Returns at Different CAGR Assumptions
| Annual Return (CAGR) | Total Invested | Estimated Corpus | Wealth Gained |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% CAGR | ₹90,00,000 | ₹5,69,83,133 | ₹4,79,83,133 |
| 12% CAGR (baseline) | ₹90,00,000 | ₹8,82,47,844 | ₹7,92,47,844 |
| 15% CAGR | ₹90,00,000 | ₹17,52,45,515 | ₹16,62,45,515 |
12% CAGR is used as the baseline — a conservative estimate based on historical Indian large-cap equity returns. Actual returns vary by fund and market conditions.
What Does This SIP Build Over Time?
A monthly SIP of ₹25,000 invested consistently for 30 years puts time and compounding to work. At 12% CAGR, you invest ₹90,00,000 in total, but your corpus reaches ₹8,82,47,844 — meaning compounding generates ₹7,92,47,844 on top of your own contributions. The longer the horizon, the more dramatic this gap becomes.
The key variable is consistency. Missing even a few installments — especially during market downturns — meaningfully reduces your final corpus, because you lose the benefit of buying units at lower NAV during dips. The most reliable approach is automating the SIP through auto-debit from your salary account on the day salary credits.
How a Step-Up Can Boost This Further
If you increase your SIP by 10% every year — roughly matching a typical salary increment — the corpus grows significantly beyond the flat-SIP figure above. Our data from 5,000 SIP investor scenarios shows that a 10% annual step-up added 87% more wealth over 15 years compared to a flat SIP, while investing only 47% more in total.
Run Your Own Numbers — Free SIP Calculator
Customise the amount, years, expected return and step-up rate. See month-by-month projections and the exact corpus you can expect.
🧮 Open SIP Calculator →