Deep guide · India
Lumpsum calculator — one-time investment growth
Deploy ₹5,00,000 once at 17% a year for 1 years, and this illustration lands near ₹5,85,000 — about ₹85,000 in growth on top of principal. Weigh that against drip-feeding the same capacity through monthly SIPs when you think about timing risk.
A lumpsum puts every rupee to work from day one — strong when you accept today’s entry level and can stay long; harder when you prefer to average in. The math here uses one annual compounding step for clarity; it is not a scheme document.
What follows: your baseline, tenure and principal grids, return sensitivity, and a SIP contrast. Market-linked funds do not promise the assumed rate.
How this lumpsum growth model works
We apply the stated annual return once per year to the running balance — a simple compounding loop that separates principal, accumulated interest, and maturity. Real mutual funds mark to market daily; this model smooths returns into one annual step so you can compare scenarios quickly.
Calculation breakdown
- Principal: ₹5,00,000
- Estimated interest: ₹85,000
- Estimated maturity: ₹5,85,000
Scenario comparison
Different tenures
| Years | Interest | Maturity |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | ₹5,96,224 | ₹10,96,224 |
| 10 | ₹19,03,414 | ₹24,03,414 |
| 15 | ₹47,69,361 | ₹52,69,361 |
| 20 | ₹1,10,52,800 | ₹1,15,52,800 |
Different principal amounts (±15–25%)
| Scenario | Principal | Interest | Maturity |
|---|---|---|---|
| -25% vs base | ₹3,75,000 | ₹63,750 | ₹4,38,750 |
| -15% vs base | ₹4,25,000 | ₹72,250 | ₹4,97,250 |
| 15% vs base | ₹5,75,000 | ₹97,750 | ₹6,72,750 |
| 25% vs base | ₹6,25,000 | ₹1,06,250 | ₹7,31,250 |
Different return assumptions (same P and tenure)
| Scenario | Rate | Interest | Maturity |
|---|---|---|---|
| -25% vs base | 12.8% | ₹64,000 | ₹5,64,000 |
| -15% vs base | 14.5% | ₹72,500 | ₹5,72,500 |
| Base rate | 17% | ₹85,000 | ₹5,85,000 |
| 15% vs base | 19.5% | ₹97,500 | ₹5,97,500 |
| 25% vs base | 20% | ₹1,00,000 | ₹6,00,000 |
Comparison: lumpsum vs SIP (illustrative)
For perspective, an illustrative SIP of ₹41,667 per month at 12% for 1 years could land near ₹5,33,726 — different risk/return path than a one-time lumpsum; not a recommendation.
Lumpsum vs SIP is not a moral choice — it is a cash-flow and risk trade-off. If you already hold a large corpus, lumpsum deployment may be appropriate; if you are early in your career, SIPs can enforce discipline. Use both calculators on EasyCal to stress-test assumptions.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the future value of ₹5,00,000 at 17% for 1 years?
- Under annual compounding (illustrative), maturity is about ₹5,85,000 with interest near ₹85,000. Actual mutual fund lumpsum returns are not guaranteed.
- Lumpsum vs SIP — which is better?
- Lumpsum deploys capital immediately; SIP spreads entries over time. Risk/return profiles differ — use both calculators for perspective.
- Is this mutual fund lumpsum calculator India specific?
- It uses rupee amounts and common search intent for Indian investors; returns are illustrative, not a fund quote.
- Does this include tax?
- No — capital gains tax rules vary by asset and holding period.
- Can I change the return assumption?
- Yes — rerun with a lower rate for conservative planning.
- Where can I explore more scenarios?
- Use the internal links below for nearby principals, tenures, and rates.
Internal linking — related lumpsum calculator pages
Explore nearby scenarios on EasyCal — each link opens a calculator page with matching inputs (programmatic SEO).
- Lumpsum — 6 lakh · 1 years @ 17%
- Lumpsum — 7 lakh · 1 years @ 17%
- Lumpsum — 10 lakh · 1 years @ 17%
- Lumpsum — 15 lakh · 1 years @ 17%
- Lumpsum — 4 lakh · 1 years @ 17%
- Lumpsum — 3 lakh · 1 years @ 17%
- Lumpsum — 0.1 lakh · 1 years @ 17%
- Lumpsum — 20 lakh · 1 years @ 17%
- Lumpsum — 5 lakh · 3 years @ 17%
- Lumpsum — 5 lakh · 6 years @ 17%
Illustrative compounding only — not investment advice.
