Calculatrice de Rendements de Fonds Communs
Estimez les rendements de fonds communs pour les modes SIP (mensuel) et lumpsum (unique). Voyez valeur à échéance, total investi et gain.
⚠️ Not financial advice. Results are illustrative only and should not be used as the basis for any investment, tax, or financial decision. Consult a qualified financial adviser or chartered accountant before acting on any figure shown.
What is a mutual fund returns calculator?
A mutual fund returns calculator projects the future value of your investment based on an assumed annualized return. It works for both SIP (Systematic Investment Plan, monthly) and lumpsum (one-time) modes, so you can compare the two strategies side by side.
SIP vs lumpsum — quick rule of thumb
Choose SIP if you invest from monthly salary, want rupee-cost averaging, or are nervous about market timing. Choose lumpsum if you have idle capital, the markets have just corrected meaningfully, or your investment horizon is 10+ years. For a windfall, an STP (lumpsum into liquid fund + monthly transfer to equity over 6–12 months) often outperforms either pure approach.
Why mutual fund returns aren't linear
Real fund returns vary year to year — equity funds may return -15% in one year and +28% in another. The CAGR you enter here is a smoothed average. Over 10+ years the smoothing assumption holds reasonably well; over 1–3 years actual outcomes can differ materially from the projection.
Choosing the right return rate for your calculation
Return rate selection is the most consequential input. For large-cap equity funds tracking Nifty 50 or Nifty 100, use 10–12% — the Nifty 50 TRI has delivered approximately 12.5% CAGR over 20 years through multiple market cycles. For mid-cap funds, 13–15% is historically justified but comes with higher volatility. For balanced advantage or hybrid funds, 9–11% is reasonable. For debt funds, use 6–8% depending on duration. Always model at two rates — an optimistic and a conservative case — to bracket the likely range. The calculator's output at 12% and 8% gives you a realistic range rather than false precision at a single number.
Direct vs regular plans — the expense ratio impact
Direct mutual fund plans have no distributor commission and charge 0.1–0.6% lower expense ratios than regular plans. This sounds small but compounds meaningfully: a ₹10 lakh lumpsum investment over 20 years at 12% in a direct plan (net TER ~0.4%) vs a regular plan (net TER ~1.1%) produces approximately ₹90 lakh vs ₹78 lakh — a ₹12 lakh difference from the same gross return. When entering a return rate in this calculator, account for the net TER: if the fund's gross return is 13% and TER is 1.2%, enter 11.8%. Use the AMC's website, MFCentral, or SEBI's MF Utilities to verify the current TER before modelling.
When to use this calculator vs XIRR
Use this mutual fund returns calculator to estimate future value before investing — it answers "how much will ₹X become in N years?" Use the XIRR calculator after investing to measure actual performance — it answers "what annualized return has my portfolio actually delivered?" The two tools are complementary: plan with this calculator, measure with XIRR. A common mistake is comparing the projected return from this calculator with the XIRR of a benchmark to evaluate a fund — the correct comparison is the fund's own XIRR versus the benchmark's XIRR over the same period.
Questions fréquemment posées
- Combien rapportent les fonds mutuels ?
- Historiquement, les fonds actions ont donné 10-12% CAGR à long terme (10+ ans). Fonds obligataires 6-8%, hybrides 8-10%. Ce sont des rendements passés — pas de garantie future.
- Quelle est la différence entre SIP et Lumpsum ?
- En SIP vous investissez un montant fixe chaque mois — avantage du coût moyen en roupies. En Lumpsum la somme entière est investie en une fois — si le marché monte vous gagnez plus, s'il baisse vous perdez plus.
- Qu'est-ce que le ratio de dépenses ?
- Frais annuels du fonds (gamme 0,5%–2,5%). Plans directs : 0,5–1,5%, Plans réguliers : 1,5–2,5%. 1% de frais supplémentaires sur 20 ans donne ~20% de valeur finale en moins. Toujours choisir le plan direct.
- Les fonds mutuels sont-ils sûrs ?
- Il y a un risque de marché — sur les actions à court terme (1–3 ans) des chutes de 30%+ sont normales. Mais à long terme (10+ ans) les données historiques sont positives. Les fonds obligataires sont plus sûrs mais battent à peine l'inflation.
- Combien de fonds dois-je avoir ?
- Pour la plupart 3–5 fonds suffisent — 1 large cap, 1 mid/small cap, 1 flexi cap, 1 obligataire, 1 international (optionnel). 10+ fonds c'est sur-diversification — comportement similaire à un indice mais avec plus de frais.
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