Your Financial Goal

Goal Funding Plan

Future Goal Value
₹26,76,451
In 5 years (incl. 6% inflation)
Today’s Goal Value₹20,00,000
Existing Savings Growth₹3,37,028
Funding Gap₹23,39,423
Required Monthly SIP₹29,265
Required Lumpsum (Today)₹13,89,212
Total Investment via SIP₹17,55,900
Funding Mix
Corpus Progress

Goal-Based Financial Planning

Goal-based investing is the bedrock of personal finance. Instead of “saving for the future” vaguely, you set specific targets — home down payment in 5 years, child’s education in 15 years, retirement in 25 years — and compute exactly what you need to invest each month to achieve each.

The Goal Planning Framework

  1. Define: What, how much (today’s value), when
  2. Inflate: Apply inflation to get future cost
  3. Subtract: Existing savings (grown at expected return)
  4. Compute: Required monthly SIP or lumpsum to bridge gap
  5. Allocate: Asset mix appropriate to time horizon
  6. Review: Annually adjust for market performance, income changes, life events

Common Life Goals + Typical Costs (FY 2025-26)

GoalToday’s Cost (Range)Inflation Rate
Emergency Fund6-12 months expenses (₹3-12L)6%
International Vacation₹3-10 lakh7-8%
New Car (Mid-segment)₹10-20 lakh5-7%
Premium Wedding (Tier-1 city)₹20-50 lakh8-10%
Home Down Payment (Metro)₹20-50 lakh5-7%
Higher Education (India MBA)₹25-30 lakh10-12%
Foreign Undergrad (USA)₹1-1.5 crore8% (in USD)
Retirement Corpus (Comfortable)₹3-10 crore6%
Business Setup₹10-100 lakh7-8%

Asset Allocation by Time Horizon

Years to GoalEquityDebtGold/REITExpected Return
< 1 year0%100% (Liquid)0%6-7%
1-3 years20%70%10%7-9%
3-5 years50%40%10%9-11%
5-10 years70%20%10%10-12%
10-15 years80%10%10%11-13%
15+ years85%5%10%11-14%

Time enables risk-taking. Shorter goals must be in safer instruments to protect capital. Longer goals can ride equity volatility for higher returns.

Worked Examples — Three Common Goals

Goal 1: ₹20L Home Down Payment in 5 Years

Today’s value₹20,00,000
Future value (@ 6% inflation)₹26,76,451
Required Monthly SIP @ 11%₹29,265
Mix50% equity + 40% debt + 10% gold

Goal 2: ₹50L Wedding in 10 Years

Future value (@ 8% inflation)₹1.08 crore
Required SIP @ 12%₹47,000/month
Mix70% equity + 20% debt + 10% gold

Goal 3: ₹5 Crore Retirement in 30 Years

Future value (corpus needed at retirement)₹5 crore (today’s value)
Inflation-adjusted at retirement (@ 6%)₹28.7 crore
Required SIP @ 12%₹83,000/month
Mix (today)85% equity + 10% debt + 5% gold

SIP vs Lumpsum vs Step-Up SIP

ApproachProsWhen to Use
Regular SIPDiscipline, rupee cost averaging, fits salaried incomeDefault approach for all goals
LumpsumHigher returns if market rises immediatelyBonus, inheritance, asset sale
Step-Up SIP (5-10%/year)Matches income growth, easier on early yearsLong-horizon goals (10+ years)
Front-loaded SIPMaximum compounding benefitIf you can do 80% of total in early years
Goal-based SWP (later)Tax-efficient withdrawalRetirement or recurring goals

Multi-Goal Funding Priority

When you have many competing goals, prioritise by life stage and importance:

  1. Tier 1 (Cannot fail): Emergency Fund (6 months), Term Insurance, Health Insurance
  2. Tier 2 (Critical): Retirement (start by 25), Child Education
  3. Tier 3 (Important): Home Down Payment, Vehicle, Wedding
  4. Tier 4 (Nice to have): Vacations, Lifestyle Upgrades, Hobbies

Allocate your investible surplus in this order. Most Indians miss Tier 1 entirely (no emergency fund + under-insured) which causes financial disaster when bad things happen.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many goals should I plan for at once?

Most middle-class Indians juggle 4-6 goals: retirement + child education + home + car + emergency + vacation. Prioritise; you don’t need to fund all simultaneously. Tier them by importance and start with top 3.

What inflation rate should I use?

Goal-specific. CPI (5-6%) for general consumer goods, lifestyle. Education: 10-12%. Healthcare: 12-14%. Real estate: 5-8% (Tier-1), 3-5% (Tier-2). Foreign goals: include INR depreciation 3-4%.

Should I save in PPF or SIP for goals?

Depends on horizon. <3 years: PPF can’t help (15-year lock-in). 5-7 years: split 50:50 PPF + Equity. 10+ years: predominantly equity SIPs. PPF is best for retirement, not short-term goals.

How do I track multiple goals?

Use a single Excel sheet or app (CashKaro, ET Money, Kuvera goal tracker). Update quarterly. Map each fund/investment to a specific goal. Avoid ‘mingled’ portfolios without goal labels.

What if I can’t afford the calculated SIP?

Two options: (a) Lower the goal (smaller car, less ambitious wedding), (b) Increase tenure (postpone goal by 2-3 years dramatically reduces SIP). Don’t compromise on retirement to fund discretionary goals.

Should I borrow to fund a goal?

Generally NO. Loans for appreciating assets (home — Yes). Loans for depreciating (car — Acceptable if EMI <15% of income). Loans for consumption (vacation, wedding — strongly Avoid).

How does Section 80C help with goal planning?

80C investments (PPF, ELSS, SSY, NSC, EPF) save up to ₹46,800/year tax in 30% slab. Direct effective return uplift. Use 80C strategically for long-term goals.

What’s the difference between need-based and want-based goals?

Need-based: retirement, child education, healthcare, basic shelter — non-negotiable. Want-based: foreign vacation, luxury car, second home — optional. Distinguish ruthlessly; underfunding needs to fund wants is a common mistake.

Should I take more risk for short-term goals?

NO. Short-term goals (<3 years) cannot recover from market correction. Use Liquid/Short Duration MFs, FDs. Reserve equity for goals 7+ years out.

How often should I review my goal plan?

Annually (full review) plus after major life events (marriage, job change, child birth, parent’s health). Adjust contributions if income changes or markets behave very differently from assumption.

Can I switch goals (e.g., car money for emergency)?

Yes — but be deliberate. Note: if you tap a fund for a different goal, the original goal needs new funding plan. Worst pattern: dipping into retirement for current needs.

Is a financial planner needed for goal-based investing?

DIY works for simple cases (few goals, moderate income). Engage a SEBI-registered fee-only planner if: net worth >₹50L, complex multi-goal scenario, significant inheritance, NRI returning to India, or near retirement (5 years).