SWP Calculator: How to Get Monthly Income from Mutual Funds in Retirement
SWP lets your mutual fund corpus pay you a regular monthly income — while the remaining corpus continues to earn returns. Here's how to plan a sustainable SWP that lasts 25-30 years.
Ram
Most Indian retirees default to Fixed Deposits for income — because they're familiar and "safe." But the math tells a different story. A ₹1 crore FD at 7% generates ₹58,333/month in interest but erodes the corpus's real value through inflation. A well-structured SWP can generate similar monthly income while allowing the corpus to potentially grow in real terms.
Use our SWP Calculator to model your exact scenario.
What Is a Systematic Withdrawal Plan?
A Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) is a facility that lets you withdraw a fixed amount from your mutual fund investment at regular intervals — typically monthly — while the remaining corpus continues to earn market returns.
The SWP mechanic:- You have ₹1 crore in a mutual fund (the corpus)
- You instruct the fund house to redeem ₹30,000 worth of units every month
- On the 5th of each month, the equivalent units are redeemed at that day's NAV, and ₹30,000 is credited to your bank account
- The remaining corpus continues earning returns
The Sustainable Withdrawal Rate
The critical question: how much can you withdraw monthly without depleting the corpus?
The 4% annual withdrawal rule (popularized in the US but applicable to India with adjustments) suggests withdrawing 4% of corpus annually, giving:
| Corpus | 4% Annual | Monthly Withdrawal |
|---|---|---|
| ₹50 lakhs | ₹2 lakhs/year | ₹16,667/month |
| ₹1 crore | ₹4 lakhs/year | ₹33,333/month |
| ₹2 crores | ₹8 lakhs/year | ₹66,667/month |
| ₹5 crores | ₹20 lakhs/year | ₹1,66,667/month |
SWP vs Fixed Deposit: A Real Comparison
Scenario: ₹1 crore retirement corpus, 20-year horizonFD Approach (7% annual interest)
- Monthly income: ₹58,333 (interest only, principal intact)
- Real value of ₹1 crore after 20 years at 6% inflation: ₹31 lakhs
- Monthly income in real terms after 20 years: ₹18,000 (severely eroded by inflation)
- Tax: Interest taxed at slab rate every year — at 30%, effective monthly income is ₹40,833
SWP Approach (₹30,000/month from balanced hybrid fund, 11% assumed return)
- Monthly income: ₹30,000 (fixed withdrawal)
- Corpus after 20 years: ₹1.85 crores (corpus has grown despite withdrawals)
- Real value of ₹1.85 crore after 20 years: ₹57 lakhs
- Tax: Only the gain portion of each redemption is taxed (LTCG at 10%), making effective tax much lower than FD
Choosing the Right Fund for SWP
Conservative Choice: Balanced Hybrid Funds (50-70% equity)
Monthly SWP draws from balanced hybrid funds benefit from equity growth while the debt component provides stability. Less volatile than pure equity funds, making corpus depletion less likely during market corrections.
Historical returns: 10-12% CAGR over 10+ year periods.
Moderate Choice: Flexi-Cap Equity Funds
Higher long-term return potential (12-15%) but greater short-term volatility. Suitable for retirees with a larger corpus, lower withdrawal rate, and some tolerance for portfolio fluctuations.
Conservative Choice: Monthly Income Plans / Debt Funds
For very conservative retirees or those with high income needs relative to corpus, debt-oriented funds provide more predictable returns (7-9%) with less volatility. Returns are lower but more stable.
How to Run SWP in India
Step 1: Accumulate the Corpus
You need a corpus large enough to sustain your desired monthly income at a safe withdrawal rate. Use our SIP Calculator to plan your accumulation phase.
Target corpus = Desired monthly income × 300 (approximation for 30-year sustainability at 4% withdrawal rate).
Step 2: Choose the Right Fund
Transfer your corpus to a balanced hybrid or flexi-cap fund (if in equities) or a conservative hybrid fund (if risk-averse). Don't start SWP immediately after retirement — give the corpus 1-2 years to settle at your chosen fund.
Step 3: Set Up SWP
On your mutual fund platform (Groww, Kuvera, Zerodha Coin, or AMC website):
- Go to the fund → Select SWP/Withdrawal
- Set monthly withdrawal amount
- Set withdrawal date (align with your expense date)
- Set bank account for credit
Step 4: Annual Review
Every January, review:
- Is the corpus growing, stable, or declining?
- Has inflation required a withdrawal increase?
- Are returns in line with projections?
Sequence of Returns Risk
The biggest risk in SWP is a major market decline in the first 3-5 years of retirement. If the market falls 40% in Year 1 and you withdraw ₹30,000/month, you're selling units at depressed prices — permanently reducing your corpus.
Mitigation strategies:- 2-year cash buffer: Keep 2 years of withdrawals in a liquid fund or FD. Draw from this during market downturns instead of your equity fund.
- Dynamic withdrawal: Reduce SWP amount during market downturns (if your budget allows)
- Conservative allocation: A 50/50 equity-debt split limits drawdown severity
SWP Tax Efficiency
Each SWP withdrawal is treated as a redemption of mutual fund units. The tax applies only to the gain portion — not the full withdrawal amount.
Example: You withdraw ₹30,000. Of this, ₹22,000 is original cost and ₹8,000 is gain. Tax applies only on ₹8,000.For equity funds held over 12 months: LTCG at 10% on ₹8,000 = ₹800 tax. For FD: ₹30,000 monthly interest is fully taxable at slab rate — at 30%, that's ₹9,000 tax.
SWP is significantly more tax-efficient than FD for retirement income.Planning Your Retirement SWP
Use our SWP Calculator to model your situation:
- Enter your expected retirement corpus
- Set your desired monthly withdrawal
- Enter expected annual return (use 10-11% for balanced hybrid, 12% for equity)
- See how many years the corpus lasts
- What if I reduce monthly withdrawal by ₹5,000?
- What if returns are only 8% instead of 11%?
- What corpus do I need for my withdrawal to never touch principal?
For SWP to work, you first need to build the corpus. Start with our SIP Calculator to plan how to reach your retirement corpus target.
