?
Index funds follow markets passively. They don’t protect from downside.
?
But actively managed funds aim to reduce losses during bad markets.
?
In your retirement, safety matters more than just returns.
?
That is why we suggest actively managed regular funds.
?
Invest through a Certified Financial Planner and MFD for guidance.
?
5. Long-Term Growth (10+ Years)
Around Rs. 15 to 20 lakh can go to large cap or flexi cap mutual funds.
?
These are actively managed, stable funds for long-term wealth creation.
?
Use this only if you won’t need this money in next 8 to 10 years.
?
These help fight inflation over the long run.
?
But these should be reviewed every year with your MFD or CFP.
?
Income Strategy: Generating Monthly Cash Flow
Rs. 48,000 pension may be enough now. But not for 20 years later.
?
Use SWP from debt-oriented hybrid funds after 3 years.
?
This creates a second income flow while keeping the capital safe.
?
Start with Rs. 8,000 to Rs. 10,000 per month from SWP.
?
Increase slowly every 2 years based on inflation.
?
Don’t withdraw from equity-oriented funds in first 8 years.
?
Let them grow quietly and support future income gaps.
?
Tax Planning After Retirement
Your pension is fully taxable under income from salary.
?
SWP from equity mutual funds is tax-friendly if used after 12 months.
?
New rule: Equity mutual fund gains above Rs. 1.25 lakh are taxed at 12.5%.
?
Short-term equity gains are taxed at 20% under new rule.
?
Debt mutual fund gains are taxed as per your income slab.
?
Withdraw funds wisely to reduce tax impact.
?
Use standard deduction of Rs. 50,000 available for pensioners.
?
Work with a CA or tax expert once a year to plan better.
?
Role of Insurance After Retirement
You have Rs. 10 lakh health insurance. That is a good start.
?
Confirm if it is a family floater or individual.
?
Renew the plan without break. Don't depend only on employer legacy policies.
?
Consider a top-up health insurance if premium is manageable.
?
Avoid life insurance plans now. You no longer have financial dependents.
?
ULIP, endowment, or money-back plans are not useful at this stage.
?
If you already have them, check surrender value.
?
If surrender value is decent, reinvest that in mutual funds.
?
Legacy Planning and Estate Transfer
Your son is working and financially stable.
?
So, now is the time to create a Will and keep nominations updated.
?
This ensures smooth transfer of your money after your time.
?
Do not delay this. A Will reduces future legal problems for your son.
?
Keep your financial records organised in one file.
?
Share details with your son, but avoid joint ownership in all assets.
?
Maintain your own financial independence always.
?
Should You Work Part-Time After VRS?
Mentally, work helps people stay active post-retirement.
?
Financially, even a small part-time income helps delay withdrawals.
?
You can teach, consult, or write in your area of expertise.
?
Don’t overwork. But don’t fully disconnect either.
?
Choose light and satisfying work.
?
It helps reduce boredom and keeps your savings untouched longer.
?
Avoid These Common Mistakes After Retirement
Don’t put lump sum in real estate. It locks up money.
?
Do not keep all money in FDs. It won’t beat inflation.
?
Avoid giving large loans to relatives. It affects your liquidity.
?
Don’t invest in ULIP, annuity, or low-return insurance schemes.
?
Avoid high-risk stock trading or PMS without full knowledge.
?
Don’t invest directly in equity without clear planning.
?
Use regular mutual funds through Certified Financial Planner.
?
Avoid direct plans unless you fully understand fund analysis.
?
Direct plans do not offer guidance or periodic review.
?
Regular funds via MFD with CFP provide handholding and reviews.
?
Finally
You have built a stable retirement base. Your house is ready. Your son is settled. Your pension gives comfort. Your corpus of Rs. 90 lakh is decent. But it needs proper allocation and discipline.
?
If you divide your money into emergency, medical, short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals — you will have peace of mind.
?
If you avoid risky products and use actively managed mutual funds — your wealth will grow.
?
You need to plan income generation slowly, with SWP over time.
?
You must also create a Will and manage taxes wisely.
?
You are heading in the right direction. Just avoid emotional decisions with money.
?
Start with a 3-year, 5-year, and 10-year investment goal within retirement itself.
?
Review this every year with the help of a Certified Financial Planner.
?
Retirement should not feel like an end. It should be a comfortable new beginning.
?
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment