SIP vs Lumpsum: Which Builds More Wealth?
Both SIP and lumpsum investing compound your money over time — the difference is when and how you deploy capital. The right choice depends on how much cash you have available, your read on current valuations, and honestly, your temperament. Here is a clear-eyed breakdown using real numbers so you can make that call with confidence.
The Core Difference
A lumpsum investment means deploying a single large amount all at once — say, ₹5 lakh into an equity mutual fund today. A Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) spreads that same ₹5 lakh into equal installments — ₹10,000 per month over 50 months, for instance.
That distinction sounds mechanical, but it has real consequences for your final corpus because equity markets are volatile. The sequence of returns matters enormously in lumpsum investing; it matters far less in SIP.
Rupee Cost Averaging: The Engine Behind SIP
When you invest a fixed rupee amount every month, you automatically buy more units when prices are low and fewer units when prices are high. This is rupee cost averaging (RCA), and it is not magic — it is arithmetic.
Consider a fund whose NAV swings like this over six months:
| Month | NAV (₹) | SIP Amount (₹) | Units Bought |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 100 | 10,000 | 100.00 |
| Feb | 80 | 10,000 | 125.00 |
| Mar | 60 | 10,000 | 166.67 |
| Apr | 70 | 10,000 | 142.86 |
| May | 90 | 10,000 | 111.11 |
| Jun | 100 | 10,000 | 100.00 |
Total invested: ₹60,000. Total units: 745.64. Average cost per unit: ₹80.47 — well below the average NAV of ₹83.33. The NAV ended exactly where it started, yet the SIP investor is up roughly 24% (portfolio value ₹74,564 vs ₹60,000 invested). A lumpsum investor who bought in January at ₹100 and watched the NAV return to ₹100 is flat.
This is the mechanical edge of SIP in volatile, mean-reverting markets.
When Lumpsum Wins
Rupee cost averaging is only an advantage in markets that fall and recover. In a steadily rising bull market, lumpsum beats SIP every time — because you deploy the full capital early and every rupee compounds for the maximum duration.
Consider a simple example: ₹12 lakh invested in a fund delivering a steady 12% CAGR.
- Lumpsum (Day 1): ₹12,00,000 compounded for 10 years = ₹37.27 lakh
- SIP ₹10,000/month for 10 years at 12% CAGR: = ₹23.23 lakh
The lumpsum investor wins by over ₹14 lakh because the entire corpus was working from year one. The SIP investor's later installments had no time to compound fully.
The lesson: if you receive a windfall — a bonus, an inheritance, proceeds from property sale — and valuations are not stretched, deploying it as a lumpsum is mathematically superior in a trending market.
When SIP Wins
SIP wins in three concrete scenarios:
- You do not have a lumpsum. Most salaried investors earn monthly. SIP is not just a strategy — it is the only practical option.
- Valuations are expensive. Buying the Nifty 50 at a P/E of 24–25x (well above the long-run median near 20x) with a lumpsum concentrates timing risk. SIP spreads that entry over the cycle.
- You are psychologically prone to panic. A lumpsum investor who sees a 30% drawdown on ₹20 lakh tends to exit. An SIP investor watching their monthly ₹10,000 buy more units at lower NAVs is more likely to stay invested.
Behavioral consistency is underrated. A 12% CAGR you actually capture beats a theoretical 14% CAGR you exit during a crash.
Head-to-Head: A 15-Year Comparison
Assumptions: ₹15 lakh available today, 12% expected CAGR (typical long-run large-cap equity return in India), 15-year horizon. SIP equivalent: ₹8,333/month for 15 years (total outflow also ₹15 lakh).
| Strategy | Total Invested | Expected Corpus (12% CAGR) | Key Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lumpsum (Day 1) | ₹15,00,000 | ₹82.5 lakh | Entry timing; sequence of returns |
| SIP ₹8,333/month × 180 | ₹15,00,000 | ₹42.3 lakh | Market timing irrelevant; behavioral consistency required |
| Hybrid (see below) | ₹15,00,000 | ~₹58–65 lakh (estimate) | Partial timing risk; improved average cost |
The lumpsum corpus looks larger because the full amount compounds from day one. But note: the 12% CAGR assumption is average across the cycle. An investor who deployed the lumpsum at a market peak in 2008 or early 2020 faced years of underwater returns before recovering — that is the risk the table cannot fully capture.
The Hybrid Approach: Best of Both Worlds
Most financial planners recommend a hybrid strategy when you have a lumpsum available but are uncertain about timing:
- Deploy 30–40% of the lumpsum immediately.
- Park the remainder in a liquid or arbitrage fund (low volatility, roughly 6–7% annualized pre-tax).
- Set up a Systematic Transfer Plan (STP) to move a fixed amount monthly from the liquid fund into your equity fund over 12–24 months.
This way, the idle money earns a return while waiting to be deployed, you reduce timing risk through phased entry, and you still have a substantial amount compounding in equity from day one. When markets correct sharply mid-transfer, you can accelerate the transfers manually — capturing lower NAVs on the remaining corpus.
Practical Decision Framework
Use this to decide quickly:
- Salaried, investing from monthly income? SIP is your only practical route. Set it up, automate it, and stop checking NAVs weekly.
- Have a windfall + long horizon (10+ years) + not at a market froth? Consider deploying 50% lumpsum immediately and STPin the rest over 12 months.
- Have a windfall + markets at historically high P/E (25x+)? Park in liquid funds, STP over 18–24 months.
- Short horizon (under 3 years)? Neither lumpsum nor SIP in equity is appropriate. Use debt funds or FDs.
One final point: the difference between SIP and lumpsum matters far less than starting early and not stopping. A ₹5,000/month SIP started at 25 vastly outperforms a ₹20,000/month SIP started at 35, simply because of the extra decade of compounding. Use our SIP calculator to run your own numbers and see how time changes the equation.
Preguntas frecuentes
Is SIP always safer than lumpsum?+
SIP reduces timing risk through rupee cost averaging, but it is not categorically safer. In a steadily rising market, a lumpsum investor ends up with a larger corpus. SIP is safer in the sense that it prevents the worst-case scenario of deploying all capital at a market peak.
Can I combine SIP and lumpsum in the same fund?+
Yes, and this is common practice. Many investors run a monthly SIP for regular contributions and make additional lumpsum purchases during market corrections — for example, when the index drops 10–15% from its recent high. Most AMC platforms and apps support both simultaneously in the same folio.
What is the minimum amount for a SIP in India?+
Most mutual funds accept SIPs starting at ₹500 per month. Some index funds and direct plans have minimums as low as ₹100. There is no regulatory cap on the maximum amount.
Does rupee cost averaging work in a consistently falling market?+
Rupee cost averaging accumulates units cheaply during a falling market, but those units only generate returns when the market recovers. If the underlying asset never recovers — like a single-stock investment or a poorly managed fund — RCA does not help. It works reliably with diversified equity index funds over long horizons because broad markets have historically recovered from every drawdown.
How is LTCG tax applied to SIP investments?+
Each SIP installment is treated as a separate purchase for tax purposes. Units held for more than 12 months qualify as long-term capital gains (LTCG) on equity funds, currently taxed at 12.5% on gains above ₹1.25 lakh per year (as per post-Budget 2024 rules). This means the first installments become long-term before the later ones do.