SIP vs RD: Which Monthly Investment Should You Pick?
Compare a market-linked mutual-fund SIP with a guaranteed bank recurring deposit across returns, risk, taxation, and flexibility.
Both a SIP (Systematic Investment Plan into a mutual fund) and an RD (Recurring Deposit with a bank or post office) let you invest a fixed amount every month, which makes them the two most popular ways for salaried Indians to build a savings habit. The similarity ends there. A SIP is market-linked — your money buys mutual-fund units whose value moves with the market, offering higher long-term growth potential but no guarantee. An RD is a fixed-return deposit — you know the exact maturity amount on day one, but the return is modest. Choosing between them is really a choice between growth with risk and certainty with lower returns.
SIP vs RD: Comparison Table
| Factor | SIP (Mutual Fund) | RD (Recurring Deposit) |
|---|---|---|
| Return type | Market-linked; ~10–12% p.a. long-term for equity funds (historical, not guaranteed) | Fixed ~6.5–7.5% p.a. (as of FY 2025-26; bank-dependent) |
| Guarantee | None — value can fall | Guaranteed; capital insured up to ₹5 lakh (DICGC) |
| Risk | Moderate to high (market risk) | Very low |
| Flexibility | High — pause, stop, step-up or redeem anytime | Rigid — fixed instalment and tenure; penalty on default |
| Liquidity / early exit | Redeem in 2–3 days (exit load / ELSS 3-yr lock-in may apply) | Premature closure allowed with penalty and lower rate |
| Taxation | Equity: STCG 20% (≤12 mo); LTCG 12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh/yr | Interest taxed at your slab; 10% TDS above ₹50,000/yr |
| Best for | Long-term wealth (5+ yrs), risk-tolerant investors | Short-term goals, safety-first savers |
Rates and tax rules are indicative and current as of FY 2025-26; they change from time to time — verify with your bank or fund before investing.
Which Should You Choose?
There is no universal winner — the right pick depends on your time horizon and how much fluctuation you can stomach. A useful rule of thumb: the longer your goal, the more a SIP makes sense, because equity's short-term ups and downs tend to smooth out over many years while compounding does the heavy lifting. For money you will need soon, or that you simply cannot afford to see dip, an RD's certainty is worth the lower return.
Choose a SIP if you…
- Are investing for a goal 5+ years away (retirement, a child's education, long-term wealth).
- Can tolerate temporary falls in value in exchange for higher growth potential.
- Want flexibility to pause, step up, or redeem without a fixed penalty.
- Want rupee-cost averaging to smooth out market volatility over time.
Choose an RD if you…
- Have a short-term goal (6 months to 3 years) with a fixed target amount.
- Cannot accept any risk to your capital and want a guaranteed maturity value.
- Prefer the discipline of a fixed monthly commitment with a bank or post office.
- Are a senior citizen or fall in a low tax slab, where the taxed interest still works well.
In practice, many investors do not choose one over the other. A common approach is to park your emergency fund and near-term goals in an RD for safety, while running a SIP for long-term wealth — getting both certainty and growth from the same monthly budget.
Pros & Cons at a Glance
SIP (Mutual Fund)
Pros
- Higher long-term return potential
- Flexible amount, pause, step-up and exit
- Rupee-cost averaging reduces timing risk
- Favourable LTCG tax on equity after 1 year
Cons
- No guarantee; value can fall
- Returns depend on fund selection and markets
- Needs a longer horizon to work well
RD (Recurring Deposit)
Pros
- Guaranteed, predictable maturity amount
- Capital safe; insured up to ₹5 lakh (DICGC)
- Simple, easy to open at any bank/post office
- No market knowledge required
Cons
- Lower returns; may barely beat inflation
- Interest fully taxed at your slab rate
- Rigid tenure; penalty for early exit or default
Try the Numbers Yourself
The clearest way to decide is to compare the same monthly amount in both. Use the SIP Calculator to project a mutual-fund corpus at an assumed return, and the RD Calculator to see the guaranteed maturity value of a recurring deposit. If you might invest a one-time amount instead, the Lumpsum Calculator and our SIP vs Lumpsum guide help too, and the Income Tax Calculator shows how each option's tax affects your take-home returns.
This comparison is for general information only and is not financial advice. Consider your own goals, risk tolerance, and, if needed, a registered adviser before investing.