SIP Calculator & Investment Planner

Plan SIP, lumpsum, step-up, goals, retirement and SWP with live charts, inflation & tax-adjusted values, XIRR, mutual-fund analytics and full report export — everything updates instantly as you type.

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The amount above is invested once per period.
Increase yearly with the step-up % below to beat inflation.
Increases your SIP by this % each year as your income grows — a small step-up can add a large amount to your final corpus. Leave at 0 to keep the SIP flat.
Invest a lump amount once a year (e.g. your bonus) on top of your monthly SIP. Every top-up compounds for the rest of the plan. Leave at 0 to skip.
Inflation-adjust the target (target is in today's money)
Apply LTCG tax on gains
Advanced: pause SIP & one-time investments

Interactive charts

Growth, invested vs returns, yearly growth, split and inflation comparison. Drag-select on the growth chart to zoom (double-click to reset), or download any chart as an image.

Milestone tracker

When your portfolio first crosses each landmark.

Breakdown table

Investment, interest earned, tax and inflation-adjusted value — yearly or month by month.

SIP vs FD, PPF, EPF, Gold, Nifty 50 & Sensex

The same cash flows compounded at typical historical rates (editable). For information only — past rates don't guarantee future returns.

Scenario simulator

Save the current inputs as a scenario, tweak anything (SIP, duration, returns, step-up, pauses, one-time investments), save again, and compare — scenarios persist in your browser.

No scenarios saved yet — click "Save as scenario" on the left.

Mutual fund explorer & historical analytics

Search any Indian mutual fund, view NAV history, CAGR, rolling returns and volatility computed from real NAV data, back-test your SIP on actual history (XIRR), and compare up to 5 funds. Data: mfapi.in (free AMFI NAV feed) — needs an internet connection. AUM, expense ratio, exit load and fund-manager details aren't part of the free NAV feed; check the AMC page for those.

Type at least 3 characters to search.

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How this SIP calculator works

A Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) invests a fixed amount at a regular interval — usually monthly — into a mutual fund. The classic maturity formula is FV = P × ((1+i)ⁿ − 1) / i × (1+i), where P is the instalment, i the periodic return and n the number of instalments. Real portfolios are messier than the textbook formula, so this planner simulates your investment month by month: annual step-ups, yearly top-ups, paused months, one-time investments and quarterly/half-yearly/yearly frequencies are all applied exactly when they happen, and the result is reported both as a nominal corpus and in today's purchasing power after inflation.

Step-up SIP: the easiest upgrade to your wealth plan

Increasing your SIP by even 10% a year — roughly in line with salary growth — can add a surprisingly large amount to the final corpus, because the biggest instalments arrive in the years when compounding has the most money to work with. Use the Annual step-up slider to see the difference instantly, then save both versions as scenarios to compare them side by side.

XIRR vs CAGR

CAGR describes a single lumpsum growing over time. A SIP is many cash flows on many dates, so its true annualised return is the XIRR — the discount rate at which all your instalments grow exactly into the final corpus. This calculator reports XIRR for every plan and computes it from real NAV history when you back-test a fund.

Inflation and tax: the numbers that actually matter

₹1 crore in 20 years is not ₹1 crore today. At 6% inflation it buys what about ₹31 lakh buys now. The planner shows the inflation-adjusted ("real") value of your corpus, and can apply long-term capital gains tax (12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh of gains per year of sale, as per current Indian rules — editable) so you plan on post-tax money, not headline numbers.

Frequently asked questions

How is SIP return calculated?

Using the future-value-of-annuity-due formula for the simple case, and a month-by-month simulation when step-ups, top-ups, pauses or one-time investments are involved. The annualised figure shown is the XIRR of all cash flows.

What is a step-up SIP?

A SIP whose instalment increases by a fixed percentage every year, e.g. ₹10,000 growing 10% annually becomes ₹11,000 in year two, ₹12,100 in year three and so on.

What return should I assume?

Long-run Indian equity indices have historically delivered low-double-digit annualised returns, debt funds mid-single digits — but past returns don't guarantee future ones. Try a conservative and an optimistic scenario and plan for the conservative one.

Is my data uploaded anywhere?

No. All planning calculations run in your browser. The only network requests are the optional mutual-fund NAV lookups you trigger, which go directly to the public mfapi.in feed.

Is this investment advice?

No — it's an educational planning tool. Returns are assumptions, mutual fund investments are subject to market risk, and you should read scheme documents carefully or consult a SEBI-registered adviser before investing.