Am 52, earn 50 L annual as salary, invest 1+L monthly and some lumpsum (ocassionally) in SIP in mix of Large, Mid, Small & Flexi Cap and have built a corpus of 5+cr in MF; have 30+L in PPF and 2 SSY accounts (investing 1.5L each annually since 2017) with 20 L each for 2 daughters; have own house and no outstanding or loans. On inheritance will have a flat (value 80 L- 1cr). My wife works with Salary 30+ L. (When) can I retire early.
Ans: You are in a strong position. Let us evaluate your early retirement readiness in a detailed, practical and holistic way.
Below is a complete assessment from a Certified Financial Planner’s lens.
Cash Flow Stability
Your salary is Rs. 50 lakh annually. That gives you approx Rs. 3 lakh monthly post-tax.
You invest over Rs. 1 lakh monthly. This means your savings rate is excellent.
Your wife earns over Rs. 30 lakh annually. This adds great strength to your family’s financial cushion.
No loans or EMIs. That frees up your entire income for lifestyle and savings.
You are able to manage expenses, save well and still maintain your lifestyle. That’s ideal.
Asset Base – Solid Foundation
Rs. 5 crore in mutual funds shows strong discipline over many years.
Rs. 30+ lakh in PPF gives tax-free and safe returns till maturity.
Two Sukanya Samriddhi accounts with Rs. 20 lakh each is excellent for your daughters’ future.
You own your house. That cuts future rental outflow.
You will inherit a flat worth Rs. 80 lakh to Rs. 1 crore. That adds more flexibility post-retirement.
No real estate investment is ideal. That keeps your liquidity high.
Mutual Fund Portfolio Health
You invest in a mix of large, mid, small, and flexi-cap funds.
This gives your portfolio balance of growth and stability.
You also invest lumpsum sometimes. That helps during market corrections.
Staying invested across market cycles improves long-term returns.
You’ve avoided index funds. That is good. Actively managed funds do better in India.
Fund managers actively adjust holdings based on markets. Index funds don’t do that.
Actively managed funds can beat inflation and generate alpha. Index funds can't.
You’ve not gone for direct funds. That is good for you.
With a CFP-backed MFD, you get regular review, asset rebalancing and risk control.
Direct funds don’t offer guidance. They suit only full-time experts.
MFDs aligned with CFPs help you stay invested during volatility. That matters.
Children’s Education Planning
Your daughters’ SSY balances are around Rs. 20 lakh each.
You invest Rs. 1.5 lakh per year in both. That’s maximum allowed.
SSY is tax-free and government backed. Very safe.
At maturity, each account can support higher education or initial marriage costs.
Along with mutual funds and PPF, you’re on track to fund both daughters’ goals.
Ensure mutual funds are earmarked with goal-based approach. Not general corpus.
Also consider having SIPs separately tagged to each daughter’s milestone.
Don’t redeem PPF or SSY unless necessary. Let them compound.
Retirement Corpus Requirement
If you retire now, you need passive income to cover expenses.
Let’s assume Rs. 1.5 to 2 lakh monthly expenses post-retirement. Adjusted for lifestyle.
That’s Rs. 18–24 lakh per year. Growing each year due to inflation.
You will need at least Rs. 5 to 6 crore invested smartly. That can generate this income.
You already have Rs. 5 crore+ in MFs. That’s close.
PPF and SSY are also future buffers. They mature tax-free.
Your wife’s income of Rs. 30 lakh/year can support family till you fully stop working.
Inheritance of Rs. 80 lakh–1 crore adds further backup.
So even if you retire now, you have fallback income and asset base.
Spouse Income and Planning
Your wife’s income adds stability. She can support some family costs for now.
But her retirement plan should also be worked out.
She may choose to work for 8–10 more years. Or take a break.
Create parallel investments in her name also. That helps post-retirement balance.
Use her Section 80C, 80D, and other deductions. Optimise tax.
Consider SIPs and lump sum in her name also. Track goals individually.
Build a joint passive income plan. Not just your side alone.
Insurance and Contingency
Ensure health insurance of at least Rs. 15–20 lakh for family.
Include super top-up for extra protection. Medical costs rise faster than inflation.
Term insurance is not priority now if assets > liabilities. But review once.
Emergency fund of 6 months’ expenses is needed in liquid fund or FD.
If not done already, create that immediately.
Keep it away from market volatility.
Tax Efficiency Post Retirement
After retirement, plan SWP from mutual funds.
Use debt and equity funds smartly for tax efficiency.
LTCG on equity funds above Rs. 1.25 lakh now taxed at 12.5%.
STCG taxed at 20%. Plan redemptions smartly.
Debt funds are taxed as per your slab. So balance carefully.
Use PPF and SSY withdrawals tax-free. Delay withdrawals for better maturity value.
Retire early, but reduce tax drag with withdrawal strategy.
Early Retirement Readiness – Final Evaluation
You can consider early retirement now.
You have strong corpus, no loan, and regular family income.
Your daughters’ education is on track. House is owned.
You will get inheritance in coming years. That gives more comfort.
If you retire today, do phased withdrawal and reduce spending spike.
You can also work part-time or consult. That gives purpose and slow transition.
Don't exit equity fully. Stay invested for 25–30 more years of life.
Inflation will erode value. You need growth even in retirement.
You don’t need annuities. They give poor returns and no growth.
Your MF portfolio gives you better post-tax income.
Avoid any real estate investments now. Keep flexibility high.
You’ve avoided ULIPs or endowment plans. That’s good. No surrender needed.
Focus now on asset allocation, tax planning and joint family goals.
With a CFP-backed review each year, you can retire with confidence.
Finally
You have built a strong foundation. Your discipline shows in your portfolio.
You can retire today. Or in 1–2 years with complete comfort.
The key now is smooth transition, not rushing out suddenly.
Create a withdrawal plan. Align goals with spouse.
Secure your health, children’s education and your peace of mind.
Keep reviewing every year with a trusted CFP-backed MFD.
Don’t panic in market falls. Stay long in equities.
You’ve earned this phase. Make it count wisely.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment