I recently inherited Rs 80 lakh after selling my father's ancestral property in Kerala. I deposited 40 lakhs into my mother's account so she can get a fixed income of Rs 40,000 for her expenses as she lives with her sister in Kerala. We live in Bangalore. I currently have a Rs 50 lakh home loan with 18 years pending. My wife is a teacher, and I am in sales. We have been investing Rs 15,000/month in mutual fund SIPs for the past 7 years and have a fixed deposit of 2 lakhs as an emergency fund. My goal is to retire by age 50. Should I use the lump sum to reduce my loan burden or grow my corpus through mutual funds?
Ans: You have inherited Rs 80 lakh by selling your father’s ancestral property. You’ve taken a wise and respectful step by setting aside Rs 40 lakh for your mother’s financial stability. That’s a thoughtful act of responsibility.
Now, you and your wife live in Bangalore. Your current financial structure includes:
Rs 50 lakh home loan (18 years remaining)
Rs 15,000/month in mutual fund SIPs for 7 years
Rs 2 lakh in fixed deposit as emergency fund
Rs 40 lakh remaining from inheritance
You are in sales, wife is a teacher
Goal: Retire by age 50 (we assume you're around 35–40 now)
Let us now build a 360-degree approach to guide how to use this Rs 40 lakh. Should you repay the loan or grow your corpus?
Let us analyse this from retirement, wealth building, debt management, risk, and liquidity angles.
Home Loan Situation: Let’s Understand It Clearly
Your outstanding home loan is Rs 50 lakh, and tenure left is 18 years. This is long-term debt. EMI is not mentioned, but assuming a typical rate around 8.5%, your interest outgo is massive over the years.
Most of your EMIs now go into interest, not principal. You are paying for the bank’s profit more than building your own home equity.
So, prepaying early helps most. It reduces the total interest and shortens loan duration.
But should you use the entire Rs 40 lakh? Or balance it with investments for growth?
Let’s explore both sides.
Option 1: Use Full Rs 40 Lakh to Prepay Home Loan
Pros:
Instant reduction of loan burden
EMI pressure becomes lighter
Frees up future cashflow
Guaranteed return (equal to home loan interest rate)
Gives peace of mind, reduces mental stress
Cons:
You lose liquidity
No money left for investing
No compounding opportunity
May delay your retirement corpus growth
Future inflation may hurt if investment base is too low
Verdict: Good if you hate debt and prioritise peace over growth. But not ideal for FIRE-style or early retirement goals.
Option 2: Don’t Prepay, Invest Entire Amount in Mutual Funds
Pros:
Rs 40 lakh invested in mutual funds grows faster
Long-term equity returns are 12–14% with good funds
Can create Rs 1.5–2 crore corpus in 15–17 years
Can be used for early retirement or large goals
Flexibility to redeem anytime
Cons:
Markets are volatile in short term
Need discipline and patience
You continue paying high home loan interest
Must avoid panic during market corrections
Verdict: Great for long-term wealth creation. Works well only if you’re mentally prepared for equity volatility.
Option 3: Blended Strategy – Prepay Part of Loan, Invest the Rest
This is the most balanced and strategic option.
Use Rs 15–20 lakh to prepay the home loan
This will reduce EMI duration by 5–6 years
Use Rs 2–3 lakh to top-up your emergency fund
Invest the remaining Rs 17–20 lakh in actively managed mutual funds
This approach:
Reduces your debt
Frees future cashflow
Builds your investment base
Keeps you on track for early retirement
Manages liquidity smartly
Verdict: This approach gives you flexibility, peace, and growth together. Ideal for your stage.
Emergency Fund and Risk Cover Must Be Updated
Right now, your emergency fund is Rs 2 lakh. This is not enough for a family in a metro.
Increase it to at least Rs 5 lakh
Use a combination of savings account, sweep-in FD, and liquid mutual funds
This will help in job loss, medical issue, or home repair
You should also review these:
Health Insurance
Don’t depend on employer policy alone
Take personal health insurance of Rs 10 lakh
Add a Rs 25 lakh super top-up plan
Term Insurance
Take term cover till age 60
Cover should be 10–12x your annual income
Do not take ULIP or endowment plans
Review Your Mutual Fund Portfolio
You have been investing Rs 15,000 monthly in SIPs for 7 years. That’s excellent. You already have a strong habit.
Let us now improve the structure and quality of your portfolio.
Avoid Index Funds
Index funds invest blindly. No risk control. No downside protection. They follow the market.
Cannot shift away from underperforming sectors
Crash when market crashes
No role of active fund manager
You get average returns, not better
For early retirement, you need better than average.
Use Actively Managed Funds Instead
These funds have expert management
They shift between sectors and stocks
Reduce volatility better
Create better risk-adjusted returns
Help you stay invested confidently
Invest through regular plans with help from a Certified Financial Planner-backed MFD.
Why Not Direct Funds?
Direct plans look cheap. But they don’t give support.
No portfolio review
No exit timing support
No tax harvesting
High chances of emotional mistakes
No rebalancing
Regular plans via a qualified MFD help you manage emotions, risk, and performance.
For FIRE or early retirement, these mistakes can cost you years.
Create a Fresh SIP Plan Using Lump Sum
You will have Rs 15–20 lakh available for investment.
Do this:
Start STP (Systematic Transfer Plan) from a liquid fund
Gradually invest into equity over 12–18 months
Use 4–5 high-quality funds only
Divide across:
Large and Midcap Funds (30%)
Multicap Funds (30%)
Flexicap Funds (25%)
Small Cap Funds (15%)
You can also add Balanced Advantage Fund if you want lower volatility.
Once your home loan prepayment is done, increase monthly SIP from Rs 15,000 to Rs 25,000.
Add a Rs 1,000 monthly step-up every year. This small step grows your SIP base over time.
Mutual Fund Tax Rules You Must Know
When you redeem equity funds:
LTCG above Rs 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%
STCG (held under 1 year) is taxed at 20%
For debt funds, both LTCG and STCG are taxed as per your slab
Plan redemptions smartly. Spread across financial years if needed.
Let your CFP guide you during withdrawal to save tax.
Prepare for Retirement at 50
You are already on track. With right planning, you can retire by 50.
Here’s how to make it realistic:
Build Rs 4–5 crore investment corpus
Make loan-free home a priority by 45
Build Rs 50 lakh health corpus (through insurance + savings)
Create Rs 25,000–40,000 passive income per month via mutual fund SWP
Avoid lifestyle inflation
Track net worth growth every year
Let your Certified Financial Planner assess your retirement corpus regularly.
Don’t chase high returns. Chase consistency and discipline.
Final Insights
You’ve handled your inheritance responsibly. You’re on the right track to financial independence.
Use this 360-degree plan to stay on course:
Prepay Rs 15–20 lakh from your loan
Increase emergency fund to Rs 5 lakh
Invest Rs 17–20 lakh in active mutual funds
Use regular plans through a CFP-certified MFD
Replace index and direct funds from your portfolio
Increase SIPs as EMIs go down
Review fund performance twice a year
Get term and health insurance updated
Prepare a simple will and add nominations
You’re building a future not just for comfort, but for freedom.
Plan smart. Stay consistent. And let your money work harder than you.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment