Sir, I have closed my ppf account and got 10 lacs. Should I invest these in mutual fund or repay my home loan(at 8.25%).
Request to share few of good mutual funds.
Ans: You have shown good discipline by investing in PPF earlier.
Now you have Rs.10 lakhs from that.
You also have a home loan at 8.25%.
And you are trying to decide between repaying the loan or investing in mutual funds.
This decision is important for your long-term wealth.
Let’s look at your situation from all angles.
Below is a 360-degree guide to help you.
This guide will not suggest any specific schemes.
But it will help you make a wise decision.
Also, I will explain everything in simple and short sentences.
Let us begin.
Understand Your Loan and EMI Pressure
Check how many years are pending in your home loan.
If only a few years are left, loan closure gives small interest savings.
But if 10 to 15 years are pending, interest outgo is still large.
At 8.25%, your EMI mostly goes to interest in early years.
You may feel pressure monthly due to high EMIs.
But if your EMI is affordable, you can stay invested too.
Avoid loan prepayment only from emotions.
Look at the numbers, and more importantly, your future plans.
Compare Wealth Creation vs. Interest Saving
Mutual fund investments can offer better long-term growth.
Over 10+ years, mutual funds can beat 8.25% interest.
But this depends on your risk-taking ability and goals.
If you invest wisely with a plan, it builds wealth.
On the other hand, repaying loan gives fixed guaranteed return.
It saves 8.25% interest per year.
But that’s not wealth creation. It only removes a burden.
So the decision depends on your future goals and emotions too.
Use a Balanced Approach Instead of One Option
Don’t put all Rs.10 lakhs into one single option.
Use part of it to repay loan.
Use the remaining to invest in mutual funds.
This way you reduce interest burden a little.
And still allow money to grow in mutual funds.
For example, repay Rs.4 lakhs loan and invest Rs.6 lakhs.
Or repay Rs.5 lakhs and invest Rs.5 lakhs.
This gives a balanced path for both safety and growth.
Analyse Mutual Fund Benefits Over Home Loan Closure
Mutual funds give flexibility. You can withdraw anytime.
Loan repayment is irreversible. Money is locked.
Mutual funds help you stay liquid in emergencies.
Investing monthly via SIP gives rupee-cost averaging benefit.
Mutual funds are also more tax-efficient than bank FDs.
Long-term growth in mutual funds can beat inflation.
You can plan goals like retirement, child education, etc.
Loan repayment won’t help any of these directly.
Risks of Investing in Mutual Funds
Equity mutual funds carry market ups and downs.
If you need money in 1–2 years, it’s better to avoid equity funds.
You must hold for at least 5 years or more.
Also, don’t pick funds by watching ads or social media.
Work with a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) for guidance.
Invest only through regular plans via MFD and CFP.
Regular plans give you professional support and ongoing tracking.
Direct plans miss that help and handholding.
Problems in Choosing Direct Mutual Funds
Direct funds seem to save cost. But it creates mistakes.
Most investors choose wrong funds in direct mode.
No one is there to stop you from making wrong decisions.
Regular plans via CFP help match fund with your goals.
Also, mutual fund returns change. Someone must monitor regularly.
If you invest through MFD + CFP, they do reviews every year.
They guide you to switch, top up or reduce funds based on life changes.
That support is not there in direct mode.
So always choose regular funds via MFD + CFP, even if you pay 1% more.
How Mutual Funds are Taxed Today
For equity funds: profits held over 1 year are long-term.
Long-term gains above Rs.1.25 lakhs are taxed at 12.5%.
Gains below that are tax-free.
Short-term gains (under 1 year) are taxed at 20%.
For debt funds: all gains are taxed as per your income tax slab.
So, equity mutual funds are better for long-term wealth.
Also, mutual fund taxation is still better than bank FDs and insurance.
Avoid Real Estate and Insurance-Linked Investments
Do not invest the Rs.10 lakhs in real estate again.
Real estate has poor liquidity and high charges.
Also, no monthly returns or emergency access.
Avoid ULIPs or investment insurance also.
They have high cost and poor return.
Only pure term insurance should be taken.
If you hold any LIC or ULIP-type plan, surrender it.
Reinvest that amount into good mutual fund SIPs.
Suggested Use of the Rs.10 Lakhs for 360-Degree Planning
Keep Rs.1 lakh in emergency fund if not already.
Repay part of the home loan (Rs.3–5 lakhs).
Start SIPs with the rest. Choose 3–5 diversified funds.
Mix large cap, flexi cap, and hybrid funds.
Invest monthly instead of one-time, for steady growth.
Build a 10–15 year plan with clear financial goals.
Involve a CFP to review and update this yearly.
Review your loan EMIs and SIP amounts every year.
Increase SIPs when income increases.
Personal and Emotional Perspective
Debt-free feeling brings emotional relief.
But wealth without growth creates future stress.
If EMI is affordable, no need to rush loan closure.
Let your money work hard in good mutual funds.
Keep loan EMI running while your money grows.
In future, these mutual fund gains can be used for bigger goals.
Example: early retirement, child education, or business startup.
So, mix emotion with strategy, not just one.
Regular Plan via MFD + CFP Gives Full Support
Certified Financial Planner guides based on your goals.
They assess risk, cash flow, and fund quality.
MFD supports execution and tracking of investments.
Regular plans allow both these services.
You pay a small fee, but get full 360-degree help.
This support is worth more than any cost saving.
Direct plans save cost, but lose guidance.
Many people regret wrong choices in direct mode.
You don’t need to do all this alone. Work with experts.
Steps to Take Right Now
Review your home loan balance and EMI structure.
Decide what amount from Rs.10 lakhs to repay.
Keep Rs.1 lakh aside for emergencies.
Start SIPs with remaining. Begin with Rs.10k to Rs.15k monthly.
Review progress yearly with a CFP.
Do not fall for trending funds or social media advice.
Build a clear financial goal plan.
Increase SIPs with income rise.
Track loan repayment vs. wealth growth every year.
Finally
Rs.10 lakhs is a good amount to start a strong plan.
Don’t use all of it in loan repayment.
Grow part of it in mutual funds with expert support.
Use a Certified Financial Planner to guide your full journey.
Life goals need liquidity, returns, and safety.
Mixing loan closure with mutual funds gives all three.
Start today. Small steps will create big success.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment