Current Age
Retire At
Live Till
30 years to save • 25 years to live off savings
Emergency health fund
Annual investment hike
Cost of Tomorrow
To maintain your current lifestyle, you will need a monthly income of:
Total Corpus Needed
₹0
Adjusted for inflation
Additional SIP Needed
₹0
To reach your goal
Corpus Gap Detected!
Your savings + current SIP will reach ₹0. Shortfall: ₹0.
This chart visualizes your money growing until retirement and depleting afterwards.
| Age | Year | Investment / Drawdown | Balance |
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Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates based on assumed rates of return and inflation. Actual returns may vary depending on market conditions. The “Cost of Tomorrow” is a projection of future purchasing power. It assumes the Post-Retirement ROI is net of taxes. Please consult a SEBI registered investment advisor before making financial decisions.
Copyright © designed by Elathi Digital – Ar. S. Anand Kumar
Let’s be honest for a second. When we talk about retirement in India, we usually have a very “Chalta Hai” attitude.
We sit with our friends over chai and say, “Arre, my PF is getting cut, that is enough,” or “My son/daughter will take care of me,” or the classic, “I will buy one plot of land in my native place and sell it later.”
But have you ever sat down with a real Retirement Calculator and actually crunched the numbers?
Most of us do “mental math.” We think: I spend ₹30,000 today. So, ₹1 Crore is huge! It’s 100 Lakhs! That will last me forever.
I am here to tell you that your mental math is dangerous. It ignores the silent killer of wealth: Inflation.
To explain this, I want to introduce you to Shankaran Pillai.
Shankaran is a 30-year-old software professional working in OMR, Chennai. He is originally from Kallakurichi, a nice town in Tamil Nadu. He earns well, sends money home to his parents, and enjoys his weekends with a movie or a dinner out.
Shankaran is smart. He saves money. He believes that if he accumulates ₹1 Crore by the time he is 60, he can retire and live like a king in Kallakurichi.
I used the Retirement Calculator (the one you see at the top of this page) to check his math. The results? They were absolutely terrifying.
Let’s break down why Shankaran (and likely you) are underestimating the cost of your future.
The biggest villain in your financial story isn’t a stock market crash; it is Inflation.
In India, the cost of living rises by about 6% to 7% every year.
Think about it:
If things are becoming expensive now, imagine the prices in the year 2056, when Shankaran turns 60.
This is exactly why manual calculation fails. You cannot calculate compound inflation in your head. You need a tool.
Let’s look at the calculator interface and fill it in for Shankaran to see the real picture.
30 YearsShankaran is young. This is his biggest advantage. The earlier you start, the less you have to save per month. If you are reading this at 25, you are golden. If you are 45, you need to wake up now.
60 YearsThis is the standard corporate retirement age in India. However, many in the private sector face burnout by 50-55. But for this calculation, let’s assume Shankaran works till 60.
85 YearsThis is the most critical input. Many people assume they will live till 70 or 75. But look at medical science in India. Bypass surgeries, angioplasties, and diabetes management have become standard. People are living longer.
₹30,000This is Shankaran’s current lifestyle cost excluding EMIs and investments. Just pure living costs—groceries, electricity bill, mobile recharge, petrol, occasional eating out.
6%This is the standard Indian average. Education and Medical inflation are actually higher (around 10-12%), but 6% is a fair baseline for general expenses.
12%We assume Shankaran invests in a diversified Equity Mutual Fund (SIP) for the long term. If he keeps money in a Savings Account (3%) or FD (6%), he will never reach his goal. You need to beat inflation, not just match it.
When Shankaran hits “Calculate,” here is the reality check that hit him hard:
At age 60, to maintain the exact same lifestyle he has today for ₹30,000, he will not need ₹30,000. He will need ₹1.72 Lakhs per month. (Yes, you read that right. Just to buy milk, veggies, pay the electricity bill, and visit the doctor, he needs nearly 2 Lakhs a month. That is what inflation does over 30 years.)
To survive from age 60 to age 85 without working, he needs a massive corpus. Target Amount: ₹4.5 Crores to ₹5 Crores.
Wait, what? ₹5 Crores? Yes. His “₹1 Crore” dream is just 20% of what he actually needs. If he retires with just ₹1 Crore, that money will be finished within 5 to 6 years. By age 66, Shankaran will have zero rupees left.
Don’t panic. I didn’t write this to scare you. I wrote this to wake you up. The numbers look scary, but the solution is actually simple if you start today.
The Retirement Calculator doesn’t just show you the problem; it shows you the path.
To reach that ₹5 Crore target, Shankaran doesn’t need to rob a bank or win a lottery. He just needs discipline.
The Lesson: The cost of delay is massive. Every month you delay, your future self suffers.
Even smart people make these mistakes. Avoid them.
“My company cuts PF, na?” Yes, but EPF gives around 8.1% interest. Inflation is 6-7%. Real growth is barely 1-2%. EPF is the debt part of your portfolio; it provides safety. But it cannot be the growth engine. You need Equity (Mutual Funds) to generate that 12-15% return that creates wealth.
The calculator asks for “Monthly Expenses,” but it assumes a healthy life. A simple hospitalization in a private hospital in Chennai or Mumbai today costs ₹2-3 Lakhs. Imagine the cost in 2050. Pro Tip: Take a separate Health Insurance cover (minimum ₹10 Lakhs base + Super Top-up). Do not touch your retirement corpus for hospital bills.
In India, we love our children. We love them so much that we break our Retirement Fund to pay for their weddings. Please understand: Your children have their whole lives to earn money. You have only one retirement. Loan for Education? Yes. Loan for Wedding? Maybe. Breaking Retirement Fund for Wedding? NEVER. It is financial suicide.
Q: Can’t I just buy land in Kallakurichi? Real estate always goes up! A: Real Estate is good, but it has two problems:
Q: Is the NPS (National Pension System) good? A: Yes, NPS is a great tool specifically for retirement because it locks your money (preventing you from spending it on a car or holiday). It also offers tax benefits. A mix of NPS and Mutual Funds is a solid strategy.
Q: What if I want to retire early (FIRE) at 45? A: Then the rules change. You need to save 50-70% of your income today. Use the calculator again, change “Retirement Age” to 45, and watch the “Corpus Needed” number jump up. You will need a much larger corpus because your money has to last for 40 years instead of 25.
Retirement planning is not about sacrificing your joy today. It is about ensuring your dignity tomorrow.
Use the Retirement Calculator. Put in your own numbers. Be honest with your expenses. Whether you are from a metro like Delhi or a town like Kallakurichi, inflation treats everyone the same.
Don’t work for money all your life. Let your money work for you.
Start your SIP today. Even ₹500 counts.