SWP Calculator
Systematic Withdrawal Plan
Final Corpus Left
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📊 Understanding Your SWP Plan
This is the one-time lump sum amount you invest at the beginning.
This is the fixed amount you will receive every month as passive income.
Total money you will receive over the entire withdrawal period (Monthly Withdrawal × Number of Months).
Extra money earned from your remaining investment while you were withdrawing. Your money keeps growing even as you withdraw!
Money left in your investment after all withdrawals. This is your safety cushion or inheritance amount.
Total amount you withdraw in one year (Monthly Withdrawal × 12).
Duration for which you will receive monthly income from this investment.
Total number of monthly payments you will receive (Years × 12).
🤔 What is SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan)?
SWP is the opposite of SIP. Instead of investing money regularly, you withdraw a fixed amount every month from your investment.
Perfect for: Retirees who need regular monthly income, people who have a lump sum amount and want steady cash flow.
How it works: You invest ₹50 Lakhs once → Withdraw ₹40,000 every month → Remaining money keeps growing at 12% per year → After 20 years, you still have money left!
Key Benefit: Your money doesn’t just sit idle. While you withdraw, the remaining amount continues to earn returns, making your corpus last longer.
SWP Calculator — Your Guide
to Systematic Withdrawal Plan
What is SWP, how it works, why retirees love it, how to calculate your monthly income, tax benefits, strategies to make your money last forever — everything explained in simple language you can actually understand.
What is SWP?
SWP stands for Systematic Withdrawal Plan. Think of it as the exact opposite of SIP. In SIP, you invest a fixed amount every month into a mutual fund. In SWP, you withdraw a fixed amount every month from your mutual fund investment. It is a way to create regular income from your invested money — just like a salary or pension, but from your own corpus.
Here is how it works in the real world: let us say you have ₹50 lakh invested in a mutual fund. You set up a SWP to withdraw ₹40,000 every month. On the 5th of every month (or whichever date you choose), the mutual fund automatically sells units worth ₹40,000 and transfers the money to your bank account. You do not have to call anyone, fill any forms, or do anything — it happens automatically, month after month.
The beautiful part? While you are withdrawing ₹40,000 monthly, the remaining corpus continues to grow because it is still invested. If your fund grows at 10% annually and you are withdrawing at a rate lower than the growth, your corpus can actually last decades — or even grow while giving you income. This is why SWP is called the retiree’s best friend.
Imagine retiring with ₹1 crore in mutual funds. You set up a SWP for ₹50,000 per month. If your investment grows at 10% and you withdraw at 6% annually, your ₹1 crore not only gives you ₹50,000 monthly income but also continues to grow to ₹1.4 crore in 10 years. You get income AND growth. That is the magic of SWP.
Why SWP is better than FD or pension plans
Most retirees in India do one of three things with their retirement corpus: put it in Fixed Deposits, buy a pension plan from LIC, or keep it in a savings account earning 3%. All three options are terrible compared to SWP. Let me show you exactly why with real numbers:
Let me give you a real comparison. Say you retire with ₹50 lakh at age 60 and need ₹40,000 monthly income:
| Option | Monthly Income | Corpus After 10 Yrs | Corpus After 20 Yrs | Tax Paid Annually |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SWP @ 10% growth | ₹40,000 | ₹54.2 lakh | ₹59.8 lakh | ₹12,000 (LTCG) |
| FD @ 6.5% interest | ₹40,000 | ₹25.7 lakh | ₹2.1 lakh | ₹93,600 (30% slab) |
| Pension Plan @ 5.5% | ₹40,000 | ₹18.4 lakh | ₹0 (exhausted) | ₹72,000 (15% tax) |
Notice how with SWP, your ₹50 lakh corpus grows to ₹59.8 lakh after 20 years even though you withdrew ₹40,000 every month for 20 years (total ₹96 lakh withdrawn). With FD, your corpus shrinks to almost zero. With pension plans, it is completely exhausted by year 18. SWP is not just better — it is in a completely different league.
How does the SWP Calculator work?
The SWP calculator is a simple tool that shows you exactly how long your money will last, how much you will have left after X years, and whether your withdrawal rate is sustainable. You enter four inputs — your total invested amount, how much you want to withdraw monthly, expected annual return rate, and for how many years — and it instantly shows you the full breakdown.
Here is how to use the SWP calculator above in 4 simple steps:
Enter your total investment amount — this is the lump sum you have saved up for retirement or whatever goal you are planning for. It could be ₹20 lakh, ₹1 crore, or ₹5 crore — whatever you have accumulated through years of investing. This is the corpus from which you will withdraw monthly income.
Set your monthly withdrawal amount — how much money do you want every month? Be realistic about your expenses. Include everything — rent, food, utilities, medicines, travel, entertainment. A good starting point is 0.5–0.75% of your corpus per month. For ₹1 crore corpus, that is ₹50,000–75,000 monthly.
Choose expected annual return — for equity mutual funds (balanced or hybrid funds best for SWP), use 8–10%. For aggressive equity funds, you can use 10–12%, but expect volatility. For debt funds, use 6–7%. The calculator assumes this return is earned on your remaining corpus every year while you keep withdrawing.
Set the time period — how many years do you need this income? If you are 60 and expect to live till 85, that is 25 years. If it is for your child’s education for 4 years, set 4 years. The calculator shows you year-by-year how your corpus grows or shrinks, and exactly when (if ever) it will be exhausted.
The calculator instantly shows you: total amount withdrawn over the period, total capital gains earned, remaining corpus at the end, and a year-wise breakdown of opening balance, withdrawal, growth, and closing balance. Change any value and watch in real-time how it affects your sustainability.
When should you use SWP?
SWP is not just for retirees. It is for anyone who has a lump sum invested and needs regular income from it. Here are the most common and practical scenarios where SWP makes perfect sense:
Smart SWP strategies to make your money last forever
The basic SWP is simple — invest lump sum, withdraw fixed amount monthly. But there are advanced strategies that can make your money last much longer and even grow while you withdraw. Here are the top strategies used by financially smart retirees:
The 4% Rule (or 3.5% for India) — withdraw no more than 4% of your corpus annually (3.5% to be conservative). This is roughly 0.33% per month. For ₹1 crore corpus, that is ₹33,000/month. At this rate, your corpus never depletes if it grows at 8–10%. Your money lasts forever and you can pass it to your children. This is the gold standard strategy.
Bucket Strategy — divide your corpus into 3 buckets. Bucket 1 (3 years expenses) in liquid/debt funds for immediate withdrawals. Bucket 2 (5 years expenses) in balanced funds. Bucket 3 (rest) in equity funds for growth. Every year, move money from Bucket 3 → Bucket 2 → Bucket 1. This way, you never sell equity during a crash — you have safety buffers.
Inflation-Adjusted SWP — start with ₹50,000/month withdrawal, but increase it by 5–6% every year to match inflation. This protects your purchasing power. Your ₹50,000 today needs to become ₹80,000 in 10 years. The calculator can model this by increasing withdrawal annually. Requires slightly larger starting corpus, but maintains lifestyle quality.
Variable Withdrawal Based on Market — in good years when your fund grows 15%, withdraw a bit more (say 5% instead of 4%). In bad years when it grows only 5%, withdraw less (3% instead of 4%). This flexibility extends corpus life significantly. Requires discipline, but works beautifully if you have some other backup income.
Hybrid SWP + SIP Strategy — if you are still working part-time, do SWP for monthly expenses AND do a small SIP (say 20% of your income) back into the same fund. This replenishes the corpus while you withdraw. Great for semi-retired people or those doing freelance work. Your corpus stabilizes or even grows.
Diversified SWP across multiple funds — instead of one ₹1 crore fund with ₹50K SWP, split it: ₹50L in equity fund with ₹25K SWP, ₹30L in balanced fund with ₹15K SWP, ₹20L in debt fund with ₹10K SWP. This spreads risk and gives you flexibility — pause one SWP if needed while others continue. Also helps in tax efficiency.
Many smart retirees use this combination: keep 2 years of expenses in liquid fund (instant access, zero market risk), start SWP from a balanced advantage fund for monthly income, and keep 40–50% in pure equity index fund for long-term growth (do not touch this for 10 years). Rebalance annually. This gives you safety, income, AND growth. Best of all worlds.
How is SWP taxed? (This is where SWP shines)
This is the most beautiful part of SWP and why it beats FD and pension plans by a mile. In SWP, you are not taxed on the entire withdrawal — only on the capital gains portion. Let me explain with a simple example because this is super important:
Say you invested ₹50 lakh in a mutual fund 3 years ago. Today it has grown to ₹70 lakh. You set up SWP for ₹50,000/month. Every month, the fund sells units worth ₹50,000. But out of that ₹50,000, only a portion is profit (capital gain) — the rest is your own original investment coming back to you.
Here is how the math works:
| Your Investment | Current Value | Total Gain | Gain % | Monthly SWP | Capital Gain in Each SWP | Tax on SWP (LTCG) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ₹50 lakh | ₹70 lakh | ₹20 lakh | 40% | ₹50,000 | ₹14,286 (40% of ₹50K) | ₹535/month (12.5% of ₹14,286 – ₹1.25L exemption) |
So out of ₹50,000 withdrawal, only ₹14,286 is considered capital gain. And from that, you get ₹1.25 lakh exemption per year. So your actual taxable amount per month is even lower. Total annual tax on ₹6 lakh SWP withdrawals = approximately ₹6,400 only.
Now compare this with Fixed Deposit:
| Instrument | Annual Income | Taxable Amount | Tax (30% slab) | Net Income After Tax |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SWP (Equity Fund) | ₹6,00,000 | ₹51,429 | ₹6,400 | ₹5,93,600 |
| FD Interest | ₹6,00,000 | ₹6,00,000 | ₹1,80,000 | ₹4,20,000 |
On the same ₹6 lakh annual income, SWP saves you ₹1,73,600 in taxes every year compared to FD. Over 20 years of retirement, that is ₹34.7 lakh saved just in taxes. Plus, your SWP corpus continues to grow while FD corpus depletes. The difference is not marginal — it is life-changing for retirees.
A real-life SWP journey — year by year
Let me show you exactly what happens when a 60-year-old retiree invests ₹1 crore in a balanced advantage fund and sets up ₹50,000/month SWP (6% annual withdrawal) with the fund growing at 10% annually:
This is not a fairy tale. This is basic mathematics. When your withdrawal rate (6% annually) is lower than your growth rate (10% annually), your corpus must grow over time. The 4% gap (10% – 6%) compounds every year. In 25 years, ₹1 crore becomes ₹3.44 crore even after withdrawing ₹1.5 crore. This is the power of sustainable SWP.
Biggest SWP mistakes that can ruin your retirement
Sequence of returns risk — if the market crashes in the first 2–3 years after you start SWP, it can permanently damage your corpus longevity. Example: you invest ₹1 cr and start ₹60K/month SWP. If the market falls 20% in year 1, you are now withdrawing ₹60K from ₹80 lakh instead of ₹1 cr — that is a 7.5% withdrawal rate instead of 6%. Recovery becomes very difficult. Solution: Always keep 2–3 years of withdrawals in a separate liquid fund before starting SWP. Start SWP only from the invested portion. This way, even if markets crash, you survive on your buffer while the main corpus recovers without selling at a loss.
Frequently asked questions
💵 Plan your retirement income today
Use the SWP Calculator above to see exactly how long your corpus will last and how much monthly income you can safely withdraw — start planning your financial freedom now.
* All SWP projections are estimates based on assumed growth rates and withdrawal patterns. Actual returns vary based on market conditions, fund performance, and timing of investments. Tax calculations are indicative based on current tax laws (as of 2024) and may change. Past performance does not guarantee future results. SWP does not eliminate market risk — corpus can deplete if withdrawal rate exceeds growth rate. Always maintain emergency funds separately. Unity Wealth Capital does not provide personalized financial or tax advice — this content is for educational purposes only. Consult a SEBI-registered financial advisor before making investment decisions.