Corpus: ₹38.0L at 12% · Total invested: ₹6.0L · Wealth gain: ₹32.0L
| Annual Return | Total Invested | Maturity Value | Wealth Gain |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8% | ₹6,00,000 | ₹19,14,733 | ₹13,14,733 |
| 10% | ₹6,00,000 | ₹26,75,781 | ₹20,75,781 |
| 12% | ₹6,00,000 | ₹37,95,270 | ₹31,95,270 |
| 14% | ₹6,00,000 | ₹54,54,555 | ₹48,54,555 |
| 15% | ₹6,00,000 | ₹65,68,147 | ₹59,68,147 |
A ₹2,000/month SIP is a solid commitment that many salaried professionals can sustain comfortably. At this level, you are investing seriously enough to build meaningful wealth over time. A 25-year SIP tenure is where compounding truly transforms wealth. At this horizon, short-term market volatility becomes irrelevant. A ₹2,000/month SIP invested for 25 years turns ₹6.0L of principal into ₹38.0L — a wealth gain of ₹32.0L.
At a 12% annualised return — the long-run historical average for diversified equity mutual funds in India — a ₹2,000/month SIP for 25 years produces a corpus of ₹38.0L. This is enough to fund a solid down payment on a home in a Tier 2 city, full funding for a child's graduation, or a comfortable retirement corpus supplement. Of course, actual returns will vary, but this gives you a realistic benchmark for goal planning.
The power of compounding is clearly visible in this SIP: your ₹6.0L investment grows to ₹38.0L, generating ₹32.0L in wealth gain (533% return on invested capital). Notably, roughly ₹31.5L of your total wealth gain — more than half — is generated in the second half of the 25-year period. This is the compounding snowball effect: the longer you stay invested, the faster your corpus grows.
This table shows how your SIP corpus builds year by year, assuming 12% annual returns — the long-run historical average for diversified equity funds.
| Year | Total Invested | Corpus Value | Wealth Gain |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | ₹24,000 | ₹25,619 | ₹1,619 |
| Year 2 | ₹48,000 | ₹54,486 | ₹6,486 |
| Year 3 | ₹72,000 | ₹87,015 | ₹15,015 |
| Year 4 | ₹96,000 | ₹1,23,670 | ₹27,670 |
| Year 5 | ₹1,20,000 | ₹1,64,973 | ₹44,973 |
For a 25-year SIP, you have maximum flexibility to take risk and benefit from long-term compounding: Small Cap Funds — historically highest returns over long horizons (15%+ CAGR), suitable for 20+ year tenures; Mid Cap Funds — strong risk-adjusted returns; Large Cap Index Funds — stable core holding; International/Global Funds — geographic diversification against INR depreciation. A classic allocation: 40% large cap index + 30% mid cap + 20% small cap + 10% international.
Calculate with different amounts, rates, and tenures
Open SIP Calculator →At 12% annual returns, a ₹2,000/month SIP for 25 years gives a maturity corpus of ₹37,95,270. Your total investment is ₹6,00,000 and the wealth gain is ₹31,95,270.
At 8%: ₹19,14,733. At 10%: ₹26,75,781. At 12%: ₹37,95,270. At 15%: ₹65,68,147. Returns are not guaranteed — equity mutual funds can deliver higher or lower depending on market conditions.
SIP returns are subject to capital gains tax. For equity mutual funds held for more than 1 year, gains above ₹1 lakh/year are taxed at 12.5% (LTCG). ELSS SIPs have a 3-year lock-in but qualify for Section 80C deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh/year.
Yes — this is the entire benefit of SIP. When markets fall, your ₹2,000 buys more units at lower prices (rupee cost averaging). Stopping a SIP during a downturn defeats the purpose and locks in temporary losses.
For a 25-year horizon, a diversified equity mutual fund — large cap index fund (Nifty 50 or Sensex) combined with a mid cap fund — is a strong choice. For higher risk appetite, include a small cap fund component.