Hello sir, I am 50yeara old working in a software company and senior manager. I would like to seek your guidance on how to utilise 50lakhs I am going to get after selling my house.
Current status of my family
Me - working as senior manager ina. Software company
Wife - working in software
2 girl children aged 18 and 13 both are studying
Financial status - getting handover of 2 flats in January 2026( need money for interiors 30lakhs approximately)
Another villa home loan is running 75lakhs with hdfc bank.
Future plan- my elder daughter is in engineering 1st year, we are planning her marriage after 7 to 8 years
Second girl is in 8th standard
As software is not good and many people are loosing jobs I want to know how to keep this money in case of job loss and for my retirement.
Ans: You have built a good financial base with discipline. Selling the house and having Rs 50 lakh gives you flexibility. You are also balancing children’s education, property commitments, and a running loan. Many people at 50 still struggle with clarity. You already have a structured thought process. That is a big strength.
» Understanding Your Current Situation
– You and your wife both are working in software. This gives dual income security.
– You will receive handover of two flats in 2026. Interiors will need Rs 30 lakh.
– You also have a villa loan of Rs 75 lakh. Loan repayment is an ongoing obligation.
– Elder daughter is in engineering. Her marriage is planned in 7 to 8 years.
– Younger daughter is in 8th standard. Education and marriage are long-term responsibilities.
– Job uncertainty in software industry is a real concern. You want safety for retirement.
This background shows you have multiple responsibilities over the next 10 to 15 years.
» Priorities for the Rs 50 Lakh
– Immediate safety: Keep a part as emergency reserve. This will help in job loss.
– Medium-term needs: Interior cost of flats must be earmarked.
– Long-term needs: Retirement and daughters’ marriages must be funded.
– Loan impact: High loan reduces cash flow. You must balance repayment with investing.
So, Rs 50 lakh cannot be used in one direction only. It must be split for safety, growth, and obligations.
» Creating an Emergency Fund
Software sector has risk of job loss. You must prepare. Out of Rs 50 lakh, at least 12 to 15 lakh should be parked in a very safe instrument. This money should be in liquid mutual funds or short-term bank deposits. Do not expose this to risk. This will give peace of mind if there is sudden job loss.
Emergency fund avoids breaking long-term investments at wrong time.
» Setting Aside for Interiors
You already know Rs 30 lakh will be required in 2026. That is less than two years away. So this portion must not go into risky assets. Equity is not suitable for such short horizon.
Keep Rs 30 lakh in safe debt-oriented mutual funds or bank deposits. This ensures money is available when flats are handed over.
By keeping this money aside, you avoid tension later.
» Handling the Villa Loan
Your villa loan is Rs 75 lakh. Loan EMI is a burden. But paying off entire loan now will block liquidity. Instead, continue regular EMI. Focus on timely payments.
Once your interiors are done in 2026, you can slowly accelerate prepayment. If your cash flow improves or bonus comes, you can part-prepay. But do not use full Rs 50 lakh now for prepayment. That will leave you with no liquidity for job loss or children’s goals.
Loan repayment must be balanced with wealth building.
» Planning for Elder Daughter
She is in first year engineering. Education cost for next three years will be manageable from your salaries. But her marriage after 7 to 8 years will need big money.
This goal requires equity exposure. At least 8-year horizon allows equity to work. You can invest Rs 7 to 8 lakh from the Rs 50 lakh for this goal. Systematic withdrawal can be planned after 7 years.
Keeping this in equity-oriented mutual funds with professional guidance will grow it well.
» Planning for Younger Daughter
She is in 8th standard. Her higher education will need funds in 5 years. Marriage will be after 12 to 15 years. Education cost is sooner, so for this you need moderate risk. A mix of equity and debt funds can be used. Marriage corpus has long horizon, so more equity is possible.
You can allocate Rs 5 to 7 lakh now into such a mix. Over 10 to 12 years, this grows into a sizeable corpus. This way, both children’s future is secured.
» Protecting Your Retirement
At 50, retirement planning cannot be delayed. You and your wife may work for 10 more years, but industry risk remains. So a portion of Rs 50 lakh must be parked for retirement.
Even if interiors and children’s goals consume large part, try to allocate at least Rs 10 to 12 lakh for retirement growth. This must be invested in equity-oriented mutual funds for compounding.
Over 10 to 15 years, this can add meaningful strength to your retirement fund.
» Tax Considerations
When you invest this Rs 50 lakh, keep taxation in mind.
– Equity mutual fund long-term gains above Rs 1.25 lakh are taxed at 12.5%. Short-term gains are taxed at 20%.
– Debt mutual fund gains are taxed as per your income slab. Since you are salaried, you may fall in higher slab.
– Hence, tax planning through combination of debt and equity is important.
For near-term needs like interiors, taxation is secondary. Safety matters more. For long-term needs like retirement, tax efficiency and growth matter more.
» Why Active Funds Are Better
Some may suggest index funds or ETFs for your goals. But these only copy the market. They cannot generate higher returns. They also fall fully when the market falls. For retirement and children’s future, you need better protection and better growth.
Actively managed funds give opportunity for outperformance. Professional managers can manage risk better. With Certified Financial Planner monitoring, active funds are safer and more productive for your situation.
» Why Regular Plans Through CFP Are Right
Direct mutual funds may look cheaper. But most investors struggle with decisions. Wrong timing, switching mistakes, and tax errors cost more than saved expenses.
Regular plans through a trusted MFD with CFP credential give you continuous guidance. They review, rebalance, and align portfolio with your goals. At 50, you cannot afford mistakes. Regular plans with professional review will save you stress.
» Insurance and Risk Cover
Job risk is only one danger. Medical risk is another. At this stage, ensure you and your wife have adequate health insurance. A base policy plus top-up cover is recommended.
Also, ensure you have term insurance cover until children are settled. This will protect their future in case of any uncertainty. Insurance is a foundation for financial planning.
» Final Insights
You have Rs 50 lakh. You also have responsibilities, a loan, and job risk. If you split the money smartly, you can cover all areas. Keep Rs 12 to 15 lakh for emergency. Reserve Rs 30 lakh for interiors in 2026. Allocate Rs 12 to 15 lakh for children and retirement.
Do not use the whole money for loan closure. Keep liquidity. Balance equity and debt based on timelines. Use actively managed funds through a Certified Financial Planner for long-term goals.
This structured plan will protect you against job loss, secure your daughters’ futures, and strengthen your retirement. You are already disciplined. With the right allocations, you can move forward with confidence.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment