How to invest according to your age to build a ₹10 crore corpus – Here’s what AI answered, it was literally was a wake up call
I asked Chatgpt that “how much one should invest through mutual funds according to their age to build a ₹10 crore retirement corpus. Neil: 20 years, Dipto: 25 years, Sanjay: 30 years and Rakesh: 40 years”
How to build a ₹10 crore corpus
To estimate how much each person should invest monthly via mutual funds to build a Rs10 crore retirement corpus, we need to make a few standard assumptions:
Required SIP by Age
Neil (Age 20) — 40 years to invest
- Time is strongly on his side
- Required SIP: ₹5,000 – ₹6,000/month
Thanks to compounding over 4 decades, even a small SIP grows massively.
Dipto (Age 25) — 35 years to invest
- Still excellent runway
- Required SIP: ₹10,000 – ₹12,000/month
A 5-year delay nearly doubles the monthly requirement.
Sanjay (Age 30) — 30 years to invest
- Compounding window starts shrinking
- Required SIP: ₹20,000 – ₹25,000/month
Notice the steep jump — time is the biggest factor.
Rakesh (Age 40) — 20 years to invest
- Late starter, aggressive saving needed
- Required SIP: ₹80,000 – ₹1,00,000/month
At this stage, discipline + higher allocation to equities becomes crucial.
What is the math behind it?
The numbers come straight from the future value of a SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) formula — this is just compound interest applied to monthly investments.
The Core Formula (SIP Future Value)
FV=P× r(1+r)n−1×(1+r)
What each term means:
- FV = Future value ( ₹10 crore target)
- P = Monthly SIP amount (what we solve for)
- r = Monthly return = annual return ÷ 12
- n = Total number of months (years × 12)
Let’s take the example of Neil (Age 20) to understand this more clearly
The key driver is this part: (1+r)n. Small changes in n (time) create massive changes in output, i.e. in 20 years your money grows 10x, in 30 years it grows about 30x and it grows 97× in 40 years time