Hidden cost of delaying investments: Starting SIPs late can kill crores from your portfolio

When we start our long term wealth creation journey, we ussually focus on ‘how much should I invest’ but the factor that is more crucial is, ‘when should I start’. As delaying investment even by few year can make a difference of crores. Thanks to the !

Let’s take the example of Aman, Rahul and Rohit to illustrate the difference

Aman starts early. At the age of 25, he starts investing a merger amount of 5000 in Mutual Fund (SIP) and continues to invest till 60. Assuming 12% interest in his investment, Aman build a corpus of 2.75 crore – where his total investment is 21 lakh and estimated returns are 2.54 crore

Rahul, meanwhile, starts at 30, and invests the same amount in MF SIPs for the next 30 years. At the age of 60, at the same interest rate, he creates a corpus of Rs1.54 crore, by intesting net 18 lakh and earning a return of Rs1.36 crore

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Rohit delays his investment and starts his SIPs at 35. To compensate it, he invests double the amount— 10,000 per month—but only until the age of 60, giving him 25 years of investing . At the same assumed return of 12%, his final corpus stood at around 1.7 crore – 30 lakh invested, 1.4 crore came as return.

Amount invested at 12% interest rate Number of years Total corpus
Aman 5,000 35 2.54 crore
Rahul 5,000 30 1.54 crore
Rohit 10,000 25 1.7 crore

Why does this happen?

The reason is simple: the power of compounding rewards time more than money.

And another factor that works here is rupee cost averaving. SIPs follow a simple rule—you invest a fixed amount regularly, no matter whether the market is up or down. When prices are low, you buy more units, and when prices are high, you purchase fewer units. Over time, this helps balance your overall purchase cost, which is called rupee cost averaging.



But if you delay starting your SIP, you lose those early of compounding, where the impact on long term corpus is significant.

How Rahul and Rohit could have compensated for the delay?

Step-up method: Increasing the investment amount by a certain percentage every year as income increases can enhance long term accumulation without a sudden rise in investment outflow

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Lump sum investments: In case of a bonus or have idle savings, they could have made an payments into their existing mutual fund scheme to compensate for lost units

The lesson is clear: in investing, starting early beats starting big. Because wealth creation is not just about how much you invest—it is about how long you stay invested.

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