Wealth & Investing

FD vs. Mutual Fund — Which Is Actually Better for Your Money?

India's great financial debate. One is safe and certain. The other is potentially far more rewarding. Here is the honest comparison.

FD vs. Mutual Fund — Which Is Actually Better for Your Money?

Fixed Deposits are the default choice of most Indian savers. They are familiar, safe, and predictable. Mutual funds, especially equity funds, feel uncertain and complicated by comparison. But the decision between FD and mutual fund is not a matter of taste — it is a matter of purpose, time horizon, and what inflation does to each.

Fixed DepositEquity Mutual Fund
Returns: 6.5–7.5% per annum currentlyReturns: 10–13% historically over 10+ years
Guaranteed returnsMarket-linked — not guaranteed
Capital fully protectedCapital can fall in the short term
Interest taxable as incomeLTCG taxed at 12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh
Ideal for <3 year horizonIdeal for 5+ year horizon
Liquidity: penalty on premature withdrawalLiquid: can redeem most funds within 2–3 days

The inflation problem with FDs

At 7% FD returns and 6% inflation, your real return is approximately 1%. Before tax. After tax (if you are in the 30% slab), your effective return on the FD is approximately 4.9% — meaning your real, post-tax, post-inflation return is negative. Your money is technically growing — and practically shrinking.

HERE'S A THOUGHT

₹10 lakh in an FD at 7% for 10 years grows to approximately ₹19.7 lakh. The same ₹10 lakh in a diversified equity mutual fund at 12% for 10 years grows to approximately ₹31 lakh. The difference — ₹11.3 lakh — is larger than the original investment. Same money. Same 10 years. The only difference is where it sat.

So when should you choose an FD?

  • When your time horizon is less than 3 years — equity is too volatile for short-term goals.
  • When capital preservation is non-negotiable — emergency fund, money for a known upcoming expense.
  • When you are a senior citizen or retiree needing predictable income — FDs serve this purpose well.
  • When market volatility would cause you genuine distress — peace of mind has value.

And when should you choose a mutual fund?

  • When your goal is 5+ years away and you can leave the money undisturbed.
  • When you want inflation-beating returns over the long term.
  • When you understand that short-term falls are normal — and will not panic-sell.
THE BOTTOM LINE

FD and mutual fund are not competitors. They serve different purposes and different time horizons. The mistake is using an FD for a 15-year goal — or an equity fund for money needed in 18 months. Match the instrument to the timeline. That is the entire science of it.

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