SWP Calculator

Plan your monthly income. Calculate withdrawals from your corpus with accurate interest compounding on the remaining balance.

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Yearly Progression

SWP Calculator – Design Your Regular Income

A Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) is a smart financial strategy that helps you generate a regular income stream-be it for a stress-free retirement, supplementing your salary, or managing recurring household expenses. However, since withdrawing more than your investment returns can deplete your capital faster than expected, careful planning is crucial. Luftle's SWP Calculator is a sophisticated online tool designed to help you estimate the sustainability of your withdrawals with precision.

Most calculators assume you start withdrawing immediately. But real planning often involves investing now, letting the money grow (Accumulation Phase), and then starting withdrawals (Distribution Phase).

By calculating your withdrawal strategy beforehand, you can determine a safe monthly payout, ensure your corpus lasts for your desired tenure, and balance immediate cash flow needs with long-term wealth growth.

Smart Tips for SWP Investors

  • Capital Protection Rule: Ideally, your annual withdrawal rate should be 1-2% lower than your expected returns to keep your principal intact.
  • Tax Efficiency: SWP is more tax-efficient than FD interest because you are only taxed on the capital gains part of the withdrawal, not the principal.
  • Beat Inflation: Unlike a fixed pension, your remaining corpus in Mutual Funds continues to grow, potentially combating inflation over 10-20 years.
  • Bucket Strategy: Keep 3 years of expenses in safer Debt Funds and the rest in Equity Funds to avoid withdrawing from Equity during a market crash.
  • Exit Load Awareness: If you start SWP immediately after investing, check for exit loads (usually 1% if withdrawn within 1 year).
  • Rupee Cost Ravaging: Withdrawing a fixed amount when markets are down depletes your units faster. Avoid high withdrawals in bear markets.

How does SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan) Work?

Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) allows you to withdraw a fixed amount from your mutual fund investments at regular intervals (monthly, quarterly, etc.). It is the opposite of SIP.

Balance = (Opening + Returns) - Withdrawal

  • Corpus: Your initial lump sum investment.
  • Returns: The growth earned on your remaining balance.
  • Withdrawal: The fixed amount you take out periodically.
  • Capital Erosion: If withdrawal > returns, your principal reduces over time.

Benefits of Using Luftle SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan) Calculator

Income Sustainability Check

Find out exactly how long your money will last if you withdraw a certain amount monthly.

Retirement Planning

Use the "I Want Income" mode to reverse-calculate how much corpus you need to build today for a stress-free retirement later.

Growth Phase Analysis

Account for the "deferral period" where you let your money grow before starting withdrawals, maximizing your corpus.

Detailed Reports

Download a yearly breakdown PDF showing opening balance, interest earned, and closing balance for every year.

Personal Loan EMI Calculator FAQs

Is SWP tax-efficient compared to FD interest?

Yes. In SWP, only the capital gains portion of your withdrawal is taxed (LTCG/STCG), whereas the entire interest from an FD is added to your income and taxed at your slab rate.

Can I increase my SWP amount later to beat inflation?

Yes, you can modify your SWP amount anytime. However, increasing withdrawals increases the risk of depleting your corpus faster if returns don't keep up.

What is a safe withdrawal rate?

Financial experts often suggest the "4% Rule" or up to 6% annually in the Indian context. Withdrawing more than what your fund earns (e.g., 8-10%) will erode your capital quickly.

What happens if the market crashes?

In a market crash, your fund value drops, but your fixed SWP continues. This sells more units at lower prices ("Rupee Cost Ravaging"). It is advised to keep 3 years' expenses in safer debt funds to avoid withdrawing from equity during crashes.