⚠️ Medical Disclaimer: These tools are for educational purposes only and are not medical advice. Please consult your pediatrician or healthcare provider for any health concerns.
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Child Education Fund Calculator

Engineering colleges that cost 8 lakhs today will cost 24 lakhs in 18 years. MBBS abroad? Don't ask. This little calculator tells you exactly how much you need to start putting aside each month. Based on your kid's age, what you want them to study, and where you want to invest. No vague advice. Real numbers.

India Education Inflation Built-In Flat & Step-up SIP Both 10 Pre-set Goals 100% Private

The education investment journey starts the moment your baby is born. engineering college 18 years from now will cost 30 to 50 lakhs. mbbs private can hit 1.7 crore. the numbers feel impossible until you do the math. Our calculator shows you exactly how much you need to save monthly via SIP to hit your education goal. We model Indian education inflation (9 to 11 percent), realistic SIP returns (12 percent equity historical), and the Sukanya Samriddhi / PPF / Mutual Fund options that Indian parents actually use.

🎓 Tax-advantaged education savings in India

Top options: Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (girl child only, 8.2 percent tax-free, 21 year lock-in), PPF (7.1 percent tax-free, 15 year lock-in, perfect for college timing), ELSS Mutual Funds (12 percent historical, 3 year lock-in, Section 80C deduction), Children Education Plans from UTI and HDFC, regular Equity Mutual Funds (SIP route). Sukanya Samriddhi and PPF combined give a stable tax-free base. Equity MFs give the growth needed for serious education goals.

💰 How Much Do I Need to Save?

Fill in the basics. We do the inflation math and SIP math. You get the monthly number plus the full picture.

Your Child Required
Education Goal Required
Financial Assumptions Defaults are realistic

How to use this calculator well

Five quick decisions to make. Defaults are sensible.

  1. 1
    Tell us about your kid

    How old is your baby right now (in months or years), and at what age will they need the money? For higher education, typically 18. For engineering specifically, 17. For abroad master's, around 22.

  2. 2
    Pick what they will study (or estimate)

    Use our pre-set goals. Indian engineering, medical, abroad UG, abroad PG. Or enter your own custom target amount in today's rupees. Our calculator will inflate it correctly to what it will actually cost when your child gets there.

  3. 3
    Pick your expected return

    12% is reasonable for long-term equity SIP. 10% is conservative. 8% if you plan to keep the money in PPF or debt funds. The lower the return, the more you have to save monthly. But lower returns are safer.

  4. 4
    See the monthly SIP needed

    You will get the exact monthly investment required, the total amount you'll invest over the years, and what the fund will grow to. Plus a year-by-year projection so you can see how the corpus builds up.

  5. 5
    Try the step-up version

    If a flat 25,000/month feels impossible right now but you expect your salary to grow, try a step-up SIP. Start at 15,000 today, increase by 10% every year. By year 18, your monthly contribution is closer to 75,000. But your starting burden is half.

💡 One parent to another

When I first ran this calculation for my own kid, the number that came back made me feel sick. 50,000 a month, are you kidding? But then I broke it down. We started with 8,000. Stepped up every year. Eight years in, we are at 16,000. The corpus is on track. The trick is to start small but to start. The number that scares you is hypothetical. The number you actually invest is real.

⚠️ This is not financial advice

The math is correct. The assumptions (inflation, returns) are based on historical India data. Your specific tax situation. Plus risk tolerance and family circumstances need a SEBI-registered advisor. Use this for planning conversations, not as the final word.

How this calculator actually works

No magic. Just two formulas. Inflation forward, then compound SIP backward. We show you the math, the assumptions, what your numbers actually mean.

1

Step One — What will it actually cost when your kid gets there?

The first problem with education planning is that everyone thinks in today's rupees. A B.Tech costs 10 lakhs today. But your 1-year-old won't go to college today. They will go in 17 years. And every single year, fees go up.

This is called education inflation, and in India it runs at roughly 9-11% per year — nearly double regular inflation. Why so high? Private colleges keep raising fees because demand for seats keeps going up. Hostel costs, books, coaching — everything compounds.

The formula: Future Value of a Goal
FV = PV × (1 + inflation)years
Example: B.Tech costs 10 lakhs today, baby is 1 year old, will go to college at 18
Years to college = 18 − 1 = 17
FV = 10,00,000 × (1.10)17 = 10,00,000 × 5.054 = 50.5 lakhs
That same 10 lakh B.Tech will cost about 50 lakhs in 17 years at 10% education inflation. That's your real target.
Your target inflated to college year
Enter your child's details above.
2

Step Two — How much to save monthly to hit that target

Now we work backward. We know how much we need (FV from step 1). We know how many years we have. We know what return we can reasonably expect from our investments. The question is: what monthly SIP will grow into exactly that target?

This is the inverse Future Value of Annuity formula. It assumes you invest the same amount every month, and your money compounds monthly.

The formula: Monthly SIP needed
SIP = FV / ( ((1+r)n − 1) / r ) × (1+r)
where r = monthly return rate (annual / 12), n = total months
Example: Need 50.5 lakhs in 17 years at 12% return
Monthly return r = 0.12/12 = 0.01
Total months n = 17 × 12 = 204
Compound factor = ((1.01)204 − 1) / 0.01 = 671.6
SIP = 50,50,000 / (671.6 × 1.01) = 7,442/month
So 7,442 a month for 17 years at 12% return gets you to 50 lakhs. That's it.
Your monthly SIP required
Enter your details above.
3

Step Three — How much will you actually invest? How much is just growth?

This is the part most people miss. Of the 50 lakhs you eventually have, how much did you put in vs how much was just compound interest doing its thing?

If you invest 7,442 a month for 204 months, your total contribution is just 15.2 lakhs. The other 35 lakhs is pure growth. You contribute 30% of the final value. The market gives you 70%. This is why starting early matters so much. Compound interest is your free employee that works 24/7 for 18 years.

Breakdown
Total invested7,442 × 204 = 15,18,168
Total growth50,50,000 − 15,18,168 = 35,31,832
Multiplier3.32x (final value / what you invested)
Your investment vs growth breakdown
Enter your details above.
4

The cost of delay — why every year you wait hurts you

Here's the cruel mathematics of compound interest. Two parents, same goal, same return rate. One starts when baby is born. The other delays by just 5 years (because hospital expenses, EMI, kids stuff, the usual).

Same target (50 lakhs), same return (12%)
Start at age 018 years, ~6,200/month, total invested 13.4 lakhs
Start at age 513 years, ~10,800/month, total invested 16.8 lakhs
Start at age 108 years, ~21,500/month, total invested 20.6 lakhs
Delay 5 years and your monthly commitment goes up by 70%. Delay 10 years and it more than triples. The first 5 years of compounding are doing the heaviest lifting. Don't skip them.
5

Step-up SIP — what to do if the number feels impossible

Let's be honest. A young parent with a new baby is rarely flush with cash. The required monthly SIP can feel out of reach. The step-up SIP is the smartest workaround.

Instead of starting at 25,000 and keeping it flat for 18 years, you start at 15,000 and increase by 10% every year. By year 18, you're contributing roughly the same as the flat 25,000 plan — but your starting burden is 40% lower, which matches how salaries actually grow.

Why step-up matches reality

A 28-year-old IT professional earns 8 LPA today. By 35 (when child is 7), salary is closer to 18 LPA. By 45 (child is 17), salary is around 35-40 LPA. Saving capacity grows with income. A step-up SIP grows with it. A flat SIP doesn't.

Year 1: 15,000/month   Year 2: 16,500/month   Year 5: 22,000/month   Year 10: 35,400/month   Year 18: 75,900/month
Your step-up SIP plan
Enter your details above to see step-up alternative.
6

Year-by-year corpus growth — where the money actually goes

The most encouraging thing about long-term SIPs: the final 5 years grow the corpus more than the first 10. Compound interest is exponential, not linear.

Example progression (7,442/month at 12% over 17 years)
End of year 33.4 lakhs (1.4 invested, growth 50K)
End of year 710.6 lakhs (4.5 invested, growth 6 lakhs)
End of year 1222.7 lakhs (8 invested, growth 15 lakhs)
End of year 1750 lakhs (15 invested, growth 35 lakhs)
Year 12 onwards is when the corpus really takes off. This is also why pulling money out of equity in market dips is so damaging — you miss the years that matter most.
Your year-wise projection
Enter your details above.
7

Where to actually park this money

The calculator gives you a number. Now you need a vehicle. Here is what makes sense for different time horizons (this is general information — not investment advice).

15+ years away (baby is under 3)
Aggressive

80-100% equity mutual funds. Pick 2-3 large-cap or flexi-cap funds with 10+ year track records. Use SIP, don't time the market. Expected return: 12-13%.

10-15 years away (child 3-8)
Balanced

60-70% equity, 30-40% in PPF/debt. PPF is excellent here — tax-free, 7.1% return, matches the 15-year lock-in to your kid's school journey. Expected return: 9-10%.

5-10 years away (child 8-13)
Conservative

40% equity, 60% debt/hybrid funds. Start shifting from equity SIP to balanced funds. You can't afford a 2008-style crash this close to needing the money. Expected return: 8-9%.

1-5 years away (child 13-17)
Safety First

90% debt, fixed deposits, debt mutual funds. Move equity gains to safer instruments. The corpus you've built must be protected. Expected return: 6-7%.

For girl child: Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (SSY) is currently at 8.2% tax-free and matures at 21. Excellent for marriage + higher education combined. You can deposit up to 1.5 lakh per year.
8

Things to plan for that the calculator doesn't show

The corpus number assumes one lump education goal. Real life has more variables.

  • School fees during the journey: A decent private school in a metro costs 1.5-3 lakh per year. From age 3 to 17, that's another 25-50 lakh total — outside this fund.
  • Coaching: JEE/NEET coaching can cost 3-7 lakh in classes 11-12. Plan separately.
  • Currency risk for abroad: If your child studies abroad, the rupee will likely depreciate against USD. Build a 20-30% buffer into abroad targets.
  • Hidden costs: Hostel, mess, books, lab fees, internship travel, gadgets. Add 25-30% on top of tuition for the full cost.
  • Marriage costs (if relevant): A separate goal entirely. Don't dip into education funds for it.
9

Reality-check categories — what different goals actually cost

Sanity check for what people typically aim for. Numbers in today's rupees:

GoalTotal cost todayWhy this cost
Govt engineering (NIT, IIT)5–8 lakhsHeavily subsidised, hostel + mess included
Private engineering (Tier 1)15–20 lakhsBITS, VIT, Manipal level
Private engineering (Tier 2)8–12 lakhsDecent state-level private
Government MBBS3–6 lakhsIf you crack NEET cutoff
Private MBBS50–80 lakhsBrutal but most parents end up here
IIM MBA20–25 lakhs2-year residential
Tier 2 MBA10–15 lakhsState PGDM colleges
Abroad UG (US/UK)50–75 lakhs4 years tuition + living
Abroad PG (1-2 years)25–40 lakhsMaster's is much shorter, cheaper
Australia / Singapore UG40–55 lakhsCheaper than US, similar quality
Add 25-30% on top of tuition for living, books, travel, gadgets. These are tuition-only estimates from 2024-25 fee structures.
10

The honest disclaimer

This calculator gives you a planning number, not a guarantee. Returns are not guaranteed. Inflation may run higher or lower than assumed. Your kid may want to study something we didn't list. Your salary may grow faster or slower than expected.

The point of this calculator is to start the conversation — with your spouse, with a financial advisor, with yourself. To replace vague worry with a concrete number. Whether that number is 7,000 or 70,000 a month, knowing it is better than guessing.

One more thing: we are not financial advisors. Anything in our explanation is general information based on publicly available data and standard math. For your specific situation, please consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor.

The questions every parent asks

Yes, it really is that much. Education inflation in India runs at 9-11% per year. Way higher than regular inflation. A B.Tech from a private engineering college in Bangalore costs around 10-12 lakhs today. In 18 years that becomes 35-40 lakhs. MBBS private costs 50 lakhs today. That's 1.7 crore in 18 years. The numbers feel scary because they should. The good news: SIPs grow too. A monthly investment of 15,000 in equity mutual funds at 12% return becomes about 1.1 crore in 18 years.
Generally speaking. Equity mutual funds for goals more than 7 years away (you can absorb market dips), hybrid funds for 5-7 year goals, debt funds and PPF for closer goals. Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana is great for a girl child (currently around 8.2% tax-free). PPF gives around 7.1% tax-free with 15-year lock-in which actually matches a child's school journey beautifully. We are not financial advisors. This is general information. Speak to a SEBI-registered advisor for what's right for your family.
For long-term equity mutual funds in India, the historical average is 12-13% over 15-20 year periods. Yes there are bad years (2008, 2020 March, 2022) but over a child's full education timeline, equity has consistently beaten everything else. For more conservative families, 10% is a safer assumption. For very conservative or shorter timelines, use 8%. The default of 12% in our calculator is realistic but not guaranteed. Markets do what they do.
It's the perfect time. Every year you delay costs you lakhs because of compounding. If you start when baby is 0 and invest 10,000 a month at 12% for 18 years, you end up with around 76 lakhs. If you start when baby is 5 years old and invest the same 10,000 monthly, you only have about 38 lakhs. Half. The 5 years you 'didn't have money for it' cost you 38 lakhs. Start with whatever you can manage, even 2,000 a month. Increase by 10% every year as your salary grows.
First. Don't panic. Most Indian parents can't afford it in full. Three practical options. One: start with whatever you can (5,000 or 10,000 monthly ). And step it up by 10% each year. A step-up SIP grows much faster than a flat SIP. Two: factor in education loans for the gap. Banks give education loans up to 1.5 crore for studies abroad. Your child will likely earn enough to repay. Three: reconsider the destination. NIT B.Tech costs 5 lakhs total. Engineering doesn't have to mean a 40-lakh private college. State medical colleges, IITs, NITs, AIIMS. These are still phenomenal options for a fraction of the cost.
Honest answer. Education insurance plans from LIC and others are usually a poor investment. They typically give 4-6% returns, lock your money for 15-20 years, and have huge surrender penalties. The same money in a SIP at 12% gives roughly 3x more. What you actually need: a term life insurance for yourself (so the child's education is funded if something happens to you). Term insurance is dirt cheap. A 30-year-old can get 1 crore cover for around 700-1000 a month. That's a much smarter combination. Term insurance for protection, SIP for growth.
They're not impossible, but they require serious planning. US undergrad costs about 50-60 lakhs total today (with scholarships, it's less). UK is similar. Australia and Singapore are cheaper at around 40 lakhs. In 18 years, double these numbers because of currency depreciation plus inflation. If you have abroad on your plan, you need to save more aggressively. Typically 25,000-40,000 monthly from baby's birth. Or plan for them to do undergrad in India and master's abroad, which is far cheaper since master's is shorter (1-2 years vs 4).
Save in your own name (or jointly with spouse). When the child turns 18, money in their name legally becomes theirs. They can spend it however they want, no questions. Money in your name means you control it until you choose to use it for them. The tax treatment is similar either way. The only exception is Sukanya Samriddhi which has to be in the girl child's name and matures when she is 21. That's actually fine because Sukanya restricts withdrawals to education and marriage purposes.
Even better in some ways. The fund you build for their education becomes seed capital for their venture. There's no rule that money saved for education must be spent on education. If your child wants to start something at 21, having 50 lakhs to fall back on (or use as starting capital) is an incredible gift. Same fund, different purpose. The point is. Give your child options, not pressure them into a specific path.
No. Everything runs in your browser. We don't save your child's age, target amounts, anything. No login, no tracking. You can calculate 10 scenarios in a row. None of it touches our server. The math runs locally on your device. Close the tab and the data is gone.

How education fund planning actually works in India

Indian healthcare for babies works on two parallel systems. Middle class families typically have a private pediatrician on call. Apollo, Fortis, Max, Manipal, Cloudnine have pediatric specialty centres in metros. Smaller cities have local trusted pediatricians who often see three generations of the same family. Government Primary Health Centres provide free care for everyone. Consultation fees at private pediatricians range from rupees 400 to 1500 in metros. Government hospitals are free, queues can be long. Many private pediatricians give WhatsApp consultations for after hours stuff. This is uniquely convenient and worth asking about when picking your pediatrician. The IAP has been updating its guidelines to match international evidence on fever management, medication choice, and the limited role of sponging.

📞 Emergency contacts in India

For emergencies in India: 112 (national emergency) or 102 (ambulance). For non-emergency child health concerns, call your pediatrician directly. Many hospital chains like Apollo, Fortis, and Max offer 24/7 telephone consultations for registered patients.

What Indian moms actually deal with

Indian families bring extra layers of advice when baby is sick. Maternal grandmother arrives within hours, often with old remedies. Mother in law has opinions. The aunties WhatsApp group has more opinions. The neighbour with no medical training also has thoughts. Most of this advice is well meaning. Some is outdated. None should replace your pediatrician. Use traditional comfort measures like haldi milk for older babies, tulsi water, light steam, these are fine alongside medical care. Just not as replacements when actual medication is needed. The cultural pressure to refuse modern medication is real and sometimes harmful. Crocin and Calpol when properly dosed are among the safest pediatric medications studied. The simple line "doctor said this is necessary" usually settles cultural disagreements about giving paracetamol.

Indian-specific questions

Yes for the tax efficiency and government guarantee. Current rate is 8.2 percent tax-free (FY 2024-25), reset quarterly. Lock in until girl turns 21 (with partial withdrawals from 18 for higher education). Maximum 1.5 lakh per year. Triple tax exemption (EEE) means interest is tax-free, maturity is tax-free, contribution gets Section 80C benefit. The 8.2 percent compounded over 18 years on 1.5 lakh annual investment gives roughly 60 to 70 lakh. Combined with equity MFs in other goals, this gives stable diversification. Open at any post office or designated banks.
Time horizon and risk tolerance decide. For 15+ years out (newborn to college), equity mutual funds historically give the best returns (12 percent typical) but with volatility. For 7 to 15 years out, hybrid funds or balanced advantage funds give moderate returns with lower volatility. For under 7 years, debt funds or PPF protect capital. PPF specifically locks for 15 years which matches a childs school timeline perfectly. NPS is technically for retirement but Tier 2 NPS can be used for any goal. Most financial advisors recommend 60 to 70 percent equity, 20 to 30 percent debt/PPF/SSY for education goals with 15+ year horizon.
Education loans are a backup, not a primary plan. Loan amounts are limited (typically 1.5 crore for studies abroad, 75 lakh for studies in India). Interest rates are 9 to 12 percent. EMI burden during student's early career is significant. Government education loans have collateral requirements above 7.5 lakh in most banks. Indian Bank, SBI, and HDFC offer the most competitive education loans. Plan to fund 50 to 70 percent of education cost through your savings, use loans for the gap. This avoids putting your child in heavy debt at age 22.

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