Lumpsum Calculator – See How Your One-Time Investment Grows
A lumpsum investment deploys a large amount at one time into a mutual fund. Common when you receive a year-end bonus, an inheritance, property sale proceeds or FD maturity. Use this calculator to estimate how a one-time investment grows at different return rates and time periods.
Lumpsum vs SIP – When to Use Which
For regular monthly income: SIP is ideal. For irregular large inflows: lumpsum or STP (Systematic Transfer Plan) is appropriate. For bonus or inheritance: use lumpsum/STP to deploy immediately rather than letting it sit in a savings account earning minimal interest.
Lumpsum Investment Tips
Consider STP Instead of Direct Lumpsum
For large amounts above ₹5 lakh, park in a liquid fund and set up a Systematic Transfer Plan to move to equity over 6-12 months. Reduces timing risk while keeping money invested.
Diversify Across Funds
A single large lumpsum is best deployed across 2-3 fund categories rather than one fund – spreading timing risk and maintaining diversification from day one.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is lumpsum investing risky?
Lumpsum investing in equity carries timing risk – if you invest just before a market fall, initial returns may be negative for a period. For goals 7+ years away, this timing risk largely disappears. For shorter timelines or large amounts, STP reduces timing risk.
What is the minimum lumpsum investment?
Most mutual funds have a minimum of ₹1,000-5,000. For amounts above ₹50,000 in equity funds, we typically recommend STP over 3-6 months.
How are lumpsum returns taxed?
Same as SIP: equity fund gains held 12+ months are LTCG taxed at 12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh. Gains held less than 12 months are STCG taxed at 20%.