Monthly SIP in PMS: How to turn ₹50 Lakhs into ₹2.5 Crore in 8 years
Building substantial wealth through a Portfolio Management Service (PMS) is not just about the initial corpus you bring to the table — it is about what you do with it systematically over time.
If you already have ₹50 lakhs invested in a PMS, your base corpus is compounding whether or not you add a single rupee to it. But pair that base with a disciplined monthly SIP of ₹54,500, and your total portfolio does not just reach ₹1 crore. At a net annualised return of 15%, it reaches approximately ₹2.53 crore in 8 years — on a total capital deployment of just over ₹1 crore.
That is a 2.5x return on every rupee invested. That is the case this article makes.
A quick framing note before we get into the numbers: the ₹1 crore milestone referenced throughout this article refers specifically to the corpus built through monthly SIP contributions alone. Your initial ₹50 lakh corpus compounds separately and in parallel, growing to approximately ₹1.53 crore over the same period. Together, these two engines — the lump sum and the SIP — are what produce the ₹2.53 crore total outcome.
What is a SIP in PMS, and why it’s different from a mutual fund SIP
A portfolio management service (PMS) is an investment vehicle managed by professional portfolio managers, strictly regulated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI). However, a PMS SIP functions quite differently from a Mutual Fund (MF) SIP.
In a traditional mutual fund, your money is pooled with thousands of other investors. In a PMS, you hold a customized demat account where individual stocks or mutual fund units are held directly in your name.
The SEBI entry barrier
Before planning a PMS journey, you must address the legal entry barrier:
- The ₹50 Lakh minimum: SEBI mandates that the minimum investment size for any investor entering a PMS is ₹50 Lakhs.
- The SIP mechanism: A PMS SIP is used as a systematic top-up mechanism to add capital to an existing portfolio, or as a structured commitment plan where the total Assets Under Management (AUM) meets or exceeds the regulatory minimum.
- Two formats: PMS structures come in two major formats, Direct Equity PMS (investing directly in stocks) and MF-based PMS (a curated portfolio of mutual funds). The SIP mechanism applies to both, though the underlying assets differ.
The math behind compounding in PMS: Why consistency beats timing
Wealth creation isn’t magic; it is pure mathematics. The future value of a systematic investment plan is calculated using the standard compounding formula:
Future value = monthly investment × [(1 + monthly rate)^months − 1] ÷ monthly rate
Where:
- Future value = the corpus you are building (₹1 crore target)
- Monthly investment = your SIP amount
- Monthly rate = annual return ÷ 12
- Months = 96 (for an 8-year horizon)
The active management edge
In passive or standard retail funds, you are tied tightly to broader index movements. However, a PMS utilizes active professional management aiming to generate alpha—returns that outperform the benchmark index. When your base rate of return increases even by a few percentage points, the compounding curve bends sharply upward.
Furthermore, running a SIP inside a PMS capitalizes on rupee-cost averaging. When the market experiences a correction, your monthly top-up contributions enter the portfolio at lower valuations. However, unlike a mutual fund SIP where averaging is mechanical, in a PMS the deployment of top-up capital is at the portfolio manager’s discretion. The benefit of averaging is real, but depends on how and when the manager deploys your contributions.
The 8-year formula: If you invest ₹54,500 per month for 96 months (8 years) at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15%, your portfolio grows to approximately ₹1 Crore.
Core scenario: ₹54,500/month at 15% for 8 years
Here is what the base case looks like in full — not just the SIP portion, but the complete portfolio picture.
The SIP engine:
- Monthly contribution: ₹54,500
- Investment tenure: 8 years (96 months)
- Total SIP capital invested: ₹52.28 lakhs
- SIP corpus at year 8: ~₹1 crore
- Wealth created by SIP returns alone: ~₹47.72 lakhs
The base corpus engine:
- Initial investment: ₹50 lakhs
- Same 15% p.a. net return, same 8-year horizon
- Base corpus at year 8: ~₹1.53 crore
- Wealth created by base corpus returns: ~₹1.03 crore
The combined picture:
- Total capital deployed (initial + SIP contributions): ~₹1.02 crore
- Total corpus at year 8: ~₹2.53 crore
- Total wealth created from returns: ~₹1.51 crore
In other words, the market generates ₹1.51 crore in wealth on a capital deployment of ₹1.02 crore. You end up with roughly 1.5 rupees of return for every rupee you put in. That is what 8 years of compounding across two parallel engines looks like.
The XIRR on the full investment — ₹50 lakhs upfront, then ₹54,500 monthly for 96 months, ending at ₹2.53 crore — is approximately 15.3% p.a., consistent with the assumed net return rate throughout.
Return sensitivity: What if PMS returns are higher or lower?
No portfolio manager delivers a flat 15% every year. Here is how the full portfolio outcome shifts across three return scenarios, all at 8 years and the same ₹50 lakh base corpus.
At 12% p.a. — conservative
- Monthly SIP needed to build ₹1 crore SIP corpus: ₹62,500
- Total SIP capital invested: ₹60 lakhs
- Base corpus at year 8: ₹1.24 crore
- Total portfolio: ~₹2.24 crore
- Total capital deployed: ₹1.10 crore
- Total wealth from returns: ₹1.14 crore
At 15% p.a. — moderate / base case
- Monthly SIP: ₹54,500
- Total SIP capital invested: ₹52.28 lakhs
- Base corpus at year 8: ₹1.53 crore
- Total portfolio: ~₹2.53 crore
- Total capital deployed: ₹1.02 crore
- Total wealth from returns: ₹1.51 crore
At 18% p.a. — aggressive / outperformance
- Monthly SIP: ₹47,200
- Total SIP capital invested: ₹45.3 lakhs
- Base corpus at year 8: ₹1.88 crore
- Total portfolio: ~₹2.88 crore
- Total capital deployed: ₹95.3 lakhs
- Total wealth from returns: ₹1.93 crore
The difference between a 12% and 18% net return is not just ₹15,000 in monthly SIP commitment — it is a ₹64 lakh difference in total terminal wealth. This is why PMS manager selection has a direct and significant impact on outcomes.
The trade-off scenarios: Invest more, get there faster
The table below shows the complete portfolio picture at each level of monthly commitment — not just the SIP corpus in isolation, but total corpus, total capital, and total wealth generated from returns. All scenarios assume 15% p.a. net return and a ₹50 lakh base corpus.
| Monthly SIP | Time to build ₹1cr SIP corpus | SIP capital invested | Base corpus at exit | Total portfolio | Total capital deployed | Total returns |
| ₹30,000 | 11 years 1 month | ₹39.9L | ₹2.35 crore | ₹3.35 crore | ₹89.9L | ₹2.45 crore |
| ₹40,000 | 9 years 7 months | ₹46L | ₹1.91 crore | ₹2.91 crore | ₹96L | ₹1.95 crore |
| ₹54,500 | 8 years | ₹52.3L | ₹1.53 crore | ₹2.53 crore | ₹1.02 crore | ₹1.51 crore |
| ₹75,000 | 6 years 7 months | ₹59.2L | ₹1.26 crore | ₹2.26 crore | ₹1.09 crore | ₹1.16 crore |
| ₹1,00,000 | 5 years 6 months | ₹66L | ₹1.08 crore | ₹2.08 crore | ₹1.16 crore | ₹92L |
| ₹1,50,000 | 4 years 1 month | ₹73.5L | ₹88.5L | ₹1.89 crore | ₹1.24 crore | ₹65L |
Two things stand out when you look at the full picture rather than the SIP corpus alone.
First, the investor who contributes ₹30,000/month for 11 years deploys only ₹89.9 lakhs of capital but ends up with ₹3.35 crore — because both the base corpus and the SIP corpus have had more time to compound. The investor who contributes ₹1,50,000/month for 4 years deploys ₹1.24 crore and ends up with ₹1.89 crore. The gap in terminal wealth is ₹1.46 crore, entirely explained by time in market.
Second, notice that the total returns column drops sharply as monthly commitment rises and time horizon shrinks. At ₹30,000/month over 11 years, returns generate ₹2.45 crore on ₹89.9 lakhs of capital. At ₹1,50,000/month over 4 years, returns generate only ₹65 lakhs on ₹1.24 crore of capital. The more aggressively you front-load capital, the less compounding does the work for you.
What net returns in PMS actually mean: Accounting for fees
To preserve financial credibility, we must address the cost of active management. Unlike mutual funds, which present a consolidated “Expense Ratio,” PMS fee structures can be multi-layered:
- Fixed management fee: Typically 1% to 2.5% p.a. calculated on average AUM, charged regardless of whether the portfolio makes a profit.
- Performance fee (profit sharing): Typically 10% to 20% of the gains generated above a hurdle rate (usually fixed around 10% p.a.).
- Transaction & brokerage costs: Expenses incurred due to the buying and selling of securities within your demat account, dependent on portfolio turnover.
Note: Most PMS providers apply a high-watermark clause, meaning performance fees are charged only when the portfolio value exceeds its previous peak. This protects investors from paying fees on returns that merely recover prior losses.
A worked example of fees
Suppose your PMS achieves an impressive 18% gross return in a year. The fee structure dictates a 2% fixed management fee and a 15% performance fee above a 10% hurdle.
- Gross return: 18.0%
- Less fixed fee: -2.0% (Leaves 16.0%)
- Calculate performance fee: The excess return above the 10% hurdle is 18% − 10% = 8%. The performance fee is 15% of 8% = 1.2%.
- Net return to investor: 16% − 1.2% = 14.8%
Therefore, the 12% to 18% return brackets utilized throughout this article are net-of-fee realistic, not raw gross numbers. When evaluating a provider, always ask to see their fee-adjusted CAGR in their official SEBI disclosure document.
Tax treatment on PMS SIP gains: What you take home
PMS gains are not tax-sheltered. Because the underlying shares are held directly in your individual demat account, every buy/sell action taken by the fund manager triggers a taxable event for you, even if you don’t withdraw a single rupee from the PMS.
As per current tax laws, equity-oriented PMS gains are taxed as follows:
- Long-term capital gains (LTCG): Applies to shares held for more than 1 year. Taxed at 5% on gains exceeding ₹1.25 Lakhs per financial year.
- Short-term capital gains (STCG): Applies to shares held for 1 year or less. Taxed at a flat 20%.
- Debt or hybrid PMS: Gains are taxed directly at your applicable income tax slab rate.
The practical implication: The ₹1 Crore target detailed in our scenarios is a pre-tax corpus. Because portfolio rebalancing by the manager can trigger mid-year capital gains taxes, your actual net take-home corpus might be slightly lower. It is wise to sync with a Chartered Accountant to model your exact post-tax outcomes.
PMS SIP vs. mutual fund SIP: Which grows faster?
Neither tool is inherently superior; they serve entirely different tiers of investors. Here is how they stack up factually:
| Feature | PMS SIP | Mutual fund SIP |
| Minimum entry ticket | ₹50 Lakhs (SEBI Mandated) | Starting at ₹500 / month |
| Portfolio structure | Tailor-made, concentrated holdings | Pooled fund, highly diversified |
| Return positioning | Targets high alpha via active strategies | Ranges from market tracking (Index) to active alpha |
| Fee transparency | High fees (Management + Performance share) | Capped Expense Ratio (Direct/Regular) |
| Reporting & transparency | Security-level holdings in your own demat account, full transaction visibility | NAV-level disclosure only, no individual holding visibility |
| Tax mechanism | Taxed at the individual transaction level | Taxed only upon redemption of fund units |
| Target audience | HNIs, Ultra-HNIs, Corporate Treasuries | Mass-market retail investors |
The bottom line: A PMS SIP makes sense when you already possess the requisite ₹50 Lakh entry threshold, and you trust that the manager’s active strategy will deliver net outperformance that comfortably outpaces their higher fee structure.
Three things to verify before starting a monthly SIP in PMS
If you are ready to allocate capital to a PMS via a systematic monthly route, do not skip these three verification steps:
- Verify SIP top-up feasibility: Not all PMS providers support automated or monthly SIP operational frameworks. Some only allow massive lump-sum additions (e.g., minimum ₹5 Lakhs per top-up). Confirm beforehand if they operationally accommodate lower monthly systematic top-ups.
- Check SEBI registration: Ensure that the portfolio management firm is fully authorized. Cross-verify their valid SEBI Registration Number directly on the official SEBI portal.
- Deconstruct the disclosure document: SEBI mandates that every provider share an official Disclosure Document before onboarding. Read it thoroughly to understand the historical track record, portfolio concentration risks, and the explicit formula used to calculate performance fees.
- Model your post-SIP exit scenario: PMS contributions are not locked in. If you need to stop monthly top-ups partway through, your existing corpus continues to compound. Your timeline to the target simply extends. Confirm the exit terms, notice period, and any exit load applicable to your specific provider before committing.
Conclusion: The ₹1 Crore question is really a discipline question
The ₹50 lakh you bring into a PMS does not sit idle while your SIP builds toward a target. It compounds in parallel, and together the two engines produce a total wealth outcome that is significantly more compelling than any single-number milestone suggests.
The scenarios in this article show that ₹1.02 crore of total capital — deployed as a ₹50 lakh lump sum plus ₹54,500 monthly for 8 years — can grow to approximately ₹2.53 crore at 15% net returns. That is ₹1.51 crore generated by the market, not by you.
The four levers remain what they always were: monthly discipline, net return quality, time horizon, and fee awareness. What this article adds is the full picture — because for a PMS investor, the SIP corpus and the base corpus are not separate stories. They are the same story.
Frequently asked questions
Can I start a PMS SIP without an existing ₹50 lakh corpus?
No. SEBI laws mandate a hard minimum onboarding limit of ₹50 Lakhs per investor per PMS. Monthly SIPs act strictly as top-up allocations to scale up an existing portfolio. If you do not possess the initial ₹50 Lakhs, building momentum through Mutual Fund SIPs is your optimal route.
What is the minimum monthly SIP amount in PMS?
While SEBI regulates the overall entry gate (₹50 Lakhs), it does not dictate top-up limits. Minimum SIP thresholds are set independently by individual PMS houses, usually ranging anywhere from ₹25,000 to ₹1 Lakh per monthly installment.
Are PMS returns guaranteed?
No. PMS portfolios consist of market-linked securities (equities, debt, or derivatives) and carry inherent market risks. Under SEBI guidelines, promising or guaranteeing fixed returns in PMS marketing is strictly illegal.

