A complete head-to-head comparison of mutual fund SIPs and bank fixed deposits. Understand returns, risk, tax treatment, and which suits your financial goals.
1. SIP vs FD at a Glance
Feature
SIP (Equity Mutual Fund)
Fixed Deposit (FD)
Expected Returns
10–15% p.a. (long-term avg)
6.5–7.5% p.a.
Risk
Market-linked, volatile short-term
Zero risk, guaranteed returns
Tax on Returns
LTCG 12.5% above ₹1.25L
Fully taxable at slab rate
Effective Return (30% slab)
~10–13% post-tax
~4.6–5.3% post-tax
Inflation-Adjusted Return
4–9% real return
−0.4% to +1.5% real return
Liquidity
High (1-day redemption)
Moderate (premature penalty)
Minimum Investment
₹100–500/month
₹1,000 lump sum
Lock-in Period
None (ELSS: 3 years)
7 days to 10 years
Best For
Long-term wealth creation (5+ years)
Capital preservation (1–3 years)
2. Returns Comparison: Real Numbers
Let's compare ₹10,000 invested monthly for different periods:
Period
Total Invested
SIP @ 12%
FD @ 7%
SIP Advantage
5 years
₹6,00,000
₹8,25,000
₹7,19,000
+₹1,06,000
10 years
₹12,00,000
₹23,23,000
₹17,31,000
+₹5,92,000
15 years
₹18,00,000
₹50,46,000
₹31,54,000
+₹18,92,000
20 years
₹24,00,000
₹99,91,000
₹52,09,000
+₹47,82,000
25 years
₹30,00,000
₹1,89,76,000
₹81,07,000
+₹1,08,69,000
Over 25 years, SIP creates ₹1.08 crore more than FD on the same ₹10,000/month investment. The gap widens dramatically due to compounding at higher rates.
SIP (Mutual Fund): You can redeem any time (except ELSS). Money reaches your bank in 1–3 business days. No exit load after 1 year for most equity funds.
FD: Premature withdrawal possible but with 0.5–1% interest rate penalty. Some banks count interest at savings rate for premature breaks. Tax-saver 5-year FD has NO premature withdrawal.
Winner: SIP — better liquidity with no penalties after 1 year.
6. The Inflation Problem with FDs
This is the most overlooked aspect of FDs. Let's do the math for the 30% tax bracket:
FD rate: 7%
Post-tax return (30% slab): 7% × 0.7 = 4.9%
Inflation rate (India average): 5–6%
Real return: 4.9% − 5.5% = −0.6%
Your FD is actually losing purchasing power. ₹10 lakh in an FD today will buy less in 5 years even with the interest earned. This is why financial advisors call FDs "safe" but not "smart" for long-term goals.
SIP at 12% with LTCG: effective ~10.5% post-tax − 5.5% inflation = +5% real return. Your money actually grows in purchasing power.
7. When FD Is the Better Choice
Short-term goals (under 3 years): Car down payment, vacation, wedding expenses where you can't afford volatility
Emergency fund backup: A 1-year FD as a secondary emergency fund (primary in savings/liquid fund)
Senior citizens: Retirees who need guaranteed monthly income from FD interest payouts
Capital protection is priority: If you genuinely cannot tolerate any loss, even temporary
Parking money temporarily: While you decide where to invest a lump sum
Beating inflation: Any goal where you need your money to actually grow in real terms
Tax efficiency: If you're in the 20–30% tax bracket, SIP's LTCG is far better than FD's slab-rate taxation
Regular income earners: SIP matches monthly salary cash flow perfectly
Young investors: Time is on your side — market volatility is irrelevant over 15–20 year horizons
9. The Best Strategy: Use Both
SIP and FD are not competitors — they serve different purposes. Here's a smart allocation strategy:
Recommended allocation by goal horizon
Goal Timeline
SIP Allocation
FD/Debt Allocation
Example Goals
0–2 years
0%
100%
Emergency fund, short-term goals
2–5 years
30–40%
60–70%
Car, wedding, home down payment
5–10 years
60–70%
30–40%
Child's education, home upgrade
10+ years
75–85%
15–25%
Retirement, long-term wealth
The bottom line
Use FD for safety and short-term goals. Use SIP for growth and long-term goals. The combination gives you stability plus returns — the best of both worlds.