SIP Investing Explained: How Small Amounts Build Big Wealth
A Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) lets you invest a fixed amount — say ₹5,000 — into a mutual fund every month. It is the simplest, most disciplined way for salaried Indians to build wealth, because it turns investing into a habit and harnesses the power of compounding over time.
Use the free SIP Calculator →
Why SIPs work: compounding + averaging
Two forces drive SIP returns:
- Compounding: your returns earn returns. A ₹10,000 monthly SIP at an assumed 12% annual return grows to roughly ₹23 lakh in 10 years — of which only ₹12 lakh is your own investment; the rest is growth.
- Rupee-cost averaging: because you invest the same amount each month, you automatically buy more units when prices are low and fewer when high, smoothing out market ups and downs.
The longer you stay, the steeper it climbs
SIP wealth is back-loaded — the biggest gains come in the later years as the corpus compounds on itself. Starting early, even with a small amount, usually beats starting late with a large one. A ₹5,000 SIP begun at 25 typically ends up larger at 60 than a ₹10,000 SIP begun at 35.
How to start a SIP in India
- Complete your KYC (PAN, Aadhaar) — done online in minutes through any mutual fund app or platform.
- Pick a fund that matches your goal and risk appetite (index funds are a low-cost starting point).
- Set the SIP amount and date; the money is auto-debited each month.
- Increase it yearly as your income grows — see the Step-up SIP Calculator.
A realistic word on returns
Mutual funds are market-linked, so returns are not guaranteed and past performance doesn't predict the future. The 12% figure often used in calculators is an assumption for equity funds over the long term, not a promise. Always match your fund choice to how long you can stay invested.
FAQs
Can I stop or pause a SIP?
Yes. SIPs are flexible — you can pause, increase, decrease or stop them without penalty (though staying invested longer usually helps).
SIP or lump sum?
For regular salary earners, SIP is usually the practical choice. If you have a large idle amount, compare both using the Lumpsum Calculator.
Open the SIP Calculator →