Everyone has an opinion. Almost nobody shows you the numbers. We used 30 years of real Nifty 50 data to settle the SIP vs lump sum debate once and for all — and the answer is more nuanced than you’ve been told.

First — the Nifty 50 in numbers
Before comparing strategies, let’s ground ourselves in what the Nifty 50 has actually delivered. These are the verified historical data points every Indian investor should know:
Nov 3, 1995
April 2026
30 years
(1995–2026)
(rupee cost avg effect)
(conservative)
Two numbers stand out immediately: the lump sum CAGR of 10.7% and the SIP XIRR of ~12.8% over 20-year periods. The SIP return is higher — and that’s not a coincidence. Rupee cost averaging means SIPs buy more units when prices are low, pushing the effective entry price down and the XIRR up. We’ll come back to this.
₹10,000/month SIP vs Equivalent Lump Sum
To make this comparison fair, we compare a monthly SIP of ₹10,000 against a lump sum equivalent to what you’d have invested over the same period. For a 10-year SIP that’s ₹12 lakh; 20 years = ₹24 lakh; 30 years = ₹36 lakh — invested as a one-time amount at the start. Returns assume the Nifty 50’s verified historical CAGR (12% for SIP, 10.7% lump sum per NSE data).
| Horizon | Total Invested | SIP Corpus | Lump Sum Corpus | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 years | ₹12 lakh | ₹23.2L | ₹33.2L | Lump Sum |
| 15 years | ₹18 lakh | ₹50.1L | ₹61.3L | Lump Sum |
| 20 years | ₹24 lakh | ₹99.9L | ₹1.13 Cr | Lump Sum (narrow) |
| 25 years | ₹30 lakh | ₹1.89 Cr | ₹2.08 Cr | Near-parity |
| 30 years | ₹36 lakh | ₹3.49 Cr | ₹3.83 Cr | Lump Sum (slim) |
Lump sum wins in a steadily rising market — on paper. The lump sum investor has all capital working from Day 1, compounding for the full duration. The SIP investor is still deploying cash in year 15, so the early instalments are compounding but the later ones aren’t. This is why lump sum has a mathematical edge in bull markets.
“Lump sum investing in a steadily rising market typically beats a spread-out SIP by 15 to 25%. But that’s only true if you invest at a random time — not at a market peak.” — 5nance Research, April 2026
But here’s where Lump Sum falls apart
The lump sum table above assumes you invest at a random, average market point. Reality doesn’t work like that. Most retail investors get excited and invest near market peaks — exactly when lump sum is most dangerous.
Look at what happened when investors put a lump sum in at three famous Indian market peaks vs what a SIP delivered over the same window:
| If you invested lump sum at… | Market condition | 10-yr lump sum return | 10-yr SIP return (same period) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 2000 (dot-com peak) | Nifty near cycle high | ~6.2% CAGR | ~12.1% XIRR |
| Jan 2008 (pre-GFC peak) | Nifty at 6,300 | ~7.8% CAGR | ~11.4% XIRR |
| Oct 2021 (post-COVID peak) | Nifty near 18,000 | ~8.5% CAGR (est.) | ~11.9% XIRR (est.) |
| Random entry (historical avg) | Any point in cycle | ~10.7% CAGR | ~12.8% XIRR |
The pattern is clear: When you invest at a peak, lump sum significantly underperforms SIP. And critically, a rolling return analysis of Nifty 50 SIPs from 2000 to 2023 found that even investors who started SIPs at the worst possible market peaks still generated positive 10-year XIRR returns in 94% of cases — with the worst 10-year SIP return in Nifty history being approximately 8.5%. That is still inflation-beating.

The Rolling Window Analysis: When does each strategy win?
Looking at every 5-year investment window in Nifty 50 history — comparing ₹1.2 lakh lump sum vs ₹10,000/month SIP over the same period — here’s the scorecard:
Lump sum wins more often in pure frequency terms. But the three windows where SIP came out ahead — 2014–2018, 2016–2020, and 2018–2022 — all coincided with high volatility, sideways markets, and corrections. These are precisely the environments when retail investors are most likely to be investing (because markets had been running hot and they finally got in). SIP protected them when they needed it most.
What ₹10,000/month actually becomes — The Real Corpus Numbers
Let’s make this tangible. Here are three real scenarios using verified Nifty 50 historical return assumptions, modelled on actual NSE data:
The Verdict
After 30 years of Nifty data, the answer isn’t “SIP always wins” or “lump sum always wins.” The answer is more useful than that:
Lump sum wins mathematically in a steadily rising market — but most retail investors don’t have a large corpus ready to deploy, don’t invest at random times, and are psychologically prone to buying near peaks. For them, lump sum is theoretically better but practically disastrous.
SIP wins behaviourally for almost everyone — it automates good investing habits, removes emotion from entry decisions, and provides a safety net against the one thing that destroys most retail portfolios: investing everything at the wrong moment.
The hybrid approach — lump sum when markets correct, SIP for regular monthly deployments — is what the data actually supports for investors who have both a salary and occasional windfalls. Put your monthly surplus into a standing SIP. Park any windfall into a liquid fund and deploy via STP (Systematic Transfer Plan) over 6–12 months.

Bottom line
The SIP vs lump sum debate has a data-backed answer — and it’s not the one most finance content gives you. Lump sum wins mathematically in bull markets. SIP wins behaviourally and in volatile markets. The hybrid approach wins in the real world. And the step-up SIP beats all of them over 30 years if you have the discipline to execute it.
The Nifty 50 has gone from 1,000 to 23,100 over 30 years. It has survived dot-com busts, global financial crises, demonetisation, a pandemic, and an oil shock. The investors who built real wealth through it all weren’t the ones who timed it perfectly — they were the ones who started early, stayed consistent, and increased their contribution every year. That’s the real data-backed strategy.
Disclaimer: All return figures are based on historical Nifty 50 data sourced from NSE, Bajaj Finserv AMC, and verified financial research. Past returns are not a guarantee of future performance. Calculations are for illustrative purposes only. The assumed CAGR of 12% is based on historical averages and actual future returns may vary. Consult a SEBI-registered financial advisor before making investment decisions.
Read More: Why Sensex & Nifty Are Falling in May 2026

