SIP for ₹60,000 Salary – How Much & Where
With a ₹60,000 monthly take-home, aim for 23% in SIP — that's ₹14,000/month. At 12% returns over 20 years, this builds a corpus of ₹1,39,88,071. Over 30 years (long career): ₹4,94,18,793.
The 50/30/20 Breakdown at ₹60,000
- 50% Needs (₹30,000): Rent, groceries, utilities, transportation, insurance premiums
- 30% Wants (₹18,000): Dining out, entertainment, subscriptions, non-essential shopping
- 20% Savings (₹12,000): Emergency fund + SIP + extra debt prepayment
In the savings bucket, prioritize: (1) Build emergency fund first (~₹300,000 = 5 months), (2) Start SIP at ₹14,000/month, (3) Step up 10% annually with salary growth.
Where to Invest the SIP
For a ₹60,000 earner starting out, a simple 2-fund portfolio works:
- ₹9,800 (~70%) in Nifty 50 index fund (direct plan, low expense ratio)
- ₹4,200 (~30%) in a flexi-cap active fund (10+ year track record)
Read our fund selection guide for detailed criteria. Avoid ULIPs, endowment plans, and dividend options — stick to growth-option direct plans.
What ₹1,39,88,071 Can Buy in 20 Years
Your projected corpus of ₹1,39,88,071 can fund:
- A comfortable retirement with ₹559,522/month passive income (4% safe withdrawal)
- Top-tier Indian college education for two children (₹15–25 lakh each)
- A Tier-1 city property down-payment plus emergency fund
- Financial independence 10–15 years ahead of traditional retirement
Step-up SIP Impact at ₹60,000
Starting at ₹14,000 and growing 10% annually over 20 years creates a corpus of approximately ₹2,09,82,106 — a significant increase over flat SIP, with only your salary growth funding the escalation. Enable step-up on day one via your AMC.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much SIP should I do with ₹60,000/month salary?
With a ₹60,000/month take-home, aim for roughly 23% in SIP — that's ₹14,000/month. At 12% returns over 20 years, this grows to ₹1,39,88,071. Over 30 years, ₹4,94,18,793.
Can I afford SIP on ₹60,000/month?
Yes, absolutely. Before starting SIP, build an emergency fund of ₹300,000 (=5 months' expenses) in a liquid fund or savings account. Then start SIP — automate it on salary day so you treat it as a non-negotiable expense.
What's the 50/30/20 rule for ₹60,000/month?
50% (₹30,000) needs: rent, groceries, utilities. 30% (₹18,000) wants: entertainment, dining, subscriptions. 20% (₹12,000) savings/SIP. Adjust 20% upward toward 25–35% once lifestyle is stable.
How do I increase my SIP over time?
Use step-up SIP: enable 10–15% annual SIP increase on your AMC platform. Tied to salary growth, this doesn't feel painful but nearly doubles your final corpus over 20 years.
What fund categories should I start with?
Simple 2-fund start: 70–80% in Nifty 50 index fund (lowest cost core), 20–30% in a flexi-cap fund (growth booster). Review annually but don't switch on short-term performance.