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How to Calculate How Much You Need for Retirement

Ankur JhaveryUpdated 21 March 2026
How to Calculate How Much You Need for Retirement
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Retirement calculation and planning

How to Calculate How Much You Need for Retirement

Retirement planning is something most Indians either ignore or postpone. This is especially true for self-employed individuals who do not have employer-provided benefits like EPF or gratuity. But here is the reality: you will eventually stop working, and when you do, you need a corpus large enough to sustain your lifestyle for 25-30 years or more.

In this guide, we will show you a simple, practical method to calculate your retirement corpus.

Step 1: Estimate Your Annual Expenses in Retirement

Start with your current monthly expenses. In retirement, some expenses will decrease (commuting, work clothes) while others may increase (healthcare, leisure). A common thumb rule is that you will need 70-80% of your pre-retirement expenses.

Example: If your current monthly expenses are ₹40,000, your estimated retirement expenses are ₹28,000-₹32,000 per month (let us use ₹30,000).

Step 2: Adjust for Inflation

Inflation erodes the purchasing power of money over time. India’s average inflation rate has been 5-7% over the past decade. You need to calculate what ₹30,000 per month will translate to in today’s value at your retirement age.

Formula: Future Monthly Expense = Current Monthly Expense x (1 + inflation rate)^years to retirement

Example: If you are 30 years old and plan to retire at 60:

  • Years to retirement: 30
  • Inflation rate: 6%
  • Future monthly expense: ₹30,000 x (1.06)^30 = ₹1,72,305
  • Future annual expense: ₹20,67,660

Step 3: Determine Your Retirement Duration

How long will your retirement last? With increasing life expectancy, plan for at least 25-30 years post-retirement. If you retire at 60, plan until age 85-90.

Step 4: Calculate the Required Corpus

You need a corpus that generates enough returns to cover your annual expenses while accounting for continued inflation during retirement. The simplest approach uses the 25x Rule:

Required Corpus = Annual Expense at Retirement x 25

Using our example: ₹20,67,660 x 25 = ₹5.17 crore

This assumes your corpus earns a real return (return minus inflation) of about 4% per year during retirement, allowing you to withdraw 4% annually without running out of money for about 30 years.

Step 5: Account for Existing Savings and Investments

Calculate the future value of your existing retirement savings:

  • EPF balance (if any from previous employment)
  • PPF balance
  • NPS balance
  • Mutual fund investments
  • Other savings earmarked for retirement

Subtract the projected future value of these from your required corpus. The difference is the gap you need to fill.

Step 6: Calculate the Monthly Investment Needed

Use a SIP calculator to determine how much you need to invest monthly to fill the gap.

Example:

  • Required corpus: ₹5.17 crore
  • Existing investments (projected future value): ₹1 crore
  • Gap: ₹4.17 crore
  • Years to retirement: 30
  • Expected return: 12% (equity mutual funds)
  • Required monthly SIP: approximately ₹11,900

A Simplified Retirement Calculator

Current Age Monthly Expenses Corpus Needed (at 60) Monthly SIP (at 12%)
25 ₹30,000 ₹6.9 Cr ₹10,400
30 ₹30,000 ₹5.17 Cr ₹11,900
35 ₹30,000 ₹3.86 Cr ₹15,400
40 ₹30,000 ₹2.88 Cr ₹23,800

Notice how starting just 5 years later doubles the required monthly SIP. Time is your greatest asset in retirement planning.

Key Assumptions and Adjustments

  • Inflation: We used 6%. If inflation is higher, you need a larger corpus.
  • Returns: We assumed 12% pre-retirement (equity) and 8% post-retirement (balanced). Adjust based on your risk appetite.
  • Healthcare: Medical costs inflate faster than general costs. Budget 15-20% extra for healthcare in retirement.
  • Social Security: Self-employed individuals in India generally cannot rely on government pensions. Your corpus must be self-sufficient.

Where to Invest for Retirement

  • NPS: Tax-efficient with additional ₹50,000 deduction. Professional management at low cost.
  • Equity Mutual Funds (SIPs): Best for long-term wealth creation.
  • PPF: Risk-free returns with tax benefits. Good for the debt portion of your portfolio.
  • EPF (Voluntary PF): If you are a former salaried employee, continue contributing voluntarily.
💡 Bachatt Tip: Do not let retirement planning overwhelm you. Bachatt has a built-in retirement calculator that helps you estimate your corpus, track your progress, and adjust your plan as your income and expenses change. Designed for India’s self-employed, Bachatt makes retirement planning simple and actionable. Try Bachatt now.