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Retirement

Retirement Corpus Calculator — Delhi

Planning retirement in Delhi, Delhi NCR? With a cost of living index of 85/100 (Mumbai = 100) and monthly expenses of approximately Rs 43,750 today, you need a corpus of Rs 7.54 crore by age 60 to maintain your lifestyle. Starting at 30, this requires a monthly SIP of Rs 21,569 at 12% returns. Use the calculator with your actual numbers.

Verified Formula|Source: PFRDA & Employees' Provident Fund Organisation|Last verified: April 2026Methodology

Your Details

yrs
18 yrs55 yrs
yrs
45 yrs70 yrs
Rs.
%
3%10%

India's long-term average is ~6%

%
6%18%

Equity MFs: 12-15%, Debt: 6-8%, Balanced: 9-11%

Rs.

EPF + PPF + NPS + MF + FD earmarked for retirement

How it works

We inflate your current expenses to retirement age, calculate the corpus needed to sustain that lifestyle indefinitely, then subtract the future value of your existing savings to determine how much SIP you need each month.

Required Retirement Corpus

₹8.62 Cr

You need this corpus by age 60 to maintain your lifestyle (30 years from now)

Monthly SIP Needed

₹0

Start this SIP today

Monthly Expenses at Retirement

₹0

After 6% inflation for 30 yrs

Total You'll Invest

₹0

Including existing savings

Corpus Growth Over Time

Age 31₹8.22 L
Age 34₹20.53 L
Age 37₹38.14 L
Age 40₹63.35 L
Age 43₹99.41 L
Age 46₹1.51 Cr
Age 49₹2.25 Cr
Age 52₹3.30 Cr
Age 55₹4.82 Cr
Age 58₹6.98 Cr
Age 60₹8.91 Cr
Amount InvestedCorpus Value (Invested + Returns)

Year-by-Year Breakdown

AgeAnnual SIPTotal InvestedCorpus Value
31₹2,41,952₹7.42 L₹8.22 L
33₹2,41,952₹12.26 L₹15.93 L
35₹2,41,952₹17.10 L₹25.71 L
37₹2,41,952₹21.94 L₹38.14 L
39₹2,41,952₹26.78 L₹53.93 L
41₹2,41,952₹31.61 L₹73.96 L
43₹2,41,952₹36.45 L₹99.41 L
45₹2,41,952₹41.29 L₹1.32 Cr
47₹2,41,952₹46.13 L₹1.73 Cr
49₹2,41,952₹50.97 L₹2.25 Cr
51₹2,41,952₹55.81 L₹2.91 Cr
53₹2,41,952₹60.65 L₹3.75 Cr
55₹2,41,952₹65.49 L₹4.82 Cr
57₹2,41,952₹70.33 L₹6.17 Cr
59₹2,41,952₹75.17 L₹7.89 Cr
60₹2,41,952₹77.59 L₹8.91 Cr

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Why Delhi's Cost of Living Shapes Your Retirement Target

Retirement corpus is not a universal number — it is deeply local. Delhi has a cost of living index of 85relative to Mumbai's 100, meaning everyday expenses here are broadly comparable to Mumbai — one of India's most expensive retirement destinations.

A 2-BHK in Dwarka or Rohini rents for Rs 28,000/month today. Inflated at 6% for 30 years, this single line item reaches Rs 1,60,818/month by 2055. Retirees who own their home debt-free by retirement eliminate this entirely — reducing the required corpus by a significant margin.

The 4% Withdrawal Rule — Applied to Delhi

The 4% rule states that a corpus invested in a balanced portfolio (60% equity, 40% debt) can sustain annual withdrawals of 4% indefinitely, with very high probability of the corpus outlasting a 25-30 year retirement. Applied to Delhi:

  • Monthly expenses today: Rs 43,750
  • Same expenses in 30 years at 6% inflation: Rs 2,51,278/month (Rs 30,15,336/year)
  • Required corpus at 4% withdrawal rate: Rs 7.54 crore
  • Monthly SIP at 12% annual returns to build this corpus in 30 years: Rs 21,569/month

The 4% rule was developed for US equity markets. For India, a 3.5% withdrawal rate is more conservative given higher inflation — this would require a corpus of Rs 8.62 crore. Use the calculator above to model different withdrawal rates.

EPF as Your Retirement Bedrock in Delhi

For Delhi's organised-sector employees, EPF is the most reliable retirement instrument — tax-free interest, government-guaranteed returns (currently 8.25%), and forced savings discipline. For the average Delhi professional:

  • Monthly EPF contribution (employee + employer, 24% of basic salary of Rs 4,20,000/year): Rs 8,400/month
  • EPF corpus after 30 years at 8.5% interest: Rs 139 lakh
  • Contribution towards the required Rs 7.54 crore corpus: 18.4%

EPF provides a strong foundation — but covers only 18% of the required corpus in most scenarios. Equity mutual funds via SIP, NPS, and PPF must supplement EPF to reach the full retirement target.

NPS in Delhi: Mandatory for Government, Recommended for Private Sector

National Pension System (NPS) participation is mandatory for central government employees who joined after 2004, and voluntary for private sector workers. Delhi's dominant sector — Government — has increasing NPS adoption, particularly at larger employers. Key NPS benefits:

  • Additional tax deduction of Rs 50,000 under Section 80CCD(1B) — beyond the 80C limit
  • Employer NPS contribution of 10% of basic is deductible under 80CCD(2)
  • 60% of corpus tax-free at maturity; 40% used for annuity purchase
  • Equity NPS funds (E tier) have delivered 12–14% returns over 10-year periods

For a Delhi professional contributing Rs 3,500/month to NPS for 30 years at 11% returns, the NPS corpus at 60 would be approximately Rs 259165409636250 lakh.

Real Estate as Retirement Asset in Delhi

Owning a Delhi property adds two dimensions to retirement planning: (1) eliminating rent, and (2) potential rental income from a second property. A 900 sq ft apartment inDelhi at Rs 12,000/sq ft is worth Rs 108 lakh. At a 2.5% gross rental yield, annual rent income is Rs 2,70,000 — approximately Rs 22,500/month. This passive income stream reduces the corpus withdrawal needed, effectively lowering your SIP target.

However, real estate is illiquid and maintenance-intensive in retirement. The SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan) from a mutual fund corpus is generally more flexible and tax-efficient for monthly income in retirement than managing a rental property.

What If You Retire in a Tier-2 City Instead of Delhi?

Geographic arbitrage at retirement is a powerful financial lever. If you accumulate your corpus working in Delhi (high salary, high cost) and retire in a Tier-2 city — say, Coimbatore, Jaipur, or Indore (cost of living index 42–50) — your monthly expenses drop by 47–51%. This means the required corpus for a comfortable Tier-2 city retirement is:

  • Required corpus to retire in Delhi: Rs 7.54 crore
  • Required corpus to retire in a Tier-2 city at index 50: Rs 4.43 crore
  • Savings: Rs 3.10 crore — enabling significantly earlier retirement or a more comfortable lifestyle on the same corpus

Unique Financial Context: Delhi

Delhi is a professional-tax-free Union Territory — residents pay Rs 0 in professional tax, a saving of up to Rs 2,500/year vs Mumbai or Bengaluru. Delhi NCR accounts for approximately 20% of India's total income tax collection despite having 5% of the population.

Disclaimer: Retirement corpus projections assume 6% annual inflation, 12% equity returns, and 8.5% EPF returns — all of which can vary materially. The 4% withdrawal rule is a guideline, not a guarantee. Actual corpus requirement depends on your specific lifestyle, dependents, healthcare needs, and investment performance. This is not financial advice. Consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor for personalised retirement planning.

FAQs — Retirement Corpus in Delhi

How much retirement corpus does a Delhi professional earning Rs 10.5 lakh need?

Assuming monthly expenses of Rs 43,750 (50% of monthly salary), retirement at 60, 6% annual inflation, and a 25-year post-retirement life span, the required corpus under the 4% withdrawal rule is approximately Rs 7.54 crore. This assumes retirement in Delhiat the city's current cost of living index of 85. If you plan to own your home debt-free by retirement, this figure can be reduced by the equivalent of Rs 28,000/month capitalised at 4% withdrawal — roughly Rs 0.8 crore less.

Is EPF enough for retirement in Delhi?

EPF alone is not sufficient for retirement in Delhi. For the average Rs 10.5 lakh earner contributing to EPF for 30 years, the accumulated corpus is approximately Rs 139 lakh — covering only 18% of the Rs 7.54 crore needed. The gap must be filled through equity SIPs, NPS contributions, and PPF. EPF provides a safe, guaranteed base but cannot carry the entire retirement load — particularly in a higher cost-of-living city like Delhi.

What is the right SIP amount for Delhi residents to retire comfortably at 60?

Starting at 30 with zero existing corpus, a Delhi professional with monthly expenses of Rs 43,750 needs to invest Rs 21,569/month in equity mutual funds (assuming 12% CAGR) to build the required Rs 7.54 crore by 60. This is 24.7% of gross monthly income. This excludes EPF contributions (which add separately) — factoring in EPF, the required top-up SIP is somewhat lower. Start the calculation with your actual numbers — current corpus, EPF balance, NPS account — in the calculator above for a precise figure.

How does FD rate of 7% in Delhi compare to inflation for retirement planning?

The average FD rate in Delhi at 7% is below India's long-term average inflation of 6% — meaning a pure FD-based retirement strategy erodes real wealth over time. After tax (10% TDS on FD interest above Rs 40,000/year for non-senior citizens), the real post-tax return on FDs in Delhi is approximately 0.30% — negative in real terms. This is why a blended portfolio with significant equity allocation is essential for long-horizon retirement planning in Delhi. FDs are appropriate for emergency funds and short-term goals, not the primary retirement accumulation vehicle.

Delhi is where retirement planning diverges most dramatically based on employer type. A central government employee on the Old Pension Scheme exits the workforce into a guaranteed Rs 80,000 to Rs 1 lakh per month pension — and needs almost zero personal corpus. A private sector executive in Connaught Place earning comparably must build Rs 5 to 6 crore entirely through self-discipline. This sharp divide makes Delhi one of India's most unequal retirement markets. The government-versus-private calculus shapes everything: housing allocation, medical coverage, and post-retirement social infrastructure. Understanding which camp you are in — and acting accordingly — is the foundational step in any Delhi retirement plan. Those in the private sector must compensate for the absent pension with aggressive SIP investing, maximized NPS contributions, and strategic real estate decisions.

Key Insight — Delhi

Rajesh is a 33-year-old private sector HR Director at a company in Connaught Place, drawing Rs 24 lakh CTC per year. He plans to retire at 60. His target retirement expense: Rs 80,000 per month in today's money (owned 2BHK in Dwarka, loan to be closed by 50). At 7 percent inflation over 27 years, Rs 80,000 per month today becomes Rs 5.26 lakh per month in nominal terms at 60. Using the conservative Indian withdrawal rate of 3.5 percent (corpus x 3.5 percent divided by 12 = monthly income), he needs: Rs 5.26 lakh x 12 / 0.035 = Rs 1.8 crore annual requirement / 0.035 = Rs 5.14 crore in nominal terms at retirement. His corpus-building plan: EPF (employer plus employee combined Rs 5,800 per month for 27 years at 8.15 percent) = Rs 60 lakh. NPS Tier-I (Rs 8,000 per month for 27 years at 10 percent) = Rs 1.07 crore, of which 60 percent lump sum = Rs 64 lakh. Equity SIP (Rs 22,000 per month for 27 years at 12 percent) = Rs 5.44 crore. Total projected corpus: Rs 6.68 crore — meeting and slightly exceeding his Delhi retirement target. The Delhi real estate wildcard: his Dwarka 2BHK, worth Rs 80 lakh today, may be worth Rs 2 to 3 crore at retirement, providing a secondary cushion if needed.

Delhi's Financial Context and Retirement Corpus Calculator

Delhi's retirement COL spans a wide range depending on location and lifestyle. A retiree in South Delhi (Vasant Vihar, Hauz Khas) with a self-owned home needs Rs 90,000 to Rs 1.1 lakh per month — premium grocery stores, expensive healthcare at Max or Apollo, and higher home maintenance. A retiree in Dwarka, Rohini, or Janakpuri with an owned home manages at Rs 65,000 to Rs 75,000 per month. Government retirees with CGHS membership save Rs 15,000 to Rs 20,000 per month on healthcare costs — the CGHS card is worth roughly Rs 25 to 30 lakh in corpus equivalent over a 20-year retirement. Delhi also benefits from excellent public infrastructure post-metro expansion, reducing transport costs for retirees who no longer need a car for daily commuting.

Calculating Your Retirement Number in Delhi

Government employees in Delhi must still calculate their retirement number, but through the pension lens. The OPS pension equals 50 percent of last drawn basic pay. If your last basic is Rs 1.94 lakh (Level 14 in 7th Pay Commission), your pension is Rs 97,000 per month — more than sufficient for Delhi's Rs 65,000 to Rs 75,000 per month COL (in today's money). NPS employees under CPS must be more careful: NPS at retirement gives 60 percent as lump sum, 40 percent mandatory annuity. On Rs 2 crore NPS corpus, the annuity (40 percent = Rs 80 lakh at 6.5 percent annuity rate) generates only Rs 43,000 per month — well short of Delhi's COL. This is the NPS adequacy gap that every CPS employee must bridge through additional equity SIP and PPF contributions. Private sector employees use the standard formula: current monthly expenses multiplied by 12 multiplied by 28 (for 3.5 percent withdrawal), then inflated to retirement date.

Asset Allocation at Retirement Age in Delhi

Delhi retirees over 60 benefit from some of India's best fixed-income infrastructure: Post Office SCSS (Senior Citizens Savings Scheme) at 8.2 percent per annum on up to Rs 30 lakh (Rs 60 lakh for couples filing jointly) is the first port of call. A couple can park Rs 60 lakh in SCSS earning Rs 4.92 lakh per year — Rs 41,000 per month — from a near-zero-risk instrument. Beyond SCSS, the recommended allocation for a Delhi retiree: 35 percent in equity balanced advantage funds and flexi-cap funds, 35 percent in debt through a combination of SCSS, RBI Floating Rate Savings Bonds, and short-duration debt funds, 15 percent in government securities and tax-free bonds, 10 percent in gold ETFs, and 5 percent in liquid funds for immediate needs. Government retirees with pension covering basic expenses can afford a higher equity allocation (50 percent or more), since the pension itself acts as a built-in debt instrument.

More Questions — Retirement Corpus Calculator in Delhi

I am 38, Delhi private sector, retiring at 55, have Rs 20 lakh saved, need Rs 70,000 per month in retirement. What SIP do I need?

You have 17 years to retirement. Rs 70,000 per month today at 7 percent inflation over 17 years = Rs 2.12 lakh per month needed at 55. Corpus required at 55: Rs 2.12 lakh x 12 x 28 (3.5 percent withdrawal rate) = Rs 7.12 crore. Your Rs 20 lakh today grows to Rs 1.28 crore in 17 years at 12 percent. Gap: Rs 5.84 crore. To build Rs 5.84 crore through SIP in 17 years at 12 percent requires approximately Rs 1.05 lakh per month. This is a high SIP requirement for a 17-year timeline. Critical adjustments to consider: first, maximise EPF contributions (your employer's share is effectively free corpus); second, deposit Rs 1.5 lakh in PPF every year (Rs 1.5 lakh for 17 years at 7.1 percent = Rs 52 lakh additional, reducing SIP gap); third, if your income grows 8 to 10 percent annually, increase SIP by the same amount every year — a step-up SIP at even 5 percent annual increase reduces your starting SIP requirement considerably.

My wife is a central government employee with OPS pension. Does that change how I calculate my own retirement corpus?

Yes, significantly — and it is one of the most underutilised planning advantages in dual-income Delhi households. If your wife's OPS pension at 60 will be Rs 60,000 to Rs 80,000 per month (covering household basics), then your personal retirement corpus target drops by Rs 60,000 to Rs 80,000 per month in monthly draw requirement. Effectively, you only need to top up to your lifestyle target, not fund the entire baseline. Example: target household retirement Rs 1.1 lakh per month, wife's pension covers Rs 70,000 — you only need to generate Rs 40,000 per month from your corpus. At Rs 40,000 per month at 3.5 percent withdrawal rate, your corpus target is Rs 1.37 crore in today's money. Compare that to Rs 3.73 crore if you were planning solo. The combined pension household is one of Delhi's most powerful financial structures — maximising it by ensuring both spouses serve full tenures is the most efficient retirement strategy a dual-income government family can pursue.

Related Calculators — Delhi

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