Key Takeaways
- A savings account earning 3.5% against 5-6% inflation costs you ₹2-3 lakh/year in purchasing power on ₹1 crore
- Use STP (Systematic Transfer Plan) to move into equity over 6-12 months. Don't invest ₹1 crore lump sum into stocks
- Emergency fund first: keep 6 months' expenses (₹3-6 lakh) in liquid funds before investing the rest
- A 60:30:10 equity-debt-gold split has delivered 10-12% CAGR over 10-year periods in India
- ₹1 crore invested at 12% CAGR becomes ₹3.1 crore in 10 years and ₹9.6 crore in 20 years
The First Thing to Do: Stop the Bleeding
If your ₹1 crore is sitting in a savings account right now, you’re losing money every single day. Not in nominal terms (your bank balance looks stable). But in real terms:
Your first move today: Transfer your ₹1 crore into a liquid mutual fund. This takes 10 minutes on any mutual fund platform. You’ll earn 6-7% instead of 3.5%, and your money is available within 24 hours if you need it. This isn’t investing yet. It’s just parking your money somewhere that doesn’t actively destroy value.
Many people with ₹1 crore suffer from "analysis paralysis." They spend months researching the perfect investment while their money earns 3.5% in a savings account. Moving to a liquid fund immediately buys you time to plan properly while earning ₹2.5-3.5 lakh more per year than a savings account.
The Framework: How to Allocate ₹1 Crore
There’s no universal answer. Your allocation depends on three things: your age, your timeline, and your existing financial position. Here’s a framework based on age brackets:
| Component | Age 25-35 | Age 35-45 | Age 45-55 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Equity mutual funds | 65-70% (₹65-70L) | 50-60% (₹50-60L) | 35-45% (₹35-45L) |
| Debt mutual funds | 20-25% (₹20-25L) | 25-35% (₹25-35L) | 35-45% (₹35-45L) |
| Gold (SGBs/Gold ETF) | 5-10% (₹5-10L) | 5-10% (₹5-10L) | 10-15% (₹10-15L) |
| Emergency liquid fund | ₹3-5L | ₹5-8L | ₹6-10L |
| Expected CAGR (10yr) | 11-13% | 9-11% | 8-10% |
Why this works: Younger investors have more time to ride out equity volatility, so they allocate more to equity. Older investors need stability, so they shift toward debt. Gold acts as a hedge against both inflation and equity downturns. It’s not about returns. It’s portfolio insurance.
Nifty 50 Index: 12-14% CAGR. Corporate bond funds: 7-8% CAGR. Sovereign Gold Bonds: 10-12% CAGR (including 2.5% interest). A 60:30:10 blend has delivered 10-12% CAGR consistently over any 10-year period since 2000, according to historical index and debt fund data.
Step-by-Step: Deploying ₹1 Crore
Step 1: Emergency Fund (Week 1)
Before investing a single rupee, carve out 6 months of living expenses. For most mass-affluent Indians, this is ₹3-6 lakh.
Park this in a liquid fund or a money market fund. Not a savings account, not a fixed deposit. You need instant access (T+1 day redemption) without sacrificing returns (6-7% vs 3.5%).
Step 2: Park the Remaining Amount (Week 1)
Transfer everything else into an ultra-short-term debt fund or liquid fund. This is your “staging area,” earning 6-7% while you deploy into equity and debt systematically.
Step 3: Set Up STP into Equity (Week 2)
Do not invest ₹65-70 lakh into equity funds in one shot. Markets could drop 15% the week after you invest, and the psychological damage of seeing ₹10 lakh evaporate will make you panic-sell.
Instead, set up a Systematic Transfer Plan (STP):
- Transfer a fixed amount from your debt staging fund into equity funds every week or month
- Duration: 6-12 months (shorter in a correction, longer if markets are at all-time highs)
- This gives you rupee cost averaging, the same principle that makes SIPs work
Equity fund allocation (within your equity bucket):
| Fund Type | Allocation | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Nifty 50 Index Fund | 40% of equity | Core large-cap exposure, lowest cost (0.1-0.2% expense ratio) |
| Nifty Next 50 Index Fund | 20% of equity | Mid-cap growth exposure, still passive and low-cost |
| Flexi-cap active fund | 25% of equity | Manager picks across market caps, alpha potential |
| International fund (US/Global) | 15% of equity | Geographic diversification, dollar hedge |
Step 4: Debt Allocation (Week 2-3)
Your debt allocation doesn’t need STP. Deploy it directly since debt funds don’t have the same volatility risk.
| Fund Type | Allocation | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Short-duration debt fund | 50% of debt | Stable returns (7-7.5%), low interest rate risk |
| Corporate bond fund | 30% of debt | Slightly higher returns (7.5-8%), moderate risk |
| Gilt fund (10-year) | 20% of debt | Government security, interest rate cycle play |
Step 5: Gold Allocation (Week 3)
| Option | Best For |
|---|---|
| Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs) | Buy-and-hold for 5-8 years. 2.5% annual interest + gold price appreciation, tax-free at maturity |
| Gold ETF | Need liquidity. Trade on exchange, no lock-in |
SGBs are strictly superior to physical gold and gold ETFs if you can hold for 5+ years. You get 2.5% interest annually (gold gives zero income), and capital gains are completely tax-free if held to maturity. The only downside: 5-year lock-in with exit option after year 5.
What ₹1 Crore Becomes Over Time
Here’s the compounding math at different return scenarios:
That ₹1 crore, invested in a disciplined, diversified portfolio at a realistic 12% CAGR, becomes nearly ₹10 crore in 20 years. Even at a conservative 10% CAGR, it becomes ₹6.7 crore.
The only way to not build wealth from ₹1 crore is to leave it in a savings account, chase hot tips, or keep switching strategies every quarter.
Three Things You Should NOT Do With ₹1 Crore
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Don’t put it all in real estate. Indian residential real estate has returned just 2-4% CAGR in most cities between 2014 and 2024 (according to NHB RESIDEX data). Add stamp duty, registration, maintenance, and zero liquidity. It’s the worst risk-adjusted asset class for most people. ₹1 crore in a Tier 2 city apartment is ₹1.04 crore after a year. ₹1 crore in a Nifty index fund is ₹1.12 crore.
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Don’t put it all in fixed deposits. FDs earn 6.5-7.5% pre-tax, but after 30% tax (if you’re in the highest slab), that’s 4.5-5.25%. Below inflation. Your ₹1 crore shrinks in real terms.
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Don’t try to time the market. Waiting for a “crash” to invest is the most expensive decision you can make. According to Dalal Street data, investors who tried to time the Nifty 50 over 2010-2025 earned 3-4% less CAGR than those who simply invested and stayed invested.
People with large lump sums are especially vulnerable to two traps: (1) "I'll wait for the right time," which means the money sits idle losing to inflation, and (2) "I'll manage it myself," which leads to over-trading, performance-chasing, and tax-inefficient moves. The data consistently shows that systematic, automated investing beats active self-management for 90%+ of retail investors.
Tax Implications You Need to Know
| Investment Type | Holding Period | Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Equity mutual funds | > 1 year (LTCG) | 12.5% on gains above ₹1.25 lakh/year |
| Equity mutual funds | < 1 year (STCG) | 20% |
| Debt mutual funds | Any period | At your income tax slab rate |
| Sovereign Gold Bonds | Held to maturity | Tax-free |
| Fixed Deposits | — | At your income tax slab rate |
Tax-loss harvesting tip: Each year, book up to ₹1.25 lakh in equity LTCG tax-free by selling and re-buying. On a ₹1 crore equity portfolio growing at 12%, this can save you ₹15,000-₹30,000 in taxes annually, compounding into lakhs over a decade.