The Excel Sheet That Builds a ₹6 Cr Retirement Corpus

Planning for retirement can feel overwhelming—especially when your target is a hefty ₹6 crore corpus. Yet with a simple, well‑structured Excel sheet, you can map out exactly how much to save, where to invest, and how long it will take to reach that goal. By the end, you’ll have a fully functional Excel template—no advanced formulas required—that shows you exactly how to build a ₹6 crore retirement corpus, whether you’re 25 or 45 today.


1. Defining Your Goal & Timeline

Before opening Excel, clarify:

  • Target Corpus: ₹6 crore in today’s rupees
  • Time Horizon: e.g., retire at age 60; if you’re 30 now, you have 30 years
  • Withdrawal Rate: A conservative 4% safe‑withdrawal rate implies ₹6 crore generates ₹24 lakh/year

These inputs set up your model: you need to accumulate ₹6 crore in 30 years (or whatever your timeframe is).


2. Laying Out the Excel Model

2.1. Sheet Structure

Create columns as follows:

ColumnHeaderDescription
AYear1, 2, 3, …, N
BAgeStarting age + Year – 1
CStarting Balance (₹)Corpus at year‑start
DAnnual Contribution (₹)Your annual savings
EReturn Rate (%)Assumed blended rate
FInterest Earned (₹)= C × E
GEnd Balance Before Contrib= C + F
HEnd Balance (₹)= G + D

2.2. Setting Up the First Row

  1. Year 1:
    • Age = your current age (e.g., 30)
    • Starting Balance = 0 (or existing retirement savings)
    • Annual Contribution = your planned yearly investment (e.g., ₹2 lakh)
    • Return Rate = a constant cell (we’ll discuss next)
  2. Formulas:
    • Interest Earned (F2): =C2 * E$1 (where E1 holds the return rate)
    • End Balance Before Contrib (G2): =C2 + F2
    • End Balance (H2): =G2 + D2
  3. Drag Down: Copy formulas down for N rows (equal to your time horizon).

3. Choosing Realistic Return Assumptions

Your blended return drives the outcome. In India today:

  • Equities: Nifty 50 delivered a 10‑year CAGR of 11.7%.
  • EPF: Employees’ Provident Fund offers 8.25% for FY 2024–25 .
  • PPF: Public Provident Fund is at 7.1% p.a. through June 2025.

If you plan a 60/20/20 split (Equity/EPF/PPF), your blended return is:

(0.6×11.7%)+(0.2×8.25%)+(0.2×7.1%)≈10.4%

Enter 10.4% in cell E1.


4. Running Scenarios & Sensitivity

4.1. Base Case

  • Contribution: ₹2 lakh/year
  • Return: 10.4%
  • Years: 30

Check the final End Balance in row 30. If it’s below ₹6 crore, you know either to increase contributions, extend the horizon, or boost return assumptions.

4.2. Conservative vs. Aggressive

Create a small table next to your model:

ScenarioReturn (%)Contribution (₹)
Conservative8.52,00,000
Base Case10.42,00,000
Aggressive12.03,00,000

Link these inputs to your model with dropdowns (Data Validation) so you can instantly recalculate outcomes for each scenario.


5. Optimizing Contributions & Allocation

5.1. Goal Seek for Contributions

Use Excel’s Goal Seek under the Data → What‑If Analysis menu:

  • Set cell: Final End Balance (e.g., H31)
  • To value: 60,000,000
  • By changing cell: Annual Contribution (D2)

Excel tells you exactly how much you must invest yearly to hit ₹6 crore at your assumed return.

5.2. Allocation Adjustments

If the required contribution feels too high, you can test higher return mixes:

  • Move from 60% equity to 70% equity and re‑calculate blended return.
  • Re‑run Goal Seek to see lower required contributions.

6. Accounting for Inflation & Taxes

6.1. Inflation Adjustment

If you want a real ₹6 crore corpus (today’s value), adjust for 6% inflation:

  • Use Excel’s FV function: =FV(inflationRate, years, 0, -60000000) gives the nominal target.
  • Update your model’s “Target” to that inflated number.

6.2. Tax Impact

  • Equity SIPs: Long‑term capital gains taxed at 10% above ₹1 lakh/year exemption.
  • PPF & EPF: Tax‑free.

To approximate, reduce your equity return by 0.5–1% (e.g., from 11.7% to 11.0%) to factor in taxes and re‑run scenarios.


7. Visualizing Progress with Charts

  1. Balance Over Time:
    • Select columns A (Year) and H (End Balance).
    • Insert a line chart to see your corpus growth curve.
  2. Contribution vs. Growth:
    • Plot a stacked area chart with columns D (Contribution) and F (Interest Earned) to see how returns accelerate your wealth.

Charts help you stay motivated as you watch steady growth year by year.


8. Tips for Staying on Track

  • Automate Monthly: Convert annual contributions to monthly (=annual/12) and set up SIPs/auto‑debits.
  • Quarterly Reviews: Update your actual portfolio returns vs. assumed in E1; adjust as needed.
  • Buffer for Market Dips: If markets underperform for a year or two, you can temporarily increase contributions to catch up.
  • Use Named Ranges: Name your key inputs (ReturnRate, Contribution) so formulas stay clear and easy to update.
  • Backup Your Sheet: Keep a cloud copy and a version history so you can revisit past scenarios.

Conclusion

With this Excel sheet, you hold a powerful tool: plug in your age, timeline, contribution capacity, and return assumptions, and watch your projected corpus unfold. By adjusting variables and running scenarios, you can precisely chart the path to a ₹6 crore retirement corpus—no guesswork, just clear numbers. Start building your model today, automate your savings, and let the spreadsheet guide you toward a financially secure retirement.

Source : thepumumedia.com

Leave a Reply