Free SWP Calculator🇮🇳 India

Plan systematic withdrawals from your mutual fund investments. See how long your corpus will last and how much monthly income you can generate.

Calculate Your SWP

Total Withdrawn
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Remaining Corpus
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Corpus Lasts
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YearWithdrawal/yrTotal WithdrawnReturnsRemaining

What is SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan)?

A Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) is the opposite of SIP. While SIP helps you invest a fixed amount every month, SWP allows you to withdraw a fixed amount from your mutual fund investment at regular intervals. The remaining corpus stays invested and continues to earn returns.

How SWP Works

When you set up an SWP, the mutual fund redeems a fixed number of units each month to give you the specified withdrawal amount. Your remaining units continue to grow based on the fund's performance. If the fund earns more than your withdrawal rate, your corpus actually grows over time.

Benefits of SWP

  • Regular income: Get predictable monthly cash flow from your investments — ideal for retirees.
  • Tax efficiency: Only the capital gains portion of each withdrawal is taxed, not the full amount. This is more efficient than dividend income.
  • Corpus continues to grow: Your remaining investment earns returns, potentially beating inflation.
  • Flexibility: You can increase, decrease, or stop withdrawals anytime without penalties.
  • Better than FD interest: SWP from a balanced fund typically yields 9-11% vs. 6-7% from FD interest.

SWP vs Other Income Options

FeatureSWPFD InterestDividend PlansSCSS/PMVVY
Expected Return9–12%6.5–7.5%Variable7.4–8.2%
Income PredictabilityFixed amountFixed rateUnpredictableFixed rate
Tax EfficiencyHigh (only gains taxed)Low (full interest taxed)ModerateLow
Inflation ProtectionGood (can step-up)NoneVariableNone
Capital PreservationIf withdrawal < returnYes (guaranteed)Fund dependentYes (guaranteed)
Best ForRegular income + growthRisk-averse investorsIrregular income OKSenior citizens

SWP Examples

Example 1: Retirement Monthly Income

Corpus: ₹50,00,000. Monthly withdrawal: ₹25,000. Fund return: 10%. After 20 years, you'll have withdrawn ₹60,00,000 and your remaining corpus will be approximately ₹22,50,000. Your money earned ₹32,50,000 in returns during this period!

Example 2: The 4% Rule

Corpus: ₹1,00,00,000. Annual withdrawal: 4% (₹33,333/month). Fund return: 10%. At this rate, your corpus actually grows — after 25 years, it could be worth ₹2.8 crore even after withdrawing ₹1 crore total.

Example 3: Step-Up SWP for Inflation

Corpus: ₹75,00,000. Monthly withdrawal: ₹30,000 with 6% annual increase (inflation). Fund return: 10%. Your withdrawal grows from ₹30K/month in Year 1 to ₹96K/month in Year 20. The corpus lasts approximately 22 years.

SWP Formula

Remaining = C × (1+r)n − W × [(1+r)n − 1] / r
  • C = Initial corpus
  • W = Monthly withdrawal amount
  • r = Monthly rate of return (annual rate / 12)
  • n = Total number of months

If the remaining amount drops below zero, the corpus is exhausted before the planned duration. This calculator shows the exact month when that would happen.

10 Tips for Effective SWP Planning

  • 1. Start with the 4% rule: Withdraw no more than 4-5% of your corpus per year to make it last 25-30+ years.
  • 2. Use a balanced fund: Balanced advantage or hybrid funds (60:40 equity:debt) provide stable 9-11% returns with lower volatility than pure equity.
  • 3. Account for inflation: Use the step-up withdrawal feature. ₹25,000 today will have the purchasing power of ₹13,000 in 10 years at 7% inflation.
  • 4. Keep 1-2 years' expenses in liquid fund: Don't rely solely on SWP. Maintain a liquid fund buffer so you can pause SWP during market crashes.
  • 5. Review annually: Check if your corpus is depleting faster than expected. Adjust withdrawals if needed.
  • 6. Combine with pension: Use SWP to supplement pension, not replace it entirely. NPS annuity + SWP can provide comfortable retirement income.
  • 7. Choose growth option, not dividend: Always invest in the growth option and set up SWP. Dividend plans are less tax-efficient.
  • 8. Delay SWP start if possible: Every year you delay, your corpus grows. Starting SWP at 62 instead of 60 can add 2-3 extra years of income.
  • 9. Use systematic transfer first: Transfer your lump sum from a liquid fund to an equity/balanced fund via STP over 6-12 months, then start SWP.
  • 10. Plan for 30+ years: Average life expectancy is increasing. Plan for your money to last until age 90, not 80.

How SWP Is Taxed in India

Equity Funds (holding > 1 year)

  • LTCG: 12.5% on gains above ₹1.25 lakh per year
  • Each withdrawal is treated as partial redemption — FIFO method determines which units are redeemed
  • Only the gain portion is taxed, not the full withdrawal

Debt Funds

  • Gains taxed at your income tax slab rate regardless of holding period
  • Still more efficient than FD interest since only the gain portion (not the full amount) is taxable

Tax Advantage Example

You invested ₹50L. After 3 years, value is ₹65L. You withdraw ₹3L. The gain portion of ₹3L is only ₹69,231 (proportional gains). Only this amount is taxable — not the full ₹3L. Compare this to ₹3L of FD interest, which is fully taxable.

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Frequently Asked Questions

SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan) allows you to withdraw a fixed amount from your mutual fund at regular intervals. The remaining corpus stays invested and continues to earn returns. It's the opposite of SIP — SIP builds wealth, SWP provides income.
Usually yes. SWP from a balanced fund can earn 9-11% while FD gives 6-7%. Plus, SWP is more tax-efficient since only the gains portion is taxed. However, SWP carries market risk while FD returns are guaranteed.
The 4% rule suggests withdrawing 4% of your corpus per year (≈0.33% per month). For ₹50L corpus, that's ₹16,667/month. At 10% returns, this rate is very sustainable — your corpus would actually grow.
Yes. You can modify your SWP amount anytime. This calculator lets you plan for annual increases (step-up) to account for inflation. A 6% annual increase helps maintain your purchasing power.
Balanced Advantage Funds or Hybrid Funds are generally best for SWP. They provide 9-11% returns with lower volatility than pure equity funds. Conservative Hybrid Funds are suitable for very risk-averse retirees.
During a crash, your fund redeems more units to meet the withdrawal amount. This accelerates corpus depletion. That's why keeping 1-2 years' expenses in a liquid fund as buffer is recommended — you can pause SWP during crashes.