Hi sir. I am 40 years, having a salary of 2.5L take home. I have a personal loan emi 1.1L for next 5 years for 50lacs. I have few insurance, lic yearly 40k and mutual funds monthly 3k. Own flat and a car (no emi). Pf monthly 20k and total in pf account 10lacs. MONTHLY household expenses 75k. Because of which unable to do savings each month.Can you please tel me best way to save money and get tide of hefty personal loan of 50lacs
Ans: Your Current Financial Portrait
Age 40, take?home salary Rs?2.5?lakh/month
Personal loan EMI Rs?1.1?lakh/month for Rs?50?lakh over 5 years
LIC premium Rs?40,000/year (insurance)
Mutual fund SIP Rs?3,000/month
Monthly PF contribution Rs?20,000; PF balance Rs?10?lakh
Own flat and car with no EMIs
Household expenses Rs?75,000/month
No other liabilities recorded
This shows disciplined insurance and investment habits despite heavy EMI pressure. Let's break it down to give you actionable direction.
EMI Pressure and Cashflow Analysis
EMI consumes over 44% of net pay
Household spending adds another 30%
Insurance, SIP, and savings add about 10%
This leaves very little flexibility or surplus
Your loan is limiting savings and creating stress. Reducing EMI or its tenure must be the top priority.
Loan Prepayment & Refinance Options
Aim: Reduce EMI or tenure to free cash
Consider balance transfer to a lower?interest lender
Negotiate better terms with existing lender
Use PF or OD against PF to prepay part of loan
Any bonuses or windfalls should go into loan prepayment
Even small additional EMIs shorten loan and reduce interest
This will gradually release cash for savings and goals.
Prioritising Emergency Fund
Your household expenses are Rs?75,000/month. You need 6–9 months’ buffer.
Emergency corpus target: Rs?4.5–6.75?lakh
Start building immediately with small but consistent contributions
Use ultra?short debt or liquid mutual funds for liquidity
Avoid touching this fund for any non?emergent need
This fund protects your family from liquidity crises and prevents loan or credit misuse.
Reviewing Insurance Coverage
You carry LIC cover through annual premium. However:
LIC products often yield low returns
Insurance should only protect
Maturity benefits from LIC are usually modest
Consider:
Reviewing coverage scheduling
Discontinuing LIC policies if they are endowment or ULIP style
Using proceeds to buy term insurance via employer or privately (at least Rs?50–75?lakh)
Ensuring health coverage through cashless employers or individual floater
Reallocating LIC costs to term insurance and investment will produce better protection and growth.
Reallocating LIC Savings to Growth
If LIC is a traditional investment policy:
Evaluate IRR projections carefully
Most give only 4–5% post-lock-in
Surrender the policy if it is underperforming
Reinvest lump sum into equity mutual funds via regular plans
Regular funds give access to CFP guidance and portfolio shaping
This step will help grow your corpus faster and within a flexible structure.
Strengthening Investment Strategy
At present: SIP Rs?3,000/month only. You need more growth-focused investing.
Key strategies:
Increase SIP contributions gradually as loan repayment frees cash
Target monthly SIP of Rs?20,000 in next 12 months
Use actively managed equity and hybrid mutual funds
Avoid direct funds—they lack monitoring and review support
Choose regular plans through MFD and CFP for guidance and rebalancing
Proper guidance and active funds increase the chances of beating the market and managing risk.
Optimising PF & VPF Usage
You are actively contributing to PF, which is good for safe returns and tax benefits.
EPF yields ~8–8.5% risk-free; keep contributing
VPF adds flexibility and higher contribution if you choose
At loan prepayment stage, consider using part of PF for OD or partial withdrawal
However, avoid complete PF withdrawal. Preserve it for retirement needs.
Re?thinking Real Estate and Gold Exposure
You already own a flat; you have stable housing. No need for more property exposure.
Rental reliance or property speculation is not required
Instead of buying gold or real estate, focus on equity and hybrid mutual funds
These offer liquidity and a better chance at capital growth
This focus helps in building financial freedom rather than tying up income.
Budgeting and Lifestyle Alignment
Your expenses are Rs?75,000/month. Let’s see if cuts are possible.
Track every category: food, utilities, subscriptions, travel
Ask yourself: Are all expenses essential?
Create a lean budget aiming to reduce Rs?5,000–10,000 per month
Redirect savings to loan prepayment or SIP
Use budget tools, apps, or a simplistic monthly ledger
Small consistent savings build over time and help free cashflow.
Strategic Loan Pay?down Plan
Your loan of Rs?50?lakh will be eliminated in 5 years at current EMI. But we can accelerate:
Use PF OD or bonus to prepay Rs?10–15?lakh
Reduce EMI burden or cut down tenure
Redirect Rs?30,000–40,000 extra monthly to loan
Aim to retire loan within 3–4 years
Reallocate freed cash to investment post?repayment
This dual approach will fast-track financial freedom and enable better mental comfort.
Building Corpus Through SIP and Free Cashflow
Post loan prepayment and eventual completion:
Your disposable income will grow significantly
Channel an extra Rs?30,000–40,000/month into SIPs
At 10% return, long-term investing will build multimillion corpus
Set mini-goals:
3 years: Emergency fund + loan
5 years: Corpus of Rs?50–60?lakh
10–15 years: Rs?2–3 crore for retirement or other goals
Regular investing, staying focused, and reviewing yearly can help you reach goals.
Asset Allocation Suggested
During EMI period:
Equity mutual funds (growth): 50–60%
Hybrid funds (growth + stability): 20–30%
Debt funds/liquid (safety, emergency): 20%
Post loan freedom:
Equity: Adjust down to 40–50% gradually
Hybrid: Rise to 30–35%
Debt/liquid: Keep 15–20% for stability
This rebalancing reduces risk as your goals approach and ensures capital protection.
Periodic Review of Portfolio
Set reviews at:
Loan hit milestones (20%, 50%, 80%)
SIP amount review annually
Rebalancing portfolio every year
Adjust asset mix as your risk capacity changes
Reassess insurance, emergency corpus, and monthly budget
Continuous course correction is key to keeping your plan on track.
Avoiding Mistakes That Hurt Progress
Don’t delay additional EMI payments
Don’t stop SIPs during market drops
Don’t invest heavily in real estate or gold
Don’t rely on LIC policies for retirement goals
Don’t mix retirement corpus with sinking liabilities
Don’t skip increasing SIPs with savings
Don’t ignore tax efficiency in investments and withdrawals
Awareness of these errors helps avoid regression and ensures financial discipline.
Tax Planning & Withdrawal Strategy
Since investments are mainly in mutual funds and PF:
EPF and PPF withdrawals are tax-free post-holding period
Equity mutual fund LTCG above Rs?1.25?lakh is taxed at 12.5%
STCG taxed at 20%
Develop SWP plan after loan is repaid to manage post?tax income
Timing of withdrawal can reduce yearly tax liability
File Form 15G/H if you no longer have tax liability to avoid TDS
A well-structured approach maintains tax efficiency across your tenure.
Using Windfalls Wisely
In the future, if you get:
Bonus payout
PF EPF maturity
Inheritance
Performance bonus
Use a strategy:
Allocate part to loan prepayment
Allocate part to emergency fund if needed
Allocate the balance to investment via SIP in active funds
This ensures judicious, goal-oriented usage of unexpected funds.
Retirement Planning and Long-Term Goals
Once loan is cleared, you free up EMI budget for:
Corpus building for retirement or legacy goals
Potential child education funds if applicable
Enhancing insurance and health safety nets
Improving life quality—travel, skill upgrades, etc.
Setting long-term goals and working with a CFP will help align your financial journey toward freedom.
Behavioral and Emotional Strength
Debt pressure creates stress; reducing it relieves mental burden
Increased savings creates a sense of security and empowerment
Staying consistent through service periods builds discipline
Financial review with a Certified Financial Planner brings clarity and adjustments
Emotional stability is as important as numbers in finance.
Finally
Your EMI is currently limiting financial freedom
Refinance, prepay, and restructure loan to free cash
Build emergency fund alongside loan repayment
Redirect freed cash to enhance SIP contributions
Choose active funds via MFD and CFP for better growth
Rebalance asset mix post?loan with rising reserves
Avoid LIC, ULIP, direct funds, real estate investments
Lock in discipline, review yearly, reinforce financial stability
Keep short?term goals aligned with long?term vision
You are not just paying debt—you’re paving a path to freedom. With consistent efforts, expert advice, and disciplined investing, you will shift from burdened to financially secure within a few short years.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment