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Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) Calculator

Estimate returns from a Systematic Investment Plan (SIP). Enter monthly amount, expected return, and duration to see projected wealth accumulation.

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Finance & Investing

SIP Calculator

Calculate SIP returns for Indian mutual fund investments. Enter monthly amount, expected return, and tenure to see future value, total invested, and wealth gained using rupee cost averaging.

Last updated: January 2026Reviewed by NovaCalculator Finance Editorial Team

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Formula

FV = P x [(1+r)^n - 1] / r x (1+r)

SIP uses the future value of annuity-due formula. P = monthly investment, r = monthly rate of return (annual/12), n = total months. The (1+r) factor accounts for beginning-of-period investment.

Last reviewed: January 2026

Worked Examples

Example 1: โ‚น10,000/mo for 10 years

โ‚น10,000 monthly, 12% annual return, 10 years
Solution:
FV = 10,000 x [(1.01)^120 - 1] / 0.01 x 1.01 = โ‚น23,23,391
Result: โ‚น23.23 lakhs (invested โ‚น12 lakhs)
Expert Insights

Background & Theory

The SIP Calculator applies the following established principles and formulas. Finance and investing rest on the foundational concept of the time value of money: a dollar received today is worth more than a dollar received in the future, because present funds can be deployed to earn a return. This principle underlies virtually every valuation technique in modern finance. The future value of a present sum P growing at rate r over n periods is expressed as FV = P(1 + r)^n, while the present value of a future cash flow FV is PV = FV / (1 + r)^n. Compound growth amplifies returns significantly over long horizons, a dynamic often described as the eighth wonder of the world. Net Present Value (NPV) extends these mechanics to evaluate investment projects by summing the present values of all expected cash flows minus the initial outlay: NPV = sum[CF_t / (1 + r)^t] - C_0. A positive NPV indicates the project creates value above the required return. The Internal Rate of Return (IRR) is the discount rate that sets NPV to zero, providing a single percentage benchmark for project comparison. The risk-return tradeoff is the central tension of investment theory. Higher expected returns generally require accepting greater uncertainty. Harry Markowitz formalized this in Modern Portfolio Theory by demonstrating that portfolio variance can be reduced through diversification when assets are imperfectly correlated. The efficient frontier represents the set of portfolios offering the maximum return for a given level of risk. The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) extends this by introducing the market portfolio as a reference, defining expected return as E(r) = r_f + beta * (E(r_m) - r_f), where beta measures an asset's sensitivity to systematic market risk. Asset classes โ€” equities, fixed income, real assets, and alternatives โ€” differ in their return profiles, liquidity, and correlations. Strategic asset allocation determines long-run target weights based on investor objectives and risk tolerance, while tactical allocation permits short-run deviations to exploit perceived mispricings. Discount rates used in valuation models must reflect the cost of capital appropriate to the risk of the cash flows being discounted, a point stressed in corporate finance texts from Brealey, Myers, and Allen through to Damodaran.

History

The history behind the SIP Calculator traces back through the following developments. The formal practice of lending at interest dates to ancient Mesopotamia, where the Code of Hammurabi around 1750 BCE regulated interest rates on grain and silver loans. Banking as an institutional activity took root in medieval Italy, with merchant bankers in Florence and Venice financing trade across Europe through instruments such as bills of exchange. The Medici family operated one of the most sophisticated banking networks of the fifteenth century, pioneering double-entry bookkeeping and correspondent banking relationships. Organized equity markets emerged in the early seventeenth century. The Dutch East India Company (VOC), chartered in 1602, issued shares to the public and created the Amsterdam Stock Exchange โ€” widely regarded as the world's first formal stock exchange. The VOC allowed investors to buy and sell shares freely, establishing the template for the joint-stock company. The period also produced the Dutch tulip mania of 1636 to 1637, one of history's first recorded speculative bubbles, in which tulip bulb futures contracts reached extraordinary prices before collapsing. England's financial revolution followed in the late seventeenth century with the founding of the Bank of England in 1694 and the development of government bond markets. The South Sea Bubble of 1720 illustrated the dangers of speculative excess and contributed to early securities regulation. Throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, industrialization created enormous demand for capital, fueling the expansion of stock exchanges in London, Paris, New York, and beyond. The New York Stock Exchange, formalized in 1817, became the world's dominant equities market by the twentieth century. The Great Crash of 1929 and subsequent Great Depression prompted the US Securities Act of 1933 and Securities Exchange Act of 1934, establishing the SEC and mandatory disclosure requirements. Harry Markowitz published his landmark portfolio selection paper in 1952, launching quantitative finance. The CAPM emerged in the 1960s through work by Sharpe, Lintner, and Mossin. John Bogle launched the first retail index fund in 1976, democratizing diversified investing and challenging active management orthodoxy.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Large-cap equity mutual funds in India have historically returned 12-15% CAGR over 10+ year periods. Mid-cap and small-cap funds have delivered even higher returns with greater volatility. Debt funds typically return 7-9%. Past performance does not guarantee future returns.
Most mutual fund houses in India allow SIPs starting from 500 per month, with some schemes offering 100 per month SIPs. There is no maximum limit. You can start small and use the step-up or top-up SIP feature to increase your investment by a fixed amount or percentage annually.
For equity funds, gains on units held over 1 year (LTCG) above 1.25 lakh per year are taxed at 12.5%. Short-term gains (under 1 year) are taxed at 20%. For debt funds, all gains regardless of holding period are added to your income and taxed at your slab rate.
SIP invests a fixed amount at regular intervals, averaging out the purchase cost over time. Lump sum invests the entire amount at once. SIP is better for regular income earners and volatile markets, while lump sum can outperform when markets are trending upward and you have funds readily available.
Yes, you can stop a SIP at any time without penalty by submitting a cancellation request to the fund house or through your investment platform. Some AMCs also allow you to pause SIP for 1-3 months. Stopping a SIP does not affect your existing invested units, which continue to grow.
A step-up SIP automatically increases your monthly investment by a fixed amount or percentage every year. For example, increasing a 10,000 SIP by 10% annually can significantly boost your corpus over 15-20 years compared to a flat SIP, as it aligns investment growth with your rising income.
Educational Note: This calculator is provided for educational and informational purposes. Results are based on the formulas and inputs provided. Always verify important calculations independently. NovaCalculator processes calculator inputs client-side; optional analytics follow visitor consent settings.Reviewed by: NovaCalculator Finance Editorial Team โ€” Reviewed against CFPB, IRS, and Federal Reserve guidance. Last reviewed: January 2026. ยฉ 2024โ€“2026 NovaCalculator.

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Formula

FV = P x [(1+r)^n - 1] / r x (1+r)

SIP uses the future value of annuity-due formula. P = monthly investment, r = monthly rate of return (annual/12), n = total months. The (1+r) factor accounts for beginning-of-period investment.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why might my result differ from another tool or reference?

Differences typically arise from rounding conventions, the specific version of a formula (for example, simple vs compound interest), or unit inconsistencies between inputs. Check that both tools are using the same formula variant and the same units. The References section links to the authoritative source behind the formula used here.

Can I use the results for professional or academic purposes?

You may use the results for reference and educational purposes. For professional reports, academic papers, or critical decisions, we recommend verifying outputs against peer-reviewed sources or consulting a qualified expert in the relevant field.

How accurate are the results from Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) Calculator?

All calculations use established mathematical formulas and are performed with high-precision arithmetic. Results are accurate to the precision shown. For critical decisions in finance, medicine, or engineering, always verify results with a qualified professional.

How do I get the most accurate result?

Enter values as precisely as possible using the correct units for each field. Check that you have selected the right unit (e.g. kilograms vs pounds, meters vs feet) before calculating. Rounding inputs early can reduce output precision.

How do I verify Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) Calculator's result independently?

The Formula section on this page shows the equation used. You can reproduce the calculation manually or in a spreadsheet using those steps. Compare your answer against the worked examples in the Examples section, which use known reference values so you can confirm the calculator is behaving as expected.

Does Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) Calculator work offline?

Once the page is loaded, the calculation logic runs entirely in your browser. If you have already opened the page, most calculators will continue to work even if your internet connection is lost, since no server requests are needed for computation.

Reviewed by Sahil, Senior Finance & Tax Editor ยท Editorial policy