Goal Inflation Calculator
Now find the SIP for this goal
Use the Goal SIP Calculator to work out the monthly investment needed to reach ₹33.46 L in 5 years.
Open Goal SIP Calculator →Future cost of your goal
₹33.46 L
+₹8.46 L more than today over 5 years
Today
₹25 L
Inflation eats
₹8.46 L
You'll need
₹33.46 L
A goal inflation calculator tells you how much a financial goal worth a given amount today will actually cost in the future. You think of "₹50 lakh for my wedding" or "₹25 lakh for a down payment" in today's rupees — but by the time the goal arrives, prices have risen. This calculator translates today's number into the future rupees you'll actually need.
It's the first calculator to use when planning any long-horizon financial goal. Once you know the inflated future cost, the Goal SIP Calculator works out the monthly investment needed to reach it.
The math is the standard compound-growth formula applied to inflation rather than returns:
Future cost = Today's value × (1 + inflation rate)yearsThree inputs, one number out:
Suppose you're planning a wedding 4 years out, and at today's prices it would cost ₹50 lakh. Assume 6% average inflation for the planning period.
The gap — about ₹13 lakh — is what inflation eats over those four years. Investing toward the ₹50 lakh number leaves you well short on the wedding day. Sizing the goal at ₹63 lakh first, and then computing the SIP for that amount, is the correct order.
India's long-run headline inflation (CPI) has averaged around 6% a year. That's a reasonable baseline, but the right rate depends on what the goal is:
Inflation compounds the same way investment returns do. At 6% inflation, prices roughly double every 12 years. So a ₹50 lakh goal:
This is why retirement and child-education plans need to be sized in future rupees from day one. A retirement goal of "₹2 crore" sounds substantial in today's rupees, but in 25 years at 6% inflation it will spend like only ₹47 lakh does today.
A few intentional simplifications:
A complete goal-based investment plan has two steps:
The "Open Goal SIP Calculator →" button in the result panel carries the inflated value across automatically, so you don't have to copy numbers between pages.
It tells you how much a financial goal worth a given amount today will actually cost in the future. You enter the amount in today's rupees, the number of years away, and the inflation rate you expect. The calculator applies the standard future-value formula — today × (1 + inflation)^years — and shows the inflated number you'll actually need.
Most people set goals in today's rupees ("I want ₹50 lakh for my wedding"), then invest assuming that exact number. By the time the goal arrives, prices have risen and the original target is no longer enough. Sizing the goal in future rupees first, then working out the investment to reach it, prevents that gap.
India's long-run consumer price inflation (CPI) has averaged roughly 6% a year over the past two decades. Use 4–5% for conservative planning. Categories like private education, healthcare, and weddings have historically inflated faster than headline CPI — assuming 7–8% for those is more realistic. There's no single right number; what matters is being consistent across your plan.
A SIP calculator works forward: given a monthly investment, what corpus do you end up with? This calculator works on the goal itself: given a number you need today, what will the same goal cost later? Use this page first to size the goal in future rupees, then the Goal SIP Calculator to find the monthly SIP needed to reach it.
Use the inflated value. If your wedding will cost ₹50 lakh today but is 4 years away at 6% inflation, the real target is ~₹63 lakh, not ₹50 lakh. Investing toward ₹50 lakh leaves you short on the day. The Goal SIP Calculator accepts the inflated number directly — or carry the value over via the hand-off CTA.
No. The calculation assumes a constant annual inflation rate for the entire horizon. Real inflation fluctuates year to year — some years 4%, others 7% — but the long-run average is what matters for a multi-year plan. Use a single representative rate for planning rather than trying to forecast each year.