SIP Calculator India 2024 — Step-Up SIP & LTCG Returns | LazyTools

SIP Calculator India 2024

Calculate mutual fund SIP returns with step-up SIP, multiple return scenarios (10%, 12%, 15%), LTCG tax post-Finance Act 2024 (in force from 23 July 2024), and goal-based reverse planning. Find the monthly SIP needed to reach your corpus target.

Step-up SIP calculatorLTCG tax 2024 includedGoal-based reverse planningInflation-adjusted returns

SIP Calculator India Tool

SIP investment details
Reset
Step-up SIP increases your monthly amount by the step-up % each year. LTCG tax of 12.5% applies on equity fund gains above Rs.1.25 lakh.
Enter values and click Calculate
Estimated corpus at maturity
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Total amount invested
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Rs. principal invested
Total returns earned
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Rs. gain on investment
Absolute return %
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% total gain
LTCG tax (est.)
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Rs. tax if equity fund
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★ Key features

Why use this free sip calculator india?

Built with the inputs and context most competing calculators skip - deeper parameters, current rates, and actionable results.

📈
Step-up SIP calculator
Annual increment percentage increases monthly SIP to match income growth.
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LTCG tax post-Finance Act 2024 (in force from 23 July 2024)
Applies 12.5% LTCG above Rs.1.25 lakh as per Budget 2024 changes.
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Goal-based reverse mode
Enter target corpus in FAQs - reverse calculation shows required monthly SIP.
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Total invested vs returns
Clear split between principal invested and returns earned.
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Absolute return percentage
Shows total gain as percentage of principal alongside corpus.
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Free, browser-based
No data sent to server. 100% private.
📄 How to use

How to use this sip calculator india

1
Enter monthly SIP amount
The amount you plan to invest each month.
2
Set duration and expected return
Investment period in years and expected annual return percentage.
3
Add step-up if applicable
Enter annual percentage increase in SIP amount (0 for flat SIP).
4
Click Calculate
See corpus, invested amount, returns, and estimated LTCG tax.
📚 Reference

SIP corpus comparison: Rs.10,000/month at different returns and durations

Duration10% p.a.12% p.a.15% p.a.15% + 10% step-up
5 yearsRs.7.7LRs.8.2LRs.8.9LRs.10.1L
10 yearsRs.20.5LRs.23.2LRs.27.9LRs.38.5L
15 yearsRs.41.4LRs.50.2LRs.67.7LRs.1.1Cr
20 yearsRs.76.6LRs.1.0CrRs.1.5CrRs.2.9Cr
25 yearsRs.1.3CrRs.1.9CrRs.3.2CrRs.6.8Cr
30 yearsRs.2.3CrRs.3.5CrRs.6.9CrRs.16Cr
📈 vs the competition

How this calculator compares

LazyTools fills the gaps most competing tools leave open - current rates, deeper inputs, and actionable context.

FeatureLazyToolsET MoneyGrowwZerodha Coin
Step-up SIP✓ Yes
LTCG tax calculation (2024)✓ Yes
Absolute return %✓ Yes
Invested vs returns split✓ Yes
No app required✓ Yes
Free, no registration✓ Yes
📖 Complete guide

SIP Calculator India: Complete Guide

SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) is the most widely recommended investment strategy in India for retail mutual fund investors. The combination of regular investing discipline, rupee cost averaging, and the power of compounding over long periods makes SIP particularly effective for wealth creation goals.

The power of step-up SIP

The most underused SIP feature is the annual step-up. Consider Rs.5,000/month for 20 years at 12% - the corpus is approximately Rs.49.4 lakh with Rs.12 lakh invested. Now add a 10% annual step-up: the corpus grows to approximately Rs.1.03 crore with Rs.34.3 lakh invested. The step-up version produces 2x the corpus by simply increasing the SIP amount in line with typical salary growth.

LTCG tax on equity SIP after Budget 2024

The Union Budget July 2024 changed equity mutual fund LTCG tax: rate increased from 10% to 12.5%, and the exemption limit increased from Rs.1 lakh to Rs.1.25 lakh per financial year. Gains from equity funds held over 12 months are long-term. Short-term gains (held under 12 months) are taxed at 20% STCG (increased from 15% in Budget 2024). For large SIP portfolios, the LTCG tax can be a significant consideration when redeeming.

SIP vs Fixed Deposit: the compounding advantage

A 10-year SIP at 12% return vs FD at 7%: Rs.10,000/month SIP gives approximately Rs.23.2 lakh with Rs.12 lakh invested. The same amount in a recurring deposit at 7% gives Rs.17.4 lakh. The equity SIP delivers Rs.5.8 lakh more - a 33% advantage despite market volatility risk. Over 20 years, the gap becomes much wider due to compounding.

Best practices for SIP investors

Key recommendations: (1) Never stop SIP during market downturns - you buy more units at lower prices. (2) Set up ECS mandate so SIP runs automatically. (3) Review fund performance annually, not monthly. (4) Activate step-up at the start rather than increasing manually. (5) Consider different funds for different goals (aggressive equity for 10+ year goals, balanced for 5-7 years, debt for under 3 years). (6) Keep LTCG within Rs.1.25 lakh annually through strategic partial redemptions.

Frequently asked questions

A Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) is a method of investing a fixed amount in a mutual fund at regular intervals (typically monthly). The power of SIP lies in rupee cost averaging - you buy more units when NAV is low and fewer when NAV is high - and compounding, where returns on previous gains generate further returns over time.
Step-up SIP (also called top-up SIP) automatically increases your monthly SIP amount by a fixed percentage each year. For example, starting at Rs.5,000 with a 10% annual step-up means Rs.5,500 in year 2, Rs.6,050 in year 3, and so on. This aligns your investment with income growth and dramatically increases the final corpus compared to a flat SIP.
From the Union Budget 2024 (July 2024), Long Term Capital Gains (LTCG) on equity mutual funds are taxed at 12.5% (increased from 10%) on gains above Rs.1.25 lakh per year (increased from Rs.1 lakh). Equity mutual funds held for more than 12 months qualify as long-term. Each SIP instalment has its own 12-month holding clock.
Historical data for large-cap Indian equity mutual funds shows 10-year CAGR of approximately 12-15% depending on the period and fund. Mid-cap and small-cap funds have shown higher but more volatile returns (15-20% CAGR over 10 years in some cases). For planning purposes, 10-12% is a conservative estimate for diversified equity funds; 12-15% is moderate.
SIP return is calculated using the compound interest formula applied month-by-month: each monthly instalment compounds at the monthly equivalent of the annual return rate. Monthly rate = Annual rate / 12. The formula is: FV = P x [(1+r)^n - 1] / r x (1+r), where P is monthly instalment, r is monthly rate, and n is number of months.
Most equity mutual funds in India allow SIP from as low as Rs.100 to Rs.500 per month. Index funds and ETF-based funds often have lower minimums. Elss funds used for tax saving can also be started from Rs.500/month. There is no upper limit on SIP amounts.
SIP is better when markets are volatile or at high valuations - it averages your purchase price over time. Lumpsum is theoretically better when markets are at low valuations, as you capture the full upside from a low base. In practice, since timing markets is difficult, SIP is recommended for regular income earners. Combining both (lumpsum when you have surplus + regular SIP) optimises returns.
XIRR (Extended Internal Rate of Return) is the most accurate measure of SIP returns because it accounts for the timing of each cash flow (each monthly instalment goes in on a different date). Unlike a simple CAGR which works only for single-period investments, XIRR correctly calculates the annualised return from irregular and regular periodic investments.

How to use this calculator for tax planning

Financial calculations are most valuable when used proactively - before making decisions, not after. Use this calculator to model different scenarios: what happens if you increase the investment amount by 20%? What if the tenure changes by 5 years? What if the interest rate moves by 1%? Scenario modelling with a calculator is free and takes minutes, but the decisions it informs can save or earn lakhs of rupees over a lifetime. Revisit your calculations annually as rates, tax rules, and personal circumstances change - the financial landscape in India evolves significantly year to year.

Regulatory and rate changes in effect for 2025-26

The current financial year 2025-26 (April 2025 to March 2026) applies the following key rates and rules. In India: LTCG on equity funds is 12.5% above Rs.1.25 lakh (Finance Act 2024, in force since 23 July 2024). STCG on equity is 20%. Small savings scheme rates stable: PPF 7.1%, SSY 8.2%, POMIS 7.4%. In the UK (2026/27 tax year): Employee NI 8%, employer NI 15% above £5,000. CGT 18%/24% on all assets. BADR 18% from 6 April 2026. Always verify current rates with official sources (income tax India: incometax.gov.in; HMRC UK: gov.uk/government/organisations/hm-revenue-customs) before making significant financial decisions.

Common mistakes in personal finance calculations

The most common errors in personal financial planning: (1) Using pre-tax return rates when the investment is taxable - always compare on a post-tax basis. (2) Ignoring inflation when planning long-term goals - Rs.10 lakh needed in 20 years requires Rs.32 lakh at 6% inflation. (3) Not accounting for charges: expense ratio on mutual funds, processing fee on loans, and withdrawal penalties on fixed income instruments all reduce actual returns. (4) Planning for best-case returns rather than conservative estimates - model at 10% return, not 15%, for long-term equity SIP projections. (5) Treating past performance as future guarantee - historical equity fund returns have been volatile decade to decade.

Privacy and data security

All calculations on LazyTools run entirely in your browser using JavaScript. No input data - salary, investment amounts, loan details, or personal information - is transmitted to any server, stored in any database, or shared with any third party. The calculator works offline once the page has loaded (except Google Fonts). LazyTools is monetised through Google AdSense display advertising, which uses advertising cookies independent of calculator functionality. If you prefer completely ad-free use, your browser's reading mode or a content blocker will hide the ad units without affecting the calculator.

Linking this calculator to your broader financial plan

No single financial calculator exists in isolation. Take-home pay calculations feed into EMI affordability checks. Loan EMI calculations feed into investment capacity planning. Investment corpus calculations feed into retirement income planning. Use the related tools linked below to build a complete picture of your financial position. A comprehensive financial plan typically covers: income and tax optimisation (salary structure, HRA, 80C investments); debt management (home loan, car loan, personal loan); medium-term savings (SIP, ELSS, PPF, RD); and long-term retirement planning (EPF, NPS, SSY for daughter). Each LazyTools calculator addresses one piece of this puzzle.

Getting the most from this calculator

For the best results, revisit this calculator whenever your financial situation changes: salary increment, change in loan, new investment, or a change in tax rules. Financial calculations are dynamic - a 1% change in interest rate or return can significantly alter outcomes over 10-20 year horizons. LazyTools calculators are updated to reflect current rates and tax rules. Bookmark this page and return annually to recalibrate your financial plan. If you are making a significant financial decision - taking a large loan, making a major investment, or restructuring your salary - consider consulting a certified financial planner (CFP) or chartered accountant (CA) alongside using this calculator. Free calculators provide accurate mathematical output but cannot replace personalised professional advice that accounts for your specific circumstances, goals, risk tolerance, and legal situation.

Frequently missed optimisations in personal finance

Most people focus on the obvious aspects of financial planning - saving more, investing more - and miss structural optimisations that can deliver equivalent results with no extra money. For salaried employees: salary restructuring (maximising HRA, food coupons, transport allowance, LTA) can reduce taxable income by Rs.60,000-1,20,000 per year without spending more. For borrowers: matching loan prepayment with annual bonus cycles (rather than keeping bonus in savings) can save more in interest than the savings account earns. For investors: booking Rs.1.25 lakh of equity gains annually (the LTCG exemption under Finance Act 2024) and immediately reinvesting effectively eliminates LTCG tax on growing portfolios. For retirees: sequencing withdrawals from taxable accounts first (FD, RD) and preserving tax-free accounts (PPF, EPFO) as long as possible minimises lifetime tax. These structural moves require no additional cash flow - just informed decision-making, which is exactly what these calculators are designed to support.

Sources and authoritative references

This calculator uses rates and rules from the following official sources. Verify current rates before making financial decisions, as these can change:

LazyTools calculators are updated to reflect legislative changes. Last verified: May 2026. This tool provides mathematical calculations only and does not constitute financial or tax advice. Consult a qualified accountant or financial adviser for decisions affecting your specific circumstances.

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