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SIP scenario

₹25,000 SIP for 10 Years — Final Value, Returns & Breakdown

A ₹25,000 monthly SIP is the territory of senior earners, dual-income households, or aggressive savers chasing a specific 10-year goal. The shorter horizon means compounding has less time to work — but the higher contribution offsets it, and the absolute numbers at the end are significant.

Total invested

30,00,000

25,000 × 120 months

Gain from compounding

28,08,477

At 12% p.a. assumed

Final corpus

58,08,477

1.94× your invested amount

How the math works

The standard SIP future-value formula is FV = P × ((1 + i)^n − 1) ÷ i × (1 + i), where P is the monthly investment, i is the monthly rate (annual ÷ 12), and n is the total number of monthly contributions.

Plugging in this scenario: P = ₹25,000, i = 1.000% per month, n = 120. You end up with a final corpus of roughly ₹58,08,477 — of which ₹30,00,000 is your own money and ₹28,08,477 is the compounding gain on top.

What this means in practice

Shorter SIPs are more sensitive to market timing than longer ones. Across 10 years, equity markets in India have historically rarely delivered negative returns — but the dispersion in outcomes is wider than for 20-year SIPs. Consider a small allocation to debt funds if you need a hard 10-year deadline.

How to actually start

  1. 1. Pick a fund. For long-horizon SIPs, most planners suggest a diversified large-cap or flexi-cap equity mutual fund as the core holding.
  2. 2. Set up auto-debit. Pick a date 2–3 days after salary credit and enable auto-debit so you can't skip a month "just this once."
  3. 3. Increase annually. Bump the monthly amount by 10% each year — a step-up SIP significantly outperforms a flat SIP over long horizons.
  4. 4. Don't check daily. Volatility is the price you pay for the 12% average. Checking the portfolio every day is the surest way to break the discipline.

Adjust the assumptions

Try different monthly amounts, tenures, and expected returns in the full Nami SIP calculator — see how step-ups, longer horizons, or more conservative return assumptions change the outcome.

FAQ

Common questions

At an assumed 12% annual return, a ₹25,000 monthly SIP for 10 years grows to approximately ₹58,08,477. You invest ₹30,00,000 over that period and the gain from compounding is ₹28,08,477.