Hello Sir,
My age is 40yrs and my salary is Rs.1,15,000 per month but savings is too less. I have an investment of Rs.7500 per month in SIP which totals to Rs.3,72,000. I have Rs.5Lacs cash in hand. My present EMI is approx. Rs.20,000 which will end up in September '25.
I have a 5yrs old daughter.
I am planning to buy a house and take a loan of upto 65Lacs.
Please help me plan my future accordingly.
Ans: You have taken proactive steps already. That deserves genuine appreciation.
Let me now assess your financial situation from a 360-degree angle.
We will cover savings, investments, retirement, family goals, and risk management.
All in a simple, step-by-step manner.
Your Current Financial Snapshot
Age: 43 years
Target Retirement Age: 50 years
Monthly Expenses: Rs. 1,20,000
Current Retirement Corpus: Rs. 1.10 crore
(Includes EPF, PPF, LIC, Mutual Funds, Shares, Jewellery)
Expected Corpus by March 2032: Rs. 2.50 crore
Health and Life Insurance: Adequate coverage for both self and spouse
Daughter’s Age: 13 years
Corpus for Daughter's Education/Marriage: Rs. 13 lakh in mutual funds
Parents’ Health Insurance: Covered under employer Mediclaim
Assessment of Retirement Readiness
1. Inflation-Adjusted Expenses Will Be Much Higher
Current monthly expenses of Rs. 1,20,000 will not remain the same.
After retirement, these will keep increasing due to inflation.
Even a 6% inflation rate will double expenses in 12 years.
This means, within retirement, monthly expenses can cross Rs. 2.5 lakh.
So, a bigger retirement corpus is needed than what you’re planning now.
2. Planned Corpus May Not Be Enough
Rs. 2.5 crore looks fine today, but not in the long run.
You may live 30+ years after retirement.
If the corpus is not large enough, you may face financial strain.
Medical emergencies and daughter’s higher education can also increase future costs.
3. Goal for Daughter’s Education and Marriage Needs Separate Focus
You already set aside Rs. 13 lakh. That’s great.
But this goal should remain separate from your retirement planning.
Continue SIPs to grow this amount steadily.
Investment Strategy to Build a Stronger Corpus
1. Increase Your SIPs in a Phased Manner
Rs. 7,500 SIP per month is a good start.
Increase SIP amount every year with your salary increment.
Step-up SIPs are powerful for wealth creation in the long term.
Invest in actively managed funds, not index funds.
2. Avoid Index Funds and Direct Funds
Index funds follow the market. They don’t try to outperform.
They give average returns, not better-than-market returns.
In retirement planning, average return may not be enough.
Actively managed funds aim for higher performance.
Direct funds don’t give advisory support.
Investing through a certified financial planner ensures better guidance.
Regular plans via a CFP-qualified Mutual Fund Distributor offer value.
They help you stay on track and adjust the portfolio when needed.
3. Asset Allocation Should Match Your Timeline
Till retirement (next 7 years), equity can remain dominant in your portfolio.
Post-retirement, slowly shift to low-risk debt funds.
But don’t fully exit equity even after retirement.
A small portion in equity will beat inflation over the years.
4. Use Your Rs. 5 Lakh Cash Wisely
Don’t keep it idle.
Keep Rs. 2 lakh as emergency fund in a liquid mutual fund.
Invest the remaining Rs. 3 lakh in hybrid mutual funds for medium-term growth.
Managing Expenses and EMI
1. Your EMI of Rs. 20,000 Ends in September 2025
Once it ends, channel that Rs. 20,000 into SIPs immediately.
Don’t let this cash flow go into lifestyle inflation.
Treat it as a bonus investment opportunity every month.
2. Control Lifestyle Inflation Now
Avoid increasing your lifestyle with salary hikes.
Keep your living cost stable to save more.
Every rupee saved now gives you more peace later.
About Your House Purchase Plan
1. Buying a House with Rs. 65 Lakh Loan Can Strain Your Retirement
A new home loan will increase your monthly EMI burden.
At age 43, taking a big loan means 15–20 years of EMI.
This will reduce your ability to invest for retirement.
Think carefully: is this house for living or for investment?
If for investment, avoid it. Real estate lacks liquidity and has poor returns.
Instead, continue living on rent and focus on retirement security.
2. If House Is For Own Stay, Keep Loan Low
Try to arrange higher down payment.
Minimise the loan.
Aim for a short tenure like 10 years.
Don’t let EMI cross 30% of your monthly income.
Insurance and Risk Protection
1. You Already Have Term and Health Insurance – Very Good
Keep term insurance active till age 60 or 65.
Check if sum assured is 10–15 times of annual income.
Upgrade if needed.
2. For Your Daughter – Don’t Mix Insurance and Investment
Never buy child ULIP or insurance plans.
Use mutual funds alone to invest for her future.
3. For Parents – Employer Mediclaim May Stop Post-Retirement
Consider buying separate senior citizen policies for them now.
Start while they are healthy and insurable.
Don’t delay this. Medical costs rise faster than inflation.
Retirement Income Planning
1. From Age 50, You Need a Monthly Income
That income should come from your mutual fund corpus.
Use Systematic Withdrawal Plans (SWP) from debt and hybrid funds.
Don’t withdraw too much at once.
Keep the corpus growing even during retirement.
Balance growth and safety together.
2. Don’t Depend on Dividends
Mutual fund dividends are inconsistent and taxable.
SWP is better. You decide how much you withdraw.
Tax Planning
1. Be Ready for Tax on Capital Gains
For equity mutual funds, LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%.
STCG is taxed at 20%.
For debt funds, gains are taxed as per your income tax slab.
A Certified Financial Planner can help you plan tax-efficient withdrawals.
2. Use Tax-Saving Funds Only If You Need Section 80C Benefits
You may already get benefits through EPF and insurance.
Don’t overuse tax-saving mutual funds.
Prioritise returns and flexibility.
Planning for Your Daughter’s Education and Marriage
1. Rs. 13 Lakh Corpus is a Strong Start
Continue investing Rs. 5,000–10,000 monthly in equity mutual funds.
Use different funds than your retirement portfolio.
Keep this fully in equity till she turns 17.
Shift to hybrid funds when expenses near.
2. Set Milestone Goals
Age 17–18: Education
Age 23–25: Marriage
Plan withdrawal accordingly. Avoid emotional lump sum spending.
Estate Planning and Documentation
1. Create a Will
Clearly name your nominees and distribute assets.
Don’t leave it for later. It avoids legal issues.
2. Review Nominations on All Investments
EPF, PPF, mutual funds, shares – ensure nominations are updated.
Review every year.
Finally
Your foundation is solid. But future expenses demand a stronger corpus.
Don’t rush into buying property with high EMI.
Increase SIPs every year. Keep lifestyle inflation in check.
Keep equity exposure high till age 50.
Slowly shift to hybrid and debt post-retirement.
Focus more on income generation than asset creation after retirement.
Protect yourself and your family with insurance and estate planning.
Track your financial plan with a Certified Financial Planner every year.
Your discipline now will build a stress-free retirement.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment