The 4% Rule Does Not Work in India. Here Is What Does.
The 4% rule was designed for US markets. Indian inflation, healthcare costs, and longer retirements require a different approach. Here is what actually works.
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The 4% Rule Does Not Work in India
The 4% rule was derived from US market data spanning 1926 to 1990. It assumes a 60/40 stock-bond portfolio and a 30-year retirement horizon. None of these assumptions map cleanly to India in 2026.
Why 4% is Too Aggressive Here
Indian inflation has averaged 5–6% over the last decade, versus 2–3% in the US. A higher inflation rate erodes your corpus faster in real terms. Healthcare costs in India inflate at 10–12% per year — far above CPI. If you retire at 45, you may have a 45-year horizon, not 30.
The Indian Safe Withdrawal Rate
Based on Indian market data and inflation characteristics, a 3–3.5% withdrawal rate is more defensible for early retirees. For standard retirement at 60, 3.5–4% may work if you maintain 20–30% equity allocation to protect against inflation.
Practical Adjustments
Dynamic withdrawal: Reduce withdrawals by 10% in years when your portfolio drops more than 15%.
Buffer bucket: Keep 2–3 years of expenses in liquid debt funds. This prevents forced equity liquidation during market downturns.
Floor income: Any guaranteed income (pension, rental, EPF interest) reduces the corpus you need to drawdown from, making your plan more resilient.
What This Means for Your Target Corpus
At 3.5% withdrawal rate, ₹1 lakh/month in expenses requires a corpus of ₹3.43 crore. At 4%, the same expenses require ₹3 crore. The 0.5% difference in rate translates to ₹43 lakh more you need to accumulate.
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