FD vs RD vs SIP

Introduction

Bank Fixed Deposits (FDs) and Recurring Deposits (RDs) are traditional bank savings instruments with guaranteed returns. SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) into mutual funds is market-linked and can offer higher returns over time with higher risk. Choosing among them depends on horizon, risk appetite and goals.

Snapshot comparison

Feature FD RD SIP (Equity Fund)
Risk Low (bank/issuer) Low Market risk (higher)
Return Fixed Fixed Variable (potentially higher)
Liquidity Medium (penalty for premature) Low/Medium High (dependant on fund type)
Best for Safety & capital preservation Regular savers Long-term wealth creation

Worked numerical example (10-year horizon)

Assumptions:
  • Total invested (A) = ₹6,00,000 over 10 years (₹5,000/month ×120 months)
  • SIP return assumption = 12% p.a.
  • RD/FD assumed interest = 7% p.a. (for demonstration)
Results (rounded):
  • SIP (₹5,000/month @12% p.a.): ₹11.62 lakh (FV).
  • RD (₹5,000/month @7% p.a.): ₹8.70 lakh (FV).
  • FD (₹6,00,000 lumpsum @7% p.a. for 10 years): ₹11.80 lakh (FV).

Interpretation:

  • For disciplined monthly saving and equity returns, SIP gave high growth.
  • For risk-averse investors, RD yields steady compounding but lower returns.
  • FD with a lumpsum deposit grows similarly to an equity SIP in this hypothetical, but FD returns are guaranteed while equity returns are uncertain.

Tax & inflation considerations

  • FD/RD interest is taxable as per slab—TDS may apply and real returns reduce after tax & inflation.
  • Equity mutual funds held >1 year qualify for long-term capital gains (LTCG) taxation slab (subject to thresholds/rules) — often more tax-efficient over a long horizon.

When to choose

  • FD: If capital preservation and guaranteed returns are top priority.
  • RD: If you want forced monthly saving with a guaranteed return.
  • SIP: If you have a 5+ years horizon and can tolerate market volatility for better long-term returns.