Estimate future corpus from one-time investments, compare inflation-adjusted value, and track year-wise growth instantly.
⚠️ Calculations are approximate and for illustration only.
| Year | Total Invested | Total Returns | Corpus Value |
|---|
Discover how one-time investments grow through compounding, how inflation affects real value, and how Fundulator helps you compare Lumpsum vs SIP performance easily.
A Lumpsum investment is a one-time deposit into a mutual fund or scheme. Your money starts compounding immediately — ideal when you have idle cash or a bonus to invest.
Compounding helps your earnings generate their own earnings. The longer you stay invested, the faster your wealth grows — even with moderate returns.
SIP spreads risk over time and suits regular earners. Lumpsum grows faster upfront — perfect for long-term, patient investors. Use Fundulator to compare both and see which aligns with your goals.
Inflation erodes future purchasing power. Enabling “Adjust for Inflation” helps you view your returns in today’s money — giving a more realistic idea of real growth.
The Wealth Growth Chart shows your total investment vs. corpus over time. It helps you understand how duration and returns shape your financial journey.
Compare Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) and Lumpsum investment to choose the approach that best fits your goals, cash flow, and risk comfort.
| Feature | SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) | Lumpsum Investment |
|---|---|---|
| Investment Style | Regular fixed periodic investment | One-time large investment |
| Market Timing Risk | Lower (Rupee Cost Averaging) | Higher (single market entry point) |
| Cash Flow Requirement | Suitable for monthly income | Requires surplus capital upfront |
| Volatility Impact | Smoothed over time | Directly affected by short-term swings |
| Return Potential | Strong long-term compounding | Can be higher if entry is at favorable valuations |
| Best For | Disciplined long-term wealth building | Investing bonuses, inheritance, or idle funds |
| When to Choose? | When you want staggered investing and lower timing risk | When you have capital ready and long holding horizon |
💡 Many investors combine both approaches — invest surplus funds as lumpsum and continue SIP for disciplined long-term compounding.
A Lumpsum investment means investing a one-time amount in a mutual fund. Your full capital starts compounding immediately, which can be effective for long-term wealth creation when you have surplus funds available.
SIP invests periodically and helps average market volatility, while Lumpsum invests all at once. Lumpsum may deliver stronger gains if invested before long growth phases, but timing risk is higher.
It shows the real value of your future corpus in today’s purchasing power. This helps you evaluate whether your investment growth is actually beating inflation.
Use realistic assumptions based on your asset mix. For equity-oriented funds, many investors model around 10–15% long term, while debt-oriented assumptions are lower. Conservative return assumptions improve planning quality.
No. Lumpsum returns are market-linked and not guaranteed. Actual outcomes depend on fund performance, investment duration, and market conditions.
Taxation depends on fund type and holding period. Equity and debt funds have different capital gains rules. Use this calculator for planning and confirm latest tax rules before investing.
It depends on cash availability, risk tolerance, and timing comfort. Lumpsum suits investors with surplus capital and long horizons; SIP suits gradual investing and better timing-risk management.
It gives instant corpus estimates, inflation-adjusted value, and year-wise growth, so you can compare scenarios and align one-time investments with long-term goals.
All results are illustrative and approximate. Actual performance will vary based on market conditions, fund performance, and inflation. Always consult a financial advisor before making investment decisions.