₹50,000 SIP for 5 Years
Invest ₹50,000 per month for 5 years. At 12% annual returns your ₹30,00,000 investment grows to ₹41,24,318. Adjust the calculator below or scan the year-by-year projection table.
Summary at a Glance
Over 5 years, a ₹50,000 monthly SIP accumulates ₹30,00,000 in contributions. At 8% returns you end with ₹36,98,335; at 10%, ₹39,04,119; at 12%, ₹41,24,318; at 15%, ₹44,84,084. The difference between 10% and 15% — only five percentage points — is ₹5,79,965 in maturity value. This is the practical power of compounding over a 5-year horizon.
Year-by-Year Growth of ₹50,000 Monthly SIP
How your corpus grows each year at three benchmark return rates.
| Year | Invested | @ 10% | @ 12% | @ 15% |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ₹6,00,000 | ₹6,33,514 | ₹6,40,466 | ₹6,51,056 |
| 2 | ₹12,00,000 | ₹13,33,365 | ₹13,62,160 | ₹14,06,772 |
| 3 | ₹18,00,000 | ₹21,06,500 | ₹21,75,382 | ₹22,83,972 |
| 4 | ₹24,00,000 | ₹29,60,592 | ₹30,91,742 | ₹33,02,187 |
| 5 | ₹30,00,000 | ₹39,04,119 | ₹41,24,318 | ₹44,84,084 |
Is ₹50,000/Month for 5 Years the Right Plan for You?
A ₹50,000 monthly SIP sustained for 5 years is a specific commitment: ₹600,000 every year, ₹30,00,000 across the full tenure. The right question isn't whether the number looks big but whether it's sustainable. A rule of thumb: your monthly SIP should be no more than 25–30% of your take-home pay if you also have EMIs and living costs, and ideally you have a 6-month emergency fund parked in liquid funds or FD before committing to a long-horizon equity SIP.
At the 5-year mark, compounding contribution to final value is substantial. Of the ₹41,24,318 you hold at 12%, only ₹30,00,000 is your own money — the rest, ₹11,24,318, is market-driven compounding. This ratio grows dramatically with tenure: a 10-year SIP is mostly your capital with modest gains, while a 25-year SIP is mostly gains with modest capital. If you can stretch the horizon or amount, the curve bends sharply in your favor.
Fund allocation for a 5-year horizon: Balanced allocation. Consider 50–60% equity with 40–50% debt to manage shorter-horizon volatility.
Step-up reality check: If you increase this ₹50,000 SIP by just 10% annually, your final 5-year corpus at 12% would be roughly ₹49,22,852 instead of ₹41,24,318 — an increase of about 19%. Most salaried investors can afford this because their income also grows annually.
₹50,000 SIP for 5 Years — FAQs
How much does ₹50,000 SIP grow in 5 years?
₹50,000 monthly SIP over 5 years grows to ₹41,24,318 at 12% annual returns. At 15% it reaches ₹44,84,084, and at 10% it is ₹39,04,119. Your total invested is ₹30,00,000.
Is 5 years enough time for a ₹50,000 SIP?
5 years lets compounding do meaningful work. Over this horizon your ₹30,00,000 grows roughly 1.4x at 12% — ₹41,24,318 total. Equity-oriented funds historically deliver 11–14% CAGR over such durations.
How is ₹50,000 SIP for 5 years calculated?
We apply the SIP formula FV = P × [((1+r)^n – 1)/r] × (1+r) with P = ₹50,000, monthly rate r = annual/12/100, and n = 60 months. Monthly compounding, annuity-due convention.
What return rate should I assume for a ₹50,000 SIP?
A conservative planning figure is 12% CAGR for diversified equity mutual funds. Aggressive mid/small-cap SIPs can target 14–15% but with higher drawdowns. Debt SIPs return 6–8%.
Can I change the ₹50,000 SIP amount later?
Yes. Most platforms allow you to modify or cancel the SIP any time. A smarter move is a step-up SIP — increase your contribution 10% annually to match salary growth. Over the full tenure this boosts the final corpus 30–60% versus flat contributions.