SIP vs FD (2026) – Which is Better? Returns, Tax & Full Comparison
What is SIP and FD? A Quick Overview
Before diving into the comparison, here is a clear explanation of what each instrument is and how it works — especially for first-time investors deciding where to put their savings.
SIP – Systematic Investment Plan
A SIP is a method of investing a fixed amount every month in a mutual fund. Each month, your money buys units of the fund at the prevailing NAV (Net Asset Value). Over time, this averages your purchase cost — a concept called rupee cost averaging. The fund then invests in stocks, bonds, or a combination, and your returns depend on how those underlying assets perform. Equity SIP funds have historically delivered 10–15% annual returns over 7–10 year periods in India, though returns are not guaranteed and can be negative in short periods.
FD – Fixed Deposit
A Fixed Deposit is a savings instrument offered by banks and NBFCs. You deposit a lump sum (or in case of recurring deposit, a fixed monthly amount) for a fixed period at a pre-agreed interest rate. The interest rate is locked in at the time of investment and does not change regardless of what happens in markets. Banks in India offer FD rates between 6.5%–8.5% p.a. in 2026, with small finance banks and NBFCs offering up to 9%+. FD interest is compounded quarterly in most Indian banks.
SIP vs FD Returns – Detailed Comparison (2026)
Numbers tell the real story. Here is a detailed comparison of how the same ₹5,000/month investment grows under SIP vs FD over various durations.
₹5,000/month — SIP (12%) vs FD (7.5%) Comparison
| Duration | Total Invested | SIP Corpus (12%) | FD Maturity (7.5%) | SIP Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Year | ₹60,000 | ₹64,047 | ₹62,422 | ₹1,625 more |
| 3 Years | ₹1,80,000 | ₹2,17,540 | ₹1,99,220 | ₹18,320 more |
| 5 Years | ₹3,00,000 | ₹4,08,347 | ₹3,62,468 | ₹45,879 more |
| 10 Years | ₹6,00,000 | ₹11,61,695 | ₹8,67,046 | ₹2,94,649 more |
| 15 Years | ₹9,00,000 | ₹25,11,285 | ₹15,65,928 | ₹9,45,357 more |
| 20 Years | ₹12,00,000 | ₹49,95,740 | ₹26,04,408 | ₹23,91,332 more |
*SIP at 12% p.a. (Nifty 50 historical CAGR). FD at 7.5% p.a. quarterly compounding. No tax deducted in this table — see tax comparison below.
After-Tax Returns — The Real Difference
Tax is where SIP shows its biggest advantage over FD, especially for investors in the 20%–30% tax bracket. FD interest is taxed at your full income slab rate every year. SIP equity returns attract LTCG tax only at 12.5% (on gains above ₹1.25L/year) and only when you actually redeem — giving you tax deferral for the entire investment period.
| Scenario | SIP After Tax (est.) | FD After Tax (30% slab) | Real Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 Years, ₹5,000/month | ₹3,83,000 | ₹3,22,000 | SIP +₹61,000 |
| 10 Years, ₹5,000/month | ₹10,60,000 | ₹7,27,000 | SIP +₹3,33,000 |
| 15 Years, ₹5,000/month | ₹22,50,000 | ₹12,40,000 | SIP +₹10,10,000 |
| 20 Years, ₹5,000/month | ₹44,00,000 | ₹19,80,000 | SIP +₹24,20,000 |
*After-tax values are estimates. SIP LTCG at 12.5% applied on gains above ₹1.25L. FD interest taxed at 31.2% (30% + 4% cess) annually.
SIP vs FD – Tax Treatment in India FY 2026-27
Tax treatment is one of the most significant differences between SIP and FD — and it strongly favours SIP for investors in the 20%–30% tax bracket. Here is a complete breakdown.
FD Tax Treatment
- FD interest is fully taxable as “Income from Other Sources” — added to your total income and taxed at your slab rate
- TDS of 10% is deducted by the bank if annual interest exceeds ₹40,000 (₹50,000 for senior citizens)
- Even if TDS is deducted, if you are in the 20%–30% slab, you must pay the balance tax when filing ITR
- Tax is paid every year on accrued interest — even if you have not matured or withdrawn the FD
- No indexation benefit on FD interest
- For a person in the 30% slab, effective FD return of 7.5% p.a. becomes 5.17% post-tax (7.5% × 0.688)
SIP / Equity Mutual Fund Tax Treatment
- SIP in equity mutual funds held more than 1 year: 12.5% LTCG tax on gains, with ₹1.25 lakh annual exemption
- SIP held less than 1 year: 20% STCG tax on gains
- Tax is paid only when you redeem — no annual tax during accumulation phase (tax deferral advantage)
- Only the gain portion is taxed, not the principal — effective tax rate is much lower than the stated LTCG rate
- For long-term investors, LTCG tax impact is minimal on the overall corpus because of years of tax-deferred growth
Effective Post-Tax Return Comparison
| Instrument | Pre-Tax Return | Tax Rate | Effective Post-Tax Return (30% slab) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank FD (SBI) | 7.25% p.a. | 31.2% annually | ~4.99% p.a. |
| Bank FD (Small Finance) | 8.50% p.a. | 31.2% annually | ~5.85% p.a. |
| SIP – Large Cap Fund | ~12% p.a. (CAGR) | 12.5% at redemption | ~10%+ p.a. effective |
| SIP – Index Fund (Nifty 50) | ~12% p.a. (CAGR) | 12.5% at redemption | ~10%+ p.a. effective |
| SIP – Mid Cap Fund | ~14-15% p.a. (CAGR) | 12.5% at redemption | ~12%+ p.a. effective |
Full Feature Comparison – SIP vs FD India 2026
| Feature | SIP (Equity Mutual Fund) | FD (Bank Fixed Deposit) |
|---|---|---|
| Returns | 10–15% p.a. historically (market-linked) | 6.5–8.5% p.a. (guaranteed) |
| Risk | Moderate to High (market volatility) | Very Low (guaranteed by bank) |
| Deposit Insurance | Not applicable | DICGC insures up to ₹5 lakh per bank |
| Minimum Investment | ₹100–500/month | ₹1,000 lump sum typically |
| Lock-in Period | None (except ELSS: 3 yrs) | Fixed tenure – premature closure penalty |
| Liquidity | High – redeem anytime (T+2 days) | Low – penalty for early withdrawal |
| Inflation Beating | Yes – strongly over long term | Marginally or no (post-tax vs inflation) |
| Tax on Returns | 12.5% LTCG (only on gains, only at redemption) | Full slab rate annually on all interest |
| Tax Deferred Growth | Yes – no tax during accumulation | No – taxed every year |
| Section 80C Benefit | ELSS SIP: up to ₹1.5L deduction (Old Regime) | 5-yr Tax Saver FD: up to ₹1.5L deduction |
| Goal Suitability | Long-term (5+ years) wealth creation | Short-term (1–3 years) capital preservation |
| Ideal For | Retirement, education, home goals 5–20 yrs | Emergency fund, 1–3 yr goals, senior citizens |
When to Choose SIP Over FD
- Goal is 5+ years away
- You can tolerate short-term market volatility
- You are in the 20%–30% tax bracket (FD tax hurts)
- You want to beat inflation significantly
- Building retirement or child education corpus
- You want flexibility to pause or stop anytime
- You want Section 80C benefit (ELSS SIP)
- Goal is less than 3 years away
- You cannot afford to see corpus fall temporarily
- You are retired and need guaranteed income
- It is your emergency fund
- You are a senior citizen (extra 0.5% rate)
- You are in the 0%–5% tax bracket
- Capital safety is the absolute priority
The Golden Rule: Match Instrument to Goal Duration
The single most important principle in SIP vs FD decision is matching the instrument to the time horizon of your goal. Equity SIP can give negative returns in any given 1–2 year period — the Nifty 50 has fallen 30–50% multiple times in history (2000, 2008, 2020). But over any 7–10 year rolling period in the last 25 years, Nifty 50 has never given negative returns. So for goals 7+ years away, SIP is almost always the better choice. For goals under 3 years, FD’s guaranteed return is better regardless of tax.
When to Choose FD Over SIP – Specific Scenarios
1. Senior Citizens – FD Often Wins
Senior citizens (60+) get 0.25%–0.75% extra FD interest from most banks — making effective FD rates of 7.5%–9% common. Senior citizens also have a higher TDS exemption limit (₹50,000 vs ₹40,000 for regular depositors) and can submit Form 15H if income is below taxable limit (avoiding TDS entirely). For senior citizens with low risk tolerance and regular income needs, FD is often more practical than SIP despite the tax disadvantage.
2. Emergency Fund – Always FD or Liquid Fund
Your 3–6 month emergency fund should NEVER be in equity SIP. Markets can fall 30–40% right when you need the money most. Emergency funds should be in: (1) Savings account (instant access), (2) Liquid mutual fund (T+1 redemption, ~7% return, tax-efficient), or (3) Short-term FD. Never in equity SIP — the whole point of an emergency fund is guaranteed access to the full amount when needed.
3. Specific Short-Term Goals
Saving for a car down payment in 18 months? A house renovation in 2 years? A foreign vacation next year? FD or liquid/short-term debt funds are appropriate. Equity SIP for a 2-year goal is speculation, not investing — markets could easily be down 25% when you need to redeem.
4. First-Time Investors with Very Low Risk Tolerance
If seeing your corpus drop from ₹5 lakhs to ₹3.5 lakhs during a market correction would cause you to panic and redeem, equity SIP is not suitable for you yet. It is better to start with FD, understand the basics, then gradually shift to SIP as your comfort with volatility grows. A SIP investor who panics and redeems at a 30% market low and misses the recovery earns much less than an FD investor who stayed patient.